probably holding a wobbleboard on the side of the main street of HobartIf you're not thinking critically about how the world around us works then, hell - what are you doing?
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Sign Up Now!probably holding a wobbleboard on the side of the main street of HobartIf you're not thinking critically about how the world around us works then, hell - what are you doing?
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Just ordered this from Amazon.
Anyone read it?
If anyone hasn't actually gone to Tassie and had a tour or two of the old convict sites it is worth considering. Port Arthur and Macquarie Harbour particularly - and the engineering aspect of Macquarie Harbour and the rock groins for flow control is a fascinating bonus.I've read heaps of crime genre and historical fiction books recently, but I'm currently reading a different genre - history/non-fiction.
TASMANIA'S CONVICTS - HOW FELONS BUILT A FREE SOCIETY : ALISON ALEXANDER
I know AA the author. Probably the 8th or 9th author I know. This book is interesting!
Tasmania's population is circa 500 000 plus. In the early days of settlement, in the early 19th Century, 75% of the Tassie population were convicts. Of that current 500 000 plus, 75% still originate from that convict stock!
What AA advances is that the felons guilty of the most serious crimes didn't arrive in Van Dieman's Land, because they were usually executed in England. She posits that of those transported, they were usually guilty of misdemeanours.
I'm in the 25% of the Tassie population whose parents emigrated to Tas. In my case, from England before I was a teenager. My better half, like most, has originated from that convict stock. There is a manifest shame from many Tasmanians about their convict heritage.
AA has chapters on different subjects - Birth Of A Convict Colony, Convicts After Sentence, The Convict Stigma, etc. In each chapter she uses heaps of anecdotes from specific convicts about their sentences, how they adapted to life in VDL, social norms in VDL, etc. I'm finding them fascinating! One crime that earned transportation and was surprisingly common, was bestiality!
Another surprising phenomenon is that life for the average convict who worked for free settlers, usually farmers, was better than labourers in England, and, soldiers in the British Army, according to AA. Convicts in Tas had far better diet and had access to better medical care.
With the abundance of Cape Barren Geese, emu, kangaroo, wallaby, possum, etc, hunting was far better than in Europe. There was longer life expectancy for Tassie convicts than for most labourers living in England, Scotland and Ireland - the main sources of convicts. Tasmanian convicts ate far more calories in a given week than English soldiers or labourers.
Moreover, compared to mainland Aus, Tasmania had fresh water in abundance. The convicts also spent a lot of time outside, so many had a healthy lifestyle.
Haven't finished Tas's Convicts yet, but it is the most interesting book I've read for a while - with its aspects of convict life that are true.
We’ve watched some of those shows too - enticing us to visit those places.If anyone hasn't actually gone to Tassie and had a tour or two of the old convict sites it is worth considering. Port Arthur and Macquarie Harbour particularly - and the engineering aspect of Macquarie Harbour and the rock groins for flow control is a fascinating bonus.
I read For the Term of his Natural Life after going to Tassie and it adds something special when you have seen places.
It is the same watching Escape to the Country and any other show from the UK or even Paris and Rome (having been there relatively recently) that you see places you have now been to and the thrill it adds.
Used to be the question of read a Book or watch a Movie first - now I have to consider reading/watching first before I go to a place so I don't miss looking at the cliffs of Broadchurch or the little streets of Doc Martin town when I happen by.
Especially fiction - I still remember the thrill of reading Lord of the Rings when Frodo went to the Rye fish and chip shopWe’ve watched some of those shows too - enticing us to visit those places.
It is also nice reading books, even fiction, set in countries one has visited.
Where the Onion Ring of Power was thrown into the Fryer.Especially fiction - I still remember the thrill of reading Lord of the Rings when Frodo went to the Rye fish and chip shop![]()