Difference between revisions of "Geelong Petition"

From eurekapedia
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "Tuesday, December 5, 1854. No further intelligence arrived last night from Ballaarat. Up to one o'clock yesterday all was quiet in that locality, but an opinion prevailed amo...")
 
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
 +
== The Geelong Petition  ==
 +
 
Tuesday, December 5, 1854.
 
Tuesday, December 5, 1854.
  
Line 15: Line 18:
 
Your Obedient servants,
 
Your Obedient servants,
  
 +
[[H.S. Willis]]
 +
 +
[[John Richardson]]
 +
 +
[[William Roope]]
 +
 +
[[Saunders Trotman]]
 +
 +
[[James MacKellar]]
 +
 +
[[Samuel Richardson (2)]]
 +
 +
[[John Wood (2)]]
  
H.S. Willis
+
[[Robert Balding]]
John Richardson
+
William Roope
 
Saunders Trotman
 
James MacKellar
 
Samuel Richardson
 
John Wood
 
Robert Balding  
 
 
--. etc.<ref>''The Argus'' 6 December 1854</ref>
 
--. etc.<ref>''The Argus'' 6 December 1854</ref>

Latest revision as of 20:35, 11 March 2021

The Geelong Petition

Tuesday, December 5, 1854.

No further intelligence arrived last night from Ballaarat. Up to one o'clock yesterday all was quiet in that locality, but an opinion prevailed among many people, well able to judge, that the calm was the result not of defeat but of a cool determination to attain a certain object.

Tuesday, December 5, 1854.

No further intelligence arrived last night from Ballaarat. Up to one o'clock yesterday all was quiet in that locality, but an opinion prevailed among many people, well able to judge, that the calm was the result not of defeat but of a cool determination to attain a certain object

A meeting will be held this afternoon at the Masonic Hall, convened by the Mayor, on the following requisition:

TO His Worship the Mayor of Geelong, - Sir, - We, the undersigned inhabitants of Geelong, request that you will convene a public meeting, to petition His Excellency Sir Charles Hotham at once to set aside the present licensing system of the diggings; convinced as we are that all the troubles and bloodshed which menace this colony originate in the manner in which such system is carried out. We publicly profess our loyalty to the throne, and our intention to support the law; but our hearts bleed for the sufferings of our fellow-colonists at the diggings.

We remain, Sir,

Your Obedient servants,

H.S. Willis

John Richardson

William Roope

Saunders Trotman

James MacKellar

Samuel Richardson (2)

John Wood (2)

Robert Balding

--. etc.[1]
  1. The Argus 6 December 1854