They were accepted as immigrant-settlers.
Both the kangaroo and the dingo were in Australia in the 1800s. The kangaroo is native to Australia, and dingoes were brought over by the Aborigines, although it is not certain when.
Not all introduced animals to Australia came in the 1800s, but those that did arrive in the nineteenth century include:camelsfoxesrabbitsdeercane toadswater buffaloEuropean carp
they were treated like all the other European immigrants that came to America. (but mostly treated unfairly)
French, Spanish, Africans, Germans, And Irish
The immigrants were treated horribly. They were made slaves most of the time. Another thing that they had happen to them was that they had to leave relatives, children etc. behind. It wasn't a very nice life...
On the whole German migrants to the U.S. were welcomed and treated with respect. They had a reputation for for being skilled and hard working.
The Irish was the largest immigrant group in the 1800s and they were generally treated poorly. Later immigrant groups were treated the same way as the Irish immigrants of the early 1800s.
You preyed
Initially, the Germans were treated the same way as any other cultural group. When they settled in South Australia in the 1840s, they contributed to the development of communities with their vast farming and agricultural expertise. They were left in peace to worship in their Lutheran churches in freedom (religious persecution is why most of them left Germany in the 1800s), and not perceived with any suspicion. However, with the advent of World War I, there was a great deal of paranoia that people's German neighbours could be spies for Germany, even if their family had been in Australia for generations. Some Germans were forced to close their businesses, German leaders in the community were stripped of their positions, and many were taken to Australian internment camps where, though they were treated well enough, they were required to remain for the duration of the war. Some Germans anglicised their surnames so they would not be interned. This happened again in WWII.
It was the Kanakas who were brought in from South Pacific islands to be used as slave labour for Queensland cane growers in the late 1800s. The Germans had nothing to do with this practice, being largely concentrated in southern Australia.
Both the kangaroo and the dingo were in Australia in the 1800s. The kangaroo is native to Australia, and dingoes were brought over by the Aborigines, although it is not certain when.
Many Germans felt they had been treated unfairly in the Treaty of Versailles
Australia has never had an official language, then or now. However, in the 1800s, the most commonly spoken language in Australia was the same as it is now - English.
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by the 1800s, Europe had conquered most of the Americas and Australia by 1800.
Australians trated Germans really really horribly and badly, because australian thought that germans were as bad as Hitler but they were'nt , they just wanted to have a nice new beginning from their horrible life back then.
Not all introduced animals to Australia came in the 1800s, but those that did arrive in the nineteenth century include:camelsfoxesrabbitsdeercane toadswater buffaloEuropean carp