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THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE TASMANIAN METAL MINING INDUSTRY: 1803-1883 (1999)
Glyn Roberts
$27.50 - Ordering information
The Role of Government in the Development
of the Tasmanian Metal Mining Industry:
1803 - 1883, is a pioneering study.
The first part of this study looks
at sporadic attempts to 1850 to find
and exploit metallic minerals. All efforts
were unsuccessful.
The second part begins by examining
responses of government and private
individuals to the discovery of gold
on mainland Australia. Some interests,
not all, were keen to match mainland
finds in Tasmania. Early negative views
of government, concerned to maintain
the effectiveness of Van Diemen's Land
as a major Goal to the Empire, gradually
gave way as penal transportation was
abandoned and modest quantities of payable
gold were recovered at Fingal on the
East Coast. The government, now sporadically
enthusiastic about mining prospects,
eventually hired a professional geologist,
Charles Gould. Roberts traces in detail
the interplay between Gould and the
government, as successive attempts in
the early 1860s failed to locate payable
gold on the West Coast.
The third part spans the period from
1867 to 1883. Government gradually become
more responsive to the view that a specific
ministry was needed to oversee public
works and survey matters, although government
involvement remained sporadic. Early
tin discoveries did not widely enthuse;
an iron industry venture failed. Major
gold and tin finds, into the 1870s,
eventually provoked a more helpful legislative
framework, a government infrastructure
more keyed to efficiency, and some government
financial help. By 1883, if the golden
age has not arrived in Tasmania, to
many Tasmanians it seemed closer.
This important study highlights roles
assumed by key politicians, public servants,
prospectors and businessmen.
Glyn Roberts comes to historical research
via a long career as a geologist.
'A very competent piece of research
and a valuable contribution to Tasmania
mining and political history.'
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