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A Chinese shopkeeper on the Atherton Tablelands: Tracing connections between regional Queensland and regional China in Taam Szu Pui's My life and work

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 November 2014

Sophie Loy-Wilson*
Affiliation:
sophie.loy-wilson@sydney.edu.au
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Extract

Chinese-run stores were a vital part of the regional communities that developed throughout Australia in the nineteenth century. Functioning variously as supply stores, post offices, banks, cook-shops, hotels and hiring depots, they helped to maintain links between regional areas and metropolitan centres, connecting local businesses to overseas markets. Chinese immigrants were a dominant part of this retail trade across the country. By 1901, there were 800 people of Chinese descent working in Queensland shops, while the South Australian census listed 400 Chinese shopkeepers for the same year.

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Copyright © The Author(s) 2014 

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References

Endnotes

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80 ‘Kong Sing family tea merchant collection’, Chinese Australian History Museum Acc. 1322567, especially receipts relating to customs (Box 112).

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82 Taam, unpublished manuscript, 37.

83 William Liu, ‘Australia's Chinese connection’, unpublished manuscript, William Liu papers, MS 6294/1.

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91 ‘Through the sugar districts’, The Worker, 5 January 1901.

92 May, Topsawyers, p. 159.

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