0 it was a store ship
No. The Endeavour was purely a ship of exploration.
According to Charles Bateson's "Convict Ships", the total number of Australian convicts sent to Australia, all colonies included, from the time of the First Fleet to the end of Transportation, was 160,151.
Transportation of convicts to Australia ended when the last convict ship left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Australia on 10 January 1868. This ship, the "Hougoumont", brought its final cargo of 269 convicts to Western Australia, as New South Wales had abolished transportation of convicts in 1840.
The Alexander was one of the transport ships, meaning it carried convicts.
there were about 2,056 in friend ship
0 it was a store ship
No. The Endeavour was purely a ship of exploration.
The Lady Penrhyn had only female convicts. The ship carried 101 female convicts.
The ships which housed convicts in England during the 1700s were called hulks.
Convicts were rough people seeing as they commited crimes but when many were sailed to Australia they lived in the hull of the ship ( the very bottom) down there female convicts were raped by male guards, rats, and they did their business in buckets but as you could imagine the ship was very rocky so the buckets of business tipped over
The Alexander was the largest of the convict transport ships, and it carried almost 200 male convicts.
According to Charles Bateson's "Convict Ships", the total number of Australian convicts sent to Australia, all colonies included, from the time of the First Fleet to the end of Transportation, was 160,151.
The last convict ship left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Australia on 10 January 1868. This ship, the "Hougoumont", brought its final cargo of 269 convicts to Western Australia, as New South Wales had abolished transportation of convicts in 1840.
The list below does not outline how many crew members or marines were aboard each ship - just the convicts and other notable passengers, and the skippers. * The Alexander - 195 male convicts, skippered by Master Duncan Sinclair * The Charlotte - 88 male and 20 female convicts, skippered by Master Thomas Gilbert * The Friendship - 76 male and 21 female convicts, skippered by Master Francis Walton * The Golden Grove - no convicts, but Reverend Samuel Johnson and his wife, skippered by Master Sharp * Lady Penrhyn - 101 female convicts, skippered by Master William Sever * Scarborough - no convicts, skippered by Master Kohn Marshall * Prince of Wales - one male convict and 49 female convicts, skippered by Master John Mason * H.M.S. Sirius - skippered by Captain John Hunter, carried Captain Arthur Phillip * H.M.S. Supply - carried 50 people, skippered by Captain Henry Bull * Borrowdale - skippered by Master Readthorn Hobson * Fishburn - skippered by Master Robert Brown
Transportation of convicts to Australia ended when the last convict ship left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Australia on 10 January 1868. This ship, the "Hougoumont", brought its final cargo of 269 convicts to Western Australia, as New South Wales had abolished transportation of convicts in 1840.
Transportation of convicts to Australia ended when the last convict ship left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Australia on 10 January 1868. This ship, the "Hougoumont", brought its final cargo of 269 convicts to Western Australia, as New South Wales had abolished transportation of convicts in 1840.