The British government in 1786 had announced…
January 1788 CE
The British government in 1786 had announced its plans to make Australia a penal colony, largely because “transportation” of convicts to North America is no longer an option.
The First Fleet is the name given to the eleven ships that sail from Great Britain on May 13, 1787, consisting of ten civil officers, two hundred and twelve Royal Marines, including officers, twenty-eight wives and seventeen children of the marines, eighty-one free persons, five hundred and four male convicts and one hundred and ninety-two female convicts.
This represents three hundred and forty-eight free persons and six hundred and ninety-six prisoners, a total of one thousand and forty-four, to establish the first European colony in Australia, in the region which Captain Cook had named New South Wales.
Orders-in-Council for establishing the penal colony had been issued in London on December 6, 1785.
The fleet, led by Captain (later Admiral) Arthur Phillip, arrives at Botany Bay between January 18 and 20, 1788.
HMS Supply arrives on January 18; Alexander, Scarborough and Friendship arrive on January 19, and the remaining ships on January 20.
This is one of the world's greatest sea voyages—eleven vessels carrying about one thousand four hundred and eighty-seven people and stores and traveled for two hundred and fifty-two days for more than ffiteen thousand miles (twenty-four thousand kilometers) without losing a ship.
Forty-eight people had died on the journey, a death rate of just over three per cent.
This is a remarkable achievement given the rigors of the voyage, the navigational problems, the poor condition and seafaring inexperience of the convicts, the primitive medical knowledge, the lack of precautions against scurvy, the crammed and foul conditions of the ships, poor planning and inadequate equipment.