Penal colony explained

A penal colony or exile colony is a settlement used to exile prisoners and separate them from the general population by placing them in a remote location, often an island or distant colonial territory. Although the term can be used to refer to a correctional facility located in a remote location, it is more commonly used to refer to communities of prisoners overseen by wardens or governors having absolute authority.

Historically, penal colonies have often been used for penal labour in an economically underdeveloped part of a state's (usually colonial) territories, and on a far larger scale than a prison farm.

British Empire

With the passage of the Transportation Act 1717, the British government initiated the penal transportation of indentured servants to Britain's colonies in the Americas, although none of the North American colonies were solely penal colonies. British merchants would be in charge of transporting the convicts across the Atlantic to the colonies where they would be auctioned off to planters. Many of the indentured servants were sentenced to seven year terms, which gave rise to the colloquial term "His Majesty's Seven-Year Passengers".[1] [2] [3] [4] It is estimated that between 1718 and 1776 about 30,000 convicts were transported to at least nine of the continental colonies, whereas between 1700 and 1775 about 250,000 to 300,000 white immigrants came to the mainland of North America as a whole. More than two-thirds of these felons were transported to the Chesapeake to work for Southern landowners; in Maryland, during the thirty years before 1776, convicts composed more than one-quarter of all immigrants.[5] However, it is commonly maintained that the vast majority of felons taken to America were political criminals, not those guilty of social crimes such as theft; for example, it was noted of Virginia that "the crimes of which they were convicted were chiefly political, and the number transported for social crimes was never considerable."[6] The colony of Georgia, by contrast, was planned by James Oglethorpe specifically to take in debtors and other social criminals. Oglethorpe referred to them as "the worthy poor" in a philanthropic effort to create a rehabilitative colony where prisoners could earn a second chance at life, learning trades and working off their debts.[7] [8] The success of Oglethorpe's vision is debated.[9]

When routes to the Americas closed after the outbreak of American Revolutionary War in 1776, British prisons started to become overcrowded. Since immediate stopgap measures proved themselves ineffective, in 1785 Britain decided to use parts of what is now known as Australia as de jure penal settlements, becoming the first colonies in the British Empire founded solely to house convicts. Leaving Portsmouth, England on 13 May 1787, the First Fleet transported the first ~800 convicts and ~250 marines to Botany Bay. Between 1788 and 1868, about 162,000 convicts were transported from Great Britain and Ireland to various penal colonies in Australia.[10] Australian penal colonies in late 18th century included Norfolk Island and New South Wales, and in early 19th century also Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) and Moreton Bay (Queensland).

Advocates of Irish Home Rule or trade unionism (the Tolpuddle Martyrs) sometimes received sentences of deportation to the Australian colonies. Without the allocation of the available convict labour to farmers, to pastoral squatters, and to government projects such as roadbuilding, colonisation of Australia may not have been possible, especially considering the considerable drain on non-convict labor caused by several gold rushes that took place in the second half of the 19th century after the flow of convicts had dwindled and (in 1868) ceased. A proposal to make the Cape Colony a penal colony was deeply unpopular with local residents, sparking the Convict crisis of 1849.

Bermuda, off the North American continent, was also used during the Victorian period. Convicts housed in hulks were used to build the Royal Naval Dockyard there, and during the Second Boer War (1899–1902), Boer prisoners-of-war were sent to the archipelago and imprisoned on one of the smaller islands.

In British India, the colonial government established various penal colonies. Two of the largest ones were on the Andaman Islands and Hijli. In the early days of settlement, Singapore Island was the recipient of Indian convicts, who were tasked with clearing the jungles for settlement and early public works.

France

France sent criminals to tropical penal colonies including Louisiana in the early 18th century.[11] Devil's Island in French Guiana, 1852–1939, received forgers and other criminals. New Caledonia and its Isle of Pines in Melanesia (in the South Sea) received transported dissidents like the Communards, Kabyles rebels as well as convicted criminals between the 1860s and 1897.

Americas

Elsewhere

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=XB5EdIEOKesC&pg=PA90 Bound with an Iron Chain – The Untold Story of how the British Transported 50,000 Convicts to Colonial America
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=hul1AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA21 Preliminaries of the Revolution, 1763–1775
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=uUk_AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA207 The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science
  4. [Lerone Bennett Jr.]
  5. Morgan . Kenneth . 1985 . The Organization of the Convict Trade to Maryland: Stevenson, Randolph and Cheston, 1768-1775 . The William and Mary Quarterly . 42 . 2 . 201–227 . 10.2307/1920428 . 0043-5597.

  6. "Writing of the early Virginians, he [Bancroft] said: 'Some of them were even convicts; but it must be remembered the crimes of which they were convicted were chiefly political. The number transported to Virginia for social crimes was never considerable.' Most other writers have held that, among transports shipped to America, political offenders formed a large majority."
  7. Web site: James Edward Oglethorpe . United States National Park Service.
  8. Web site: James Edward Oglethorpe . Oglethorpe.
  9. Web site: Establishing the Georgia Colony, 1732–1750 . United States Library of Congress.
  10. Web site: Convicts and the British colonies in Australia. Government of Australia. 8 May 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160101181100/http://www.australia.gov.au/about-australia/australian-story/convicts-and-the-british-colonies. 1 January 2016. dead.
  11. Taylor, Alan. American Colonies. Penguin: London (2001).
  12. https://www.thenation.com/article/world/guantanamo-bay-detention-visit/ Journey to Guantánamo: A Week in America's Notorious Penal Colony: A journalist heads to the US naval base and detention center, seeking out truths we're not meant to see.
  13. https://truthout.org/articles/the-imperialist-and-racist-origins-of-the-guantnamo-penal-colony/ The Imperialist and Racist Origins of the Guantánamo Penal Colony.
  14. https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-2002-02-13-0202120790-story.html Guantanamo Could be Terrorist Penal Colony.
  15. https://captimes.com/news/opinion/column/john-laforge-over-150-still-suffer-at-guantanamo-our-penal-colony/article_6aeb836b-34d6-5d5e-9969-31ff46f8f3fe.html John LaForge: Over 150 still suffer at Guantanamo, our penal colony.
  16. San Francisco Chronicle, 19 February 2019, p. A-2
  17. Web site: Colonización de Magallanes (1843–1943). 2020-04-05. Memoria Chilena. Biblioteca Nacional de Chile.
  18. Book: Martinic . Mateo . Mateo Martinic . 1977 . Historia del Estrecho de Magallanes . es . Santiago . Andrés Bello . 140 .
  19. Web site: Historia. 2020-04-07. Museo de Sitio Castillo de Niebla. Servicio Nacional del Patrimonio Cultural. es. 4 August 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200804005645/https://www.museodeniebla.gob.cl/643/w3-propertyvalue-42964.html?_noredirect=1. dead.
  20. Urbina C. . María Ximena. Ximena Urbina . 2017 . La expedición de John Narborough a Chile, 1670: Defensa de Valdivia, rumeros de indios, informaciones de los prisioneros y la creencia en la Ciudad de los Césares . John Narborough expedition to Chile, 1670: Defense of Valdivia, indian rumours, information on prisoners, and the belief in the City of the Césares . . 45 . 2 . 11–36 . 10.4067/S0718-22442017000200011. free .
  21. Web site: Chrysopoulos . Philip . Bactria: The Ancient Greek State in Afghanistan . Greek Reporter . 16 August 2021 . 12 April 2022.
  22. Web site: Dr Gul Rahim Khan . Greek genes and the numismatic expert from Peshawar . Dawn . 19 August 2018 . 12 April 2022.
  23. Book: Cohen . Joanna Waley . Exile in Mid-Qing China: Banishment to Xinjiang, 1758–1820 . 1991 . Yale Historical Publications . 10.2307/j.ctt2250vjs . j.ctt2250vjs . 978-0300048278 .
  24. For example:Book: Feig. Konnilyn G.. Hitler's Death Camps: The Sanity of Madness. 1981. reissue. Holmes & Meier Publishers. 1981. 296. 978-0841906761. 2015-06-29. [...] a forced-labor camp [...] named Arbeitslager Treblinka I [...] an order exists, dated 15 November 1941, establishing that penal colony..
  25. Book: Jager. Sheila Miyoshi. Sheila Miyoshi Jager. Brothers at War: The Unending Conflict in Korea. 2013. Profile Books. 458. 978-1847652027. 2015-06-29. Prison labor camps, or kwalliso, were first established in North Korea after liberation from Japan to imprison enemies of the revolution, landowners, collaborators, and religious leaders. After the war, these places housed un-repatriated South Korean prisoners of war. [...] There are six such camps in existence today, according to a May 2011 Amnesty International report, 'huge areas of land and located in vast wilderness sites in South Pyong'an, South Hamyong and North Hamyong Provinces.' ... Perhaps the most notorious penal colony is kwalliso no. 15. or Yodok [...]..
  26. Book: Stewart. John. 3rd. African States and Rulers. 2006. McFarland & Company. 96. 978-0786425624. 2015-06-29. From 1879 the Spanish basically used Fernando Po as a penal colony for captured Cuban rebels..
  27. Gates, David (1986). The Spanish Ulcer: A History of the Peninsular War. W W Norton & Co. .