<p><strong>Hannah was&nbsp;an incredible woman&nbsp;who was before her time.</strong></p><p>As&nbsp;an innkeeper&nbsp;in&nbsp;the&nbsp;rough-and-ready&nbsp;settlement&nbsp;of&nbsp;South Brisbane&nbsp;during the 1840s-50s Hannah out-lived two husbands and suffered the grief of losing children in a time when reaching the age of 37 was considered an achievement. She had a high profile in the local Brisbane and Ipswich area and would have been considered a strong working-class woman living in a tough male-dominated society.&nbsp;Her&nbsp;inn&nbsp;was&nbsp;a&nbsp;hub of social and commercial life&nbsp;and she&nbsp;would have been well acquainted with&nbsp;many of the early settlers&nbsp;in South East Queensland.&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>In a time when women&nbsp;rarely appeared in court&nbsp;Hannah was involved in legal actions&nbsp;to protect her rights in a society controlled by men.&nbsp;She&nbsp;successfully challenged her first husband's will&nbsp;and defended herself against charges associated with the business of running an inn.&nbsp;Although&nbsp;she&nbsp;might be&nbsp;a 'small cog' in history&nbsp;Hannah&nbsp;could&nbsp;also be&nbsp;regarded as&nbsp;an early advocate of women's rights.</p><p><br></p><p>This book&nbsp;also&nbsp;documents&nbsp;Hannah's neighbouring allotment owners on the south bank of the Brisbane River.&nbsp;They include some of the most influential men in the&nbsp;colony&nbsp;including Robert Towns Jacob Montefiore&nbsp;and several mayors of Brisbane.</p>
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