- James Esmond
James William Esmond (
11 April 1822 –3 December 1890 ), was an Irish-Australian gold prospector and miner, and was one of the first people to discover gold in Australia.Esmond was born in
Enniscorthy , a town inCounty Wexford in the south-east of Ireland, in 1822, the son of a merchant. cite encyclopedia | title = Esmond, James William (1822 – 1890) | encyclopedia =Australian Dictionary of Biography | volume = 4 | pages = 142 | publisher = Melbourne University Press | year = 1972 | id = ISBN 0522840345 | accessdate = 2007-04-29 ] Migrating to thePort Phillip District (later the colony of Victoria) in 1840, Esmond worked a number of jobs, including working on stations in theWestern Port region, and driving themail coach from Buninyong to the region around Horsham, a major town in theWimmera .In 1849, having heard news of the
California gold rush , Esmond sailed forCalifornia to try his luck. Arriving too late to be successful as a prospector, Esmond took work as a supervisor on the diggings, before returning toSydney ,New South Wales in 1850. Incidentally, Esmond travelled on the same ship asEdward Hargraves , the man credited with first discovering gold in New South Wales. Esmond returned to Buninyong, and took work as a contractor digging post holes. cite book | last = Birrell | first = Ralph W. | title = Staking a Claim: Gold and the Development of Victorian Mining Law | publisher =Melbourne University Press | year = 1998 | location =Carlton South, Victoria | id = ISBN 0-522-84803-6 ] There he met DrGeorge Hermann Bruhn , a German doctor andgeologist who was returning from Clunes. Bruhn told Esmond that in Clunes he had met with the pastoralist Donald Cameron; gold had been found on Cameron's property in March 1850, and Bruhn told Esmond ofquartz reefs there which were likely to bear gold.Esmond quickly set out for Clunes, with his colleague James Pugh. Having investigated the area, they concluded that there was gold there, and so they hired two
sawyer s, known as Burns and Kelly, to work the site. Having recovered severalounce s of gold from the site, Esmond travelled to Geelong on5 July 1851 and showed the gold to "Geelong Advertiser " journalist Alfred Clarke. When questioned by Clarke about the location the gold came from, Esmond was vague; but once he returned from Melbourne on15 July , having purchased materials to make a cradle, he told Clarke that the gold had come from Clunes. News of the find was broken in the Melbourne newspapers on16 July , cite journal | last = McCarthy | first = John | title = 150 Years of Gold | journal = Sir John Quick Bendigo Lecture Series | volume = 8 | publisher = La Trobe University | date = 2001-09-26 | url = http://www.latrobe.edu.au/quick/assets/downloads/quicklecture2001.pdf | id = ISSN 1325-0787 | accessdate = 2007-04-29 |format=PDF] and by Clarke in the "Advertiser" on22 July . Esmond sent the first saleable gold produced in Victoria – fourteen ounces – to Clarke on22 August , which was later sold in Melbourne.Esmond would later claim that he first found gold on
28 June . Mining engineer and amateur historian Peter McCarthy has suggested that Esmond had "set up as a prospector in the Pyrenees on his return and kept himself fed somehow, without officially stealing the Queen's gold, for several months." On22 May 1851 theGovernment of New South Wales had issuedregulation s undercrown land s legislation to control gold mining, impose mining licences and collect licence fees. Meanwhile Victoria was to become a separatecolony from New South Wales on1 July 1851, and theGovernment of Victoria – which had very few police or military forces at its disposal – would be responsible gold mining from then on. McCarthy suggests that Esmond nominated28 June (or29 June in some sources) as the date of discovery because, accounting for the travel times between Clunes and Melbourne, his claim would reach the authorities there on1 July 1851, when he would be free from New South Wales' strict licencing scheme.In 1853 and 1854, the
Legislative Council of Victoria established the first of several Select Committees to consider rewards for the discovery of goldfields. The committee considered Esmond's claim of discovery, and accepted that he found gold on28 June 1851 and that the site was revealed on22 July . However, the committee also considered the claim ofLouis Michel , who had discovered gold at Anderson's Creek, in the town of Warrandyte; the committee determined that Michel had both discovered gold and reported the discovery on5 July 1851, the same day that Esmond showed the Clunes gold to Alfred Clarke in Geelong. Ultimately, the committee found that Michel was the first to discover and publicise a goldfield, but that Esmond was the first actual producer of gold, and both were granted rewards of £ 1000.Esmond continued to be involved in gold mining, eventually moving to the goldfields at Ballarat, where he became politically prominent among the miners' organisations, ultimately commanding a section of miners in the
Eureka Stockade . In 1865, Esmond started a gold mining company conducting deep shaft mining in the area north of Clunes. Despite his efforts, the company was unsuccessful, and he ultimately sold it; in a cruel twist of fate, the buyers were successful within a couple of months.Esmond suffered from
Bright's disease later in life, and struggled with financial problems; the mining community sought government aid for him, though none was forthcoming, but public donations had raised £150 for his family by the time of his death. Esmond died on3 December that year, 36 years to the day after the Eureka Stockade. Historian William Withers, in hisobituary of Esmond on5 December , wrote that he walked to the top of a hill overlooking Ballarat and saw a shining white shaft ofgranite marking the spot where the Stockade took place, a monument erected six years earlier to mark but not commemorate those who had died there. cite journal | last = Sunter | first = Anne | title = Remembering Eureka | journal = Journal of Australian Studies | volume = Dec 2001 | pages = 49–60 | publisher = University of Queensland Press | id = ISSN 0314-769X | accessdate = 2007-04-29 ] Withers' respectful tribute to Esmond, one of a number of Eureka diggers who had recently died, was unusual at the time, when the Stockade was still regarded by many as a disloyal rebellion.Esmond was survived by his wife Margaret, their three sons and six daughters.
ee also
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Victorian gold rush References
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