- Richard Turton
Captain Richard Turton was an officer of the
40th Regiment stationed atSydney . He was selected to lead the first party ofconvicts in the re-establishment of the secondconvict settlement atNorfolk Island . The island had been abandoned since the first convict settlement was finally removed in 1814. The new settlement was intended to be the most severe settlement, where the worst convicts would be sent, without hope of escape and offering, in Governor Darling's view, “the extremest punishment short of death”. With 34 soldiers, 57 convicts, and 12 soldiers' wives and children, he landed on6 June 1825 . Most of the convicts were tradesmen to clear the regrowth and prepare buildings. Atreadmill was planned, but never sent.The convicts worked twelve hour days, and the rations of salt meat and maize-meal sound unappetising, but there are no reports of harsh treatment of this working party.
Thirty-one more convicts arrived in December, along with more wives.
In March 1826, Turton was promoted to major, replaced by Captain Vance Young Donaldson of the
57th Regiment , and returned to Sydney.References
* Hazzard, Margaret, "Punishment Short of Death: a history of the penal settlement at Norfolk Island", Melbourne, Hyland, 1984. (ISBN 0-908090-64-1)
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