Hello again.
The book which I have photocopied and laminated extracts out of for display at reunions etc is THE STORY OF NEW ZEALAND by Bassett, Sinclair and Stenson pages 58 to 61. Most came out as assisted "steerage class" passengers. There is an illustration of how crowded the sleeping quarters were, how they were arranged on the "SS BOLTON of 540 tons 1841" separating the single M & F passangers, sick bay, couples, families etc. A family of parents and four children would all have to fit in an allocated 1.8 x 2.4 metres sleeping enclosure. On a voyage of the "LLOYDS" to Nelson in 1842, 65 children died on the way out. This was possibly one of the worst cases, not helped by whooping cough spreading through the ship.
There is a big list plus cost of the Emigrants' outfit required. [Clothing, bedding, utensils etc per person] Also the daily food ration allocated for one adult, not something you would choose to live on today, but fascinating reading.
No time to look it up now, but the Lloyd's Shipping Register I assume, would give a description of the vessels registered and insured therein.
- Alan.