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Okla-homey
1/26/2007, 07:35 AM
Jan 26, 1788: First Australian penal colony established

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219 years ago today, the first 736 convicts banished from England to Australia land in Botany Bay. Over the next 60 years, approximately 50,000 criminals were transported from Great Britain to the "land down under," in one of the strangest episodes in criminal-justice history.

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Australian landmass compared to the US

This date is now Australia's national holiday, Australia Day.

Why did the Brits choose to ship their crooks out of the country in the first place? The accepted wisdom of the upper and ruling classes in 18th century England was that criminals were inherently defective. Thus, they could not be rehabilitated and simply required separation from the genetically pure and law-abiding citizens.

Accordingly, lawbreakers had to be either killed or exiled, since prisons were too expensive. With the American victory in the Revolutionary War, transgressors could no longer be shipped off across the Atlantic to Georgia which began as a penal colony, and the English looked for a colony in the other direction.

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IMHO, the best Aussie beer evar!

Captain Arthur Phillip, a tough but fair career naval officer, was charged with setting up the first penal colony in Australia. The convicts were chained beneath the deck during the entire hellish six-month voyage. The first voyage claimed the lives of nearly 10 percent of the prisoners, which remarkably proved to be a rather good rate.

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Capt. Arthur Phillip...he made William Bligh seem like a sweetheart by comparison

On later trips, up to a third of the unwilling passengers died on the way. These were not hardened criminals by any measure; only a small minority were transported for violent offenses. Among the first group was a 70-year-old woman who had stolen cheese to eat.

Although not confined behind bars, most convicts in Australia had an extremely tough life. The guards who volunteered for duty in Australia seemed to be driven by exceptional sadism. Even small violations of the rules could result in a punishment of 100 lashes by the cat o'nine tails. It was said that blood was usually drawn after five lashes and convicts ended up walking home in boots filled with their own blood--that is, if they were able to walk at all.

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Australia Day ceremony in Melbourne

Convicts who attempted to escape were sent to tiny Norfolk Island, 600 miles east of Australia, where the conditions were even more inhumane. The only hope of escape from the horror of Norfolk Island was a "game" in which groups of three prisoners drew straws. The short straw was killed as painlessly as possible and a judge was then shipped in to put the other two on trial, one playing the role of killer, the other as witness.


They who came here in chains, who were lashed while they worked in convict gangs at Port Arthur. They who like many others were driven through starvation or oppression from their home-lands to the shores of this new country, Australia. They, who for a multitude of reasons that hopefully, I or my children will never witness or experience, decided not to harbour grudges or discontent but rather to look to the future. They who embraced this country as their own and said; "let's get on with it, this is a new land, this is our home." -- Dennis O'Keeffe - Australian Musician

So, today, have a cool one in honor of the "Land Down Under" on Australia Day!

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Your correspondent (fourth from left) with some squadronmates in Darwin in the Australian outback in 1991 just before Gulf War I. IMHO, Austrialia is a great country and my second choice if I couldn't be an American.

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OUinFLA
1/26/2007, 07:56 AM
An idea who's time should be revisited.

Thank you Homey

KC//CRIMSON
1/26/2007, 09:07 AM
Andy Roddick doesn't like Australia very much. Boy got pwned!

TUSooner
1/26/2007, 09:19 AM
That's a fair dinkum holiday!

Tulsa_Fireman
1/26/2007, 09:52 AM
Great job, Homey!

My grandmother-in-law is Australian born and bred, from the oceanside city of Fremantle. A product of the ages old story of an Oklahoma serviceman in WWII meeting a slender, bright-eyed, rough and ready Aussie girl and bringing her home with a ring on her finger. A beautiful woman, both inside and out. If she's the representative example of Australia and her people, I can see full well why you love it so. Tough as nails, yet open and loving. Unafraid of good ol' dirt and hard work, yet cultured as the finest pearl.

Just don't get her started on the Japanese. ;)

SoonerJack
1/26/2007, 12:20 PM
Awesomeness again, Homey. Australia would definitely be my 2nd choice after the good ol' USA.

By the way, on what type of aircraft did you serve?

olevetonahill
1/26/2007, 01:48 PM
I took My R&R there , I never made it out of the Kings Cross in Sydney :D

Okla-homey
1/26/2007, 06:00 PM
Awesomeness again, Homey. Australia would definitely be my 2nd choice after the good ol' USA.

By the way, on what type of aircraft did you serve?

I flew in the the first evar flight of B-1B's to Australia. It was Cold War air defense exercise they ran in the outback called "PITCH BLACK." Our job, for about two weeks, was to launch out of RAAFB Darwin, fly out over the sea, and then double back and try to sneak into their airspace and avoid getting killed by their FA-18's. Sometimes they killed us, but other times we lived long enough to simulate bombing the bejebus out of Darwin. It was kinda stacked in their favor because they were always expecting us.

jacru
1/26/2007, 07:54 PM
They now far out-shine the country that didn't want them.

TUSooner
1/26/2007, 07:57 PM
I knew several Aussie tennis players at OCU. One guy was called "Hanoi" because he was always getting bombed.