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 1) Ballarat Reform League and the start of Eureka
 
 On Saturday, 11 November 1854 an estimated at more than 10,000 miners 
gathered at Bakery Hill, directly opposite the government encampment. At
 this meeting, the Ballarat Reform League was created, under the 
chairmanship of Chartist John Basson Humffray. Several other Reform 
League leaders, including Kennedy and 
Holyoake, had been involved with the Chartist movement in England. Many 
of the miners had past involvement in the Chartist movement and the 
social upheavals in Britain, Ireland, and continental Europe during the 
1840s. In setting its goals, the Ballarat Reform League used the British
 Chartist movement's principles. The meeting passed a resolution "that 
it is the inalienable right of every citizen to have a voice in making 
the laws he is called on to obey, that taxation without representation 
is tyranny". The meeting also resolved to secede from the United Kingdom
 if the situation did not improve.
 
 2) Elizabeth Scott first woman to be executed in Victoria.
 
 At nine thirty in the morning of Wednesday 11th November 1863 at Old 
Melbourne Gaol, Elizabeth Scott stood on the scaffold with Julian Cross 
and David Gedge for the murder of her husband. Moments before the 
hangman released the trapdoor, she turned her hooded face to David and 
asked, ‘Davey, will you not clear me?’. For an hour after the hanging 
Elizabeth’s lifeless body swung from the scaffold. Her head and face 
were grossly swollen. So great had been the effect of the fall, her head
 was nearly severed from her body.
 
 3) Ned Kelly's executed 
 
 He was hanged on 11 November 1880 at the Melbourne Gaol. Kelly's gaol 
warden wrote in his diary that when Kelly was prompted to say his last 
words, the prisoner opened his mouth and mumbled something that he could
 not hear.  The Argus reported that Mr. Castieau, the governor of the 
gaol, informed the condemned man that the hour of execution had been 
fixed at ten o'clock. Kelly simply replied "Such is life." His leg-irons
 were removed, and after a short time he was marched out. He was 
submissive on the way, and when passing the gaol's flower beds, he 
remarked "what a nice little garden," but said nothing further until 
reaching the Press room, where he remained until the arrival of chaplain
 Dean Donaghy. The Argus reported that Kelly intended to make a speech, 
but he merely said, "Ah, well, I suppose it has come to this," as the 
rope was being placed round his neck. Although the exact number is 
unknown, it is estimated that a petition to spare Kelly's life attracted
 over 30,000 signatures.
 
 4) Remembrance Day 
 
 Marks the
 anniversary of the armistice which ended the First World War on the 
11th of November 1918. Each year Australians observe one minute silence 
at 11 am on 11 November, in memory of those who died or suffered in all 
wars and armed conflicts.
 
 5) Sacking of the Prime Minister Gough Whitlam
 
 Edward Gough Whitlam, served as the 21st Prime Minister of Australia 
from 1972 to 1975. Whitlam led the Labor Party to power for the first 
time in 23 years at the 1972 election, retained government in 1974 
before being controversially dismissed by Governor-General Sir John Kerr
 at the climax of the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis. Whitlam 
remains the only Prime Minister to have his commission terminated in 
that manner.
 
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