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Henry Seekamp

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Occupation
  
Australian journalist

Known for
  
Seditious libel


Name
  
Henry Seekamp

Role
  
Journalist

Henry Seekamp Opinions on Henry Seekamp

Full Name
  
Henry Erle Seekamp

Born
  
1829
England

Died
  
July 19, 1864, Clermont, Australia

Henry Seekamp: The Australian Media Hall of Fame


Henry Erle Seekamp (1829 - 19 July 1864) was the owner, editor and a journalist of the Ballarat Times at the time of the Eureka Rebellion in 1854. The newspaper was fiercely pro-digger. It was used to print the Ballarat Reform Charter and many of the flyers for the monster meetings on the Ballarat Goldfields, in Victoria (Australia).

Henry Seekamp Opinions on Henry Seekamp

Seekamp may have been born in England, in 1829. He is reputed to have achieved a Bachelor of Arts degree from an unknown university. He arrived in Ballarat in 1853 and tried prospecting. He must have met with some success as he was able to buy printing equipment and pay the cost of its freight to Ballarat. In December 1853 he married Dublin widow, Clara Maria Duvall.

Governor Sir Charles Hotham, shortly after his appointment, pronounced publicly that 'all power proceeds from the people' and at Ballarat, he told the miners: '...I shall not neglect your interests.' But by September 1854 Seekamp was suggesting that despite protestations of giving the diggers a fair go, Hotham had secretly ordered the police to invigorate the search for unlicensed miners. (Ballarat Times, 30 September 1854)

In increasingly strident editorial tone the four-page weekly broadsheet newspaper criticised the Government and supported the diggers movement. On the Ballarat reform movement Seekamp wrote:

"This league is nothing more or less than the germ of Australian independence. The die is cast, and fate has cast upon the movement its indelible signature. No power on earth can now restrain the united might and headlong strides for freedom of the people of this country ... The League has undertaken a mighty task, fit only for a great people – that of changing the dynasty of the country." (Ballarat Times 18 November 1854)

On the day after the massacre at the Eureka Stockade on 3 December 1854, Seekamp was arrested in his office and charged with sedition, for a series of articles that appeared in the Ballarat Times. Many of these articles were written by George Lang, the son of the prominent republican and Presbyterian Minister of Sydney - the Reverend John Dunmore Lang. The Chief Justice, Sir William à Beckett, effectively told the jury that it must find Seekamp guilty. He was tried and convicted of seditious libel by a Melbourne jury on 23 January 1855 and, after a series of appeals, sentenced to six months imprisonment on 23 March 1855. He was released from prison on 28 June 1855, three months early.

During his imprisonment his wife took over the editorial duties on the newspaper, and won support for her outspokenness. He returned to Ballarat after he was released and continued to edit the Ballarat Times. Seekamp was present at the 2nd anniversary celebrations of the Eureka Stockade that were held in 1856.

In 1856 Seekamp wrote a review in the Ballarat Times of Lola Montez and her erotic Spider Dance and in a notorious incident Montez chased him with a whip. Shortly after Clara and Henry Seekamp moved to Queensland. He died at the Clermont gold diggings in Queensland on 19 July 1864, at the age of 35.

Later in life Clara Seekamp commented on the importance of her husband: "If Peter Lalor was the sword of the movement, my husband was the pen".

References

Henry Seekamp Wikipedia