There was limited cutlery on the First Fleet. Naturally, neither knives nor forks could be used because they could have been used as weapons against either other convicts or the marines.
The only cutlery the convicts were permitted were spoons.
According to the website First Fleet Fellowship, there were 44 sheep on board the First Fleet.
There was no Queen of the First Fleet. The First Fleet carried convicts and marines to New South Wales.
The first fleet of ships that landed in Australia was simply called the First Fleet.
The flagship of the first fleet was HMS Sirius.
The first fleet stopped at Tenerife for supplies.
The First Fleet was known as the First Fleet when it came to Australia.
The First Fleet.
No. There was no mutiny on the first fleet.
According to the website First Fleet Fellowship, there were 44 sheep on board the First Fleet.
There was no Queen of the First Fleet. The First Fleet carried convicts and marines to New South Wales.
The first fleet was never alive. It was a fleet of ships. The last known person who was aboard the First Fleet died during the 1860s.
The First Fleet was not something that was built. The First Fleet was the fleet in which the first permanent settlers travelled to Australia, and it was made up of convicts, marines and officers from England.
The first fleet of ships that landed in Australia was simply called the First Fleet.
The first stop for the First Fleet was Tenerife in the Canary Islands.
The flagship of the first fleet was HMS Sirius.
Americans call cutlery "cutlery."
You can count cutlery, the noun 'cutlery' is an uncountable noun.But you can have one set of cutlery, or two or more sets of cutlery, or many pieces of cutlery, but the noun 'cutlery' itself never takes the plural form.