
Contents
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Two Victorias? Two Victorias?
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Representing Queen Victoria and Prince Alfred Representing Queen Victoria and Prince Alfred
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Representing the colony Representing the colony
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Masculine culture Masculine culture
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Respectable society Respectable society
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The diaries of Curtis Candler and Frederick Standish The diaries of Curtis Candler and Frederick Standish
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Masculine and naval bonds Masculine and naval bonds
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Epilogue Epilogue
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Three Two Victorias? Prince Alfred, Queen Victoria and Melbourne, 1867–68
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Published:August 2016
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Abstract
In 1867–8 the first British royal tour to Australia drew attention to two Victorias–the Queen and the colony. The visit by Queen Victoria’s second son, Prince Alfred, gave colonists a perfect opportunity to demonstrate how their society was worthy of its namesake. This chapter demonstrates how throughout his five-week visit, public festivities frequently reminded Prince Alfred of the link between the two Victorias. But the tour also drew attention to tensions within local society, between those who emphasised the colony’s civilised, genteel character and those who revelled in its opportunities to pursue drinking, gambling and whoring. Alfred represented many of the most attractive qualities associated with the colony–youth, modernity, expertise–as well as some more dubious ones. This chapter demonstrates that, for all the loyalty expressed to the Queen and the Prince in Victoria, the visit was ultimately most important in advancing the colony’s own reputation.
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