History of Australia

The human history of Australia, however, commences with the arrival of the first ancestors of Aboriginal Australians by sea from Maritime Southeast Asia between 50,000 and 65,000 years ago, and continues to the present day multicultural democracy.

The traditional economy was cooperative, with males generally hunting large game while females gathered local staples such as small animals, shellfish, vegetables, fruits, seeds and nuts.

[45] In the same year, a French expedition led by Louis Aleno de St Aloüarn, became the first Europeans to formally claim sovereignty over the west coast of Australia, but no attempt was made to follow this with colonisation.

[71] Phillip sent exploratory missions in search of better soils, fixed on the Parramatta region as a promising area for expansion, and moved many of the convicts from late 1788 to establish a small township, which became the main centre of the colony's economic life.

The Corps, working closely with the newly established wool trader John Macarthur, staged the only successful armed takeover of government in Australian history, deposing Bligh and instigating a brief period of military rule prior to the arrival from Britain of Governor Lachlan Macquarie in 1810.

He sent explorers out from Sydney and, in 1815, a road across the Blue Mountains was completed, opening the way for large scale farming and grazing in the lightly wooded pastures west of the Great Dividing Range.

Lacking bushcraft and unwilling to learn from the local Aboriginal people, Burke and Wills died in 1861, having returned from the Gulf to their rendezvous point at Coopers Creek only to discover the rest of their party had departed the location only a matter of hours previously.

[147] The first governor of New South Wales, Arthur Phillip, arrived with instructions to: "endeavour by every possible means to open an Intercourse with the Natives and to conciliate their affections, enjoining all Our Subjects to live in amity and kindness with them.

Some, such as the radical magazine The Bulletin and the Tasmanian Attorney-General Andrew Inglis Clark, were republicans, while others were prepared to accept a fully independent country of Australia with only a ceremonial role for the British monarch.

[235] In the 1890s Henry Lawson, Banjo Paterson and other writers associated with The Bulletin produced poetry and prose exploring the nature of bush life and themes of independence, stoicism, masculine labour, egalitarianism, anti-authoritarianism and mateship.

The Anzacs formed part of the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force with the task of opening the Dardanelles to allied battleships, threatening Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire which had entered the war on the side of the Central Powers.

The situation caused alarm amongst a few politicians and economists, notably Edward Shann of the University of Western Australia, but most political, union and business leaders were reluctant to admit to serious problems.

[349] Gavin Long argues that the Labor opposition urged greater national self-reliance through a buildup of manufacturing and more emphasis on the Army and RAAF, as Chief of the General Staff, John Lavarack also advocated.

Returning to Australia, with the threat of Japan imminent and with the Australian army suffering badly in the Greek and Crete campaigns, Menzies re-approached the Labor Party to form a War Cabinet.

While demanding reinforcements from Churchill, on 27 December 1941 Curtin published an historic announcement:[360] "The Australian Government... regards the Pacific struggle as primarily one in which the United States and Australia must have the fullest say in the direction of the democracies' fighting plan.

[364] On 14 May 1943, the Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, though clearly marked as a medical vessel, was sunk by Japanese raiders off the Queensland coast, killing 268, including all but one of the nursing staff, further enraging popular opinion against Japan.

"[375] Minister for War Organisation of Industry, John Dedman introduced a degree of austerity and government control previously unknown, to such an extent that he was nicknamed "the man who killed Father Christmas".

[385] Menzies presided during a period of sustained economic boom and the beginnings of sweeping social change, which included youth culture and its rock and roll music and, in the late 1950s, the arrival of television broadcasting.

[392] The Australian economy stood in sharp contrast to war-ravaged Europe, and newly arrived migrants found employment in a booming manufacturing industry and government assisted programmes such as the Snowy Mountains Scheme.

"Our imaginations saved us from finding life too humdrum, as did the wild freedom of being able to roam far and wide in different kinds of (neighbouring) bushland...Children in the suburbs found space in backyards, streets and lanes, playgrounds and reserves..."[410] In 1954, the Menzies Government formally announced the introduction of the new two-tiered TV system—a government-funded service run by the ABC, and two commercial services in Sydney and Melbourne, with the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne being a major driving force behind the introduction of television to Australia.

In foreign policy, the government continued Labor's friendly relations with China and Indonesia, repaired the frayed relationship with the US and opposed white minority rule in South Africa and Rhodesia.

[445] Paul Kelly concludes that, "In the 1980s both Labor and non-Labor underwent internal philosophical revolutions to support a new set of ideas—faith in markets, deregulation, a reduced role for government, low protection and the creation of a new cooperative enterprise culture.

The government's environmental interventions included stopping the Franklin Dam in Tasmania, banning new uranium mines at Jabiluka, and proposing Kakadu National park for world heritage listing.

The Keating government also pursued a number of "big picture" issues throughout its two terms including increased political and economic engagement in the Asia Pacific region, Indigenous reconciliation, and an Australian republic.

The government engaged closely with the Indonesian President, Suharto and other regional partners, and successfully campaigned to increase the role of APEC as a major forum for strategic and economic co-operation.

[460] Following a sharp increase in unauthorised arrivals by boat from 1999, the government opened new mandatory detention centres in remote areas of Australia and issued temporary visas for those found to be refugees.

[468] By 2007, the Howard government was consistently trailing the Labor opposition in opinion polls, with key issues being rising interest rates, the unpopular Work Choices industrial relations reforms, and climate change policy.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott's government began implementing its policies on unauthorised maritime arrivals, including Operation Sovereign Borders, boat turnbacks, the reintroduction of temporary protection visas, and the resettlement in third countries of those found to be refugees.

Almost 400 were produced between 1970 and 1985. Notable films include The Adventures of Barry McKenzie (1972), Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975), My Brilliant Career (1979), Breaker Morant (1980), Gallipoli (1981), the Mad Max trilogy (1979–85) and Crocodile Dundee (1986).

[570] A number of Australian directors and actors, including Baz Luhrmann, George Miller, Peter Weir, Cate Blanchett, Nicole Kidman, Geoffrey Rush and others, have been able to establish careers both in Australia and abroad.

Rock painting at Ubirr in Kakadu National Park . Evidence of Aboriginal art in Australia can be traced back some 30,000 years.
Kolaia man wearing a headdress worn in a fire ceremony, Forrest River, Western Australia. Aboriginal Australian religious practices associated with the Dreamtime have been practised for tens of thousands of years.
A Luritja man demonstrating his method of attack with a large curved boomerang under cover of a thin shield (1920)
Exploration by Europeans until 1812:
1797–99 George Bass
Abel Tasman , the first European to discover Van Diemen's Land , now known as Tasmania
Lieutenant James Cook , the first European to map the eastern coastline of Australia in 1770
Two of the Natives of New Holland, Advancing To Combat (1784), lithograph based on 1770 sketch by Cook's illustrator Sydney Parkinson
A General Chart of New Holland including New South Wales & Botany Bay with The Adjacent Countries and New Discovered Lands , published in An Historical Narrative of the Discovery of New Holland and New South Wales , London, Fielding and Stockdale, November 1786
Landing of Lieutenant James Cook at Botany Bay, 29 April 1770
The perilous situation of The Guardian Frigate as she appeared striking on the rocks of ice ( c. 1790 ) – Robert Dighton; depicting the Second Fleet
Founding of the settlement of Port Jackson at Botany Bay in New South Wales in 1788 – Thomas Gosse
View of Sydney Cove ( Aboriginal : Warrane ) by Thomas Watling , 1794–1796
Map of the south eastern portion of Australia, 1850
Melbourne Landing, 1840; watercolor by W. Liardet (1840)
Adelaide in 1839. South Australia was founded as a free-colony, without convicts.
Brisbane (Moreton Bay Settlement), 1835; watercolour by H. Bowerman
Black-eyed Sue and Sweet Poll of Plymouth, England mourning their lovers who are soon to be transported to Botany Bay (published in London in 1792)
The humanitarian Caroline Chisholm was a leading advocate for women's issues and family friendly colonial policy.
Businesswoman Elizabeth Macarthur helped establish the merino wool industry.
A painting depicting the Castle Hill Rebellion in Sydney of 1804
Flinders prepares to circumnavigate Terra Australis - July 1802
Matthew Flinders led the first successful circumnavigation of Australia in 1801–02.
John Longstaff , Arrival of Burke, Wills and King at the deserted camp at Cooper's Creek, Sunday evening, 21 April 1861
Alexander Schramm's A Scene in South Australia (1850) depicts German settlers with Aborigines
Mounted police engaging Indigenous people during the Slaughterhouse Creek Massacre of 1838, during the Australian frontier wars .
Proclamation issued in Van Diemen's Land around 1828–1830 by Lieutenant-Governor Arthur , which explains the precepts of British justice in pictorial form for the Tasmanian Aboriginals . Tasmania suffered a higher level of conflict than the other British colonies in Australia. [ 156 ]
Fighting near Creen Creek, Queensland in September 1876
The Australian native police consisted of native troopers under the command of white officers that was largely responsible for the 'dispersal' of Aboriginal tribes in eastern Australia, but particularly in New South Wales and Queensland
Portrait of Bungaree at Sydney in 1826, by Augustus Earle .
Aboriginal farmers at Loddon Aboriginal Protectorate Station at Franklinford, Victoria , in 1858
William Wentworth advocated for greater self-government, establishing Australia's first political party
The opening of Australia's first elected Parliament in Sydney ( c. 1843 )
Mr E.H. Hargraves, The Gold Discoverer of Australia, Feb 12th 1851 returning the salute of the gold miners – Thomas Tyrwhitt Balcombe
Eureka Stockade Riot. J. B. Henderson (1854) watercolour
A polling booth in Melbourne – David Syme and Co ( c. 1880 )
William Strutt 's Bushrangers on the St Kilda Road (1887), scene of frequent hold-ups during the Victorian gold rush by bushrangers known as the St Kilda Road robberies .
The seizure of the blackbirder ship 'Daphne' ca.1869;
The Pacific Slave trade operated between 1863 and 1904 saw tens of thousands of South Sea Islanders brought to the sugarcane plantations of Queensland either as indentured workers or slaves
"The labor crisis. – The riot in George Street, Sydney" ( c. 1890 )
The origins of a distinctly Australian style of painting are often associated with the Heidelberg School movement, Tom Roberts ' Shearing the Rams (1890) being an iconic example.
The bush balladeer Banjo Paterson penned a number of classic works including " Waltzing Matilda " (1895), regarded as Australia's unofficial national anthem.
Sir Henry Parkes delivering the first resolution at the federation conference in Melbourne, 1 March 1890
Edmund Barton (left), the first Prime Minister of Australia , with Alfred Deakin , the second Prime Minister
Opening of the first Parliament of Australia in 1901
Implementing the White Australia policy was one of the first acts of the new parliament. Pictured: The Melbourne Punch (c. May 1888)
Procession in support of an eight-hour work day, George Street, Sydney , 4 October 1909
Australian soldiers in Egypt with a kangaroo as regimental mascot, 1914
8 August 1918 , by Will Longstaff . A depiction of the Battle of Amiens
Prime Minister W. M. Hughes in 1919
Australian soldiers carrying Prime Minister Billy Hughes , the 'little digger', down George Street, Sydney after his return from the Paris Peace Conference, 1919
Built between 1920 and 1930, a cultural masterpiece of Australian architecture , Brisbane City Hall was one of the most expensive buildings and the second largest construction of the Inter-war period, after the Sydney Harbour Bridge .
Pioneer aviator Sir Charles Kingsford Smith
Edith Cowan (1861–1932) was elected to the West Australian Legislative Assembly in 1921 and was the first woman elected to any Australian Parliament.
Ribbon ceremony to open the Sydney Harbour Bridge on 20 March 1932. Breaking protocol, the soon to be dismissed Premier Jack Lang cuts the ribbon while Governor Philip Game looks on.
In 1931, more than 1,000 unemployed men marched from the Esplanade to the Treasury Building in Perth, Western Australia , to see Premier Sir James Mitchell .
21-year-old Don Bradman is chaired off the cricket pitch after scoring a world record 452 runs not out in 1930. Sporting success lifted Australian spirits through the Depression years.
Phar Lap , c. 1930
Prime Minister Robert Menzies and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1941
The light cruiser HMAS Sydney , lost in a battle in the Indian Ocean, November 1941
Australian troops at Milne Bay, Papua. The Australian army was the first to inflict defeat on the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II at the Battle of Milne Bay of August–September 1942.
An Australian light machine gun team in action near Wewak , Papua New Guinea , in June 1945
A patrol from the 2/13th Infantry Battalion at Tobruk in North Africa, (AWM 020779). The 1941 Siege of Tobruk saw an Australian garrison halt the advance of Hitler's Panzer divisions for the first time since the commencement of the war.
US General Douglas MacArthur , Commander of Allied forces in the Pacific, with Prime Minister John Curtin
Dutch and Australian PoWs at Tarsau, in Thailand in 1943. 22,000 Australians were captured by the Japanese; 8,000 died as POWs.
Australian soldiers display Japanese flags they captured at Kaiapit , New Guinea in 1943.
Australian women were encouraged to contribute to the war effort by joining one of the female branches of the armed forces or participating in the labour force.
The Bombing of Darwin , 19 February 1942. Japanese air raids on Australia during 1942–43 killed hundreds of servicemen and civilians, while Axis naval activity in Australian waters threatened shipping between 1940 and 1945.
1942 Australian propaganda poster. Australia feared invasion by Imperial Japan following the invasion of the Australian Territory of New Guinea and Fall of Singapore in early 1942.
Queen Elizabeth II inspecting sheep at Wagga Wagga on her 1954 Royal Tour. Huge crowds greeted the Royal party across Australia.
Postwar migrants arriving in Australia in 1954
After World War II and by the 1950s, Australia had a population of 10 million, and the most populous urban centre was its oldest city, Sydney . It has retained its status as Australia's largest city ever since.
Tumut 3 power station was constructed as part of the vast Snowy Mountains Hydro Electric Scheme (1949–1974). Construction necessitated the expansion of Australia's immigration programme.
Prime Minister Harold Holt with Aboriginal rights campaigners ahead of the 1967 Referendum .
Liberal Senator Neville Bonner , the first federal parliamentarian to identify as Aboriginal, joined the Senate in 1971
Harold Holt and US President John F. Kennedy in the Oval Office in Washington, D.C., 1963. By the 1960s, Australian defence policy had shifted from Britain to the US as key ally.
Personnel and aircraft of RAAF Transport Flight Vietnam arrive in South Vietnam in August 1964.
Gough Whitlam and US President Richard Nixon in 1973. The Whitlam government was responsible for significant reforms, but went on to be dismissed in controversial circumstances.
Malcolm Fraser and US President Jimmy Carter in 1977.
Bob Hawke with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1987. Hawke went on to become the longest-serving Labor Prime Minister.
Paul Keating delivering the Redfern Park Speech on 10 December 1992
John Howard , the 25th Prime Minister of Australia held office from 1996 to 2007, the second-longest tenure in history
The Australian-led coalition INTERFET during the East Timor crisis from 1999 to 2002
The Australian-led multinational force in response to the Solomon Islands conflict (1999–2003).
Operation RAMSI (2003–2017) became Australia's largest effort in democracy and nation-building
Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard in 2006. Gillard went on to become Australia's first female Prime Minister.
Australian special forces wait for extraction during the War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
Prime Minister Tony Abbott signing the China–Australia Free Trade Agreement with President Xi Jinping , November 2014
A barricade in Coolangatta enforcing the border closure between Queensland and New South Wales in April 2020 that was implemented by the Queensland Government in response to the COVID-19 pandemic [ 495 ]
AUKUS founders
Scott Morrison with fellow AUKUS founders Prime Minister Boris Johnston of the UK and US President Joe Biden .
Anthony Albanese , the 31st Prime Minister of Australia reviews the Federation Guard during the Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II, 4 June 2022
Country Liberal Adam Giles became the first indigenous Australian to head a state or territory government when he became Chief Minister of the Northern Territory in 2016.
Uluru: returned to traditional owners in 1985
A female police officer in 2008
Malcolm Fraser: Committed to a multicultural Australia
John Gorton in 1970. As Prime Minister, Gorton revitalised government support for Australian cinema
Patrick White: In 1973, became the first Australian to win a Nobel Prize in Literature
Donald Horne 's The Lucky Country (1964) is a critique of a "dull and provincial" Australia that gets by on its abundance of natural resources. [ 576 ] The book's title has been constantly misinterpreted since the book was published. [ 577 ]