1804 in Australia

The following lists events that happened during 1804 in Australia.

1804
in
Australia

Decades:
  • 1780s
  • 1790s
  • 1800s
  • 1810s
  • 1820s
See also:

Incumbents

Governors

Governors of the Australian colonies:

Events

  • 4 March – The Castle Hill convict rebellion, also known as the Battle of Vinegar Hill, takes place: 200 convicts, mostly Irish, rebel. Fifty-one convicts are punished, and nine hanged.[1]
  • 3 May – An Aboriginal food hunting party is attacked by settlers and soldiers at Risdon Cove. Eyewitness estimates of the death toll from the massacre vary from three or four to fifty.[2]
  • 16 September – A government-owned brewery is opened at Parramatta as a means of controlling the consumption of spirits.[3]
  • 4 November – In a letter to Sir Joseph Banks, Matthew Flinders recommends that the newly discovered country, New Holland, be renamed "Australia" or "Terra Australis" (from the Latin "australis" meaning "of the south").[4]

Exploration and settlement

Births

Deaths

References

  1. Whitaker, Anne-Maree: Castle Hill convict rebellion 1804, Dictionary of Sydney.
  2. Darby, Andrew: Debate exposes 200-year-old massacre, The Age, 4 May 2004.
  3. Late in the eighteenth century, Australian Beers.
  4. Flinders' letter to Sir Joseph Banks 1804, National Library of Australia, 4 November 1804.
  5. Newman, Terry: Bowen Refuses to Bow Out Archived 5 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Parliamentary History Project (Parliament of Tasmania), December 2003.
  6. Settlement at Coal Harbour and Hunter’s River to be named Newcastle, Limits of Settlement and Governorship, &c., University of Newcastle, 24 September 1804.
  7. 1803–1850s, British outpost, Tasmanian Year Book 2005, Australian Bureau of Statistics, 21 November 2006.
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