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Caroline
Chisholm 1808 - 1877 immigrants' friend
Caroline
Chisholm (1808-1877), immigrants' friend, was born near Northampton,
England, daughter of William Jones, a yeoman farmer who died while
she was young. She was brought up to regard visiting the sick as
her social duty. In 1830 she married Captain Archibald Chisholm
of the East India Co., and about that time became a convert to Catholicism.
Her husband was posted to Madras in 1832 and there she helped establish
and ran an industrial school for soldiers' daughters, in which girls
were taught basic literacy and trained in housework. Her first two
children were born during their six years in Madras.
In 1838 the Chisholms embarked on the Emerald Isle for Sydney,
and en route were delayed for a month in Adelaide. At a time when
theories of colonisation were widely contested - and especially
the price at which to sell 'vacant' colonial land so that emigration
would remedy distress among the British working class without recreating
the problem in the colonies - Mrs Chisholm witnessed the early difficulties
of the colony founded by 'systematic colonisers'. She became a participant
in the colonisation debate, favouring small-scale family settlement.
The Chisholms arrived in Sydney towards the end of a speculative
land boom and rented a house at Windsor where their third son was
born. Two daughters and another son were born later. Shortly after
Captain Chisholm's recall in 1840, the boom collapsed; emigration
schemes, devised to supply plentiful labour to an expanding economy,
flooded the labour market. The closure of the Immigrants' Barracks
following the adoption of bounty immigration intensified the problem:
bounty immigrants were required to disembark within ten days. Distressed
for women left homeless, Mrs Chisholm successfully petitioned for
the reopening of the Barracks and personally met ships on arrival.
She is best remembered for arranging transport to country centres
for immigrant women, sometimes riding with them herself. At a time
when policing of the pastoral districts was largely directed to
protecting the more distant runs from Aboriginal attack, women required
an escort for safety. She activated a network of mainly Catholic
friends and was soon able to claim complete success. Within a year
the stream of immigrants had fallen to a trickle.
Her attention focussed then on family reunion: the earlier immigration
schemes had restricted the number of children accompanying parents
and there were still families separated by transportation. Her later
family colonisation scheme was linked with self-help ideals: her
society was prepared to advance a portion of the fare, but expected
and generally secured repayment. She travelled extensively in the
British Isles, raising money and overseeing arrangements. From 1845
her husband joined in this work.
All her activities were directed to securing hard-working immigrants
for the colonies; she appears never to have doubted that in Australia
prosperity, or at least a decent living, was assured to anyone willing
to work hard. Her aims were epitomised in the form of land settlement
which she came to favour: families would be encouraged to take up
small blocks which could be worked with their own labour; the land
would have to be bought but payment would be permitted over a long
period. From 1854, her energies were increasingly directed to land
reform.
Captain Chisholm returned to Australia in 1851 and Mrs Chisholm
in 1854. They received 5000 pounds as a gift from the Victorian
government, and 2500 pounds by private subscription. They opened
a store but were not very successful. Caroline, though in poor health,
ran a school at Newtown, Sydney, for several years. In 1866 they
left the colony. Mrs Chisholm died in London on 25 March 1877.
Famous in her own lifetime she was later raised in estimation by
a generation embittered by sectarian conflict: her supporters came
from all denominations and help was extended across religious divisions.
Likewise, a theoretical concern for family life brought her further
acclaim in twentieth-century Australia.
Heather Radi
Margaret Kiddle Caroline Chisholm 1957.
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