From 1788 to 1868, it is estimated that 164,000 convicts were shipped off to Australia under the British Government’s Transportation Act, proposed as an alternative to the death penalty. It also supplied cheap, disposable labour while removing the ‘unsightly’ poor from Britain. About 24,000 young women were sent over, the vast majority – 65 per cent – convicted of petty theft. One of these convicts, Sarah Ford, was sent to the factory for stealing six beer glasses and an apron. Many others were exiled for similar crimes of poverty, such as stealing bread.
The ocean voyage to Australia was long and harrowing. According to detailed ship journals, most of these female convicts had never been on a boat before, so for many, the trip was a long stretch of extreme…
