Not titled [training exercise: Victorian mounted riflemen]

Place Oceania: Australia, Victoria
Accession Number ART94352
Collection type Art
Measurement sheet: 27.4 x 37.4 cm (irreg.); image: 26 x 35.4 cm
Object type Work on paper
Physical description watercolour on paper
Maker Penry, J.
Place made Australia: Victoria
Date made c.1893
Conflict Australian Colonial Forces, 1854-1900
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain

Public Domain Mark This item is in the Public Domain

Description

A group of Victorian colonial mounted riflemen in a training exercise. They have demounted, their horses are to one side, and they are firing over a small hill. The Victorian mounted rifles went on to serve in the Boer War sever years later. One of a group of five works by J. Penry showing military training exercises held in Victoria in 1893.

In 1870, volunteer units raised from local residents replaced the British Army troops in the colony of Victoria. These troops were either militia, who were part-paid by the government, or volunteer units who were privately funded (for example the Victorian artillery). These units would undertake annual training, often on a private estate over a number of days and in front of a large crowd of civilian spectators.

This scene may take place at the annual Easter Encampment, which in 1893 was held at Sunbury for Victorian artillery volunteers and other units in early April, or it may take place the Box Hill camp for metropolitan units, which was also held during Eater in 1893. The annual Easter military camps were extremely popular with the Victorian public during the late nineteenth century, and were held at various locations around Melbourne (often at Queenscliff, Portsea, Werribee or Sunbury).