Dark Heritage: Wakefield, Parliament House, and the Housing Crisis in South Australia
![Image](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjn-3gY8cduIu-9OSlQX-m-_wigm5xPtAjMBZnEsgiHcJm4iglLR0BpgTsheQGzJDLizmnJDzccOoVyJRWKT2FXOKyZBucVIAbQocpHtQHtc8SxCoNvaOjcf58b4XrrLKc10-bFrPasAyEexRWhD8Zf_RFXIMlkdIhzjrobLU2C1mYTkmCDO_ahTDbDLwR3/w282-h395/wakefiled%20face.jpg)
Edward Gibbon Wakefield. I pass his commemorative bronze bust almost every day - a metal cast of Dark Heritage. This term stems from dark tourism studies associated with specific sites of death , tragedy , and disaster . More recently, the concept of Dark Heritage has expanded to include broader aspects of cultural heritage sites and artefacts associated with complex, contested, and negative histories . So it is here where I suggest that we take the opportunity to contest the problematic plaque of Edward Gibbon Wakefield on Parliament House on North Terrace. Let me tell you why. The plaque reads: IN HONOUR OF EDWARD GIBBON WAKEFIELD 1796 - 1862 THE AUTHOR OF THE SYSTEM OF LAND - SALES COLONIZATION UPON WHICH THE PROVINCE OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA WAS FOUNDED FOR FREE SETTLERS WITH FREEHOLD LANDS AND RESULTANT SELF-GOVERNMENT. 1952 The plaque highlights the idea that free settlers (South Australia was established as a colony for free British settlers, not convicts) with freehold