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North Australia

North Australia was (1) the name of a briefly proclaimed but never established British colony and (2) a former part of the Northern Territory of Australia administered as "North Australia".

Colony (1846–1847)
A colony of North Australia was briefly authorised by the British government by letters patent of 17 February 1846 but never established. The colony was to comprise that part of the Colony of New South Wales that is now the Northern Territory of Australia and that is now that part of the state of Queensland lying north of the 26th parallel. The colony was intended as a new penal colony after the end of transportation to the existing Australian colonies. Since 1822, when John Bigge recommended the establishment of a convict settlement at Port Curtis (now the location of Gladstone, Queensland), the idea had been revived several times. As some difficulty was being experienced in finding work for time-expired convicts in Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), it was decided to try the experiment of sending them to a new area and giving them land and a certain amount of government help. Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby and William Ewart Gladstone, successive secretaries of state for the colonies, fathered the project. Charles Augustus FitzRoy, the Governor of New South Wales, was to be the Governor and, in May 1846, Colonel George Barney was appointed to be Lieutenant-Governor and Superintendent. Gladstone selected Barney as a man used to authority and with previous experience in Australia. Barney was dispatched and arrived in Sydney on 15 September 1846 on the William Hyde. He quickly surveyed the coast in a small steamer, decided that Port Curtis was the most suitable place for a settlement and returned to Sydney. However, after a change of government ministries in Britain, Henry Grey, 3rd Earl Grey succeeded Gladstone, and he promptly vetoed the whole project and the letters patent authorising the colony were revoked in December 1846. There was much discomfort from the extreme summer heat. News of the revocation of the colony reached Barney and the party returned to Sydney. The colony's intended role as a convict penal settlement attracted much criticism in the New South Wales Legislative Council. ==Territory (1927–1931)==
Territory (1927–1931)
North Australia was a short-lived administrative area of the Northern Territory of Australia. George Pearce, Minister for Home and Territories in the federal government in the 1920s, thought that the Northern Territory of Australia was too large, sparsely populated and disparate to be adequately administered as a whole. So, on 1 February 1927, under the Northern Australia Act 1926 (Cth), administration the Northern Territory was split into two administrative areas, North Australia and Central Australia, respectively above and below latitude 20° S. However, on 12 June 1931, administration of the Northern Territory reverted to a single area and administration. ==See also==
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