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OverviewChequered Lives is the fascinating story of a Quaker family from England who camped on the beach in 1837 before the city of Adelaide was created, but rose to owning a 3000-acre estate in the Adelaide Hills. Barton Hack built his first house where the Adelaide Railway station now stands, became a merchant who owned ships, a whaling station and the first vineyard in the Province, and was chairman of the first Chamber of Commerce in Australia. His younger brother Stephen became a grazier and explorer. After they lost everything in the crash of 1841-1843, their lives took a very different turn. When Barton's great-great-granddaughter, journalist Iola Mathews, opened a trunk full of their letters, diaries and memoirs, she knew she had to write the family's story. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Iola Mathews , Chris DurrantPublisher: Wakefield Press Imprint: Wakefield Press Edition: 2nd edition Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.380kg ISBN: 9781743057070ISBN 10: 1743057075 Pages: 322 Publication Date: 01 August 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThis work is an important, readable and informative addition to the growing library of early South Australiana. --Peter Brinkworth, the Pioneer , Pioneers Association of South Australia As this detailed and gripping account shows, there were no guarantees in the rough and tumble of colonial life, and the ambitious Hack brothers encountered success and failure, joy, tragedy, and family division. 'Chequered Lives' is a great story, fascinating and moving and very well told. --Brian Matthews, Honorary Professor of English at Flinders University and award-winning biographer and columnist Author InformationIola Mathews OAM (nee Hack) is the great-great-granddaughter of John Barton Hack. She has a degree in history from Melbourne University and was a journalist with the Age newspaper for many years and the author of How to Use the Media in Australia (Penguin, 1991). She later worked at the Australian Council for Trade Unions as an industrial officer and advocate. More recently she wrote a memoir, My Mother, My Writing and Me (Michelle Anderson Publishing, 2009) and established writers' studios in the National Trust property Glenfern in East St Kilda. She lives in Melbourne with her husband Dr Race Mathews. Dr Chris Durrant is an astrophysicist with a keen interest in the history of South Australia. He was born in England and worked at Cambridge University and in Freiberg, Germany, before coming to Australia in 1983. He is a former head of the School of Mathematics and Statistics at Sydney University and an author of several books on astrophysics. Since retirement he has pursued his interest in history and lives in Adelaide with his wife Kerry. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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