I’m a little late with my Australia Day post, owing to the fact that I’ve just returned from Melbourne on a four day holiday. Many thanks to the incredible Annie Seaton for putting this opportunity together and my apologies again for my tardiness.

The Hotel Windsor, known back in 1899 as The Grand Hotel

The Hotel Windsor, known back in 1899 as The Grand Hotel

As it so happens where we stayed in Melbourne, the Hotel Windsor on Spring Street has a tangible link to the history of the country. Built as the city’s premier destination in 1883 as The Grand Hotel, its location opposite Melbourne’s Parliament House was very convenient for late night sittings to determine the final clauses that would become our nation’s constitution.

The magnificent Exhibition Building in Melbourne, site of Australia's federal Parliament for the first decade of the new nation's life

The magnificent Exhibition Building in Melbourne, site of Australia’s federal Parliament for the first decade of the new nation’s life

Until the capital of Canberra was established in 1913 Melbourne’s Exhibition Centre was the location for the first decade and a bit of our combined nation’s history.

Canberra is one of the few ‘created capitals’, that is cities that were especially designed and built to be a national capital, rather than the most prominent trading town earning that honour, such as Paris or London. Other created capitals which come to mind are Washington DC and Brasilia, the new capital of Brazil.

Celebrating the wonder of Australia, its natural beauty, its First Peoples, all the migrants who came afterwards, our can-do spirit and inventiveness is Australia Day, held on the 26th of January to mark the landing of the First Fleet of English convicts to arrive in Port Phillip Bay in 1788. If you’d like a historical romance which looks at Australia’s early history, then I highly recommend Beyond Innocence by fellow Queenslander, Joanna Lloyd.

All present and incorrect. T-shirts saying Australia was established in 1788. It wasn't. It was established in 1901.

All present and incorrect. T-shirts saying Australia was established in 1788. It wasn’t. It was established in 1901.

Yet we’re not without our detractors, just in the past week two major retailers have pulled Australia Day T-shirts for having the temerity to say Australia: Established 1788.

And quite right too – Australia as a nation wasn’t established until January 1 1901 – the first day of the 20th century.

Prior to this date, the continent was divided into six of self-governing British colonies and before that, Terra Australis was occupied by between 500 and 700 Aboriginal nation groups.

Australia as a nation did not exist prior to Federation.

Please do go and visit some other amazing Australian authors and support them with sales of their books:

Don’t forget to call in every day and visit the blogs, leave a comment, enter the raffle copter for the fabulous gift basket.

$100 and 26 e-books (some print) from our generous authors

drawn Australia Day

 

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January 1 Monique McDonnell
January 2 Sara Hantz
January 3 Annie Seaton
January 4 Imogene Nix
January 5 Caitlyn Nicholas 
January 6 Tima Maria Lacoba
January 7 Nicole Flockton
January 8 Wendy L. Curtis
January 10 Susan Horsnell
January 11 Susanne Bellamy
January 12 J’aimee Brooker
January 13 Victoria Purman
January 14 Ann B Harrison
January 15 Cate Ellink

 and

 Demelza Carlton

January 16 Jenny Schwartz
January 17 Donna Gallagher
January 18 Lily Malone
January 19 Tea Cooper
January 20 Fiona McArthur
January 21 Max Henry
January 22 Jennie Jones
January 23 Alison Stuart
January 24 Eve Rabi
January 25 Kendall Talbot
January 26 Annie Seaton-Prize draw

Annie Seaton

http://annieseatonromance.com

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