‘ A Very Fair Statement of His Past Life ’ : Transported Convicts , Former Lives and Previous Offences Author :

As mass digitization brings new opportunities for analysing criminal and convict records, this article considers how we can recover the personal histories of the convicted. It proposes ‘intimate reading’ as a complementary approach to large-scale data mining and distant reading methods currently being developed to analyse large prison cohorts. Immersive reading, integrating quantitative and qualitative analysis of multiple sources, permits investigation of specific individuals, their interaction with others, and their engagement – however unequal – with the recordmakers. It helps us detect the agency of those who have left few traces of personal testimony but whose lives were captured in abstract information garnered by officialdom. The article focuses on male convicts who served time at Great Yarmouth in the 1830s and 1840s and were transported to Van Diemen’s Land where arrivals were interrogated on their offending histories, occupations and family ties, and their bodies inspected for distinguishing characteristics. Comparing convict records with other documentation on their former lives allows us to explore what exiles revealed and concealed from the authorities about their past. Social profiling of this group exposes patterns in employment, family and social networks that are not so readily apparent when reading fragmentary evidence of individual lives. Small-scale data analysis enables us to decode the more personal testimony unwittingly preserved by the penal authorities when they transcribed the convicts’ tattoos. The article concludes with an intimate reading of the elaborate tattoos of one Yarmouth convict that spectacularly depicted the man he felt himself to be.

the 'dark matter of plebeian and middling knowledge and life'.
Here, I show how my practice of intimate reading developed out of investigating inmates' experiences of imprisonment and their lives before and after committal to Great Yarmouth Gaol and House of Correction in the 1830s and 1840s.I begin with close reading, the approach I initially used to study interactions between prisoners and their teacher, Sarah Martin, who worked as a voluntary prison visitor from 1818 till her death in 1843.Focusing on her brief journal entries on her encounters with one prisoner, John King, I examine what the teacher thought she knew about inmates and what she recognized she could not know with certainty.While Martin's journals illuminate her understanding of her students' lives and characters, they offer only snapshots of inmates themselves, refracted through the visitor's pious gaze.From examination of one individual prisoner, therefore, I move outwards to reconstruct the experiences of offenders like him.Comparisons are drawn between statements made by thirty-four male convicts, formerly imprisoned at Yarmouth, in answer to cross-examination by the penal authorities in Van Diemen's Land combined with evidence of their lives derived from gaol, census and parish registers.Social profiling, based on data analysis of this cohort, is then used to help interpret John King's testimony to his penal interrogators and to conduct an intimate reading of his life and passions via the description of his elaborate tattoos.Intimate reading, integrating qualitative and quantitative analysis, provides insights into individual experiences of criminalization while raising new questions that might be explored by larger-scale studies of prison and convict populations.

I. Close Reading: 'I am not here for any thing that is a disgrace'
On 11 November 1839, John King (aged seventeen) and William Tunmore (eighteen), were picked up in a hayloft and, deemed by the magistrate to be rogues and vagabonds intent on stealing, were sentenced summarily to three months hard labour in the House of Correction at Great Yarmouth.Three weeks later, Sarah Martin recalled 'Part of a conversation with John King', beginning with his protestation at conviction: "I am not here for any thing that is a disgrace.["] What? not a disgrace to be committed to a prison?-but I was only in a hay loft -And what for -That hay loft has of late been a thief's house.Who but thieves go there?-I was only lying there.What right had you to enter another man's hay loft?Would an honest man have done it.-I did nothing.-What good would it do you if you could possibly deceive me? -even then would not God know what you are? and would you not know yourself to be what you are?He looked disconcerted and agreed to this -He was in the prison before.
Martin's surviving Everyday Books detailing lessons with inmates offer a rare opportunity to examine reactions to conviction, imprisonment and correction after 1835, when prisons were brought under the auspices of the Prison Inspectorate, charged with systematizing penal discipline in England and Wales.Following lessons, Martin hastily jotted down interactions and exchanges between prisoners and herself that she believed illustrated improvement or deterioration in conduct and character.Sometimes, as in her entry on John King, the teacher transcribed their words, albeit in abbreviated form.Thus, at the very moment that the Prison Inspectorate was implementing policies designed to prevent communication between prisoners and subject them to a regime of silence, Martin's journals captured snatches of their voices.How might we interpret this evidence and what, if anything, might it tell us about the experience and mentality of the convicted?
The copious writings of prison reformers and the wealth of data amassed by the authorities on the convicted have been read as constituting the discursive power of disciplinary regimes.Much attention has been paid to how the idea of the 'offender' was constructed by penal discourses and how, from the 1840s, biographical data on prisoners was used to profile and police individual offenders and criminal types.Nevertheless, most scholars have been sceptical about whether these discourses tell us much about the individual subjectivities of the convicted, concluding that 8 9 10 11 official records document what the powerful saw or understood, reflecting and reinforcing their preoccupations and prejudices.Viewed this way, it is not John King who speaks to us through Martin's journal but the teacher or, as poststructuralists would have it, the discourse of moral correction.
In the following discussion I highlight two problems with this approach.First, it overplays the rigour of the information procedures deployed by governing bodies, institutions and agents like Martin, and their confidence in the data they collected and what it could tell them.Second, in focusing attention on inmates as objects of regulatory knowledge, we reaffirm the power of the institution and can miss the possibility of investigating the lived experience of those who came in contact with it.We cannot begin to comprehend the operation and effects of penal discourses on prisoners if we do not also try to go beyond them, to explore the lives and worlds of the convicted, and to detect what the record keepers did not, or could not, see.
Martin's note on her encounter with King, for example, might seem to confirm her authority as teacher and spiritual guide and the legitimacy of the legal system that prosecuted him.It does not reveal the circumstances that prompted his defiant protestation -'I am not here for any thing that is a disgrace' -but recounts the teacher's apparent success in bringing about his submission; 'He looked disconcerted and agreed to this'.While Martin's entries in the coming weeks recorded her answers to complaints by his cellmates over the justice of their confinement and their opposition to biblical instruction, King appears to have knuckled down to learning and within a fortnight could read words of three letters.Nevertheless, she doubted his improvement in character; after all, as she remarked tersely, 'He was in the prison before.'Far from Martin's journals demonstrating the discursive power of the prison or the moral regime she managed within it, her need to document the reactions of scholars betrays awareness of her limited influence over them.Unlike God, who, she believed, could see into their souls, the teacher might be deceived.She must judge them by their actions as well as words.Their conduct, too, was difficult to interpret.On discharge, King and his cellmates asked for copies of the scriptural verses they had learned so they might show them to their friends outside the gaol.The teacher gave each a book, covered in brown paper, containing two or three hand-written verses, but how confident could she be that their request indicated the beginnings of conversion rather than attempts to curry her favour?Thus, record-keeping was important to Martin: when inmates left, the teacher tabulated in her register what she had discovered of them and 'observed' their character so she could judge if they deserved further assistance and remember them if they returned to gaol.Hence, she recorded John King's age and sentence, his religion (Church of England), that he could neither read nor write, having 'no capacity', but that he had now learned 'by memory'; 'See Everyday Book', she added, in case she needed future reference.Martin was typically cautious in her assessment of the lad: 'Former character and habits low -temper good -Always wears a silly smile.very ignorant -willing and desirous of being instructed and diligent but fails from want of capacity.capable of great deceit.'Martin's ambivalence and uncertainty towards the prisoner reflected what she had learned about him but also what she thought she knew of the hundreds of inmates who had passed through her gaol classes.John King's words, transcribed and mediated by Martin, do not give us direct access to what the prisoner felt and thought: under interrogation was he defensive, compliant, cheeky, defiant?Inmate voices were caught only momentarily in the teacher's journals and reach us distorted through her words.More often, she reported what she told prisoners and so, for us, they are seen -like John King's 'silly smile' -but not heard.While close reading, the dominant method used in recent socio-cultural history, may illuminate Sarah Martin's motivation and perspective, it is of limited use in examining the self-perception of her scholars.But perhaps their actions can speak in place of their words, as Martin herself intimated?Or, if their actions do not speak for them, might they speak of their world?Her prison scholars were all captured elsewhere -in the gaol registers, census returns, and parish records.Occasionally, even their 'voices' can be heard.What happens if we orchestrate these voices?Can they get us any closer to

II. Forced Migration, Forced Narration?
By the 1830s and 1840s, gaol and hulk records on individual offenders accompanied all convicts to the penal colonies but only in Van Diemen's Land were arrivals interrogated systematically about their criminal history and former life.
As late as 1827, Governor Arthur complained the colony received no documentation about convicts' offences, conduct in custody or prior associations.Consequently, he instigated requirements that Surgeon-Superintendents, charged with the instruction as well as the physical welfare of exiles aboard ship, provide on arrival in Hobart a 'hulk list' containing: the name, the number, the age, the birth-place, the crime, the period of conviction, when and where the sentence, whether married or single, whether he can read or write, or whether he can only read, or whether he can do neither, where taught, his trade, the character he brought from the gaoler, the character from the hulk, the alleged qualifications, what he is able to do and then his behaviour on board the transport.This information formed the basis of each convict's indent.It was presented to the Muster Master, responsible for their assignment, who boarded the ship with the Principal Superintendent of Convicts to make a 'minute examination' of each prisoner, with piles of paperwork to hand.For Arthur, interrogation would fill the gaps in official documentation and impress on convicts the all-seeing power of 'the System'.Faced by an apparently knowledgeable investigator, such display of evidence and forensic inspection, the convict, concluded Arthur, would be awed into truthfulness: The man perceives at once that the officer who is examining him does know something of his history; and not being quite conscious how much of it is known, he reveals, I should think, generally a very fair statement of his past life, apprehensive of being detected in stating what is untrue.'Reputedly, convicts were indeed overwhelmed by the panopticon gaze of the Principle Superintendent who, they said, could recall every prisoner by name and ship and 'never forgets anything'.
Cognisant of its omissions and reliance on prisoner confession, Arthur's record-keeping system seems to bear out Michel Foucault's premise that modern forms of surveillance function as 'a network of relations from top to bottom, but also to a certain extent from bottom to top and laterally'.Yet, the role of offenders in the production of criminal records has rarely been probed.By the time they arrived in Van Diemen's Land, most convicts will have become accustomed to cross-examination as they made their way from bench to prison to hulk to ship.Ten of the Yarmouth convicts, including John King, had been incarcerated on at least one occasion precisely for failing 'to give a proper account' of themselves when picked up as a 'rogue and vagabond', acting suspiciously.Others will have been quizzed about their circumstances and rights of settlement when they applied to the Poor Law guardians for parish relief.Some were at home in 1841 when the census enumerator required residents to provide their age, occupation and native place.Used to reeling off an account of themselves, what did convicts admit to the authorities and, equally important, what did they omit?Was Arthur right to assume they would be inclined to truthfulness?Did any seize the opportunity to enhance their prospects in a new land by reconstructing their past?
There has been considerable debate over the value and interpretation of data based on information supplied by prisoners.According to V. A. C. Gatrell and T. B. Hadden, evidence of their offences, ages, literacy levels and occupations garnered by the Prison and Police Returns 'is probably the least reliable material in the official statistical records'.In view of contemporary complaints that offenders lied about their age, employment, schooling and religion to mitigate their sentence or treatment in gaol, J. J. Tobias speculated that prisoners were 'incurable Challenging this iconoclastic revisionism, data analysis by economic historians in the 1980s barely looked at prior convictions and instead honed in on information relating to convicts' occupations, skills and labour power.The exiles, they contended, were best seen as 'forced migrants' and 'convict workers' whose profile correlated closely with that of the British labouring classes from whose ranks they were mainly drawn rather than from an imagined criminal residuum.In the most recent study to estimate prior offending rates, Alison Alexander, project manager for 'Founders and Survivors', endorses the argument made by the Convict Workers team that the majority of Van Diemen's Land convicts had been 'ordinary working-class people' in that about 75% had been in employment but supplemented meagre earnings by resorting to petty theft.Around a quarter, nevertheless, had been habitual offenders, she estimates, with about 15% having regularly engaged in theft alongside casual labour while perhaps 10% had been professional thieves.Alexander's assessment is based on information listed in the indents of 5048 men and women, supplied by the authorities and by convicts themselves but is not, unlike the analysis below, correlated with gaol admissions.
Recently, attention has turned not just to the imaginary of nineteenth-century observers but to cultural narratives deployed by the convicted in their keepsakes and tattoos, stories and memoirs.Far from dismissing offenders as 'incurable romancers', historians have begun to show how romancing itself might constitute a form of evidence which illuminates the cultural strategies prisoners used to convey, interpret and trade on their past.Ian Duffield, for example, has viewed the records of convict interrogation on arrival in Van Diemen's Land as 'forced narratives' that, nonetheless, contain arresting first-person voices.In a close reading of statements made by four black convicts, he argues their answers to cross-examination should be read as 'high-density micro-narrative[s]' in which the voice of the colonized subject intrudes spectacularly into the state record.Alexander Simpson, court martialled in 1832 for his part in the Jamaican slave uprising, declared his offence as 'Mutiny & exciting the Slaves to Rebellion.I was a slave myself.'Such 'powerfully dramatic "action narratives"', contends Duffield, wrest our attention from the colonial 'eye', with its power of surveillance over the prisoner, to the autobiographical 'I' of the convicted.They remind us that the penal gaze was not omnipotent for its record-keeping depended on convicts' own voices that sometimes challenged the system that imprisoned them.'[I]n these brief, supercharged tales', concludes Duffield, 'the convicts' agendas are not effectively hijacked by the agendas of the Convict Department record-keeping: convict voices are vividly if briefly audible.' The convict 'I', however, was rarely documented as assertively as Alexander Simpson's defiant declaration, 'I was a slave myself'.Usually the first-person pronoun was expunged from the record and the convict's identity reduced to his crimes and utility to the colonial labour force, as when the clerk entered John King as 'Fisherman' and noted his stated offence, 'Stealing 2 stone 11 of old canvass pr [prosecutor] Cullenthorpe of Yarmouth'.In order to recover King's statement as an 'action narrative', and those of the vast majority interrogated by the Superintendent of Convicts, we need to return to the scenes of their 'crimes' and the circumstances that led to their exile.

III. Record Linkage and Social Profiling: 'Stated this Offence'
In the following examination, I compare the prison and convict records of thirty-four men transported to Van Diemen's Land in the period 1837-1852 who served time at Yarmouth Gaol, for summary and indictable offences.
Small-scale analysis has its own challenges and limitations.Piecing together the offending histories of the convicted requires careful detective work if we are to avoid falsely indicting them anew.Two John Kings went in and out of Yarmouth Gaol in the early 1840s, for example, and another man bearing the same name was transported with John King aboard the Surrey.Variations in name and transcription mistakes can lead to a wide margin of error so my statistical findings should be read as approximations.However, a micro-historical approach combining quantitative and qualitative investigation and aided by access databases, enables more extensive contextualization and intensive interpretation of historical sources than large-scale studies can undertake.Some Yarmouth convicts had entered prison as early as 1834 and all can be tracked in the Gaoler's daily log as well as in the gaol registers.Twenty-nine convicts were transported following trial at the Great Yarmouth Quarter Sessions.The remaining five passed through the prison but were sentenced in the county town to transportation at the Norwich Quarter Sessions or the Norfolk Special Assizes.
Five women admitted to Yarmouth Gaol in the same period were sent to Van Diemen's Land, four of whom were sentenced by the town's magistrates.Tried at the Norfolk County Assizes, which heard all capital offences, Charlotte Yaxley pleaded not guilty to murdering her step-daughter.She was the only Yarmouth convict to protest against her conviction when stating her offence in Van Diemen's Land: 'I am innocent'.All the other exiles were convicted of theft and their profiles correspond with the similar number sent from the East Anglian port to other penal colonies in the same years.I exclude women from this analysis, however, because their offending histories were very different to the men's.Between them, the women had been convicted of seven offences (only two had known prior convictions) and, in common with other female prisoners in the gaol, they had a much lower committal rate than the males.
All but two of the male Yarmouth exiles arrived in Van Diemen's Land after the transition in 1839 from the Assignment to the Probation system, when penal bureaucracy approached its apogee.Comparison of gaol registers and convict records confirms Governor Arthur's concerns about the reliability and leakage of the official documentation trail that continued into the Probation era.In 1844, for example, the Gaoler testified at the Norwich Assizes to the prior convictions of three former inmates, all under twenty years old, tried for stealing money from a public house: Robert Harrod had eleven committals at Yarmouth, William Jenkins three and Joshua Artis nine.Yet, the Gaoler's information did not reach the hulk authority, which reported that Harrod and Artis had one previous conviction and Jenkins '2 or 3', presumably offences committed at Norwich.Neither did the Gaoler's report of their conduct under his watch reach the convict authority.Harrod was disciplined seven times in Yarmouth Gaol while Jenkins and Artis, at eighteen times apiece, were among the most frequently punished inmates for run-of-the-mill infractions: fighting, singing, shouting, swearing, communicating with female prisoners and so on.When the Gaoler's report was forwarded, it usually tallied with his record of the prisoner's conduct in gaol, but in only nineteen out of thirty-four cases did his assessment reach Van Diemen's Land.
The Gaol Report usually recorded the Gaoler's numerical estimate of the convicts' prior committals at Yarmouth, regardless of whether they had been acquitted, and included the offence for which they were transported.According to his reports, the nineteen convicts had served 56 imprisonments between them, giving an average offending rate of 2.95.In fact, the thirty-four convicts had served 129 prior imprisonments at Yarmouth, averaging 3.82 each.If we add to these committals the offences that led to their transportation, as well as a further 29 offences committed elsewhere, only two of which they omitted, we have a total of 194 offences and an overall committal rate of 5.71 each.
By contrast, if we calculated the average number of prior committals solely on the Gaoler's Reports, we would have a figure of 1.65 per convict, an under-reporting of repeat offending by around two-thirds.
Only three of the thirty-four convicts were positively identified by the Gaoler as first-time offenders but, in their statements, two of these acknowledged prior offences committed elsewhere while the third had been imprisoned twice at Yarmouth as a refractory pauper.No information was sent about seven convicts.Six of these men had previous committals at Yarmouth while four of them owned up to former convictions in their statements.The one convict who had no offending history was a Sheffield cutler on the tramp, sentenced to transportation for street robbery committed in Yarmouth with two other itinerants.If, as many itinerants will have done, he concealed his With at most one first-time male offender transported from Yarmouth, the gaol committal rates raise questions about the conclusions of earlier large-scale examinations of convict records, such as the assertion in Convict Workers that two-thirds of exiles were first-time offenders.They also suggest the possibility that L. L. Robson's long-contested claim that '[c]ertainly one-half, and probably two-thirds, had formerly been punished' may have been a conservative estimate.However, committal rates do not take us much closer to understanding how the convicted viewed their offences.Some imprisonments were for very short periods -a day or two on Further Examination or a week or two on Remand that did not lead to conviction and which, understandably, many convicts did not acknowledge.If we exclude these short stays and six acquittals from our analysis, we have a figure of 91 convictions of which the convicts admitted 45 and omitted 46 when stating their former crimes.With the offences committed outside Yarmouth and those for which they were sentenced to transportation, in all they acknowledged 122 crimes, averaging 3.59 offences each.
Of the prior offences they admitted, the Yarmouth exiles were most likely to acknowledge convictions for theft.They admitted to 33 (73.33%) of these offences, even some that were trivial (Samuel Iverson, who seems to have had a sweet tooth, confessed to serving one day for peppermint and two acquittals for sugar) and to us earned grossly excessive sentences (George Mills's six-month sentence for stealing apples).In total, the transportees declared six out of eight convictions for pilfering food and all five for stealing clothes.Their readiness to admit to theft suggests that most accepted the illegality of crimes against property ownership, an acceptance borne out by the fact that, when free, some would take to court those who stole from them, as did considerable numbers of former convicts.Robert Harrod arrived in Van Diemen's Land with a string of thirteen convictions going back to the age of twelve of which over half involved theft (though he conceded only one), but he would bring at least two prosecutions when manager of a hotel and store.
Much of the thieving by Yarmouth offenders appears to have been opportunistic and connected with their occupation, like the work-based appropriation that characterized much of the crime committed by the labouring poor elsewhere.Samuel Wells worked for a brewer and was transported for stealing a peck of barley.Seven years previously he had served three months for robbing a plank, an offence he declared along with stealing a fender, a charge for which he was acquitted.The sawyer Isaac Gowing was transported for stealing a plane; he admitted his one prior conviction of thieving wood the previous year.The Yarmouth transportees declared six of the eight clearly occupation-related thefts of which formerly they had been convicted.Partnerships in crime were also connected to occupation.Two young men transported for life for horse-thieving may have met through working as boatmen, though when they were first committed together for being idle and disorderly, the youngest was only thirteen.He admitted that offence (10 days and 2 months) and twelve months for housebreaking but the older boy admitted only one prior conviction of twelve months for stealing a watch.
Others were more selective in their recall.Thomas Mapes was committed nine times at Yarmouth.He pleaded not guilty to stealing three cheeses with a companion, a cheesemonger, but was sentenced to six months.In his statement he admitted taking cheese and receiving ten days for an assault.In fact, by paying fines he avoided imprisonments for two assaults, one against a policeman, but served one month for an assault on another constable.
He overlooked these and other committals, including two months for vagrancy and suspicion of robbery.By contrast, William Chapman admitted six imprisonments for 'disorderly conduct', without specifying he had been charged three times with beating policemen, nor for bathing in the river at an improper time.An apprentice shoemaker, he admitted stealing ladies' shoes with two other boys, one of whom acknowledged the same offence in his statement.The Yarmouth convicts were less ready, therefore, to acknowledge violent crime than property offences.In general, assaults were prosecuted much less frequently and severely than property-based offences and often imprisonment could be avoided by paying a fine.Six men had convictions relating to assault (five of these on women, five on policemen) but only three owned up to any history of violence.James Brown alluded in veiled terms to two such commitments: 'two months for a row' (with his father) and six months for 'breach of peace' (an assault on Elizabeth Barber).Both offences must have been vicious to incur such long sentences.For other convicts, omission of their history of assault probably reflects their acceptance of violence as an integral and everyday part of the rough-andready male culture of the seaport rather than any reluctance to declare it or sense of wrong-doing and shame.
Sentenced to seven years for stealing a silk bag and money, for instance, John Newstead acknowledged twelve months for a highway robbery committed outside Yarmouth and five counts of 'drunkenness', probably connected with his four convictions for assault at Yarmouth, one on a policeman and three on women, one of whom was probably his girlfriend since her name was tattooed on his arm.Neither did Newstead disclose committals for stealing a pair of boots and being a refractory pauper.
Of the men's 129 commitments at Yarmouth, only 19 (14.73%) led to an appearance at the Quarter Session; the remaining 111 cases (86.05%) were heard summarily by the magistrates.Many of these were for misdemeanours ranging from vagrancy, being idle and disorderly or a suspicious character, to removing soil, sand or dirt without license.William Copping confessed to breaking out of the workhouse five times, though none of the three convicts who served time at Yarmouth as refractory paupers owned up to their offence against the parish.Thomas Tripp admitted two counts of suspicion but not the three weeks spent for being a rogue and vagabond who 'did wilfully expose his person, he being entirely naked'.However, 42 of the Yarmouth men's former convictions were for misdemeanours to which they admitted 25, a surprisingly high number (59.52%).These included the boys William Jenkins, sent down for twelve months for 'setting boats adrift', and Thomas Bowles, a week each for breaking windows and being absent from his work.
The scavenger Christopher Riches, however, clearly distinguished between felony and misdemeanour; 'Denies having been convicted before' states his convict record.He was eighteen when sentenced to transportation in 1845 with his brother Isaac (seventeen) for stealing four fathoms of rope from a ship, worth 1s 10d.On their conviction, the Gaoler, unusually, wrote out their committal history in full, showing he was well aware of their record of persistent offending.Yet, though Christopher had been committed eleven times and Isaac six, their Gaol Reports list only two convictions each.While comparison of these records illustrates the gaps in the paper trail, it also illuminates the boys' understanding of legality, property and theft.Christopher first entered gaol on remand in June 1841 for 'digging up and carrying away soil from the Denes' and was remanded twice more that year for stealing manure and a basket.
On other occasions he received a week or a fortnight for removing dirt and ill-using a donkey.Many juvenile boys were summarily convicted of gathering dirt -a common means of making a little money.For Christopher, however, it was a legitimate livelihood -Sarah Martin noted his father was the 'Town Scavenger' -at which he worked industriously.Ten of his eleven admissions were connected with scavenging.His brother Isaac seems to have drawn the same distinction between thieving and scavenging.He admitted six months for stealing a watch, seven days for stealing money, and seven days for 'picking my mothers [sic] pocket' but omitted six months for vagrancy with intent to steal wood from a shipyard.Isaac excluded one further imprisonment -stealing eggs and knives from a shop -an offence for which both brothers were prosecuted but only the younger convicted.Given Isaac's admission of the other thefts, on this occasion he may have been wrongly indicted.
Isaac's remand for picking his mother's pocket alerts us to another aspect of the offenders' history that is thrown into relief when we compare the statements convicts made about their family and its whereabouts with other records.
At least five Yarmouth convicts had been committed to gaol by a relative, six if we include William Copping, whose prosecution was instigated by the man who subsequently lived with Copping's wife.James Brown was first committed, aged eighteen, for a 'row' at the behest of his father.The short, sharp shock of six weeks confinement evidently failed for he received three more committals before being sentenced to seven years.Likewise, on the complaint of his mother, twelve-year-old Robert Harrod spent the first of eleven stints at Yarmouth Gaol for being 'idle and disorderly, wandering abroad and absenting himself from home'.His absences may have been prompted by tension with his step-father, who Robert omitted from the family he listed to the convict authorities.Thomas Bowles was sentenced to transportation for stealing £50 from his uncle.His father Edmund had been a policeman at Yarmouth and was charged with secreting a watch, property of the executors of Thos Bowles.When young Thomas got into trouble with the law, Edmund appears to have been absent from home; he was not resident at the 1841 Census and in 1844, two years after his son, was transported for street robbery in Norwich, committed with a woman who was not his wife, and where he had also been convicted of assault.
While these committals hint at family trouble -relatives are only likely to have prosecuted an errant family member after prolonged disruptive behaviour -all five gave an accurate account of their kin, as did the large majority of convicts.Other evidence on their convict records suggests a kind of atonement on the part of two of these men.Isaac Riches's elaborate tattoos, noted by the convict clerk, depicted the parents from whom he had stolen -'MR [Mary Riches] CR [Christopher Riches] Man & Woman above elbow' -and probably his companionship with his brother with whom he embarked for Van Diemen's Land -'two men arm in arm'.When first admitted to gaol, James Brown was entered in the register as 'James Brown, Junior' to distinguish him from the father with whom he had been brawling.Brown appears to have adopted the patronym for he is named in the convict records as 'James Brown, the Younger'.He seems to have identified with his father, following in his occupation as a bricklayer and proudly displaying the tools of their trade in his tattoos -'hammer compasses trowell plumb rule level step level'.
Most Yarmouth convicts began their offending career in their early teens.61.02% were under eighteen when they committed their pre-transportation offences; as a cohort they were younger than the gaol's repeat offender population, 41% of whom were under eighteen in the years 1839-1841.Of the convicts, 32.35 % were still under eighteen when sentenced to transportation.Where Robson found half of male transportees were under twenty-five on arrival in Australia, nearly three-quarters (70.59%) of the Yarmouth convicts fell into this age group.Only five were over 30.At fourteen, Henry Coppin was the youngest exile, sentenced in 1841 for stealing an oil frock and trousers from a ship.One year earlier, his father William Copping had been given seven years for receiving stolen goods.Five times confined as a refractory pauper, William seems not to have been able to fulfil the two main paternal duties of providing for and protecting his children and it is likely that, with his departure, Henry went off the rails.
Probably Henry was estranged from his mother, for her name is not included in his statement though he gave the names of his father and siblings.At the 1841 Census, Henry was not at the lodging house in Lowestoft where his mother resided with the man who had testified against her husband, and he was picked up as a rogue and vagabond prior to his conviction for theft.
Reconstructing convicts' families by linking their indents with Christening records and census returns reveals a startling aspect of their profile.Of the thirty-one men whose families can be identified through the indent or the census, seventeen (54.84%) had lost their father, eighteen if we include the effective death of Henry Coppin's father on his transportation.Twelve had no mother (38.71%) while six had neither parent, though only one of these was under twenty.Only ten convicts (32.26%) had both parents living.Record linkage reveals the catastrophic effects on some young men of the loss of a parent, and especially the father.In a port dominated by male occupations with few employment opportunities for women, the death of the male breadwinner could devastate the family economy.On at least two occasions William Hickling's mother had taken her three sons into the workhouse and towards the end of her life she would again be a pauper.When William was sentenced to transportation for theft in 1841, Maria Hickling and her youngest son Robert (seven) were acquitted of receiving stolen goods from him.
All but two convicts came from Norfolk, one of the most distressed agrarian counties in the 1830s and 1840s, while four came from Norwich.The rest were born in Great Yarmouth or its immediate vicinity where the mixed economy of the port offered more employment opportunities, though much of it casual, and generally better wages than the surrounding rural areas.The Gaoler's records of their occupations closely correlate with those on their convict statements and allow us to track their progress through the occupational structure of the port.On his first admission in 1839, aged fourteen, for stealing poultry, William Hickling was working at 'a fish office' while on successive visits he was listed as a labourer.On arrival in VanDiemen's Land, however, William described himself as a fisherman, an occupation that probably signified the future he had hoped for himself, rather than his previous employment.If this is the case, he connected himself with his elder brother Matthew, listed as a mariner in the 1841 Census, and the sailor father they had lost.Joshua Artis firmly identified himself with his father, a knife-grinder and cutler.We can trace Joshua's progress from 'chip boy' in his early admissions to 'labourer' in later ones.In Van Diemen's Land he described himself as 'an imperfect tailor', the trade he must have begun to learn at the Penitentiary prior to embarkation, but to which he proudly added his father's trade -cutler -the one to which, presumably, he always thought he was heading.Fifteen of the twenty-three convicts whose family occupations can be traced claimed their father's trade or that of an elder brother.Some had definitely been employed in their father's trade, such as the waterman Joseph Anderson and watchmaker William Wetherill.For others, their stated occupation was a way of connecting themselves to the life they had departed and, in particular, their sense of masculine vocation.
There is only one convict who may have deliberately changed his employment status in order to enhance his chances in the penal colony.Henry Simmonds entered Yarmouth Gaol as a 'hawker of needles'; in Van Diemen's Land he gave himself the more elevated role of coachman and groom.Conceivably he had done this job in the past but his claim may have been a white lie for he appears to have told one other.Simmonds had been arrested at Yarmouth with his 'wife' Anna, who was acquitted of street robbery; in Van Diemen's Land he declared himself single.William Chapman, sentenced at the same Sessions as Simmonds, likewise claimed to be single though, four days after his removal to the Warrior hulk, his 'wife' had to be told to leave the gaol, having appeared 'in a state of angry excitement, using disrespectful language towards the Local authorities'.I have not found either Simmonds or Chapman (who may have been in common-law unions) in the marriage registers but if these two men cast off their marital status -as did some convicts and the spouses they left behind -I have found no other evidence of men falsifying their occupational or family circumstances.In the light of their collective profile, therefore, drawn from their testimony, what can we make of the statements made by John King when the Surrey anchored at Hobart in 1842 and who, early in 1840, had walked out of the prison gate, with his booklet of religious verses, covered in brown paper, smiling perhaps?

IV. Intimate Reading: 'I am not married but…'
John King was sentenced to seven years transportation in December 1841 for stealing old canvas.His conduct record gives his age as twenty-four but he was only twenty.In his statement he declared five previous imprisonments: '2 months for shoes; 14 days for lathwood; vagrancy 3 months; for soil 14 days; 3 months for stealing'.In the 'Black Books', his life was tabulated so the convict authorities might better monitor his conduct, exploit his labour and identify him if he absconded.As James Bradley and Hamish Maxwell-Stewart caution us, their inspection 'served to remind convicts of their status as subjected (and subjectified) objects of "panopticon" knowledge, imprisoned by descriptions of their own bodies and regulated by the internalisation of this knowledge.'Yet, in notating the tattooed markings on convict bodies, the penal clerks unwittingly recorded many convicts' own embodied statements.In their highly original 'quantitative deconstruction' and 'qualitative exposition' of the indents of five thousand tattooed convicts, Bradley and Maxwell-Stewart examine the 'margin between contending constructions of convict subjectivity', between the 'state record' and tattoo descriptions, which suggest 'a "popular" counter-narrative of mediation, resistance and transcendence.' Their approach offers me a method not only of deconstructing the quantitative data on the Yarmouth convicts to explore their collective experience but also of applying these findings in an intimate reading of John King's tattoos.He had begun to decorate his 'pockpitted stout and not allowed to speak -if she only sang to her baby.Mrs Shuckford [the Gaoler's wife] sends an order that she should be quiet.'But Maria Bowler was sent down again the following year for running away from the workhouse with items of clothing.John King was again in prison, serving three months for vagrancy.I cannot establish if Mary Ann Balls, Mary Bowles and Maria Bowler were the same woman, as seems likely, nor what happened to King's lover and their children after he was transported.'I am not here for any thing that is a disgrace' John King had told his Christian teacher when imprisoned for vagrancy in 1839.But vagrancy may well have been either cause or effect of the apparent rift from his birth family.Certainly it will have prevented him from caring effectively for his young family and Mary Ann Balls.Was this in his mind when he admitted to the Superintendent of Convicts, 'vagrancy 3 months'?Mary Ann Balls appears to figure in John King's tattoos, perhaps with her two children if the letter-string 'EJMB' refers to their initials.Regardless of his inability to meet his manly duty as provider for his family, King's tattoos conveyed the romantic ideals of constancy, companionship and hope.As so often in popular culture, these ideals were symbolized by a female figure.Two of King's tattoos depicted loving attachment: 'man woman in each hand 2 sprigs'; 'sailor & woman with cross'.
Representations of the sailor's fond farewell or joyful return to his sweetheart frequently adorned love tokens, illustrated songs and broadsides, and will have been especially resonant to men like John King, raised in a seaport, who frequently sported them in their tattoos.They remind us that popular culture was often more sentimental than bawdy in tone and infused with religious sentiment.While convicts commonly identified with the crucified Christ in their tattoos, however, we cannot know if John King's sailor and woman shouldered the cross together or if she bore it alone, just as Mary Ann Balls was left to raise her children on her own.Though listed as a labourer in the gaol and census records, King gave his occupation as fisherman at Hobart.On his left breast, over his heart, was a barque, possibly the Surrey on which he was transported but more likely the ship he had wished to join, for he also depicted a mermaid, two anchors and fish, all familiar talismans of mariners.Where his father worked on the shoreline, John King looked out to sea.The name 'ROBERT JACUP' was spelled out, almost certainly the 24 year-old Yarmouth shipwright with whom King surely enthused about boats.'RJ.AC.OB' appeared on the letter string on King's outside left leg and there was an 'R' between his right forefinger and thumb.Robert Jacup was clearly a significant other: mentor, lover, partner-in-crime?
Perhaps they swapped tattoos.
Tattooing was an integral part of Yarmouth's sea-faring culture, as it was of life aboard the convict ships.28 of the 34 men from Yarmouth were tattooed on arrival in Van Diemen's Land (82.35%), far more than the 26% of arrivals from Scotland.Like other convict body art, John King's tattoos drew on symbols of male prowess -'man with bow & arrow lion eagle' -but others were more ominous in tone.There appears to have been a 'Bat & [purse?]' -nocturnal and nefarious pursuits?-alongside the note to self -'J.K. prepare to meet thy God'.The words echoed the hell-fireand-brimstone preaching of King's teacher at Yarmouth Gaol but did they signal penitence, fatalism, blasphemy?An intimate reading of his tattoos cannot disclose their full meaning but it can show how John King expressed himself through the popular cosmology found in other convict tattoos which mixed the sacred and profane, light and dark; 'J.K. prepare to meet thy God heart & dart flowerpot GK ass manshead'.

V. Conclusion
Cultural historians have alerted us to the significance of narratives in shaping identity but have tended to privilege written texts as the source of such narratives and as means to their interpretation.John King's body art suggests an alternative personal history to that contained in the terse statements recorded by the convict authority and hints at his inner life as well as the man he chose to display to the world.But grilled by the Superintendent of Convicts, half the Yarmouth men were candid about their offending record, stating most, if not all, of their convictions, and especially their longer imprisonments.The other half were more selective in their account but only five gave no former offences and all admitted the crime which had them transported.In the information they supplied about their occupations and families, the Yarmouth convicts were largely credible witnesses to their own life histories.When their statements are read alongside other records about their lives, we learn some of what Sarah Martin could not know but also much that she did: that most had lost parents or become disengaged from their family; that regular work and family ties were sources of stability and that lack of employment and supervision could undermine those ties; and so too could the lure of companionship and conviviality rooted in the masculine, rough-and-ready, coming-a-going street culture of the seaport.In his vibrant tattoos, John King's body bore that culture's attractions, its spirit, and its costs: 's encounter with the law and the prison visitor, even to what made him smile?To begin, let us turn to one occasion when convicts were compelled to speak.
More credence has been given to the value of convict indents but they have been the source of radically different interpretations of Australia's penal population.The first studies employing large-scale examination of indents to determine convicts' prior offending rates concluded in the mid-twentieth century that, contrary to popular mythology, exiles were rarely starving poachers or 'Village Hambdens'.Most convicts were not first-time offenders, they argued, and many came from what contemporaries termed the 'criminal class'.
convictions from the authorities (he claimed to have no relatives) he has also concealed himself from the historian and his record cannot be confirmed.
Barque on left breast mermaid man woman in each hand 2 sprigs man with bow & arrow lion eagle EJMB sun half moon 3 stars heart & darts & several red marks APRIL 1838 M AM 2 anchors fish ROBERT JACUP on right arm R between forefinger & thumb right hand sailor & woman with cross Bat & [purse?]JK prepare to meet thy God heart & dart flowerpot GK ass manshead SK CK INGWI SARAH KING SH SK on left arm [RJACOB] on outside of left leg Selected Essays (New York: Basic Books, 1973), pp.3-30.My approach to 'intimate reading' resists the opposition between big data and micro history methodologies drawn by Jo Guldi and David Armitage in The History Manifesto (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014). Ben Heller, review of London Lives 1690-1800 -Crime, Poverty and Social Policy in the Metropolis, Reviews in History (no.1001) URL: http://www.history.ac.uk/reviews/review/1001. Date accessed: 27 June 2013. See: Helen Rogers, 'The Way to Jerusalem: Reading, Writing and Reform in an Early Victorian Gaol', Past and Present, no.205 (2009): 71-104; '"Oh, what beautiful books!" Captivated Reading in an Early Victorian Prison', Victorian Studies 55.1 (Autumn 2012): 57-84; 'Singing in Gaol: Christian Instruction and Inmate Culture in the Nineteenth Century', Prison Service Journal 199 (2012): 35-43; 'Kindness and Reciprocity: Liberated Prisoners and Christian Charity in Early Nineteenth-Century England', Journal of Social History 47.3 (Spring 2014): 721-45.
Understanding about past lives can be derived not just from the texts that produce individuals as 'subjects' but from the gaps, overlaps, and tensions within and between those records.In his much-cited preface to The Making of the English Working Class, Edward Thompson proposed that 'if we watch[…]men over an adequate period of social change, we observe patterns in their relationships, their ideas, and their institutions.'Thompsondismissedthe use of quantitative analysis in reconstituting such relationships and yet it can enable us to observe patterns in social connections and in people's behaviour that are not always, nor only, observable in records of their expression.Correlating information on individual offending histories in the convict indents with Yarmouth Gaol's admissions registers reveals official documentation substantially under-recorded convicts' previous convictions by about by about two-thirds.This has important implications for on-going research on persistent offending.Together, the Founders and Survivors and Digital Panopticon projects are reconstructing the life-courses of convicts sentenced at the Old Bailey and transported to Van Diemen's Land, unprecedented in scale of investigation and forensic detail.But to capture a fuller picture of the petty offending histories typical of most convicts, further research will be needed linking convict records to sentencing in the lower courts where the vast majority of cases (around 80% at Yarmouth) were heard.Tracking convicts' life histories backwards as well as forwards will enable us to root 'criminal' behaviour in the cultures and economies of particular localities, neighbourhoods and households.This may assist us to be more precise about the pressures on individuals and families that led to 'delinquency', such as the high levels of orphanage that compounded the poverty and underemployment experienced by many lads and young men from Yarmouth.An immersive, intimate practice of reading, of the kind conducted in this article, can help us reconstruct from abstracted data on individuals, garnered by officialdom, something of the experience and agency of people living in an actual time and place.'What good would it do you if you could possibly deceive me?' asked the Yarmouth prison teacher Sarah Martin when she accused John King of being a vagrant and thief; 'even then would not God know what you are? and would you not know yourself to be what you are?He looked disconcerted and agreed to this'.We cannot know if John King, or indeed Martin's other scholars sent to Van Diemen's Land, internalized this judgement of self.
His coded words and symbols speak to us suggestively yet elusively.They do not give us access to the 'real' John King but, when combined with his penal record and other data about his life and social relationships, an intimate reading allows us to do a little more than speculate on their meaning.