Everything about South Australia Act 1834 totally explained
The
South Australia Colonisation Act 1834 is the
short title of an
Act of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom with the
long title » An Act to empower His Majesty to erect South Australia into a British Province or Provinces and to provide for the Colonisation and Government thereof
and citation
4 & 5 Will. IV c. 95.
It provided for the settlement of a province or multiple provinces on the lands between 132 degrees east and 141 degrees of east longitude, and between the
Southern Ocean, and 26 degrees south latitude, including the islands adjacent to the coastline. It was put into effect on
15 August 1834.
The
Act largely reflected the views of
Edward Gibbon Wakefield, who saw control of land sales as a way to finance the development of a colony and encourage the emergence of a
class structure similar to that of
England.
Overview
The
Act recognized that these lands were inhabitable, and made provision for colonization, government, and the funding of the new settlement on these lands. The
Act states that the land specified by the
Act is 'waste' and 'uninhabited' (this statement was subsequently modified by the
Letters Patent establishing the Province of South Australia in 1836). The
Act specifically provided for a limited independence of Government, whereby all laws made by the government in
South Australia were to be presented to the
King in Council in the
United Kingdom. The Act stated that would be allotted to the colony and to be convict-free. The plan for the colony to be the ideal embodiment of the best qualities of British society, that is, no religious discrmination or unemployment.
The
Act allowed for three or more appointed commissioners, called
The Colonization Commissioners for South Australia, to oversee the sale and leasing of land in South Australia to
British subjects. The province and its capital were named prior to settlement. The "Act" further specified that it was to be self-sufficient; £20,000 surety had to be created and £35,000 worth of land had to be sold in the new colony before any settlement was permitted. These conditions were fulfilled by the close of 1835. The
Act specifies the minimum price of land at twelve
shillings
sterling per English
acre, and for the selling price of land to be an equal price per acre, irrespective of the quality of the land. The money raised by the sale and leasing of land constituted what was called an
Emigration Fund which was to be applied to the cost conveying further immigrants from
Great Britain and
Ireland.
These commissioners were empowered by the
Act in a number of areas. They were able to appoint officers, delegate responsibilities, and make payment for the services provided. They were empowered to seek financing for the costs of starting the settlement. One method specifically prescribed in the
Act was for the issuing of
bonds under the
Seal of the commissioners in two separate and distinct areas. Firstly, they were able to issue what was named
South Australia public lands securities up to a sum of fifty thousand
pounds. This financing was to pay for the cost of transporting immigrants, until the time when the funds from land sales was sufficient to cover the cost of transportation. Secondly, they were able to issue what was named
South Australian Colonial Revenue Securities, up to a sum of two hundred thousand pounds. This funding was a public debt on the colonial governance, which was to provide money for the operation of the settlement. It was to be repaid by the rates and taxes imposed on the colonists. The commissioners were required to submit to Parliament once a year a full and detailed report of the proceedings in South Australia.
The
Act authorized the appointment of trustees, who would oversee a guarantee against the expense of settling South Australia, purchased out of the funds raised as
South Australian Colonial Revenue Securities. This guarantee could be either
Exchequer bills or other
government securities in England. The amount was specified as twenty thousand pounds.
The
Act specified that those immigrating to South Australia, under the
Emigration Fund, should be a married couple under the age of thirty, and that they both, along with any children they had, must immigrate to South Australia. The
Act also specifically forbade the transportation of
convicts to South Australia.
The
Act provided for the establishment of local government, specifying that the local population should exceed fifty thousand.
The
Act allowed for the liquidation of public land, if at the end of a ten year period, the population of the province or provinces hadn't reached twenty thousand
"natural born Subjects of His Majesty". This was to also repay any remaining debts of the
South Australian Public Lands Securities.
The
Act finally placed a proviso on any establishment of settlements in South Australia. The
Act specifically forbade the commencement of settlements until twenty thousand pounds had been raised and invested in the government securities or Exchequer bills. In addition no settlement could proceed until public lands to the value of thirty-five thousand pounds had been sold.
This
Act was repealed by the
South Australia Act 1842Further Information
Get more info on 'South Australia Act 1834'.
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