23 people died in the fist fleet voyage
Approximately 778.
=apparantly there are 717 convicts 191 marines and 1 190 officers=
There were 180 female convicts on the First Fleet.
The First Fleet, which arrived in Australia in 1788, lost about 48 people out of around 1,500 convicts, marines, and their families during the journey. The Second Fleet, which arrived in 1790, faced a much higher death toll, with estimates of around 267 out of approximately 1,000 convicts dying, primarily due to disease and malnutrition. The Third Fleet, arriving in 1791, had a death rate of about 10%, with around 75 deaths among the 2,000 convicts transported. Overall, the mortality rates decreased with subsequent fleets, but conditions remained harsh.
The Fishburn was a storeship. It carried no convicts.
778.
It seems that they they did relatively well on the First Fleet. However the same can not be said for the many convicts transported to Australia after that.
some of them did but not many
Sources vary, but the number of female convicts on the First Fleet is estimated to have been between 180 or 189.
The deaths during the voyage were: one marine, one marine's wife, one marine's child, 36 male convicts, four female convicts, five children of convicts
The deaths during the voyage were: one marine, one marine's wife, one marine's child, 36 male convicts, four female convicts, five children of convicts