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Convict Records

 

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Introduction

 

The Swan River Settlement had been in existence for twenty years when it took the unusual step of electing to become a British penal settlement in 1849. Eager Home authorities accepted the offer and quickly dispatched the barque Scindian, which arrived in Gage Roads on the 1st June 1850 with a cargo of 75 male convicts aboard. This was to be the first of 43 shipments of convicts to the colony over an 18 year period.

The Convict Establishment and houses of convict officers, Fremantle, c. 1870s. [00880D]

Certificate of Freedom - sample of one of the few surviving certificates, 1873, Acc 1518, Series 2334

 

Although a total of 9,925 convicts were officially transported during this period, it is estimated that some 500 of these were local prisoners intermixed with the transported convicts.

Transportation of convicts to Western Australia ceased in 1868 as a result of a reassessment of British home policy, with the last convict ship to Australia, the Hougoumont, arriving in the Swan River Colony on 10 January 1868 with 229 convicts aboard. Convict labour continued to be used for sometime following the end of transportation, relying on local prisoners and those convicts yet to serve the reminder of their sentences. At the time of the Hougoumont's arrival some 3,158 convicts remained under government control in Western Australia.

Enrolled Pensioner Force on Parade, Government House, 1871. [4368B/50]

 

There are a considerable number of records relating to the convict system held by the State Records Office including those created by the Convict Establishment and the Colonial Secretary's Office, as well as the records of various local Courthouses and Police Stations.

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Convict Establishment Records

 

Fremantle Prison was built as a convict establishment by the British government in the 1850's, following the decision to transport convicts to WA, with the Comptroller General of Convicts being appointed to govern the facility.

The convict workforce was spread throughout the State through the use of depots and a ticket-of-leave system for convicts who exhibited good behaviour. The main depots of the Convict Establishment were in North Fremantle, Freshwater Bay, Clarence, Guildford, and Greenmount. There were also hiring stations located further afield in Toodyay, York, Bunbury, King George's Sound, Mount Eliza, and Port Gregory.

The bulk of records relating to convicts and the operations of the Convict Establishment are listed on AEON but remaining records are listed in the hardcopy AN 358 finding aid in the State Records Office Search Room.

The majority of the Convict Establishment records are available for viewing on microfilm at the State Records Office.

The following are examples of some of the many series of records created by the Convict Establishment that are available through the State Records Office:

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Other Convict Records

 

In addition to the significant records on convicts created by the convict Establishment there are also many other areas where convict related information can be uncovered. The following categories of records all contain significant amounts of information relevant to researchers investigating convict history.

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Parkhurst Boys

 

Between 1842 and 1861, 1499 juvenile offenders, aged 10 to 20, from the Isle of Wight's Parkhurst Prison, were transported to the Australian and New Zealand colonies. The Swan River Colony received 234 male juvenile convicts between 1842 and 1849. Once in the Colony the boys were pardoned on two conditions: that they were apprenticed to local employers and that they did not return to the country in which they were convicted during the term of their sentence. The scheme is viewed by many historians as a form of de facto convictism.

 

Other records relating to Parkhurst Boys can be located in the Governor's Despatches received from the Secretary of State. Records of the Guardian of Government Juvenile Immigrants and other associated Parkhurst Boys records may also be found in the Colonial Secretary's Office records, particularly amongst the inward correspondence. See also further information on Colonial Secretary's Office records.

Information on Parkhurst Boys may also be located in the Battye Library's Private Archives Collection (MN 1214).

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Enrolled Pensioner Guards

 

Those soldiers who came to Western Australia as guards aboard the convict transports were known as the Pensioner Guards (also known as the Enrolled Pensioner Force or Enrolled Guards). The Enrolled Pensioner Guards comprised of aged or invalid military personnel who were unfit for active duty but capable of fulfilling a role as garrison troops or convict guards.

Between 1850 and 1868 approximately 1,100 pensioner guards and their families arrived in Western Australia, many of whom remained on as settlers. Upon completion of 7 years of service the Pensioner Guards were eligible for a free land grant.

Some of the records available relating to the Pensioner Guards include:

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Published References and Guides

 

There are a number of published references and guides that can be of considerable assistance when researching Western Australian convicts. These publications include:

 

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Downloadable Indexes

 

The State Records Office has also been fortunate to have two local researchers, Anne and Bruce Buchanan, compile a series of detailed indexes and finding aids to records in the State archives collection. Anne and Bruce have conducted this work in a voluntary capacity.

In 2005, Anne and Bruce commenced a project to index a series of convict related letters in the correspondence of the Governor of Western Australia for the period 1851-1868. This original correspondence is accessible at the State Records Office on microfilm (reference: SROWA, Consignment 488, items 30-34).

Anne and Bruce have comprehensively indexed this correspondence by addressee, theme, name, location, ship and renumeration. Copies of the indexes for items 30-32 are downloadable:

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Further Information

 

State Records Office staff at the Enquiry Desk can provide additional information on the range of convict related records available from within the State Records Office collection. For more information contact us by telephone on (08) 9427 3360, by facsimile on (08) 9427 3368, via email at sro@sro.wa.gov.au or in person.

 

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