John Hubert Plunkett in New South Wales, 1832-1869
Abstract
Prior to 1965 when I began research on a topic dealing
with Australian Catholic history in the 19th century X had heard
only vaguely of John Hubert Plunkett. I knew that he had been
a lawyer in the service of the Crown, that a street in Sydney
had been named after him and, more recently, one in the suburb
of Chifley in the A.C.T. The period of his service in the
Colony of New South Wales threw him into contact, and perhaps
contrast, with others whose names have been left to posterity
so that they are remembered whilst he has been well-nigh forgotten.
Wentworth, Bourke, Forbes, Gipps, Parkes and even
Deniehy need no testimonial today. Their times, their lives,
their motives and their utterances have been studied and written
about at length. It is not possible to pick up a book on
Australian history of their period that does not give them
recognition. Yet when A.C.V. Melbourne wrote his lasting work
on constitutional development up to 1856 he did not find room
in his index for a reference to John Hubert Plunkett. John West,
in an editorial in the Herald a century ago, wrote that no name
would shine brighter than Plunkett's in the pages of Australian
history i he was mistaken.
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