Conditions in England
In England in the 1700s, many people lived on farms owned by rich landlords. These landlords were often cruel and greedy, so families could not pay the high rents that were asked for their farms. These landlords had also put fences around the ‘common land’ so there was nowhere for the villagers to grow their vegetables or let their animals graze.
As well, various inventions had made farming easier so landlords did not need so many workers. Many families had to leave the land and look for work in the cities.
But unskilled work in the factories was poorly paid and the invention of the steam engine meant that factory owners needed fewer workers there too.
The cities became very crowded and between 1750 and 1770, London’s population doubled. Many lived in the streets, often starving or freezing to death. People would beg or steal food, or they would steal things to sell to buy food so that they, or their children, could live one more day. Stealing a gentleman’s handkerchief in 1770 would be the same as stealing a computer today. There was no such thing as unemployment benefits or a single parent’s pension.
Crime became very common. So, to stop it, the courts increased the penalties and by 1820, there were 150 offences for which a person could be hanged. If you stole something worth more than five shillings you could be hanged and it did not matter if you were a man, a woman or a child. Because the rich people did not want to acknowledge the poor – their only value was a worker to enhance their lifestyle – they did not care what happened to them.
However, some judges felt sorry for the people and so, instead of sentencing them to death, they sent them to prison for life.
Life in jail was horrifying. Convicts were chained up and given no clothes, bed or food. Nothing was free. You had to survive on what your family and friends could bring you. If you had no money you were put in the dungeons. There was nowhere to wash or go to the toilet and many prisoners died from disease. In some prisons, a grille was built into the wall facing the street so that prisoners could beg from those on the outside. Visitors even had to pay to visit you.
Soon the jails were very overcrowded. But instead of building new ones, the government used old ships that were left over from the war with France. These were called hulks, and because they were old and rotting, life on these was worse than in the prisons. Very soon, they were overflowing too, and a new solution had to be found.
The British Government tried to solve the problem by sending the prisoners to work in their American colonies, but after the War of American Independence (1775–83), which the Americans won, the British had to stop sending prisoners there. The Americans preferred to use African slaves rather than British convicts to do their work for them.
So in August 1786, it was decided the prisoners could be sent to the land newly discovered by Captain James Cook which he had called New South Wales and claimed for Britain.
The government thought this was a good idea because the convicts could be set to work to build their own houses and grow their own food, and there would be no danger of them escaping because New South Wales was 19,000 kilometres from England.
So, on 13 May 1787, 11 ships set sail from Portsmouth in England under the command of Captain Arthur Phillip. On board the ships were 780 convicts, and 211 soldiers and their families.
Altogether about 1400 people made that first journey, eventually landing in Sydney Cove on 26 January 1788.
As well, various inventions had made farming easier so landlords did not need so many workers. Many families had to leave the land and look for work in the cities.
But unskilled work in the factories was poorly paid and the invention of the steam engine meant that factory owners needed fewer workers there too.
The cities became very crowded and between 1750 and 1770, London’s population doubled. Many lived in the streets, often starving or freezing to death. People would beg or steal food, or they would steal things to sell to buy food so that they, or their children, could live one more day. Stealing a gentleman’s handkerchief in 1770 would be the same as stealing a computer today. There was no such thing as unemployment benefits or a single parent’s pension.
Crime became very common. So, to stop it, the courts increased the penalties and by 1820, there were 150 offences for which a person could be hanged. If you stole something worth more than five shillings you could be hanged and it did not matter if you were a man, a woman or a child. Because the rich people did not want to acknowledge the poor – their only value was a worker to enhance their lifestyle – they did not care what happened to them.
However, some judges felt sorry for the people and so, instead of sentencing them to death, they sent them to prison for life.
Life in jail was horrifying. Convicts were chained up and given no clothes, bed or food. Nothing was free. You had to survive on what your family and friends could bring you. If you had no money you were put in the dungeons. There was nowhere to wash or go to the toilet and many prisoners died from disease. In some prisons, a grille was built into the wall facing the street so that prisoners could beg from those on the outside. Visitors even had to pay to visit you.
Soon the jails were very overcrowded. But instead of building new ones, the government used old ships that were left over from the war with France. These were called hulks, and because they were old and rotting, life on these was worse than in the prisons. Very soon, they were overflowing too, and a new solution had to be found.
The British Government tried to solve the problem by sending the prisoners to work in their American colonies, but after the War of American Independence (1775–83), which the Americans won, the British had to stop sending prisoners there. The Americans preferred to use African slaves rather than British convicts to do their work for them.
So in August 1786, it was decided the prisoners could be sent to the land newly discovered by Captain James Cook which he had called New South Wales and claimed for Britain.
The government thought this was a good idea because the convicts could be set to work to build their own houses and grow their own food, and there would be no danger of them escaping because New South Wales was 19,000 kilometres from England.
So, on 13 May 1787, 11 ships set sail from Portsmouth in England under the command of Captain Arthur Phillip. On board the ships were 780 convicts, and 211 soldiers and their families.
Altogether about 1400 people made that first journey, eventually landing in Sydney Cove on 26 January 1788.