Hi Tofgem
I was at the archives with Ruskie on Tuesday - I ran out of time but she checked the immigration for your Pierpoints & this is what she found - sounds like a not too easy trip
It was a very strange film - looked like a list by the agent rather than immigrants on an individual ship. This is what it said:
The following are Navvies [I was unable to read the first letter of this word so made an educated guess] sent out on the Light of the Age selected by the agency of Mr Percival of Liverpool for the Railway Works.
1866
Pierpoint G and fam
Ship: Light of the Age
1865 Dec
agent: Percival
place: Liverpool
Free passengers: VERY difficult to read but looks like 3 ½ [wondering if this means three adults and one child – remembering that what what considered an adult then is considered a child today]
There was some additional information at the beginning of the film:
A letter dated 4 Apr ’66 by the inspector of immigrants on the ship “light of the Age”.
Ship left Glasgow 9th December 1865
arrived Brisbane 26th [sorry unable to read the month] at 5pm
206 souls, including five cabin passengers
There was little sickness on the voyage except 4 cases of scarletina and 1 of measles, 3 births, 10 deaths all under 2 years of age.
Poop cabin – married couples, light and airy, clean and well arranged.
In between decks, one side for the remaining married couples, one side for young men, This part of the ship was ill arranged, dark and ill ventilated.
Some bunks were wet for most of the voyage from leakage from the galley and single female’s water closet. The surgeon Supt complained to the captain but no attention was paid. The main deck was extremely dirty.
Water closets for men – 4 on each side – no doors and ‘disgusting looking. Surgeon Supt complained to captain but nothing was done.
2 water closets for single females were decent.
2 galleys – one for cabin crew, one for passengers (too small) – cooking apparatus was heated by the steam of the condenser boiler.
Complaints:
Wet bunks during the greater part of the voyage
Lack of seats
3 people were put aboard without proper clothing or bedding which had been promised them. This agent behaved in a most unbecoming manner.
The captain was enebriated and frequently used improper language
Numerous robberies and petty thefts
The immigrants were unruly in their conduct and dirty in their habits
Credit to the Surgeon Supt for the few deaths and immunity to disease – most remarkable considering that measles and scarlet fever existed.
Trish & Ruskie