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William Lane

 
(1861-1917), born Bristol, England, of Irish-English parentage, worked his passage to America at the age of 16. After a series of casual jobs he turned to the printing trade as a compositor, then journalist, on a Detroit newspaper. His American experience developed his radical interests; his socialist thinking was moulded by the Americans Henry George and Edward Bellamy, and later by his reading of Karl Marx. His strong racist attitudes, especially his implacable hostility towards the Chinese, also date from his American period. Lane returned to England briefly in 1885 with a wife and daughter but in the same year came to Australia to join other members of the family already in Queensland. He became a journalist in Brisbane, where in 1887 he founded a branch of the Bellamy Society and established, with Alfred Walker, the weekly newspaper the Boomerang. He became deeply involved with the 'New Unionism' and with the planning of the Queensland Australian Labour Federation, a federal organisation of unions. In 1890 he became editor of the Brisbane Worker in which he advocated full-scale socialism, supported the maritime strike of 1890 and the shearers' strike of 1891, campaigned for the rights of women in letters under the pseudonym 'Lucinda Sharpe', and persistently mooted the idea of a 'Co-operative Commune' either in Australia or abroad. Disappointed in the prospects for socialism/communism in Australia after the failure of the strikes in 1890-91, he established in 1891, and became chairman of, the New Australia Settlement Association with the object of organising a communist colony in South America which would be the vanguard of world communism. Lane led the New Australia expedition to Paraguay in the Royal Tar in 1893, but when the original settlement broke up in discord he and his followers formed another settlement, Colonia Cosme. He visited England in 1896 on an unsuccessful recruiting trip for the Cosme settlement, returned to Cosme in February 1898 and left permanently in August 1899. After three months as editor of the Sydney Worker he became in 1900 the leader-writer of the New Zealand Herald in Auckland (1900) and its editor in 1913. As 'Tohunga' (Maori for 'prophet') he wrote voluminously on social and political topics, but his stance grew increasingly conservative. After his death he was praised in the NZ press as a great editor and imperialist, but the radical Australian press, apart from some sporadic recriminations about his change to conservatism, contented itself with remembering the intense idealism of his younger years. Lane's first novel, White or Yellow? A Story of the Race War of A.D. 1908, was serialised in the Boomerang in twelve episodes in 1888 under the pseudonym 'Sketcher', but his chief literary work was the novel The Workingman's Paradise (q.v., 1892), written under the pseudonym 'John Miller' to raise funds to help the unionists gaoled for conspiracy in the shearers' strike of 1891. His writings for the New Zealand Herald were published as Selections from the Writing of 'Tohunga' in Auckland in 1917. Lane is the subject of Lloyd Ross's William Lane and the Australian Labor Movement (1937), and he and his philosophies are analysed in Michael Wilding's introduction to the 1980 facsimile of The Workingman's Paradise. He features in Vance Palmer's play about the shearers' strike of 1891, Hail Tomorrow (1947), in Graham Shiel's play 'New Australians Rehearse the Working Man's Paradise' (1983) and in George Hutchinson's 'The Ballad of Billy Lane' (1982); his work for New Australia is comprehensively examined in Gavin Souter's A Peculiar People: The Australians in Paraguay (1968). Hume Nisbet's A Dream of Freedom (1902) deals unfavourably with New Australia.

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William Lane

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William Lane

William Lane (6 September 1861 – 26 August 1917) was a journalist, advocate of Australian labour politics and a utopian.[1]

Contents

Early life

Lane was born in Bristol, England, eldest son of James Lane,from Ireland a Protestant Master Gardener , and his English wife Caroline, née Hall.[1] When Lane was born his father was earning a miserable wage, but later his circumstances improved and he became an employer. The boy was educated at Bristol Grammar School and showed ability, but he was sent early to work as an office boy. Lane's mother died when he was 14 years of age, and at age 16 he migrated to Canada, then to the United States, where he worked first as a printer, then as a reporter for the Detroit Free Press (1881), there meeting his future wife Ann MacGuire. In 1885 they migrated to Brisbane, Australia, where Lane immediately got work as a feature writer for the weekly newspaper Queensland Figaro, then as a columnist for the newspapers Brisbane Courier and Evening Telegraph, using a number of pseudonyms ("Lucinda Sharpe", which some consider to be the work of Annie Lane,William Wilcher and "Sketcher").

A life-long abstainer from alcohol, in 1886 he created an Australia-wide sensation by spending a night in the Brisbane lock-up disguised as a drunk, and subsequently reporting the conditions of the cells as "Henry Harris". Lane's father was a drunk who impoverished the family.[1]

With the growth of the 7-2 labour movement, "Sketcher"'s columns, especially his "Labour Notes" in the Evening Telegraph, increasingly promoted labourist philosophy, and Lane himself attended meetings supporting all manner of popular causes, speaking with his "American twang" against repressive laws and practices and Chinese immigrants.

After becoming the de facto editor of the Courier, Lane departed during November 1887 to found the weekly The Boomerang, "a live newspaper, racy, of the soil", in which pro-worker themes and lurid racism were brought to a fever-pitch by both "Sketcher" and "Lucinda Sharpe". He became a powerful supporter of Emma Miller and Women's suffrage. A strong proponent of Henry George's Single Tax Movement, Lane became increasingly committed to a radically alternative society, and ended his relationship with the Boomerang due to its private ownership.

In May 1890 he began the community-funded Brisbane weekly The Worker, the rhetoric of which became increasingly threatening towards the employers, the government, and the British Empire itself. The defeat of the 1891 Australian shearers' strike convinced Lane that there would be no real social change without a completely new society, and The Worker became increasingly devoted to his New Australia utopian idea.

The Workingman's Paradise, an allegorical novel written in sympathy with the shearers involved in the 1891 Shearer's Strike, was published under his pseudonym John Miller in early 1892. In the novel Lane articulated the belief that anarchism is the noblest social philosophy of all. Through the novel's philosopher and main protagonist he relates his belief that society may have to experience a period of State socialism to achieve the ideal of Communist anarchism. Mary Gilmore, later a celebrated Australian writer, said in one of her letters "the whole book is true and of historical value as Lane transcribed our conversations as well as those of others".

New Australia Colony

Contriving a division among Australian labour activists between the permanently disaffected and those who later formed the Australian Labor Party, Lane refused the Queensland Government's offer of a grant of land on which to create a utopian settlement, and began an Australia-wide campaign for the creation of a new society elsewhere on the globe, peopled by rugged and sober Australian bushmen and their proud wives.

Eventually Paraguay was decided upon, and Lane and his family and several hundred acolytes from New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia departed Mort Bay in Sydney in the ship Royal Tar on 1 July 1893.

New Australia soon had its crisis, brought on by the issues of inter-racial relationships (Lane singled out the Guarani as racially taboo) and alcohol. Lane's dictatorial manner soon alienated many in the community, and by the time the second boat-load of utopians arrived from Adelaide a year later, Lane had left with a core of devotees to form a new colony nearby named 7-2.

Eventually Lane became disillusioned with the process, and returned to Australia in 1899.

Later life

Lane then went with his family to New Zealand. After initial melancholia, he soon refound his old verve as a pseudonymous feature-writer from 1900 for the newspaper New Zealand Herald ("Tohunga"), only this time as ultra-conservative and pro-Empire. He had strong racial antipathy toward East Asians, and during World War I he developed extreme anti-German sentiments. He died on 26 August 1917 in Auckland, New Zealand, having been editor of the Herald from 1913 to 1917, much admired, having lost one son Charles at a cricket match in Cosme in Paraguay, and another Donald on the first day of the ANZAC landings (25 April 1915) on the beaches of Gallipoli.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

 Oxford Companion to Australian Literature. Oxford University Press. © 1994 All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article William Lane Read more

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