This article examines the political and economic circumstances surrounding the introduction of international telegraphy to Australia in 1872, and analyses the local and international factors that helped shape institutional arrangements for the provision of this service. Its particular, it focuses on the tension between private and public interests in the provision of communication infrastructure, and related issues of public policy, competition (or lack thereof) and pricing.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
‘Adelaide and Port Darwin Telegraph. Copy of Agreement … 1971’1971, South Australia, Parliamentary Papers 1871, vol. 2, no. 26.
2.
BlaineyGeoffrey1968, The Tyranny of Distance, Macmillan, Melbourne.
3.
ButlinN.G.1964, Investment in Australian Economic Development 1861–1900, Cambridge University Press, Melbourne.
4.
HarcourtEdgar1987, Taming the Tyrant: The First One Hundred Years of Australia's International Communication Services, Allen & Unwin, Sydney.
5.
Letter from Charles Todd to the Treasurer, 18 April 1870 in Appendix I to ‘Intercolonial Conference, 1870’, South Australia, Parliamentary Papers 1870–71, vol. 2, no. 63.
6.
LivingstonK.T.1996, The Wired Nation Continent: The Communication Revolution and Federating Australia, Oxford University Press, Melbourne.
7.
MoyalAnn1984, Clear Across Australia: A History of Telecommunication, Thomas Nelson, Melbourne.
8.
PurdyWilliam1875, Mail Communications with Australia Reviewed from 1852 to 1874, Sampson, Low, Marston, Low and Searle, London.
9.
‘Report on Anglo-Australian Telegraph Schemes’1870, South Australia, Parliamentary Papers 1869–70, vol. 3, no. 118.
10.
‘Report on the Post Office, Telegraph, and Observatory Departments of South Australia’1884, South Australia, Parliamentary Papers 1884, vol. 4.
11.
‘Report from the Select Committee on Telegraphic Communication’1873, New South Wales, V&P 1872–73, vol. 2.
12.
WinseckDwayne R.PikeRobert M.2007, Communication and Empire: Media, Markets, and Globalization, 1860–1930, Duke University Press, Durham, NC.