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The document is a promotional description for the book 'Benevolent Colonizers in Nineteenth Century Australia: Quaker Lives and Ideals' by Eva Bischoff, which explores the role of Quakers in colonial Australia. It is part of the Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies Series and discusses themes such as Quaker identity, humanitarianism, and settler colonialism. The book is available for instant download in PDF format and has received high ratings from readers.

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Benevolent Colonizers in
Nineteenth-Century Australia
Quaker Lives and Ideals

Eva Bischoff
Cambridge Imperial
and Post-Colonial Studies Series

Series Editors
Richard Drayton
Department of History
King’s College London
London, UK

Saul Dubow
Magdalene College
University of Cambridge
Cambridge, UK
The Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies series is a collection of
studies on empires in world history and on the societies and cultures which
emerged from colonialism. It includes both transnational, comparative
and connective studies, and studies which address where particular regions
or nations participate in global phenomena. While in the past the series
focused on the British Empire and Commonwealth, in its current incarna-
tion there is no imperial system, period of human history or part of the
world which lies outside of its compass. While we particularly welcome the
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scholarship on world history with an imperial theme.

More information about this series at


http://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/13937
Eva Bischoff

Benevolent Colonizers
in Nineteenth-­
Century Australia
Quaker Lives and Ideals
Eva Bischoff
Department of International History
Trier University
Trier, Germany

Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies Series


ISBN 978-3-030-32666-1    ISBN 978-3-030-32667-8 (eBook)
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32667-8

© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer
Nature Switzerland AG 2020
This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the
Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of
translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on
microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval,
electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now
known or hereafter developed.
The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this
publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are
exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use.
The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information
in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the pub-
lisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the
material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The
publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institu-
tional affiliations.

Cover illustration: Givenworks

This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature
Switzerland AG.
The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland
Acknowledgements

This project was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft within


the framework of the project on “Siedlerimperialismus in Nordamerika
und Australien: Gouvernementale Ordnungsansätze, Kleinstereignisse
und Mikropraktiken an der Frontier in der ersten Hälfte des 19.
Jahrhunderts,” a Postdoc Scholarship on “Colonialism & Colonial
History” granted by the German Historical Institute London, and a
Postdoctoral Fellowship granted by the Martin Buber Society of Fellows
in the Humanities and Social Sciences at the Hebrew University Jerusalem.
I would like to express my sincere gratitude for the generous support of
my research.
In addition, I hereby would like to thank all the librarians and archivists
across the globe, who supported my research with great competence, end-
less patience, and valuable advice. Many of them put in extra hours to
assist the travelling historian. This book would be impossible without their
dedication and help! I also would like to thank my colleagues at home and
abroad for being such supportive and wonderful kindred spirits, especially
Ulla Lehmkuhl and Norbert Finzsch. Also, a big shout out to my students
in Trier for putting up with my almost constant jet lag and archive-­
induced absences.
And, of course, many thanks to the Incredible Bold!

v
Contents

1 Introduction  1

2 Violence and Pacifism: Writing the History of the Anglo-­


world from Within  9
2.1 Playing Scales or Writing the Microhistory of the Anglo-­
World 13
2.2 Connecting Research Contexts and Conversations 16
New Imperial History and the British World  16
Settler Colonial Studies  21
Imperial Humanitarianism  24
Genocide Studies  27

3 A Peculiar People: Quakers and the Atlantic World


Around 1800  37
3.1 Inner Light and Worldly Matters: Quaker Abolitionism 42
From Germantown to London: Becoming an Abolitionist
Movement  44
The Caring Power of Evangelical Quakerism  45
3.2 Strategies of Conflict Resolution: Between Peace
Testimony and Diplomacy 49
From Revolutionaries to Law-Abiding Subjects  50
The Lamb’s War and Its Consequences  51

vii
viii CONTENTS

Quaker Peace Principles and Settler-Indigenous


Relations in Colonial Pennsylvania  54
3.3 A Translocal Community: Quakers and Migration 59
Travelling under Concern: Ministers Abroad  60
Flows of Books and Friendly Affection: The Circulation of
Knowledge  63
Friends Overseas: Certificates and Networks  66

4 Quakers in Early Nineteenth-Century Van Diemen’s Land 79


4.1 Those Assembled for Worship and Discipline: Founders of
Hobart MM 83
Quakers of Convict Background  92
Free Quaker Settlers  96
4.2 Practices of Belonging: Quaker Identity in the Antipodes109
Particular Colonists: Everyday Questions of Practising
Quakerism 110
Finding a Suitable Companion: Marriage Networks 113
Living in a Masculinist Society: Quaker Men 119
4.3 Transferring the Quaker Way to the Antipodes122
Establishing a Familiar Discipline: Organisation and
Structure 123
Nourishing Minds and Teaching Principles: Quaker
Books and Schools 124

5 The Case of James Backhouse and George W. Walker:


Quaker Ministers and Colonial Governmentality, 1834145

6 Being at Home: Van Diemen’s Land as a Quaker Settler


Space159
6.1 Taking the Land: Material Practices and Production of
Settler Colonial Knowledge162
Transforming Palawa Country into Settler Agricultural
Space 163
Producing Settler Colonial Knowledge: Botany and
Anthropology 173
Settler Architecture: Improving the Land and Building
Prestige 177
CONTENTS ix

6.2 Colonial Governance and Quaker Domesticity180


The Quaker Home and the Vandemonian Penal System 182
The Quaker Home and Cultural Genocide 188

7 The Case of Francis Cotton and George F. Story: Quaker


Settlers and the Tasmanian Frontier, 1829–1831201

8 Removal, Reform, Protection: Building a Humanitarian


Empire217
8.1 Transmissions: Settler Experiences and Humanitarian
Discourse221
Journals and Committees: Quaker Routines 227
Quaker Settler Experiences Converted 229
Establishing the Cornerstones of Humanitarian Discourse  236
Filters and Nets: Transmitting and Connecting
Knowledge 238
8.2 Imagined Common Grounds: William Penn in
Australia?241
An Example to Follow: Penn in Humanitarian Discourse  244
Becoming Quaker: Imagining Settler Space|Time in
1830s Van Diemen’s Land 250

9 Tasmanian Lessons: Translation of Quaker Experiences


and Concepts, 1836–1843261
9.1 A Second Pennsylvania? South Australia and Quaker
Settlers266
9.2 A Slender Basis: Quaker Settlers and Aboriginal People272
Coming in But Staying Out: The Etiquettes of
Interaction 274
Local Politics: Between Retaliation and the Prevention of
Extinction 280
9.3 South Australian Quaker Voices in Quaker
Humanitarian Discourse289
The Benevolent Coloniser Speaks: John Barton Hack 291
Shifting from Amelioration to Anthropology: William
May 299
x Contents

10 Conclusion315
10.1 Building the Anglo-World from Within316
10.2 The Benevolent Coloniser318
10.3 Sounds of Silence or Narrating Genocide the Quaker Way322

Bibliography331

Index387
About the Author

Eva Bischoff teaches International History at Trier University, Germany.


Her research interests include Colonial and Imperial History, Postcolonial
Studies, Settler Colonial Studies as well as Gender/Queer Studies.

xi
Abbreviations

AKJV Authorised (King James) Version of the Bible


APS Aborigines Protection Society
CEN Census Commission
CMS Church Missionary Society
CON Convict Department
CSO Colonial Secretary’s Office
CUS Customs Department
DL Dixon Library
FHL Friends House Library
Gov. Governor
HRA Historical Records of Australia
IOR Independent Order of Rechabites
LMS London Missionary Society
LSD Land and Surveys Department
Lt. Lieutenant
Lt.-Col. Lieutenant-Colonel
Lt.-Gov. Lieutenant-Governor
MfS Meeting for Sufferings
ML Mitchell Library
MM Monthly Meeting
MP Member of Parliament
NL Canberra National Library of Australia, Canberra
NSW New South Wales
POL Launceston Police
PYMIC Indian Committee of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting
QM Quarterly Meeting
RGD Registrar-General’s Department

xiii
xiv ABBREVIATIONS

RS Royal Society of Tasmania Collection


RSA Royal Society of Tasmania
SL NSW State Library of New South Wales
SL South Australia State Library of South Australia
SRSA State Records South Australia
TAHO Tasmanian Archives and Heritage Office
TUA Tasmania University Archives
Utas University of Tasmania
VDL Van Diemen’s Land
WMS Wesleyan Missionary Society
YM Yearly Meeting
List of Figures

Fig. 3.1 Edward Hicks, The Peaceable Kingdom (c. 1834). (Oil on
Canvas, 74.5 × 90.1 cm, National Gallery of Art, Washington,
DC)55
Fig. 3.2 Benjamin West, The Treaty of Penn with the Indians (1771–
1772). (Oil on Canvas, 190 × 274 cm, Pennsylvania Academy
of Fine Arts, Philadelphia) 57
Fig. 4.1 Quakers in Australia, 1852–1854. (Frederick Mackie and
Robert Lindsey, List of Members of Society of Friends in
Australia (1852–1856), n.d., Port 8/1, Friends House Library,
London)85
Fig. 4.2 Quaker migration to Australia before 1862. (William Oats.
1985. Question of Survival: Quakers in Australia in the
Nineteenth Century. St. Lucia: University of Queensland
University Press, p. 31) 86
Fig. 4.3 Population Tasmania, 1803–1861. (Generated from: Australian
Bureau of Statistics. “Population by Sex, States and Territories,
31 December, 1788 onwards (Table 1.1),” 3105.0.65.001—
Australian Historical Population Statistics, 2014: Population
Size and Growth, released 18 September 2014, http://www.
abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/[email protected]/DetailsPage/3105.0.65.00
12014?OpenDocument, last access 20 January 2017) 87
Fig. 4.4 Female population Tasmania, 1803–1861 (in per cent).
(Generated from: Australian Bureau of Statistics. “Population
by Sex, States and Territories, 31 December, 1788 onwards
(Table 1.1),” 3105.0.65.001—Australian Historical Population
Statistics, 2014: Population Size and Growth, released 18

xv
xvi LIST OF FIGURES

September 2014, http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.


nsf/DetailsPage/3105.0.65.0012014?OpenDocument, last
access 20 January 2017) 88
Fig. 4.5 Members and persons connected to the Religious Society of
Friends, Hobart, 20 September 1833. (Generated from: Society
of Friends, Records of Hobart Regional Meeting, Minute
Books Hobart Monthly Meetings (20 September 1833–3
December 1857), S 1/A/1, Vol. 1 (1833–1835), 20 September
1833, pp. 9–10, Tasmania University Archives, Hobart) 91
Fig. 4.6 Francis Cotton (1801–1883) and Anna Maria Cotton (1800–
1882, née Tilney). (Photographs, Special and Rare Collection,
Tasmania University Archives, Hobart) 97
Fig. 4.7 George Fordyce Story (1800–1885). (Photograph, George
Fordyce Story seated in Garden, Tasmania, c. 1850–1855,
Special and Rare Materials Collection, Tasmania University
Archives, Hobart) 100
Fig. 4.8 Kelvedon (“F. Cotton”), 1839. (Detail from: George Frankland.
1839. This Map of Van Diemen’s Land, is Dedicated to the Land
Holders of the Colony. London: J. Cross. Map coloured, mounted
on linen, 128 × 83 cm, Special Collections MAP F 862,
National Library of Australia, Canberra) 101
Fig. 4.9 (a) Sarah Benson Walker (1812–1893, née Mather) and (b)
George Washington Walker (1800–1859). (Photographs,
Special and Rare Materials Collection, Tasmania University
Archives, Hobart) 102
Fig. 4.10 Marriage Connections between the May, Coleman, Cotton,
and Mather Families. (Data collated from: Marjorie and William
Oats. 1982. “A Biographical Index of Quakers in Australia
before 1862”, Hobart, pp. 62–63, 69–72, 166–67, 271–72) 114
Fig. 6.1 Police districts and military posts, 1826. (Lyndall Ryan. 2012.
Tasmanian Aborigines: A History Since 1803. Crows Nest: Allen
& Unwin, p. 81) 166
Fig. 6.2 Oyster Bay Nation. (Lyndall Ryan. 2012. Tasmanian
Aborigines: A History Since 1803. Crows Nest: Allen & Unwin,
p. 19) 167
Fig. 6.3 Layout of garden at Kelvedon, April 1831. (Detail from: Farm
Memoranda (April 1830–February 1831), Francis Cotton and
Family Papers, DX 19/B/22, entry 14 April 1831, Tasmania
University Archives, Hobart) 168
Fig. 6.4 Rocky Hills Grant and Leases, c. 1850s–1860s. (Francis Cotton
and Family Papers, DX 19/A/12, 1, Tasmania University
Archives, Hobart) 171
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