|
Post by nzbc on Aug 7, 2008 21:58:10 GMT 12
easy2chinese.com/category/china-articles/overseas-chinese/in-oceania/in-australia/Earliest arrivals: 1788 to 1848 From the very beginning of the colony of New South Wales, links with China were established when several ships of the First Fleet, after dropping off their convict load, sailed for Canton to pick up goods for the return to England. The Bigge Report attributed the high level of tea drinking to ¡®the existence of an intercourse with China from the foundation of the Colony ¡¡¯ That the ships carrying such cargo had Chinese crew members is likely and that some of the crew and possibly passengers embarked at the port of Sydney is probable. Certainly by 1818, Mak Sai Ying (also known as John Shying) had arrived and after a period of farming became, in 1829, the publican of The Lion in Parramatta. John Macarthur, a prominent pastoralist, employed three Chinese people on his properties in the 1820s and records may well have neglected others.
|
|