Hammock Scrap

1819–1848

Found by archaeologists beneath the floorboards of Hyde Park Barracks, a few scraps of rope and coarse, but finely woven flax linen scraps like this one are all that’s left of the hundreds of hammocks that originally lined the convict sleeping wards. With usually 1000 or more men in the Barracks, all the hammocks in the wards would have been occupied, and the remainder of the men had to sleep on blankets on the floor. For most convicts, the only personal space they had was their assigned hammock. Strung up on strong wooden frames, like on board a ship, the large rooms had 70 hammocks, and the small rooms had 30. Occasionally, the hammocks were taken down to be washed, but most of the time they would have been foul-smelling and filthy.

In each room rows of hammocks slung to strong wooden rails, supported by upright staunchions fixed to the floor and roofs. 20” or 2’ in breadth and 7’ in length are allowed for each hammock; and the 2 rows are separated from each other by a small passage of 3’.

Commissioner John Bigge, 1822, in J.T. Bigge, Report of the Commissioner of Inquiry into the State of the Colony of New South Wales, London, House of Commons, 1822, 22.

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Convict Sydney, Level 1, Hyde Park Barracks Museum
Convict Sydney

Objects

These convict-era objects and archaeological artefacts found at Hyde Park Barracks and The Mint (Rum Hospital) are among the rarest and most personal artefacts to have survived from Australia’s early convict period

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Convict Sydney

Convict Sydney

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Convict Sydney

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Convict Sydney

Leg Irons, bar link

Known as darbies or slangs in the convict ‘flash’ slang language, leg irons came in various shapes and sizes

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Convict Sydney

Clock-winding crank

This sturdy crank was used for many years to wind the Hyde Park Barracks clock

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Convict Sydney

Hack barrow

Convict brickmakers working at the Brickfields (now Haymarket) used hack barrows like this one, stacking 20 or 30 wet bricks on the timber palings along the top, for transporting them from the moulding table to the ‘hack’ yard for drying

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Convict Sydney

Cupping glasses & scarificator

These cupping glasses are of the type that was used in the treatment of convict patients at the General ‘Rum’ Hospital

Convict Sydney

Leg irons, standard

Standard leg irons, like those pictured here, weighed seven pounds (3.2 kilograms)

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Convict Sydney

Leg irons, heavy

Known as darbies or slangs in the convict ‘flash’ slang language, leg irons came in various shapes and sizes

Brass dumbell shaped stamp.
Convict Sydney

Brass stamp

Between 1830 and 1848, the superintendent’s office operated from the Hyde Park Barracks, where this stamp was most likely used, on official documents and ledgers

Taylor panorama (left detail)
Convict Sydney

What was convict assignment?

‘Assignment’ meant that a convict worked for a private landowner

Sydney Living Museums Image
Convict Sydney

Ball and chain

1820s–1840s: Known as darbies or slangs in the convict ‘flash’ language, leg irons came in various shapes and sizes

'Sydney Cove, Port Jackson. 1788' / W. Bradley
Convict Sydney

Molesworth report

The findings of the 1837 Molesworth inquiry brought about the end of convict transportation to New South Wales