The British decided to send convicts to New South Wales because it was the best way to colonise the continent. They wished to colonise Australia for several reasons:
1. To expand the British empire, and prevent the French from gaining a foothold in the Australian continent or in that part of the Pacific.
2. To solve the problem of Britain's overcrowded prisons (a consequence of the Industrial Revolution) by establishing a new penal colony in a land which showed promise for eventually becoming self-supporting. Britain had been sending their excess prisoners to North America, but the American War of Independence put a stop to the practice. After James Cook's successful voyage which involved charting the eastern coast of Australia, New South Wales was seen as a viable proposition for a convict colony. In particular, it was endorsed by Sir Joseph Banks, the influential botanist who travelled with Cook.
3. Australia could provide commercial and political gains to Britain.
4. Due to war, Britain needed to find an alternative supply of Flax and timber as her Baltic supply was under threat. It was believed that nearby Norfolk Island would provide this.
5. Britain needed a port in the East to promote trade with China and to extend its naval and commercial power.
The first permanent settlers arrived in Australia with the First Fleet on 26 January 1788 to set up the new penal colony.
a punishment for convicts as Britain had no where else to put them
No. The English also sent convicts to Australia, but they stopped doing that and started sending them to Australia because America became an independent nation.
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.
There were no convicts in Western Australia in 1829. The first convicts in Western Australia only arrived in 1850.
Convicts first arrived in Australia in January 1788.
There was only one way for convicts to travel to Australia, and that was by way of wooden ships.
VERY MUCH SO, YES. HOWEVER ALL SUCH TRAFFIC OF SENDING CONVICTS TO AMERICA, CEASED AT THE OUTSET OF HOSTILITIES WITH THE COLONIALS. THE PRACTICE CONTINUED IN THE CARIBBEAN AND LATER AUSTRALIA. VERY MUCH SO, YES. HOWEVER ALL SUCH TRAFFIC OF SENDING CONVICTS TO AMERICA, CEASED AT THE OUTSET OF HOSTILITIES WITH THE COLONIALS. THE PRACTICE CONTINUED IN THE CARIBBEAN AND LATER AUSTRALIA.
Australia.
it was not
GEORGIA (US STATE) was the prior destination where British convicts would be sent. After the American Revolution this was no longer viable because Georgia was part of the newly sovereign United States. This resulted in Britain sending their convicts to Australia.
They were simply called "convicts".
Western Australia was the last of the states to have convicts. The last convict ship to Western Australia, the Hougoumont, left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Western Australia on 10 January 1868. Transportation of convicts to Australia ceased after this.