Leane Times: One Family's Transformation from Cornish Farmers to Australian Fighters

Front Cover
Broadcast, 2018 - History - 194 pages
Historian Charles Bean described the Leanes as 'the most famous family of soldiers in Australian military history' and they were used as a poster family for recruitment in the First World War. But these Aussie diggers were separated by only one generation from humble Cornish farmers and their families, who sought godliness not glory when they sailed to South Australia in 1852.In 'Leane Times', Wendy Frew goes behind the myth of this famous fighting family to discover a complex story of people who came to Australia in search of prosperity and religious freedom. Lifted out of almost medieval village life in east Cornwall by a great wave of religious non-conformism and mass migration from the old world to the new, the Leanes landed in South Australia at a time when free immigrants were carving out a 'paradise of dissent'. These Cornish immigrants helped influence education, civic life and women's rights in their new country, and eventually transformed themselves into people who called themselves Australian.

About the author (2018)

Wendy Frew is an award-winning journalist who has interviewed captains of industry and the media, pulled back the veil on corrupt development in New South Wales, and taken a look at the seedier side of the art auction market. She has worked in Australia and overseas for a number of media organisations, including Fairfax Media, Reuters and the BBC.Wendy has also long been fascinated by Australian history and most recently channeled that passion into the search for her Cornish ancestry. 'Leane Times' is her first book.

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