Places | |
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Accession Number | ART19873 |
Collection type | Art |
Measurement | sheet: 28 x 40.6 cm; image: 23.2 x 33.7 cm |
Object type | |
Physical description | engraving on paper |
Maker |
after Walter Paget Illustrated London News |
Date made | 1885 |
Conflict |
Sudan, 1885 |
Copyright |
Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain
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Last sketches from the Sudan: Lord Wolseley bidding farewell to the Australian Infantry
Depicts Lord Wolseley and mounted British infantry farewelling the New South Wales contingent as they prepare to return to Australia following their contribution to fighting the War in Sudan (1885). Between March- June 1885, the NSW Contingent served in Sudan, Africa. The contingent, an infantry battalion of 522 men and 24 officers and an artillery battery of 212 men, was ready to sail on 3 March 1885. It left Sydney amid much public fanfare, generated in part by the holiday declared to farewell the troops; the send-off was described as the most festive occasion in the colony's history. The NSW contingent anchored at Suakin, Sudan's Red Sea port, on 29 March 1885 and were attached to a brigade composed of Scots, Grenadiers and Coldstream Guards. The Australian contingent sailed for home on 17 May 1885, arriving back in Sydney on 19 June. It was generally agreed at the time that, no matter how small the military significance of the Australian contribution to the War in Sudan, it marked an important stage in the development of colonial self-confidence and was proof of the enduring link with Britain.