Katana VentraIP

Cornish Australians

Cornish Australians (Cornish: Ostralians kernewek)[2] are citizens of Australia who are fully or partially of Cornish heritage or descent, an ethnic group native to Cornwall in the United Kingdom.

Cornish Australians form part of the worldwide Cornish diaspora, which also includes large numbers of people in the US, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, Mexico and many Latin American countries. Cornish Australians are thought to make up around 4.3 per cent of the Australian population and are thus one of the largest ethnic groups in Australia and as such are greater than the native population in the UK of just 532,300 (2011 census).[3]


Cornish people first arrived in Australia with Captain Cook, most notably Zachary Hickes, and there were some Cornish convicts on the First Fleet, James Ruse, Mary Bryant, along with several of the early governors. The creation of South Australia, with its emphasis on being free of convicts and religious discrimination, was championed by many Cornish religious dissenting groups and Cornish people comprised a sizeable proportion of settlers to that colony. Large scale Cornish emigration to Australia did not begin until the 1840s, coinciding with the Cornish potato famine and slumps in the Cornish mining industry. The gold rushes and copper booms were major draws on Cornish people, not just from Cornwall itself, but also from other countries where they had previously settled.


In recent years the story of the Lost Children of Cornwall, child migrants sent from Cornwall to Australia up until the early 1970s, has come under intense scrutiny. The practice of sending apparently unwanted or orphaned Cornish children abroad continued long after it had ceased, after being discredited, in other areas. It has been the subject of apologies by both the Australian and British prime ministers.[4]

Number of Cornish Australians[edit]

A 1996 study by Dr. Charles Price gives the total ethnic strength of Cornish Australians as 269,500 with a total population of 768,100. This is made up by 22,600 of un-mixed origin and 745,500 of mixed origin and equates to 4.3 percent of the Australian population.[5] This makes the Cornish the fourth largest Anglo-Celtic group in Australia after the English, Irish and Scottish, and the fifth largest ethnic group in Australia.


Approximately 10 percent of the population of South Australia, and over 3 percent of Australia as a whole, has significant Cornish ancestry.[6] In the 1986 Australian Census 15,000 people reported their ancestry as Cornish,[7] however, no figure from the 2006 Australian census has been published as to how many reported their ancestry as such in that year.


In 2011 a campaign was launched to increase the number of people writing in their Cornish ancestry on the 2011 Australian Census.[8][9]

Culture[edit]

Festivals[edit]

The Cornish who moved to Australia brought with them many festivities and holidays. The most important being at Christmas and Midsummer.[10]

Australia's 12th and longest-serving Prime Minister, 1939–41 and again 1949–1966, was half Cornish. Meeting Cornish author A.L. Rowse in Oxford once, he introduced himself as "a Cornish Sampson on his mother's side."[34] His grandfather was the prominent Cornish trade unionist John Sampson.

Robert Menzies

23rd Prime Minister of Australia and longest serving Australian Labor Party Prime Minister. Both of his parents were of Cornish ancestry. Hawke's leadership has been credited with reinvigorating academic interest in the Cornish in Australia.[35]

Bob Hawke

Australia's Prime Minister between 2018 and 2022 confirmed he has Cornish ancestors when he visited Bodmin Jail and St Keverne in Cornwall during the G7 2021 to research his family history.[36]

Scott Morrison

– When Captain Cook arrived in Tahiti in June 1769, to observe the transit of Venus, his second-in-command was the Cornishman Lieutenant Zachary Hicks. After six months charting the coast of New Zealand, Cook headed west in search of New Holland as Australia was then known. It was at first light on 19 April 1770 that Hicks spotted land ahead, so it is that the most south-eastern tip of Australia is called Point Hicks. Cook hugged the coast until they arrived at Botany Bay, where again Hicks came to the forefront. Rowing ashore in two jolly boats, he was the first of the party to set foot on Australian soil.[42]

Zachary Hicks

Cornish associations[edit]

There are many Cornish associations in Australia, as there are around the world.[48] The Cornish Association of South Australia is the oldest, being run continuously since 1890. Others include The Cornish Association of Bendigo and District, The Cornish Association of New South Wales, Southern Sons of Cornwall inc., The Cornish Association of Queensland, The Cornish Association of North Yorke Peninsula, The Cornish Association of Tasmania, The Cornish Association of Victoria, and The Cornish Association of Western Australia.[49]

Leggo's – producers of foods. Named after founder Henry Madren Leggo, whose parents came from Cornwall.

Italian-style

– Australia wide clothing manufacturer and retailer, founded by Fletcher Jones the son of a Cornish miner from Bendigo.

Fletcher Jones

Michell Group. Comprising Michell Wool, one of the largest wool processing companies in the world. Michell Machinery, distributors of agricultural machinery and equipment. Founded by George Henry Michell, born in Phillack, Cornwall in 1839.

– founded in 1886 to establish coal mines in Tasmania's Fingal Valley, where it continues to operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of Cement Australia.

Cornwall Coal Company

Cornish Americans

Cornish diaspora

Cornish people

European Australians

Europeans in Oceania

Immigration to Australia

Notable Australian Cornish wrestlers

Payton, Philip, Making Moonta: The Invention of Australia's Little Cornwall, ; 2007, ISBN 978-0859897952

University of Exeter Press

. Cornwall24.net. 27 September 2010. Retrieved 30 August 2017.

"Kernewek Lowender – the World's Largest Cornish Festival"

Prest, Wilfrid; Round, Kerrie; Fort, Carol S. (30 August 2017). . Wakefield Press. ISBN 978-1-86254-558-8.

The Wakefield Companion to South Australian History

. 16 February 2011. Archived from the original on 16 February 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2017.

"Cornish Association of Western Australia Inc – Culture"