Convict Workers: Reinterpreting Australia's PastStephen Nicholas State and private employers in New South Wales recognised the convicts' previous occupations, and employed a large proportion of them in the same occupations they had held at home. The women convicts - often classified as prostitutes - in fact brought a range of occupational skills equally as important for the economic development of Australia as those of the male convicts. Once settled in Australia, the convicts consumed a diet, and experienced housing, superior to that received by free men and women at home. The organisation of their work was not very different from that in Britain and Ireland and, while cruel treatment did exist, the likelihood of numerous floggings during their term of sentence is shown to be a myth. Convict workers is a study in comparative history, noting the resemblances and the contrasts with indentured labour, slavery and punitive communities elsewhere. By illuminating the contribution of the convict workers to Australia's economic and social development. |
Contents
The Organisation of Public Work | 152 |
Convict Labour and the Australian Agricultural | 167 |
The Care and Feeding of Convicts | 180 |
A New Past | 199 |
Country of Birth and Sex | 204 |
Literacy and Sex by Country of Trial 210211 | 210 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
agricultural allowed aristocrats arrived artisan assigned Australia average Bermuda Bigge Britain British building capital cent century colonial Committee Company compared Continued convict labour costs COUNTRY crime criminal depended early economic elite emigrants employed employers employment England English evidence factory farm female convicts Female Total forced gangs Governor height historians History housing immigrants included indents Indian industrial Ireland Irish labour aristocracy labour market land less literacy living London maker Male Female masters migration occupations organisation penal physical population prisoners production proportion punishment ration received recorded Report road rural sample Select sent sentence servants ships skilled Slavery slaves Society South Wales statistical Study supply Sydney Table task Total Male trade transported United University unskilled urban values wage women workers workforce write