| Question | Answer |
| “The Desire that we should be one people, and remain | one people, without mixture of other races” ALFRED DEAKIN (PRIMARY) |
| “The foundation stone of all | social reform is the education and enfranchisement of women”
ROSE SCOTT (PRIMARY) |
| White women and men shared:
“The conviction that | non-white people at present lacked appropriate qualities for citizenship” PATRICIA GRIMSHAW (SECONDARY) |
| “We want to train our | children to be… citizens”
WALTER MURDOCH (Academic from Melbourne University – 1908) (PRIMARY) |
| âIn every enlightened community the establishment of old-age pensions is regarded as | an ideal whose attainment should be earnestly soughtâ ATTORNEY GENERAL GROOME (PRIMARY) |
| “I am human and | nothing human is beyond my sphere”
VIDA GOLDSTEIN (PRIMARY) |
| “By 1914 the Labor party had | held office in every state.” STUART MACINTYRE (SECONDARY) |
| Australia, a place of redemption from “the Past with its | crashing empires, its falling thrones, its dotard races” WILLIAM LANE (PRIMARY) |
| “Arbitration was a heroic effort to | engineer a system of social and economic fairness” PAUL KELLY (SECONDARY) |
| “The more young Australians we | have the wealthier the country must be” ANDREW FISHER (PRIMARY) |
| Conciliation and Arbitration Act | 1904 |
| Customs Tariff Act | 1902 |
| ‘New Protection’ | 1906 |
| Invalid and Old Age Pension Act | 1908 |
| Workmen’s Compensation Act | 1912 |
| The Commonwealth Franchise Act | 1902 |
| Maternity Allowance Act | 1912 |
| Immigration Restriction Act | 1901 |
| Pacific Island Labourers Act | 1901 |
| Defence Act Amendment | 1909 |
| Defence Act | 1903 |
| “There is no power in the world like that of women… this most | potent constituency we seek to represent, and for their suffrages we sue” - Louisa Lawson |
| Aboriginals – Section 127 of the Australian Constitution | Stated that Aboriginal people were not to be counted in the census |
| Aboriginals – Section 51 of the Australian Constitution | States must take responsibility for Aboriginal people |
| “The crimson thread of | kinship runs through us all” HENRY PARKES (PRIMARY) |
| âThe typical âAustralianâ is a practical man, rough, and ready in his manners and | quick to decry any appearance of affection in othersâ RUSSEL WARD (SECONDARY) |
| Golden Summer - Arthur Streeton | 1889 |
| Sunlight Sweet Coogee - Arthur Streeton | 1890 |
| Clancy of the Overflow - Banjo Patterson | 1889 |
| The Man from Snowy River - Banjo Patterson | 1890 |
| A Holiday at Mentone - Charles Conder | 1888 |
| My Country - Dorothea Mackellar | 1908 |
| The Pioneer - Frederick McCubbin | 1904 |
| Freedom on the Wallaby - Henry Lawson | 1891 |
| The Drover's Wife - Henry Lawson | 1901 |
| Bailed Up - Tom Roberts | 1895 |
| Shearing the Rams - Tom Roberts | 1890 |
| The Big Picture - Tom Roberts | 1903 |
| Chinese Pest - Melbourne Punch | 1888 |
| A Plain Case - Australian Tit-Bits | 1888 |
| Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU): Formed in | 1888 in WA; 1892 in Tasmania |