EMANCIPIST


Meaning of EMANCIPIST in English

any of the former convicts (and their supporters) in Australia in the late 18th and the first half of the 19th centuries who were struggling for full civil rights. Technically, the term applied only to pardoned convicts; it was generally used as well, however, for expireesconvicts whose full terms had been served. Before 1810, Emancipists were given land grants (from which only a few prospered), and some rose to prominence in business and the professions. They were excluded, however, from the political and social life of the New South Wales colony, which was dominated by free settlers and British officials. During the governorship of Lachlan Macquarie (181021), attempts were made to alter this situation. Macquarie sought to introduce prominent Emancipists into the social life of the colony and to allow Emancipist attorneys to practice before the Supreme Court. He also appointed four Emancipists to the magistracy. Macquarie's efforts had the effect of stiffening opposition to Emancipist ambitions, and in the aftermath British imperial policy tended to support the free-settler faction (see Exclusive) in their determination to deny the Emancipists full citizenship. In the 1820s and 1830s the Emancipists joined lesser free settlers in supporting a faction of prominent liberals who sought a broadly based representative government for the colony (see Australian Patriotic Association). This was achieved in 1842 without restrictions against Emancipist participation.

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