Born on the voyage: Inscribing emigrant communities in the twilight of sail
Date
2019
Authors
Hobbins, Peter
Clarke, Anne
Frederick, Ursula
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Publisher
International Maritime Economic History Association
Abstract
From the 1830s to the 1880s, non-stop voyages from the United Kingdom to the
Australasian colonies created highly structured and insular shipboard communities. Emigrant
experiences were shaped by the social spaces aboard sailing vessels, alongside layers of
formal superintendence and informal communitas. While these increasingly literate travellers
commonly recorded their passage in diaries and letters, other means of marking the journey
are less well documented. Detailing the voyages to Sydney of sister clipper ships Samuel
Plimsoll and Smyrna in 1874–83, this article explores two complementary maritime textual
traditions. One practice saw newborns named after their vessel or – in a singular instance –
detention in quarantine. Another enduring tradition entailed emigrants carving mementoes
of their voyage into the sandstone at Sydney’s North Head Quarantine Station. In contrast
with written narratives that often concluded upon arrival, we argue that these informal
commemorations kept voyages and vessels alive through the ensuing decades.
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Source
International Journal of Maritime History
Type
Journal article
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Restricted until
2037-12-31