A thorough and carefully researched history of the gold rushes in New
Zealand – and it establishes a benchmark for future work on the history of
the gold rushes.
It's based on sound scholarship and aimed at the wide and growing general
readership of those keen to know more about, and to weigh up, the history of New
Zealand. The style is clear, clean and lively. The scope is the social history
of the goldfields of colonial New Zealand, from the 1850s to the 1870s.
The book opens with a survey of worldwide rushes in the late eighteenth and
the first half of the nineteenth centuries, when for the first time in history a
great wheeling movement of gold diggers began to revolve from continent to
continent.
The main body of the book looks at all the rushes, large and small, that took
place in the colony: Coromandel, Golden Bay, Otago, Marlborough, the West Coast
and Thames. The early chapters of the main body survey rushes chronologically;
the later chapters look at rushes thematically.
Beautifully illustrated with sketches and watercolours of the times –
black and white – this is both a wonderful read and a beautiful
gift book.
Author Biography
Stevan Eldred-Grigg won the $35,000 Copyright Licensing Limited scholarship to
write this book. He is a novelist, short story writer, essayist and historian.
His first novel, Oracles and Miracles, was published in New Zealand in 1987. He
has written eight other novels. His histories include A Southern Gentry, A New
History of Canterbury, Pleasures of the Flesh, Working People, The Rich and Xin
Xilan de Wenxue Lucheng. He has three grown sons.