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NSW Migration Heritage Centre

documenting Australia's migration history


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Objects Through Time: 1830-1840s

Convict sandstock bricks
1831 Fairfield Convict Sandstock Bricks

The 1831 convict brinks are historically significant because Horsley House is the only Australian colonial house that can be directly related to Anglo-Indian architecture. Continue reading →

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1830 Single Key Boxwood Flute

The flute has historic value as evidence of one of the earliest musical instrument dealers known to have operated in Sydney from his arrival in the colony in 1832 until his death in 1854. Continue reading →

Order Ending Transportation To NSW c.1840
1840 Order Ending Transportation To New South Wales

The Order-in-Council has historical significance as evidence of the 1840 Order-in-Council and its aftermath represented the turning point when, 50 years after its foundation, New South Wales ceased to be a penal colony. Continue reading →

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1838 Liverpool Wheat Sheaf Gatepost

Discover the sandstone sculptured wheat sheaf from Macquarie Fields House near Liverpool that was built by Samuel Terry in 1838. Continue reading →

Convict Button c.1830s, SLNSW
1830 Convict Work Clothes Button

Discover the brass button from the work clothes of a convict assigned to the Australian Agricultural Company at Newcastle in the 1830s. Continue reading →

Governor Bourke’s 1835 Proclamation of Terra Nullius

The Proclamation of Governor Bourke, 10 October 1835 is historically significant. It implemented the doctrine of terra nullius upon which British settlement of New Holland was based. National Archives of the United Kingdom, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, U.K. Continue reading →

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ADDRESS

Powerhouse Museum
Telephone +61 (02) 9217 0111
500 Harris Street, Ultimo, NSW, 2007, Australia
info@phm.gov.au

The Migration Heritage Centre at the Powerhouse Museum is a NSW Government initiative supported by the Community Relations Commission.



© 2010 NSW Migration Heritage Centre