Alfred Black
Appearance
Personal information | |
---|---|
Died | 1859 |
Domestic team information | |
Years | Team |
1858 | Victoria |
Source: Cricinfo, 2 May 2015 |
Alfred Angel Black (died 1859) was an Australian cricketer. He played two first-class cricket matches for Victoria in 1858.[1][2] He was "Minister of War" of the insurgents in the Eureka Stockade.[3][4][5][6]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- "Fatal Mining Accident at Italian Gully", The Star, Ballarat, 20 June 1859, p 3
- Mark McKenna. The Captive Republic: A History of Republicanism in Australia 1788-1996. Cambridge University Press. 1996. p 100.
- Audrey Oldfield. The Great Republic of the Southern Seas: Republicans in Nineteenth-century Australia. Hale & Iremonger. 1999. Pages 188 to 190. [1]
- Noel McLachlan. Waiting for the Revolution: A History of Australian Nationalism. Penguin Books. 1989. p 90. [2]
- Forbes et al. Battles of the Nineteenth Century. Cassell and Company. 1892. Volume 2. p 43.
- (2008) 10 Journal of Australian Colonial History 107
- Norman Bartlett. The Gold-seekers. Jarrolds. 1965. pp 187, 188 & 209. [3]
- Nathan Frederick Spielvogel. The Affair at Eureka: The Story of '54. Second Edition. J Fraser. 1928. p 29.
- "The Affair at Eureka" (1912) 10 The Lone Hand 318
- Eureka Centenary Supplement. Historical Studies: Australia and New Zealand. December 1954. p 47.
- Roy Bridges, "The Story of a Hundred Years: Chapter 71: Eureka", The Herald, Melbourne, 9 November 1934, p 22
- "Eureka: Symbol of Man's Fighting Spirit", The Herald, Melbourne, 23 November 1946, p 13
- "The Eureka Stockade", The Ballarat Star, 18 January 1870, p 2
- "The Eureka Stockade", Evening News, Sydney, 3 December 1904, p 7
- "Gold-Seekers of the Fifties: The Eve of Eureka", The Argus, Melbourne, 10 June 1899, p 4
- H R Nicholls, "Reminiscenses of the Eureka Stockade" (1889) 2 The Centennial Magazine 746 to 748
- Craig Stockings and John Connor. Before the Anzac Dawn. NewSouth. 2013. PT72.
- ^ "Alfred Black". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 2 May 2015.
- ^ "Alfred Black". Cricket Archive. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
- ^ Carolyn Webb, "Sporting history unearths stories of Australia's forgotten cricketers", The Age, 24 December 2013.
- ^ "Country News: Ballarat and District", The Argus, Melbourne, 13 March 1905, p 6
- ^ William Bramwell Withers, The History of Ballarat: From the First Pastoral Settlement to the Present Time, 1887, pp 79, 101, 102, 106, 110 and 126.
- ^ John Molony, Eureka, Melbourne University Press, 2001, pp 129, 146, 150, 170, 217 & 220