
Chinese steelyard scale c.1840-60 PHM
Collection
Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Object Name
Chinese steelyard scale
Object/Collection Description
A Chinese steelyard scale (do’tchin) consisting of a ivory scale rod with a brass pan and weight, all stored in a varnished, wooden, paddle shaped case. The case consists of two halves with the lid attached to the base by a rivet. The lid swivels open to reveal areas that have been hollowed out to fit the rod, weight and pan. The ivory scale rod has black dots marking off the weight scale. The brass pan is joined to the rod with four strings and the detached oval weight is also attached to string. Made in China, c.1840-1860. Dimensions: approx 220mm long X 35mm wide X 10mm high.
In March 1851, Edward Hargraves wrote to the Sydney Morning Herald to announce that he had found payable gold just outside the New South Wales town of Bathurst. By 15 May over 300 diggers were in the area prospecting for gold and the Australian gold rush had begun. The following month further discoveries were made at Clunes in Victoria and later Warrandyte, Bunninyong and Ballarat. By the end of the year half the adult male population of the colony was at the diggings.
With so many people leaving for the goldfields, many businesses found it hard to keep operating. Ship crews deserted, leaving vessels stranded in port, shepherds left their flocks, government officials, clerks, teachers and policemen left their jobs in the excitement. Soon they were joined by thousands of immigrants from Europe, America, China and New Zealand keen to try their luck. Between 1852 and 1861 over 342,000 people arrived, often enduring appalling conditions on overcrowded ships. Conditions were not much better on land as tent cities sprang up to accommodate the burgeoning population and the cost of food and necessities skyrocketed.
The discovery of gold in NSW from the early 1850s saw a huge influx of migrants in search of instant wealth. The primary result of the gold rush was that the economy boomed and for a short time gold outstripped wool as the Colony’s primary export. Many of the people who came in search of gold were Chinese men. Drawn from their home villages mainly in Kwangtung Province by the first gold rushes in Victoria, California and NSW in the 1850s they usually arrived in organised groups of 30 -100 men. In 1861 there were about 13,000 Chinese in NSW with the majority 12,200 on the goldfields. Throughout the 19th century Chinese arrivals continued to the regions of NSW associated with mining, replacing those who had returned home or left for opportunities elsewhere.

Chinamen at work on the goldfrields.

Lambing Flat miners’ camp c.1860s SLNSW
The scales have aesthetic significance in the functional design and manufacture of Chinese goldfields objects in the 19th century. Commonly used by Chinese miners and storekeepers at a time when goods were often paid for in gold, they were designed to be highly portable to be packed away when moving from gold field to field by foot.
The scales provide a research tool for historians to explore the culture and politics of the goldfields and especially how the Chinese fitted into the social landscape in their transactions and dealings with European shop keepers and merchants. The Chinese traditionally bartered in gold.
Chinese Australians who reside in regional NSW are predominately descended from the early migrants to the goldfields. Objects such as the scales provide a means for these communities to recognise and acknowledge the hardships and racism experienced by their ancestors. Objects and collections from Chinese communities provide the material culture for the stories of ancestors. These objects and collections have a resonance across regional NSW and Australia.
The scales are well provenanced to the Powerhouse Museum Collection.
The scales are rare because they were made for a specific purpose and function and were used on the 19th century Australian gold fields. They are rare because few of these scales from the gold rush remain in public collections.
The scales represent the experience of the 19th century Chinese on the goldfields. The myths surrounding the Chinese created largely on the goldfields provided the seeds for the ideology for the 1901 Immigration Restriction Acts.
The condition of the object is good given the rarity and fragile nature of the fabric.
The scales are a powerful interpretive tool in communicating the Chinese experience of isolation and ‘different-ness’, their success and industry as miners and shop keepers and their persecution by the wider European population on the diggings and in the wider community.
Bibliography
Coupe, S. & Andrews, M.
Their Ghosts may be heard: Australia to 1900,
Longman Cheshire, Sydney, 1992.
Regional Histories of NSW,
Heritage Office & Dept of Urban Affairs & Planning,
Sydney, 1996.
Significance: A guide to assessing the significance of cultural heritage objects and collections,
Heritage Collections Council. 2001.
Wilton. Janice,
Golden Threads: The Chinese in Regional NSW, 1850 - 1950,
New England Regional Museum & Powerhouse Publishing, 2004
Websites
http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/collection/database/
?irn=256733
Written by Stephen Thompson from documentation on PHM EMu collection information system and research files.
June 2007
Migration Heritage Centre NSW © 2007
- Object Name Chinese Steelyard Scale c.1840
- CollectionPowerhouse Museum
- Cultural backgroundChinese
- Era1840 - 1900


