TRANSPORTATION
ON THE PITT
Before the Pitt
sailed, an anonymous complaint reported that in the prison section, should the 391
men be placed in the prison, every berth or space of 18 inches would be
occupied and if a sickness should happen a sick person would touch someone in
good health. The women [convicts] were accommodated in quarters built on the
gun deck. The officers were also compelled to live in very cramped conditions.
As a result of this report 33 sick male prisoners were re-landed.
The Pitt sailed from Yarmouth Roads on
Among the soldiers and sailors and the
families of the soldiers, who were also confined below decks because of the
weather, a malignant fever appeared and it was said to have resulted in 27
deaths in a fortnight. The fever spread so rapidly that for some time they were
almost afraid to approach each other. The Pitt's
crew were so depleted that when she left the doldrums and ran into heavy gales,
some of the convicts were recruited to help navigate her. This would have been
a welcome relief from the stench and heat experienced below deck. Major Francis
Grose, who sailed in the Pitt with the middle contingent of the Rum Corps, claimed that the
mortality rate among the soldiers and sailors was due to the dreadful stench
which rose through gratings placed on each side of the ship. Although these
gratings brought fresh air to the convicts below deck, the stench that rose
from them was so dreadfully offensive as to bring on fever amongst the soldiers
and sailors who slept above them. However, the Pitt's, master Edward Manning blamed the
call at St Jago for the fever which appeared among
those who went ashore but did not spread to the convicts.
At Rio de Janeiro the sick were
sent to hospital where they would have been treated for such complaints as
fever, dysentery, boils, scurvy and mouth rot caused by lack of adequate diet
and cramped unventilated accommodation.
The healthier convicts were landed on an island not far from the ship
where they were placed in the care of Mr Jameson and given a diet of fresh
meat, fruit and vegetables. Captain Manning found it necessary to send four
convicts ashore in the ship’s boats from which the convicts escaped. The
captain feared they had drowned in the attempt although they could have been
hidden in the convent of Froars. Fresh provisions and
the spell ashore did much to restore the health of all.
Reluctantly, after resting for three weeks at
The Pitt arrived at Port Jackson on
[from Warby, My Excellent
Guide by Michelle Vale]