Fifty Years in the Making of Australian History
Fifty Years in the Making of Australian History Parkes, Henry Sir (1815-1896) A digital text sponsored by New South Wales Centenary of Federation Committee University of Sydney Library Sydney 2000 http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/fed © University of Sydney Library. The texts and images are not to be used for commercial purposes without permission Source Text: Prepared from the print edition published by Longmans, Green and Co., London 1892 First Published: 1892 Languages: French Latin Greek, Classical RB1592/36 Australian Etexts autobiographies political history 1890-1909 prose nonfiction federation 2001 Creagh Cole Coordinator Final Checking and Parsing Fifty Years in the Making of Australian History In Two Volumes by London Longmans, Green and Co. 1892 Preface THIS book is not a history nor yet an autobiography. It leaves my life still to be written, should it be deemed worth the writing. It leaves, in fact, the first thirty years after my birth almost a blank. My residence in New South Wales has extended over fifty-three years; I began, in association with others, to take an earnest interest in the affairs of the colony within two or three years after my arrival. My first acquaintances were Charles Harper, William Augustine Duncan, and Henry Halloran, the latter of whom, now a hale man of eighty-two years, is still my warm personal friend, whose high generous spirit and fine gifts of mind have contributed much to my enjoyment of life. Some years before the advent of Responsible Government I was drawn into the active politics of the country; and of all the men who laboured conspicuously in public in preparing the way for the new Era, I now stand alone.
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