About This Book
A first-person narrative chronicles life and administration at the new settlement in Port Jackson, combining chronological transactions and travel-diary entries that trace exploration of nearby rivers and terrain, routine garrison and convict activities, and social attempts to alleviate hardship. It records encounters and exchanges with Indigenous inhabitants, practical notes on climate, plants and animals, and discussion of resources and prospects such as whaling. Interleaved observations evaluate the colony’s improvements, provisioning challenges, and the social and moral condition of its population across the first years of establishment.
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