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Convicts, transporation etc

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  • Ordered to the Island – Irish Convicts & Van Diemen’s Land- John Williams

    Ordered to the Island – Irish Convicts & Van Diemen’s Land- John Williams

    Published by Crossing Press, Sydney in 1994, effectively self published. Scarce and fine condition.

    Octavo size, card covers, 226 pages, some illustrations, nicely composed work.

    John William completed a Doctorate Thesis at the University of Tasmania in the early 1970’s largely around this broad subject. This book is the condensation and improved presentation of the facts and conclusions therein.

    Could there be a better overall reference to provide perspective regarding the Irish Convict in Tasmania – doubt it.

    The facts about the Irish taken away to far away .

    $70.00

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  • [Tasmania] – Female Factory Female Convicts – Tony Rayner

    [Tasmania] – Female Factory Female Convicts – Tony Rayner

    The story of more than 13,000 women exiled from Britain to Van Diemen’s Land.

    Quite a bit of the Female Factory still exists today and its worth a visit if you are in Hobart.

    Octavo, perfect bound soft cover, 198 pages, illustrated, a very good to better copy. Published by Esperance Press in 2005.

    Whilst the book concentrates very much on Hobart there is also a good chapter on the other Female Factories on the Mainland … Parramatta; Newcastle, Bathurst, Port Macquarie, Moreton Bay etc.

    The Female Factory not your ordinary sort of workplace.

    $30.00

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  • Varieties of Vice-Regal Life – Edited by Richard Davis and Stefan Petrow.

    Varieties of Vice-Regal Life – Edited by Richard Davis and Stefan Petrow.

    Published by the Tasmanian Historical Research Association in 2004. Signed nicely by the editors. Largeish softcover of substance, 298 pages, nicely produced.

    Thomas Denison arrived in Hobart in 1847 to become Governor .. this is a comprehensive compilation of the correspondence he entered into and also that of his wife Lady Caroline Denison. The editors have added many helpful notes and interpretations which make the whole highly informative regrading that period of Tasmanian History.

    Personal, full and interesting accounts of the day through correspondence … an art form now lost.

    Tasmanian History wrapped up in letters ..

    $30.00

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  • Port Arthur  – The Journal of Charles O’Hara Booth – Commandant of the Port Arthur Penal Settlement.

    Port Arthur – The Journal of Charles O’Hara Booth – Commandant of the Port Arthur Penal Settlement.

    A hard to find Tasmanian production. Published by the Tasmanian Historical Research Association in 1981.

    Slightly larger octavo, 298 pages, illustrated and a super fine copy

    Booth kept his almost daily diary for 23 years so there is so much about Port Arthur to make it the fundamental record of the goings on in the penal establishment.

    Real diary makes for interesting reading

    $60.00

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  • Van Diemen’s Land [History of Tasmania to 1838] – James Boyce

    Van Diemen’s Land [History of Tasmania to 1838] – James Boyce

    A new edition of James Boyce’s super book on Tasmania. Published in 2018, with a Forward by Richard Flanagan.

    Octavo, 388 pages, with maps, plates, notes and references. very good condition. The winner of a number of prestigious awards.

    Van Diemen’s Land a Colony formed out of transportation of convicts. How they survived and settled and adapted to the land. Conflicts with establishment and bushrangers. The fate of the aboriginal community.

    James Boyce’s thoughtful perspective of the early years and the impact of colonialism

    $40.00

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  • Joseph Mason – assigned Convict 1831-1837 – Edited by Kent and Townsend.

    Joseph Mason – assigned Convict 1831-1837 – Edited by Kent and Townsend.

    Published by the Melbourne University Press, a fine copy of the first edition 1996. Octavo, 182 pages with end paper maps. Gift inscription on half title otherwise clean as a whistle.

    Joseph Mason was transported to New South Wales, one of many who protested against the mechanisation of agriculture … threshing machines.

    The large part of this book is his Memoir of goings on a wonderful insight into the Colony … referencing encounters with aboriginal people and good descriptions of convict “assignments” around Sydney, Parramatta and Campbelltown and explorations along the Nepean River.

    Good introductory chapters with contributions from David Kent as well as the industrious editors.

    One of the more thorough and thoughtful convict accounts

    $20.00

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