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John McQuilton

    Australia's Communities and the Boer War
    The Empire's Patriotic Fund
    • 2017

      The Empire's Patriotic Fund

      Public Benevolence and the Boer War in an Australian Colony

      • 131 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Focusing on the Empire's Patriotic Fund established in 1901, the book explores its role in supporting dependents of Australian soldiers during the Boer War. It highlights the fund's unique position as one of the first attempts to address the impacts of sustained warfare in Australia, emphasizing the middle-class men's efforts to redefine social welfare in response to war. By analyzing applications to the fund, the study sheds light on the interplay of class and gender, and prompts further exploration of repatriation history in early 20th-century Australia.

      The Empire's Patriotic Fund
    • 2016

      Australia's Communities and the Boer War

      • 140 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      This book explores an Australian regional community’s reaction to, and involvement with, the Boer War. It argues that after the initial year the war became an ‘occasional war’ in that it was assumed that the empire would triumph. But it also laid the foundations for reactions to the outbreak of the Great War in 1914. This is the first exploration of the place of the Boer War in Australian history at the community level. Indeed, even at the national level the literature is limited. It is often forgotten that, despite the claims that Australia became a federation via peaceful means, the colonies and the new nation were, in fact, at war. This study aims to bring back into focus a forgotten part of Australian and imperial history, and argues that the Australian experience of the Boer War was more than the execution of Morant and Hancock.

      Australia's Communities and the Boer War