Towards the end of 1895 Davis sent to
The Bulletin a sketch
Starting The Selection based on his father's experience. The sketch was published on 14 December 1895. Encouraged by
J. F. Archibald, the editor and publisher of
The Bulletin, Davis continued writing the series of sketches. The stories were originally written about different families but accepting a suggestion by
A. G. Stephens, a writer at
The Bulletin, the work was reconstructed as the experiences of the Rudd family. In Australian history, a
selection was a "free selection before survey" of
crown land under legislation introduced in the 1860s, similar to the United States
Homestead Act. Selectors often came into conflict with
squatters, who already occupied the land and often managed to circumvent the law.
The Bulletin published the illustrated collection comprising 26 stories in 1899 as
On Our Selection. Within four years 20,000 copies had been printed. It afterwards appeared in numerous cheap editions and by 1940 the number of copies sold had reached 250,000. ==Contents==