List of Sources and Footnotes
- (096)
Klemzig is nowadays a suburb of Adelaide in the City of Port Adelaide Enfield. It was the first settlement of German immigrants in Australia and was named after the village of Klemzig in the former German Prussia, now Klępsk in Poland.

- (097) Letter to the Dresdener Missionary Society (June 21st, 1839)

- (098)
Letter to Pastor Wermelskirch from June 21st, 1839 (EN) Original at Digitalarchiv Halle (DE)

- (099)
List of sworn Germans (Naturalisation Act of September 1839)

- (100)
Carl Gotthilf Meier (1811-1870); [auch Meyer; Maier; Mayer]) He came aboard the "Skjold" in Port Adelaide with his wife Wilhelmine Henriette, née Warnas, on October 30, 1841; he was one of "Kavel's People".

- (101)
Luther's Treasure Chest German Version (DE)

- (102)
Matthew Moorhouse (1813-1876) first "Protector of Aborigines".

- (103)
John Webster went to Australia in 1838 and followed his brother William to New Zealand two years later.

- (104)
The former missionary of the London Missionary Society in Madagascar could be John Canham (1798-????), who, after completing his missionary work for the LMS in 1838, sailed with his family to South Australia. Nothing further is known about his whereabouts.

- (105)
Sir Charles Cooper (1795-1887) war der erste Oberste Richter in Südaustralien und kam im März 1839 mit der "Katherine Stewart Forbes" an. Er war Nachfolger im Amt des ersten Richters von Sir John William Jeffcott (1796-1837)

- (106)
Johann Daniel Schlinke (1807-1878) arrived in Port Adelaide on January 25, 1839 with the "Catharina" from Hamburg. He was a confectioner by profession, later built a mill and also competed with CWS for the favor of Bertha Teusler, whom he then married on July 8, 1840.

- (107)
Bertha Mathilde Teusler (1822-1852) arrived in Port Adelaide on the "Prince George" in 1838. She was the stepdaughter of Johann Friedrich August Fiedler, her mother's second husband, Johanna Maria Teusler, née Koehler. Her mother died just 17 days after her arrival, so that at the age of 16, Bertha had to look after her four siblings (between 5 1/2 and 16 years old) and her stepfather. On July 8, 1840 she married Johann Daniel Schlinke.

- (108)
Van Diemens's Land was the colonial name of the island of Tasmania during the European exploration and colonization of Australia in the 19th century
