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1

Blue china: Single female migration to colonial Australia. Carlton South, Vic: Melbourne University Press, 2001.

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2

Margaret, Reynolds. The last bastion: Labor women working towards equality in the parliaments of Australia. Chatswood, Sydney, NSW: Busines & Professional Pub., 1995.

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3

O'Lincoln, Tom. United we stand: Class struggle in colonial Australia. Carlton North, Vic: Red Rag Publications, 2005.

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4

Levi, Margaret. Women in "the working man's paradise": Sole parents, the women's movement, and the social policy bargain in Australia. Canberra, ACT, Australia: Administration, Compliance & Governability Program, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University, 1991.

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5

Cereal for dinner: A memoir of magazines and motherhood. Pymble, N.S.W: HarperCollins, 2009.

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6

M, Creese Thomas, ed. Ladies in the laboratory III: South African, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian women in science : nineteenth and early twentieth centuries : a survey of their contributions. Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press, 2010.

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7

Good talk: The extraordinary lives of ten ordinary Australian women. Fitzroy, Vic: McPhee Gribble, 1985.

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8

Creese, Mary R. S. Ladies in the laboratory III: South African, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian women in science, nineteenth and early twentieth centuries : a survey of their contributions. Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2010.

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9

1959-, Syson Ian, ed. Bobbin up: A novel. 4th ed. Melbourne: Vulgar Press, 1999.

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10

Baldock, C. Vellekoop. Women, Social Welfare and State Policy in Twentieth-Century Australia (Working Papers in Australian Studies). Menzies Centre for Australian Studies, 1992.

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11

Gothard, Jan. Blue China: Single Female Migration to Colonial Australia. Melbourne University Publishing, 2001.

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12

Freedman, Mia. Work Strife Balance. Pan Macmillan Australia Pty, Limited, 2017.

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13

Pol, Caroline van de. Back to Broady. Ventura Press, 2017.

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14

Russell, Lynette. Procuring Passage. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037153.003.0004.

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This chapter discusses the assumption that resource maritime labor was exclusively performed by men. It argues that in southeastern Australia the success and wealth produced by the sealing industry up to 1815 and the subsequent economic stability of European men was wholly dependent on Tasmanian pallawah or indigenous women's skills and expertise. Although there are estimates that there were as many as 200 Newcomer men involved in the industry, each man often had between three and five Aboriginal women working with him. In some years the islands yielded between ten and twenty thousand sealskins. Each hunting episode required the women to club the seal and drag it to the beach, where they would begin the butchering process. The women also developed useful skills in boat handling and other associated aspects of the industry.
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Design, Bourd. Best AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERDS Grandma Ever : This Pretty Journal Design Is for AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERDS Lovers It Helps You to Organize Your Life and Working on Your Goals for Girls Womens Men Kids: Passeword Tracker, Gratitude Journal, to Do List, Flights Inf. Independently Published, 2020.

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