In the early years, convicts were put to work immediately on building projects, particularly roads, and farming. New buildings needed to be constructed as the first shelters were just tents and lean-tos.
The first jobs involved clearing the land. The convicts had to chop down trees, then cut the wood up for practical uses such as building. They needed to clear the shrubs and low bushes as well, and prepare the ground for tilling and planting. This was hard work as most of the English tools were unable to stand up to the demands of Australia's harsher, rocky soil.
The convicts also had to quarry rock and haul it. This was used for building, and in the construction of roads and bridges.
Some of the convicts were assigned as servants to the free settlers or the officers. As the colony developed, the convicts worked in more skilled areas such as smithing, building tools, and even more intellectual pursuits where they showed aptitude. One of Australia's most famous architects, Francis Greenway, was a convict. Another convict with a background in printing was given permission to establish the colony's first newspaper.
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The term convict is not used anymore. If you want to become a convict, which I certainity hope it, if when you break the law and you get captured. Then they deport you into a new land, like the English when they brought all the prisoners to Australia
Western Australia was the final state to be using convict labour. The last convict ship to Australia, the Hougoumont, left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Western Australia on 10 January 1868.
Ned Kelly was not a convict. He was a bushranger, and he was born a free person in Australia.
they arrived at 1793 in Australia
1868 the ship was sent to westen australia
Records do not show the name of the ship on which William Buckley, the convict, sailed to Australia. He was not, however, on the First Fleet.
He was the first convict priest in Australia.
because he was a convict
Elizabeth Hayward was not the youngest convict to enter Australia. She was the youngest female convict. The youngest convict was John Hudson, just nine years old. Elizabeth Hayward was married twice. Her husbands were William Nicholls, and then George Collins.
The only remaining convict colony in Australia by the end of 1853 was Fremantle, in Western Australia.
The First teacher in Australia was a Lady named Isabella Rosson, she was a British lady who had come to Australia as a convict in the first fleet, she was a convict for steeling dresses worth 2 shilling. After her sentence of 7 years as a convict she was free but had to stay in Australia with other free convicts she helped build colonies, and in her colonie she took the job of being the first teacher in Australia in a little hut with her husband who was the second teacher in Australia.