Australian High Commissioner Thomas White visiting NEW AUSTRALIA
Date1951
Object numberANMS1453[018]
NamePhotograph
Mediumphotographic print on paper
DimensionsOverall: 101 × 152 mm
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineAustralian National Maritime Museum Collection
DescriptionA black and white image of Australian High Commissioner Thomas White walking with a group of migrant children aboard the NEW AUSTRALIA while at Southhampton preparing to depart to Australia.
An attached paper slip on the back of the photograph reads ‘Australian High Commissioner visit immigrant ship. Mr. T.W. White. The new Australian High Commissioner in London, visited the all-migrant liner NEW AUSTRALIA just starting her second year of service. There were about 1600 immigrants aboard bound for Australia. Photo Shows: Mr. T.W. White, Australian High Commissioner, makes friend with some of 568 children aboard the NEW AUSTRALIA at Southampton before she sails for Australia.’HistorySince the first Fleet dropped anchor in 1788, more than 10 million people have moved from across the world to start a new life in Australia, arriving in waves, encouraged by the 1850s gold rushes or to escape adverse conditions at home in the social upheavals of C19th Britain's industrial revolution, the turmoil of revolution, two world wars, the aftermath of the Vietnam war in the 1970s and more recent conflicts.
With the catchphrase 'populate or perish' ringing through the community, Australia stepped up its immigration in the years after WWII, offering assisted passage to British migrants, encouraging migration from European countries, and finally in the 1970s repealing the restrictive white Australia policy framed after federation in 1901. More than seven million new settlers have now crossed Australia's shores since 1945 and it's estimated that one in four of Australia's population was born overseas.SignificanceThis image is one of a series of photographs taken by Fairfax photographers that provides a unique window into how immigrants were viewed and immigration policy articulated in the popular press in Australia. They represent something of the personal face to Australia's massive post-war immigration push and show immigrants from many European nations, USA and China.
Samuel J Hood Studio
10 April 1952
Samuel J Hood Studio
26 January 1929