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HistoryCaptain Arthur Phillip’s instructions on landing in January 1788 were to found a settlement and to cultivate the land using convict labour. Early food production by convict labour however was generally a failure and Phillip had realised by July that he needed experienced farmers. He wrote on 9th July 1788 to Evan Nepean, Under Secretary of the Home Department: ‘If fifty farmers were sent out with their families, they would do more in one year in rendering this colony independent of the mother country, as to provisions, than a thousand convicts.’ Finally, four years later, the British Government sent out a small group of settlers with their families, numbering fifteen. Thomas and Jane Rose and their then family of four, Thomas, Mary, Joshua and Richard, were amoung this group who had sailed from England in the Bellona on 8 August 1792 and disembarked at Port Jackson on 16 Wednesday 16 January 1793. This family was the first family of free settlers to arrive in the colony, hence the area where their grants were made, became known as Liberty Plains. Thomas and Jane’s family increased by the births of John, Sarah and Henry in the intervening years.
Square Rigged Ship - similar dimensions and style as the Bellona
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