Brief description
The Richard Daintree collection consists of 10 glass plate positives in a wooden travel case made in the 1870s.Full description
The glass plate positives are copies of glass plate negatives, produced through wet plate photography. The photographs were taken by Richard Daintree in north Queensland in the 1860s of gold miners at home and at work; a bullock team and dray; and a large group of Aboriginal or Islander people at a mission station. Richard Daintree (1832-78) was born in Cambridgeshire and joined the gold rush to Victoria in 1852. Unsuccessful as a prospector, he became a geological surveyor and a skilled photographer. In the 1860s he was one of the earliest European settlers in north Queensland. He conducted geological surveys and discovered gold that lead to the first gold rushes in north Queensland.Notes
http://www.nma.gov.au/collections/richard_daintrees_glass_plates/Significance
As a photographer, he made the only known images of these first remote gold fields in the north. They were used internationally by the colony to promote immigration and investment.User Contributed Tags
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Identifiers
- Local : nma-collection-16
- URI : www.nma.gov.au/collections-search/results?search=adv&ref=coll&collname=Richard+Daintree+Collection
