26 January 2018
Coinciding with the fireworks and backyard barbeques, a
national debate often rages over the history and meaning
of Australia Day.
Professor Jane Lydon, (pictured) Wesfarmers Chair in
Australian History at The University of Western
Australia, said there are often misconceptions about the
history of the day.
"The First Fleet actually arrived on Australian soil on
the 18 of January 1788 but found the French already in
occupation – so they moved the whole fleet around the
corner to Sydney Cove," Professor Lydon said.
"So January 26 commemorates the second landing – and
only the male convicts were unloaded that day. The women
were then disembarked on February the sixth
precipitating what would have been a gang-rape scenario,
the horror of which is unimaginable."
"So a more accurate name for the event on 26 January
might be the ‘Second Landing of Male Convicts Day.’"
Australia Day has also been shuffled around in recent
history.
On July 30 1915, an Australia Day was held to raise
funds for the First World War effort. Then Australia’s
landing at Gallipoli earlier that year was to launch the
commemoration of another national day: Anzac Day on
April 25.
Other colonies commemorated their own imperial
foundations. In Western Australia, Foundation Day on
June 1 celebrated the arrival of white settlers in 1829.
In 1935, all states adopted a common date and name for
Australia Day; January 26 and by the 1940s a national
public holiday was in place.
"Since 1938 however, Aboriginal Australians have pointed
out that, from their perspective, the arrival of the
British is not a cause for celebration: on the contrary,
it ushered in an era of dispossession. We now know that
Indigenous Australians had been in possession for at
least 60,000 years," Professor Lydon said.
"If we wish to include the First Australians we must
acknowledge that for them the arrival of the First Fleet
is a day of mourning.
"I vote for an Australia Day date of May 9, the day in
1901 when the first federal parliament house was founded
in Melbourne – this more accurately marks the moment of
shared nationhood."