The discovery of Gold in Australia was a defining factor in the development of all colonies but with particular emphasis on Victoria and later Western Australia. Gold was first discovered by a man named Edward Hargreaves in New South Whales in 1851, in a landscape that was likened to the gold fields of California which also was found to harbor gold deposits underground. However it was Victoria that experienced the largest ‘gold rush’ of all the colonies during the 1850s. During this period there was mass movement amongst the population of the Australian colonies as well is immigration from abroad, with people coming in search of gold. The population of Victoria swelled by almost seven hundred percent in the decade following the discovery. By the end of 1851 over half of the male Victorian population was working on the goldfields and by the end of 1856 over one hundred thousand men. The sudden discovery of gold and mass migration that came subsequently brought up a number of problems and anxieties and fears about Australia’s future and it also brought about an arguably racial sentiment to Australian culture.
The discovery of gold provided an opportunity for people to financially better themselves, based purely on luck. As there were chances of ordinary working men striking it rich in the gold fields, there was a high possibility for a redistribution of wealth within society. This may not have been the case for all minors, but for a select few who were lucky enough to find gold it was. Thus there was a positive outlook of the future for the poorer working classes as an opportunity to gain wealth and social standing. However conversely it would undoubtedly have been an intimidating prospect for the wealthier upper classes as they were faced with the possibility of losing their high place in society to minors who found gold and became wealthy. This anxiety of the upper class was portrayed in John Leech’s painting entitled ‘Topsy Turvey’ created in 1854. This painting depicts elites of colonial Australia waiting upon common miners who are dressed in lavish clothes eating and drinking expensive commodities. The chance of ‘striking it rich’ also posed a problem to the Australian ideals of hard work with reward following. The ideal of hardwork and subsequent reward was shattered due to the fact that a minor could go out into the gold fields and find a gold nugget worth a fortune and his success can be solely put to sheer strength and luck.
This is an image of two 'diggers' searching through the soil they have unearthed in the hope to strike it rich and find gold.
During the gold rush period it is argued that an anti-immigrant attitude developed within the colony, which was most visible when looking at the experience of the Chinese immigrants. Upon hearing of the gold to be found in Victoria many Chinese men immigrated to Australia to try their luck and make better lives for themselves, as did many other men. There were over forty thousand Chinese arrivals between 1852 and 1889, however there were also thirty six thousand departures. At one stage during the 1850s, when the gold rush was at its highest peak nearly one in ten of the men in Victoria were Chinese. These Chinese immigrants were accustomed to working for very poor wages in their homeland and as such were willing to work for less than the average white digger working for a mining company. This fact brought much opposition to the Chinese and on a number of occasions broke out in riot. In 1873 violence towards the Chinese miners erupted in Riot in a town called Clunes where a minor company director, Peter Laylor was employing Chinese minors to work for him at a cheaper rate than white men would work for. The men were fed up with the Chinese stealing, what they believed, to be their work and riot broke out resulting in the deaths and injury of many Chinese men. The Victorian government accepted these feelings, whether they were racially fuelled or simply economic, and introduced a Restrictive Immigration Policy which limited the number of foreign workers, mainly Chinese, who could come to Australia to work in the gold fields. Another issue with regard to the Chinese miners was that they money they made from the gold they found was sent back to China and was not put back into the Victorian market through purchase of goods and other services which generated profit. It has been said that these anti-immigration sentiments lead to the ‘White Australia Policy’ which was implemented following federation.