VR created image of interior of convict ship © Rob Giles

VR created image of interior of convict ship © Rob Giles

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This online exhibition introduced a local place-based West Country dimension to being transported overseas as a felon. 
The exhibition took you from the County Courts to Plymouth, where a convicted felon would await being loaded onto one of the convict ships transporting them to a destination like Botany Bay or Tasmania. Much has been written about the convict voyage experience, and about what happened to convicts, notably in Australia. But, what was the journey from arrest to being shipped off really like?
This exhibition endeavoured to unmask the cold truth with some thought-provoking questions:
  • How was it decided who should be transported, instead of being hanged, or pardoned?
  • What happened when you got to Plymouth – particularly as felons were held in rotting decommissioned Royal Navy wooden ships (hulks) no longer fit to sail, acting as temporary prisons off Hamoaze in Plymouth Sound
  • What was it like to actually spend weeks on these hulks waiting for that unknown destination beyond the seas?
  • Just how did Plymouth cope with a steady influx of felons awaiting transportation?
  • How were they fed, clothed, treated and how involved was the local community?
The illustrated podcast accompanying the exhibition (see below) answers these questions and explores the local dimensions to transportation overseas, including the case study of former Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison's Cornish ancestor, exploring William Roberts' arrest, conviction at the Assizes in Bodmin, and then his conveyance to Plymouth, and place on ‘The First Fleet’. 
EVENT ORGANISERS
The event, which was suitable for all, was of particular interest to local schools and history groups, foregrounding the importance of using legal history to develop a better understanding of fair and proportionate justice delivery and its need for a local dimension. 
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EXHIBITION PODCAST

This half hour podcast has been produced to accompany the online exhibition by CHEX and the School of Society and Culture. 
The podcast features Professor Judith Rowbotham and Research Fellow Christopher Wilkes. Please click on the image to view.
 

About Culture and Heritage Exchange

Formerly known as CHITCHAT, the Culture and Heritage Exchange (CHEx) is a knowledge exchange initiative which engages academic researchers, industry professionals, heritage stakeholders, and the general public in transdisciplinary conversations through transmedia methods, sources, and platforms.
The study of culture and heritage offers an important forum for the discussion of key influences and temporal trajectories that have helped shape the present. The initiative is proactive in disseminating its members’ research through its events such as public exhibitions, film showings and public seminars. 
CHEx
 

Event photography and video

Please be aware that some of the University of Plymouth's public events (both online and offline) may be attended by University staff, photographers and videographers, for capturing content to be used in University online and offline marketing and promotional materials, for example webpages, brochures or leaflets. If you, or a member of your group, do not wish to be photographed or recorded, please let a member of staff know.