Audiobook: Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria
Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria
1 - Verse - An Introductory Medley
- Download Verse - An Introductory Medley audio
- Download Mr Froude's "Oceana" - My First Night Ashore audio
- Download Indigenous Features Around Melbourne - Early Civilizing Difficulties audio
- Download "The Beach" (Now Port Melbourne) - Early Melbourne, It's Up's and Down--1840-1851 audio
- Download The Melbourne Corporation, 1842 - The Early Squatting Times audio
- Download Early Western Visctoria ("Australia Felix") audio
- Download Some Names of Mark in the Early Years - The Henty Family, and the Foundation of Victoria audio
- Download Some Interjecta in re Batman, Pioneer of the Port Phillip Settlement - John Pascoe Fawkner, Father of Melbourne audio
- Download James Simpson, First Magistrate of "The Settlement" - Sir John O'Shanassy audio
- Download William Kerr, Founder of the Argus - Charles Hotson Ebden, Esquire audio
- Download Edward Wilson, Chief Proprietor of "The Argus", "The Times" of the South audio
- Download Early Society: Ways, Means and Manners - "Government House" audio
- Download Cheap Living - The German Prince audio
- Download Black Thursday - Mount Alexander and Bendigo audio
- Download Early Victorian Legislation audio
- Download Postcript - Melbourne in 1888 audio
- Download Albury - Brisbane audio
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Description
Son of John Westgarth, surveyor-general of customs for Scotland, was born at Edinburgh, in June 1815. He was educated at the high schools at Leith and Edinburgh, and at Dr Bruce's school at Newcastle-on-Tyne. He then entered the office of G. Young and Company of Leith, who were engaged in the Australian trade, and realizing the possibilities of the new land, decided to emigrate to Australia. He arrived in Melbourne, then a town of three or four thousand inhabitants, in December 1840.
When the new colony was constituted Westgarth headed the poll for Melbourne at the election for the legislative council. He had had many activities during the previous 10 years.
He revisited Australia in 1888 and was everywhere welcomed. When the Melbourne international exhibition was opened he walked in the procession through the avenue of nations alongside Mr Francis Henty, then the sole survivor of the brotherhood who founded Victoria. As a result of his visit two volumes appeared Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria, in 1888, and Half a Century of Australasian Progress, in 1889. Returning to Great Britain Westgarth died suddenly at Edinburgh on 28 October 1889. He married in 1853 and left a widow and two daughters.
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