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Convict Orphans – Lucy Frost

2025 Shortlist

Convict Orphans

All families have their secrets, and a convict ancestor or an illegitimate birth were shames that families once buried deep. Among the best-hidden stories in Australia's history are those of the convict orphans. Agnes arrived on a convict transport aged four and was abandoned when her mother needed to escape an abusive husband. After their mother died and their father deserted them, Maria and Eliza Marriner were taken into state care too. Cut off from family, behind the walls of the imposing sandstone buildings of the Queen's Orphan Schools, they were among hundreds of young children entrusted to the much-feared Matron Smyth. At the age of 12, the children left the orphanage to work without pay on farms and in homes – some of them places where no child should ever have been sent. Although colonists called it white slavery, the authorities turned a blind eye to what was really happening. These are stories of abuse and abandonment, and also of great generosity and kindness from individuals who rescued and supported children. Some children managed to build happy lives for themselves, but many could not navigate a system stacked against them.

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About the author

Lucy Frost has spent a career researching and writing about 19th-century women and children. Lucy is the author of Abandoned Women, No Place for a Nervous Lady and other books, and Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Tasmania.