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How Did Poor People Emigrate from the British Isles to Australia in the Nineteenth Century?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2014
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One of the great themes of modern history is the movement of poor people across the face of the earth. For individuals and families the economic and psychological costs of these transoceanic migrations were severe. But they did not prevent millions of agriculturalists and proletarians from Europe reaching the new worlds in both the Atlantic and the Pacific basins in the nineteenth century. These people, in their myriad voyages, shifted the demographic balance of the continents and created new economies and societies wherever they went. The means by which these emigrations were achieved are little explored.
Most emigrants directed themselves to the cheapest destinations. The Irish, for instance, migrated primarily to England, Scotland, and North America. The general account of British and European emigration in the nineteenth century demonstrates that the poor were not well placed to raise the costs of emigration or to insert themselves into the elaborate arrangements required for intercontinental migration. Usually the poor came last in the sequence of emigration.
The passage to Australasia was the longest and the most expensive of these migrations. From its foundation as a penal colony in 1788, New South Wales depended almost entirely on convict labor during its first four decades. Unambiguous government sanction for free immigration emerged only at the end of the 1820s, when new plans were devised to encourage certain categories of emigrants from the British population. As each of the new Australian colonies was developed so the dependence on convict labor diminished.
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References
1 Van Diemen's Land was established as a separate colony in 1825; Port Phillip was settled from 1834 and became the colony of Victoria in 1851; South Australian colonization began in 1836; the original settlement at Moreton Bay in 1824 eventually evolved as the colony of Queensland in 1859; and the slower settlement of Western Australia began in 1829.
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21 The terms “poor,” “paupers,” and “the destitute” were often given varyingly negative connotations in the nineteenth century. Under-Secretary Hay tried valiantly to bring terminological clarity to the question in January 1831. but without much success. See Madgwick, p. 91. Particularly confusing was the tendency to regard as a “pauper" or “destitute” any immigrant “whose passage was financially assisted by state or private charity.” See N. L. Tranter, p. 134. It was, indeed, common to regard all assisted emigrants as “Poor Persons”: see James Stephen to J. S. Lefebvre, July 4, 1834, quoted by Main, J. M.. “The Foundations of South Australia,” in The Flinders History of South Australia: Political History, ed. Jaensch, D. (Adelaide, 1987), p. 9Google Scholar. On the technical difficulties, see McClymer, John F., “The Historian and the Poverty Line.” Historical Methods 18 (1985): 105–10CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On changing meanings more generally, see Himmelfarb, Gertrude, The Idea of Poverty (New York, 1984)Google Scholar; and Sen, Amartya, Poverty and Famine (Oxford, 1981), chap. 2Google Scholar.
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29 The Poor Law Report of 1834 described emigration as “one of the most innocent palliatives of the evils of the present system” and gave examples of the reduction in poor rates achieved by parochial boards sponsoring emigration. The report said, however, that “Those persons are generally most forward to emigrate who are least corrupted by the abuses of the system of relief. Those are most willing to remain a burthen to their parishes who are most thoroughly profligate and useless.” See The Poor Law Report of 1834, ed. Checkland, S. G. and Checkland, E. O. A. (Harmondsworth, 1974), pp. 487–88Google Scholar. This proposition is at least partially confirmed in the work of Anne Digby on East Anglian parish emigration in the 1830s in “The Labour Market and the Continuity of Social Policy after 1834: The Case of the Eastern Counties,” Economic History Review, ser. 2, 28 (1975): 10–13Google Scholar.
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37 Despatches of the governor of New South Wales, Sir Charles Fitzroy to John Pakington, 1852, ML, MSS A1261 No. 130.
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