''The People's Advocate and New South Wales Vindicator
was a newspaper that advocated on issues of importance for the working classes of New South Wales. It played a prominent part of the political scene in Sydney from 1848 until 1856. The appearance of the People’s Advocate'' in 1848 marked a distinct change in the nature, language and attitude of Australian radical print. It was the first colonial paper to demand that the workers, as producers of all wealth, receive a fairer share of labour's produce, which its banner quote from
Alphonse de Lamartine proclaimed every week: "
Political economy has hitherto occupied itself about the production of wealth. It must now occupy itself about the
distribution of wealth; so that the labourer may no longer be left without his fair share of the produce." The ''People's Advocate
was established by Edward John Hawksley and the Sydney printer Francis Cunninghame. Cunninghame had previously been the editor of the Sydney Citizen'' but Hawksley, an English Catholic radical, wrote the majority of the paper's editorial content. The first issue was published in December 1848. One month earlier, Edward Hawksley, in collaboration with
Henry Parkes, Richard Hipkiss, J K Heydon, Francis Cunninghame,
Angus Mackay, Benjamin Sutherland and other radicals, formed the Constitutional Association to press for democratic government. David Kemp in his book,
Land of Dreams: How Australia Won Its Freedom, notes that the group initially formed to promote
Robert Lowe as a "people's candidate" in the Legislative Council elections of that year. Inspired by
Chartist ideas, ''The People's Advocate'' became the unofficial mouthpiece for the Constitutional Association. It supported radical voices like
Daniel Deniehy,
Charles Harpur,
Adelaide Ironside,
Robert Lowe and
John Dunmore Lang. It also acted as a foil to the
squatting and mercantile focus of
The Sydney Morning Herald. Terry Irving called ''The People's Advocate'' "the most famous radical paper of the period". In the tumultuous period between the unrest of 1848 and the establishment of New South Wales' representative government in 1856, it was E.J. Hawksley and ''The People's Advocate
, more than any other paper, that pushed the case for democratic reforms. Don Baker writes that Lang understood the weight that The People's Advocate'''s reputation carried among the radical constituency. So despite his anti-Catholic rhetoric, it was within its pages that Lang looked to rehabilitate his reputation and to advance his case for election to the
NSW Legislative Council. According to Baker, "Hawksley was so completely taken in that his careful, judicious leading article acquitted Lang of all charges against him." They published at least one literary work under the imprint Hawksley and Cunninghame:
Raymond, Lord of Milan, a Tragedy of the 13th Century by
Edward Reeve (1851), a play in verse, which was well received by several critics. The play was staged nearly a century later by
May Hollinworth at Sydney's
Metropolitan Theatre. The partnership was dissolved in January 1852, although Cunninghame continued to publish the paper from his printery in King Street. == Hawksley and Cunninghame ==