During the 1850s and 1860s, Chinese immigrants played a major role in the development of the fishing industries in Australia. Prior to their involvement, the industry was hampered by the problems posed by the transportation of fish to market. It was common for whole catches of fish to putrefy before they could reach their destination. The influx of Chinese gold miners, who relied on fish as a dietary staple, increased the demand that prompted the creation of many Chinese fish-curing establishments.
Chinese fish curers in colonial Australia fished but also purchased large quantities of fish, creating a new and reliable market for European fishermen. Fish-curing businesses supplied their compatriots on the goldfields with fresh and cured fish. These establishments, which made sums of money far greater than any European fishing operation, provided hundreds of jobs for both European and Chinese Australians in the fishing industry.
Very few pieces of documentary evidence, along with archaeological records from one colonial-period Chinese fish-curing camp in Victoria, remain. They reveal a fascinating story of how Chinese fish curers successfully dominated Australia's fishing industry; how they lived, worked, organised themselves, participated in colonial society, and the reasons why they suddenly disappeared.
Alister Bowen worked for many years as a tradesman and in the earth moving industry before completing an Honours degree in archaeology in 1999 at the Australian National University and a PhD in Archaeology in 2007 at La Trobe University. He has a long held interest in Australian prehistory and history and has worked on a wide range of archaeological projects throughout the ACT, NSW and Victoria. His research interests include historical and pre-historical Australia, archaeological heritage management, archaeological procedures, site conservation, and the archaeology of culture contact.
Õ¬Äе¼º½ the series
Conversions
Acknowledgements
2. History of commercial fishing in Australia
3. The Chinese in China and Victoria
4. The Chinese in Victoria’s fishing industry
5. Excavation at Chinaman’s Point
6. Artefact analysis
7. Occupation dates and site interpretation
'Dixon’s gracious and subtle curation hosts an array of other critics and his arguments are threaded with luminous and illuminating references to Miller’s work. From the earliest pages, Miller and his work are central, as well as the voices of other critics, whose work Dixon hosts within his own.'
Felicity Plunkett Southerly
'Bowen’s successful integration of historical sources and archaeological materials was best embodied in the conclusion where he crafted a hypothetical experience of a 19th-century visitor to Chinamen’s Point.'
Benjamin Baker Post-Medieval Archaeology
'Archaeology of the Chinese Fishing Industry in Colonial Victoria is a well-considered, methodical, and eye-opening piece of research. This highly readable, well-illustrated publication provides a fascinating insight into a niche colonial Chinese industry. The cross-disciplinary approach and the various themes explored provide a broad perspective on the topic, and point to a number of avenues for further research into previously under-examined aspects of colonial Chinese participation in Australian economic activities and industries besides gold mining.'
Amy Chan Historic Environment
'This work was originally a PhD thesis and is a fine example of the need for
more monographs in all disciplines, particularly Australian history. Reading
Archaeology can only benefit historians. Archaeologists model evidence
interpretation in markedly creative and distinctive ways, their conclusions are
careful and measured and they must elaborate their theoretical base clearly ... a must for all historians of the late nineteenth century.'
Paula Jane Byrne Journal of Australian Colonial History
'This highly readable, well-illustrated monograph provides access to the knowledge gained from a very good PhD project ... and highlights the significant role a small specialised sector of the nineteenth century Chinese migrants (the fish curers) played in the development of the Victorian fishing industry.'
Neville A. Ritchie Australian Archaeology
'This work is important as it provides the first investigation of the
Chinese fishing industry in Australia. Future historical archaeologists
can build on Bowen's work in other countries where the Chinese engaged
in the fishing during the nineteenth century.'
Linda Bentz Archaeology in Oceania
‘Bowen's study reveals the critical importance of the Chinese fishing industry to the Victorian fishing industry, and demonstrates that colonial social and economic organisation and cross-cultural interaction is much more complex than is often assumed ... his monograph is essential reading for other scholars of Chinese Australian history.’
Barry McGowan Australian Historical Studies
Size: 297 × 210 × 9 mm
192 pages
146 b&w illustrations and 33 b&w tables
Copyright: © 2012
ISBN: 9781920899813
Publication: 28 Nov 2012
Series: Studies in Australasian Historical Archaeology 3