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Brickfields
Depot
Assignment from Brickfields
Escape from Brickfields
Arrival of the
Martin Luther
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In
the latter part of the transportation period,
under the probation scheme, female convicts
were usually held in hiring depots (sometimes
known as Branch Factories) awaiting hire
into service by employers.
There
was a hiring depot at Launceston in a rented
house in St John's Square and there was
a hiring depot in Hobart at New Town—Brickfields
Hiring Depot. In 1843,
there was also a temporary Hiring Depot
for female convicts in Liverpool St, Hobart
and in the late 1840s female convicts could
also be hired from the Anson
probation station. As it was difficult
for employers in the interior to travel
to either Launceston or Hobart, a hiring
depot was later opened at Ross, as part
of the Ross
Female Factory.
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At other
times throughout the transportation period, female
convicts were hired directly from their ship upon
arrival, from the
Anson,
or from a female factory.
On 6 September
1852, the Comptroller-General's Office issued the
following proclamation.
The
Hobart Town Gazette regularly listed the
number of female probation passholders awaiting hire
during the probation period of transportation. On
7 April 1848, the Comptroller-General's Office notified
the following numbers of female passholders awaiting
hire: 69 at Brickfields Hiring Depot, Hobart; 14 at
Launceston Hiring Depot, St John's Square; total of
83. On 23 October 1847, there were 117 female passholders
awaiting hire at Brickfields Hiring Depot, 17 at St
John's Square, Launceston, and 40 on board HMS
Anson (total 174).
A
month later the Hobart Town Gazette announced
that the Hiring Depot in St John's Square, Launceston
for female probation passholders would close on 31
May 1848 "and that their hiring will be effected
from that date at the Female Factory." (HTG,
9 May 1848 p.465) However, it appears that the hiring
depot in St John's Square did not close until the
end of June as the returns in the Hobart Town
Gazette until that time still list female probation
passholders awaiting hire from there. By 3 July 1848,
Launceston Female Factory has replaced St John's Square
hiring depot on these lists.
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The
building in the Brickfields, however, is
not used as a Penitentiary, or Factory within
the spirit and meaning of the Act, neither
as a place of punishment, but merely as
a Depot for the accommodation of Female
Pass Holders awaiting service.
(Correspondence between Forster and Visiting Magistrates
Messrs Carter and Watchorn, 1844, CO 280/183, PRO, London)
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The Brickfields
Hiring Depot was located where the North Hobart football
oval now stands. Its building was completed
by the Royal Engineers Department on 1 October 1842,
but female convicts had been held there for assignment
since February 1842. After its closure in November
1852, Brickfields became an immigration depot and
later a pauper establishment.
The Brickfields
establishment was included in the census in 1843.
The following details were recorded:
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person
in charge - George Brooks |
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proprietor
- the Crown |
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building
built of brick, complete and inhabited |
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no free
persons residing at the establishment |
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179 persons
dwelling at the establishment on the night of
31 December 1842 which comprised:
 |
24
single females aged 14 to under 21 years |
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136
single females aged 21 to under 45 years |
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19
single females aged 45 to under 60 years |
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179
single females in Government employment |
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72
single females Church of England |
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16
single females Church of Scotland |
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3
single females Wesleyan Methodist |
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88
single females Roman Catholic |
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Two
Visiting Magistrates, William
Watchorn and William Carter, were appointed in 1844
to visit the houses of correction in Hobart on a regular
basis and report on their findings. A lengthy
report was submitted by them on 7 October 1844 (AOT,
GO 33/52 pp172-194). In their reports, the Brickfields
Hiring Depot was referred to as the Branch Factory.
Included here are some extracts from their report.
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In
the course of their duties they visited
for the first time in the month of June
or July the Branch Factory in the Brickfields,
upon the state & condition of which,
they, on that occasion, made no report,
and against which visit the Comptroller
General entered no protest or objection.
On
the 3rd August they again visited the Brickfields
Factory & were induced to go at an early
hour, from information they had received
of the general irregularity & bad conduct
of that prison. It was about ˝ past
9. The Prisoners were just commencing
Breakfast. There was a total absence
of all order & regularity, & the
noise & confusion from Talk & Clatter
were beyond description. On the appearance
of the Superintendent who had been sent
for, they requested to be shewn over the
Buildings, this was done with evident reluctance.
In the sleeping apartment the night clothes
& bedding had not at that hour of the
morning (past 9) been removed to the open
air. The floors were covered with
expectoration. Tobacco ashes showed
certain tokens of persons having smoked
there during the night or morning.
On asking the Superintendent for an explanation
of these things, he answered (to the effect)
he could not help it, he could do nothing
with them (... the female Prisoners).
The Comptroller General knew of their smoking
& sanctioned it, they were not there
he (the Comptroller General) said for punishment
& had a right to smoke if they pleased.
Although they the Visiting Magistrates could
not doubt what they heard from the Superintendent
yet they could scarcely believe that the
Comptroller General had given such permission,
for they deemed if he had no regard to cleanliness
of the place, he would have had some fear
of the danger of such a practice in a Building
composed entirely of Wood.
The
Visiting Magistrates did not on this occasion
enter a report in the Book of the Office
as the Superintendent excused the general
state of the Factory on the ground of the
recent death of his Wife & the prisoners
having been removed a day or two before
from one Building to another. They
admonished him upon the want of cleanliness
& discipline & told him they should
report the practise of smoking to His Excellency
the Lieutenant Governor.
Daily
prayers are not read in this Factory.
The
Visiting Magistrates could not acquit themselves
of the full discharge of their duties if
they did not report the lax & mischievous
system of this Estabt.
The Women do not work! They have no
employment, a state of absolute Idleness.
Of itself sufficient to engender vice &
counteract reformation. The practise
of Tobacco smoking (most strangely encouraged
here) for females & more especially
for young ones is filthy & disgusting.
A habit which not only stupefies the faculties
but renders the female mind callous to reproof
& shame.
From
this place Prisoners can & do send out
articles to Pawn & receive into &
sometimes purchase within the Buildings
luxuries of various kinds. They are
permitted to some extent to be out on Sunday
& have been seen about the Brickfields
in the twilight of an Evening.
The
Visiting Magistrates conceive the whole
system is one of great mismanagement
dangerous to the community & destructive
of any hope that might otherwise be entertained
of the moral reformation of any of the Class.
The
Visiting Magistrates could not but contrast
the difference of appearance & behaviour
of the prisoners at this Establishment with
those of the
Cascade Factory.
At the latter every Female was modestly
& becomingly drest their behaviour quiet
and respectful. At the former place
there were women in Groups of 3 or 4 seated
on the Ground not deigning to get up on
the appearance of Visitors or the Superintendent
& only acknowledging their presence
by a loud laugh or a bold stare, any with
their dresses loose & immodest, their
language generally loud & imprudent
& their whole behaviour with few exceptions
more like the unrestricted libertine of
the pavé than Females undergoing a process
of moral reformation.
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The
Visiting Magistrates wrote a letter of complaint to
the Colonial Secretary, J E Bicheno Esq, and received
a reply stating that the situation would be enquired
into. They continued in their report:
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The
subject was enquired into yet the practise
of smoking is not discontinued. Subsequently
to their visit a woman's clothes took fire
from her thrusting a lighted pipe into her
pocket & it took the exertions of 2
or 3 persons to extinguish them.
On
the receipt of the foregoing letter of the
Colonial Secretary's the Visiting Magistrates
carefully examined the Quarter Sessions
Act & they found by Clause No.65 that
they were empowered to visit every Gaol
& House of Correction at least once
a month & to examine into the treatment,
behaviour & condition of all prisoners
therein & so far as their powers extend
to redress all abused within the same &
by a foregoing clause No.56 they find that
Gaols & Houses of Correction are thus
defined.
"That
every Building now or hereafter used by
the authority of the Government as a common
or public Gaol for the ordinary confinement
of prisoners therein at Hobart Town shall
be deemed & taken to be not only a legal
& public Gaol but also a House of Correction
to all intents & purposes whatsoever"
& by the 57th clause it is enacted that
"the Buildings at Hobart Town &
Launceston respectively called Penitentiaries
used for the reception of Transported male
offenders in the service of the Govt. &
the Buildings at Hobart Town & Launceston
respectively called Factories used for the
reception of transported female offenders
in the service of the Government shall be
also respectively to all intents & purposes
Houses of Correction, the said Penitentiaries
for Males & the said Factories for Females."
By
these clauses the Magistrates deemed their
powers & duties perfectly defined &
clearly pointed out & again visited
on the 21st August the Branch Factory in
the Brickfields when they were informed
by the Superintendent that he had received
orders from the Comptroller General not
to admit them ...
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The
Lieutenant Governor replied to the Visiting Magistrates
on 12 October 1844 outlining the difference between
Brickfields, as a Hiring Depot, and
Cascades, as a
Female Factory.
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The
Lieut. Governor has read the Magistrates
report & has ordered an enquiry into
the circumstances detailed therein, respecting
the Factory at the Brickfields, & has
directed the Comptroller General's attention
to the subject.
While
the Lieut. Governor is glad to avail himself
of the information contained in this report
drawn up by the Visiting Magistrates he
begs to repeat what he has viva voce more
than once communicated to Mr. Carter previous
to the report; that he is aware that all
Gaols & Houses of Correction are to
be visited by the Visiting Magistrates appointed
by Quarter Sessions, & fully admits
their right to do so but that the Factory
at the Brickfields tho' used heretofore
as a Prison or House of Correction
& therefore under the Visiting Magistrates
according to the Act, yet that it is no
longer used as a Gaol or House of Correction,
though still called "Factory"
but is a mere Building used for the convenience
of the
Anson &
part of that Penitentiary, in order
to receive the inmates of the Anson when
discharged from or changing their service,
until again hired instead of the inconvenience
of sending such persons on board the "Anson"
again, & that it is neither a Prison
nor a House of Correction, nor a receptacle
for any Prisoners under any other sentence
than the one they had received in England
[own emphasis], & consequently that
the Visiting Magistrates might as well claim
to visit any Station or Depot, where there
happened to be Passholders, & that the
Regulations relating to these persons being
decided by the Home Government & part
of a whole system of Prison & Probation
system it is impossible to allow any person
but the Comptroller General to interfere
with the arrangements relating to them.
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Assignment
of Female Convicts from Brickfields
The following
article commenting on the assignment of female convicts
from Brickfields Hiring Depot appeared in the Colonial
Times and Tasmanian on 6 June 1848 (p3 c5).
ASSIGNMENT
OF FEMALE SERVANTS FROM THE BRICKFIELDS FACTORY.—We
have received information relative to the mode
of hiring female pass-holders at the Brickfields,
which requires some comment. It appears, that
a practice prevails of "snapping up"
the women in a manner by no means just to the
public, or, in accordance with what ought to
be the rules and regulations of that establishment.
There seems to be a kind of under-handed system
at work, by which the women are hired, almost
immediately upon entering the Factory, but this
is not carried on by the worthy Superintendent,
Mr. Williams, but by the connivance, as we suspect,
of some of the subordinate officers. Into this
matter, however, we shall not enter further,
until we have enquired fully into it, when we
shall report accordingly. We may observe, in
conclusion, that general discontent prevails
as to the mode of assignment from the Brickfields,
the cause we shall endeavour to ascertain. |
This
article suggests that better servants are being 'creamed
off' for those willing to bribe the 'suborordinate
officers' at Brickfields.
Escape
from Brickfields
On
11 September 1845, eight female convicts escaped from
Brickfields Hiring Depot
by scaling the fence. They were reported as
absconders in the Hobart Town Gazette on 16
September 1845 (p.1168). The escapees were:
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Name |
Ship |
Age |
Native Place |
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Elizabeth COVENTRY |
Woodbridge |
20 |
London |
| Bridget
KELLY |
Greenlaw |
26 |
Limerick |
| Biddy
or Rose RILEY |
Greenlaw |
18 |
Meath |
| Margaret
KELLEHER |
Greenlaw |
18 |
Cork |
| Catherine
MURRAY |
Emma
Eugenia
(3) |
17 |
Liverpool |
| Mary
McDONALD |
Emma
Eugenia
(3) |
17 |
St
Giles |
| Mary
Ann McHUGH |
Angelina |
20 |
Paddington |
| Eliza
PITMAN |
Angelina |
20 |
Shoreditch |
Arrival
of the Martin Luther
The
Martin Luther arrived in Hobart on 1 September
1852 carrying 212 female convicts. By this time,
the
Anson was no
longer in service as a probation station and female
convicts were being hired into service upon arrival.
Just
two weeks after its arrival, the Comptroller-General's
Office notified the public (in the Hobart Town
Gazette):
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that the
Female Convicts who have arrived by the
Martin Luther, eligible for private
service, can be hired at the Brickfields
Depot on Friday next, the 17th instant,
at 11 o'clock
a.m.
It
will be necessary that parties desirous
to hire any of these women should obtain
an order from this Office. |
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