This paper examines the contestations surrounding the life-sized statue of Robert Towns in Townsville, north Queensland. Unlike many of the cases catalogued by Contested Histories, this statue was erected in recent history–in 2004–with funds from the local council, in spite of instant controversy. Towns was a merchant entrepreneur and ‘blackbirder’, whose ship ‘Don Juan’ brought one of the earliest shiploads of South Sea Islanders from present-day Vanuatu to labour on his Queensland properties in 1863.
To see the full case study click here.
Active Learning for History and Social Studies Lessons
The book “Active Learning for History and Social Studies Lessons” […]
Helsingor declaration
Finding the roots of your own past Making students familiar with migration history
The AVATAR method: historical empathy through imagination
“The textbook is man-made’. Using history textbooks for active learning, critical thinking and citizenship-building’