A History of Early Sydney
A groundbreaking history of the colony of Sydney in its early years, from the sparkling harbour to the Cumberland Plain, from convicts to the city’s political elite, from the impact of its geology to its economy.
The Colony is the story of the marvellously contrary, endlessly energetic early years of Sydney. It is an intimate account of the transformation of a campsite in a beautiful cove to the town that later became Australia’s largest and best-known city.
From the sparkling beaches to the foothills of the Blue Mountains, Grace Karskens skilfully reveals how landscape shaped the lives of the original Aboriginal inhabitants and newcomers alike. She traces the ways in which relationships between the colonial authorities and ordinary men and women broke with old patterns, and the ways that settler and Aboriginal histories became entwined. She uncovers the ties between the burgeoning township and its rural hinterland expanding along the river systems of the Cumberland Plain.
Enthusiastically received on first publication, this is a landmark account of the birthplace of modern Australia, and a fascinating and richly textured narrative of people and place.
Author: Grace Karskens
Paperback : 678 pages.
SKU: P1736
About The Author
Grace Karskens is Professor of History at the University of New South Wales and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. She is the author of The Rocks, winner of the 1998 NSW Premier’s History Award, and of People of the River.
Grace Karskens writes with the passion and insight of a novelist, and the accuracy of a historian. To read it is to have one’s imagination stretched.’ – Thomas Keneally, Sydney Morning Herald