Pamela Chauvel’s research while affiliated with The University of Sydney and other places

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Publications (1)


a Map of Maria Island, location of Darlington. b Aerial photograph of the Darlington showing location of key landmarks
“Religious Instructor’s house, Maria Island” (Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts, Tasmanian Archive and Heritage Office SD_ILS: 686141). Bernacchi’s house and front garden ca.1890
Plan of the Twelve Apostles
“Photograph – Twelve Apostles, Maria Island” (Tasmanian Archives Office, E.R. Pretyman Collection NS1013). Photograph taken between 1910 and 1924
“Photograph – View of Darlington from the Cement Works, Maria Island” (Tasmanian Archives Office NS479/1/31). Photograph taken between 1924 and 1934

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Mapping Difference in the “Uniform” Workers’ Cottages of Maria Island, Tasmania
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

December 2020

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1,330 Reads

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2 Citations

International Journal of Historical Archaeology

Pamela Chauvel

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In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, company towns often provided housing for workers within a system of benevolent paternalism. This paper examines a set of workers’ cottages known as “the Twelve Apostles” on Maria Island, Tasmania. The archaeology reveals differences between the standardized, company-built houses, providing evidence that the residents’ responses often varied in ways that were not officially expected or sanctioned by the company. People individualized their houses in ways that reflect their everyday routines and rituals, and demonstrate how they made these houses into homes.

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