For other uses see Transport (disambiguation) or Transportation (disambiguation).
Transportation or penal transportation is used to refer to the
deporting of
convicted
criminals to a
penal colony, for example by
France to
Devil's Island and by the
United Kingdom (then including
Ireland) to its colonies in
The Americas, from the
1620s to
1770s, and
Australia between
1788 and
1868. It can also be used generally to describe such activities.
Overview
A
sentence of transportation could apply for life or for a specific period of time. The penal system required the convicts to work, either on government projects such as road construction, building works and mining, or assigned to free individuals as a source of unpaid labour. Women were expected to work as domestic servants and farm labourers.
A convict who had served part of his time might apply for a
ticket of leave permitting some prescribed
freedoms. This enabled some convicts to resume a more normal life, to marry and raise a family, and a few to contribute to the further development of the colonies. Some used the freedom to revert to their previous ways. But
exile was an essential component of the punishment. At one time, returning from transportation was a
hanging offence.
Transportation punished both major and petty crimes in
Great Britain and
Ireland from the
17th century until well into the
19th century. At the time it was seen as a more humane alternative to
execution, which would most likely have been the sentence handed down to many of those who were transported, if transportation hadn't been introduced. From the 1620s until the American Revolution the British colonies in
North America received transported British criminals, effectively double the period that Australian colonies subsequently received convicts. The
American Revolutionary War brought an end to that means of disposal, and with the remaining British colonies in what is now
Canada being periously close to the new
United States of America sending people who might easily become hostile to British authorities there wasn't an option. Thus, the British Government was forced to look elsewhere.
The
gaols became more overcrowded and dilapidated ships were brought into service, the 'hulks' moored in various ports as floating gaols.
Transportation from Britain ended officially in
1868, although it had become unusual several years earlier.
In British colonial
India,
freedom fighters were transported to the
Cellular Jail in the
Andaman islands.
British transportation to Australia
In
1787, the "
First Fleet" departed from England, to found the first
colony in
Australia, as a penal colony. The Fleet's arrival at
Port Jackson, on
January 26,
1788 (now
Australia Day) is considered the founding event in the history of
Sydney, as well as
New South Wales and modern Australia in general. In 1803,
Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) was also settled as a penal colony, followed by the
Moreton Bay Settlement (Queensland) in 1824. The other
Australian colonies were "free settlements", as non-convict colonies were known. However,
Western Australia adopted transportation in 1851, to resolve a long-standing
labour shortage. Until the massive influx of free immigrants during the
Australian gold rushes of the
1850s, the settler population was dominated by convicts and their descendants. Transportation continued until 1868, when it was terminated in Western Australia.
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