A Cargo of Women : Susannah Watson and the convicts of the Princess Royal

Babette Smith
A Cargo of Women : Susannah Watson and the convicts of the Princess Royal
A Cargo of Women : Susannah Watson and the convicts of the Princess Royal
ISBN: 9781741755510
Publication Date: 1 October 2008


Who were Australia's women convicts? Were they drunks and whores, 'genetic' criminals and moral degenerates as many observers believed? Or victims of circumstances almost unimaginable in the twenty-first century, as others claim?A Cargo of Womentraces the chequered story of one hundred women transported together in 1829 on the ship Princess Royal. Caught in an England convulsed by change, they become the unwitting and unwilling pioneers of a new land.Through imaginative use if detailed research, Babette Smith presents a personalized view of this group of women. She traces their stories, presenting us with a patchwork image of individual lives that are both rich and varied, and often poignantly tragic. We encounter their despair at being parted from their families and particular concern for the children left behind, their experiences of assigned service in the colony, the marriages that could provide salvation or the final degradation, the opportunities that existed for a new life in a society more socially mobile. Framing them all is the story of the indomitable Susannah Watson who, trapped in the crowded filthy slums of Nottingham, stole because she 'could not bear to see her children starving'. Separated forever from her husband and four children, she was transported for 14 years, but served 16. She endured the convict system at its worst, yet emerged triumphant to die in her bed aged 83 singing 'Rock of Ages'.The originality of A Cargo of Womenis enhanced by the inclusion of 15 previously unpublished letters written by Susannah Watson, which were discovered by amazing coincidence after work in this book was well underway.'Smith comes as close as any historian has come to reconstructing the complex experience of a convict woman an absorbing story.' - Kay Daniels, Australian Historica...