*THE
WORKER*
Brisbane July
29, 1893
A
UNION PRISONERS RECOLLECTIONS.
Life in St.
Helena.
By James
Martin.
As the prison
vehicles drew up to the court house, the same were to convey us back
to the gaol after sentence, a number of sympathetic people gathered
round. Just to let the public know we weren't daunted we gave three
hearty cheers for the Cause of Labour – cheers that reached the
strike camps in due time and let our comrades who were still fighting
the hopeless battle know that we were going to gaol with stout hearts
for a good Cause.
AFTER THE
SENTENCE.
Rockhampton
gaol is divided into several yards; the one we had been in and were
kept in until our departure for the South was called the Committed
Men's Yard, contained a great many Unionists under going short
periods of imprisonment for alleged intimidation and so on. These men
were naturally anxious to know how we got on. And after our return,
by secret wires we conveyed the news to them. Loud and deep were some
of the curses uttered that day against the infamous Government. We
were kept in Rockhampton gaol about a week after receiving our
sentences. One fine morning after breakfast we were all summoned out
of the yard into what they called the “circle,” an open space
inside the prison walls. There we were securely chained together and
told that we were to be shipped for Brisbane. The boys in the next
yard soon found out the game and gathering in groups began to discuss
the matter, when their ears were greeted by sounds never before heard
inside those walls.
The sounds were
our departing cheers. Without a moment's hesitation and at the risk
of being punished by Ogre Sheeby they sent back the salutation, and
their ringing cheers remained clear and distinct in our minds for
many months. Scarcely had the cheering died away when forth from his
residence, which is situated inside the outer wall, came savage old
Gaoler Sheeby in a towering passion. “What's all this?” says he.
“Such conduct I never knew here before. If it was a thing that
would do you any good I could understand it.” “ It'll do us no
harm,” said one of our chaps in a tone that the “Spike Island
tyrant” wasn't much accustomed to.
OUT AT SEA.
After that we
were bustled into vehicles and taken to the wharf where the
Government steamer Otter was lying in wait for us. A large body of
men, women and children had congregated to see us off, and with words
of encouragement and more hearty cheers ringing in our ears we went
down the Fitzroy in chains. When a bend of the river hid from view
the friendly people, still waving handkerchiefs, we turned our
immediate surroundings and found that we were accompanied not only by
Inspector Fitzgerald and a number of police but escorted as well by a
military guard of somewhere about a hundred men. It looked as if
they meant to keep us at any rate. Perhaps they feared we had designs
upon the ship. Maybe they suspected us of securing the vessel and
taking to piracy. Soon after reaching the open sea our chains were
knocked off, and that of course was a great relief. It is a cruel
thing to keep a man chained up at sea where there is not the
slightest chance of his escaping and where there is always danger of
an accident to the ship. Further it is a contravention of the
Merchant Shipping Laws, and cannot but have a degrading effect upon
the public this parading of men in chains before the eyes of the
world. Yet I understand that it is a common practice to keep
prisoners on transit from Townsville and other Northern ports in
chains all the way to Brisbane. Something ought to be done to put a
stop to it.
However, we
were fortunate enough to get our irons struck off, and just in time,
for sea sickness attacking us we were soon all in a very bad way. The
passage was exceedingly rough and when one evening we sighted the
Cape Moreton light we were not a little pleased, although it was a
sign that we were getting near the walls that were to cut us off for
years from home and friends and freedom. On board the vessel we
didn't feel like prisoners so much because somehow we were conscious
it would take a very little to put us all on one footing. Coming down
the coast we passed the Burwah. Her crew and passengers crowed on to
the starboard side and cheered us loudly. It was a voice from the
Seamen's Union crying “Mates from the Bush, you have done well.”
ST. HELENA
AT LAST.
We turned into
Moreton Bay about nine o'clock one night and anchored. In the morning
on reaching the deck we found our boat steaming straight for St.
Helena. This was a surprise as we were all under the impression that
our destination was Brisbane Gaol. Landing at the wharf we took our
leave of the Otter for a time. And here I would like to say that the
kindly consideration shown us by the captain and crew of the Otter
will live in our memory for many a long year. Once on shore we were
hurried off to the stockade where after being searched to see that we
had no pickaxes or cross-cut saws concealed about us we were placed
in separate cells in what they call G Wing. These cells are worthy of
description, as I shall have occasion to speak of them again: They
are 8ft. Long by 3ft. 6in. Wide and 12ft. High, and when you are
locked in one of them it gives you more the impression of a shaft
than anything else. The ventilation is most defective, as the fresh
air passing through the grating near the roof is unable in summer
time to sink in quantities sufficient to really benefit the
unfortunate inmate. So the immured prisoner lies and gasps and fights
the mosquitoes all through the hot season nights.
TREATMENT OF
SICK CONVICTS.
It wouldn't be
so bad if none but healthy prisoners were shut up in those cells, but
as a matter of fact there is hardly a day in the year but sees some
poor convict who has fallen sick slung into one of them. Try and
imagine, you who know what mosquitoes are, what a miserable time a
sick man has fighting those pests in such infernal holes. And that is
not all. Adjoining these cells are the shops where an incessant
hammering is kept up all day long. What with one thing and another
the unhappy sick are driven almost mad. Is that right? Is it even
human? When visitors are shown over the stockade they are taken into
the hospital where they are led to believe sick prisoners are put. It
is a miserable structure enough, the hospital, and altogether
inadequate, but a paradise compared to those G wing cells, for in the
hospital the beds have at least mosquito nets round them and there is
some chance of fresh air. But even the hospital beds want looking to.
I can't say what the mattresses are stuffed with, but from bitter
experience I know them to be as hard as a brick, and the pillows are
as bad.
Let any reader
who happens to visit St. Helena feel them and then try and imagine an
unfortunate fever patient tossing on them until he is covered with
bed sores. It is a mean sort of economy that prevents the sick, even
if they are convicts, getting a soft bed. But bad as the hospital is,
greatest the danger is of infection for there is but the one small
ward for all classes of diseases, hard as the beds are, disgusting as
it is to be lying in close proximity to other patients while all
sorts of operations are being performed on them, for there is no such
thing as privacy there, it is, as I have already said, far better
than being locked up in a G wing cell.
THE GAOL SURGEON.
The public will
perhaps want to know who is directly responsible for the treatment of
the sick at St. Helena, and I may as well say at once it is the
medical officer, Dr. Wray. Nobody can interfere with his
arrangements. If he likes to lock sick men up in mere shafts where
they will be alternately stifled with heat, bitten by insect pests
and racked with the hammering of adjacent workshops no one has the
right to interfere. The superintendent himself, Captain Pennefather,
cannot prevent it – work worthy of the days of Botany Bay though it
is – or I am convinced he could. I have known him, though, to let
men out of those cells who begged for it almost on their bended knees
and asserted that they had quite recovered when in reality they were
worse than ever. But in doing that I feel certain that he left
himself open to a charge of interfering with the doctor's
arrangements. Dr. Wray is alone to blame for the horrible treatment
of the sick on St. Helena. His style and bearing is more like that of
a 14th Century gaoler than a physician. Prisoners dread
him and it is a common thing to see men suffering for weeks rather
than face him. His cruelties would take too long to recount. I may as
well say the public see that one great reform on St. Helena is
absolutely necessary.
THE DREAD OF
FIRE.
But to return
to my story. On finding myself alone in a G wing cell for the first
time many thoughts flitted through my head. I thought of my mates far
away in the bush and wondered when and under what circumstances I
should meet them again. Bye-and-bye it struck me that there was great
dander from fire in a prison such as this built of wood. The real
force of the danger didn't come all at once, but in a short time when
I found out that built right up against the stockade were three
wooden shops in every one of which fire was used all through the
week. I remembered a short time before of a lunatic asylum in Canada
catching fire and scattering the inmates all over the country. The
fear of being scattered about didn't trouble me, but getting burned
alive seemed so possible that I must confess I was really alarmed and
the longer I thought of it the more I was troubled in my mind. At
last I mentioned it to some of the old hands, but the effect was such
that ever afterwards I kept it to myself. I found that many were
brooding over the same possibility – some of them to such an extent
that there was danger even of their reason going.
And no wonder,
when you consider that some of these men had been years where I had
only been weeks thinking over the matter. Such time for brooding too.
A man is locked up at 5 o'clock pm. In winter; the light in his cell
is not sufficient to allow him to read; he is thus thrown back on
himself and his thoughts, no matter where they wander, eventually
come back to that one idea, the terrible danger of being burnt alive.
And the danger is there. It is not only a possible danger but well
within the range of probability. A bit of fire unnoticed left in the
tinsmith shop, a smouldering rag in the boot or tailor shop, and
nothing could save the entire stockade. In event of fire, too,
considerable delay would arise in rescuing the prisoners. The keys
must be brought from the chief warden's house some distance away
outside the stockade. Every lock has a separate key. The keys are
kept in numbers of about twenty on a ring, and it is a common thing
to see a warder who has been on the “Island” for years fumbling
with them for several minutes before he can hit the right one, and
that when there is nothing to distract him. This state of affairs
wants altering. No prison should be built of wood, especially on a
place like St. Helena where there is no water laid on and absolutely
no possibility of fighting a fire that got a start. To build a new
stockade of stone down there would not cost much. There “labour”
is “free” and reliable, and suitable stone can be procured on the
spot.
(To be
Continued).
*THE
WORKER*
Brisbane
August 5, 1893
A UNION
PRISONER'S RECOLLECTIONS.
Life in St.
Helena. - (Continued)
By James
Martin.
A FIRST
INSPECTION.
After I had
been in the cell some little time the door was suddenly thrown open
and I was told to stand out, When I stood out I found that my mates
were also in front of the doors of their cells. Just then the Chief
Warder, Mr. Hamilton, who at that time was Acting Superintendent,
came along and said: “ There are some of you men not sentenced to
hard labour, I believe?” He was answered in the affirmative.
“Well,” he went on, “I would like to tell you that the Sheriff
will be round directly to ask you to volunteer to work and if you
take my advice you will volunteer because your food will be more
plentiful and your treatment better.” And with that he went away.
Shortly after the Sheriff did come accompanied by Dr. Wray. We were
stood out again. The Sheriff eyed us critically. The doctor asked us
if we were sound. Then they went away and we were locked up once more
without any further reference to the question of work. In the
afternoon we were marched round to the store where we exchanged our
clothes for prison garments. The rain fell for two or three days
heavily enough to prevent work in the open air. So we stayed in the
yard. In this yard, which is called D Yard, the men were kept who
were not yet due for their “indulgence,” that is their tobacco
and tea. At that period all first “timers” had to remain three
months, second “timers” six months, and third “timers” nine
months before they were allowed either tobacco or tea. There were
were men of all degrees of criminality there – first, second, third
and all manner of “timers,” so that they were a very fair sample
of the sort of people you meet in prison.
AMONGST THE
CRIMINALS.
Naturally
enough we struck up a yarn with some of them and they took quite a
delight in initiating us into the ways of the place, Here I may state
that the inmates were a far better sample of men than we had expected
to find. Being clean shaved all round, of course, they looked a bit
odd, so did we no doubt a day or two later when we lost our beards.
There didn't happen to be any of those repulsive-looking characters
you read about on hand. Perhaps by that time they had all been
hanged. Queensland was pretty busy with the rope just then. What
struck me as especially strange was that there was absolutely no
attempted at classification. Prisoners of all grades were thrown
together. Men convicted of the most heinous offences walked and dined
and talked freely with those who were there for some paltry matter
that could hardly be called an offence at all. Not that it made as
much difference as one might imagine, for as a rule the conversation
you hear on St. Helena is not about the crimes that brought men
there. I used to think that in gaol one's ears would be ever lastly
assailed by speeches of villainy, but to my surprise I found that
there was hardly a question, political or otherwise, that would not
get an intelligent handling there.
THE ROUTINE
BEGINS.
On the Monday
morning following our arrival we were told off in a gang by ourselves
in charge of a warder who took great pains in our instruction. “I
noticed,” said he, “that some of you didn't salute when your
names were called. If you wish to keep out of trouble attend to
that.” His advice was given in a kindly spirit and of course was
taken in good part. But it came hard on some of us bushmen to touch
our hats to the officials of a gaol-at least I found it so. We got
used to it in time, however. From the first some were against working
it all. The The majority of us were sentenced to imprisonment only,
and we felt that the Government were not keeping within the “law”
in forcing us to “labour.” Not that we minded the work. In fact
we preferred it, but it looked like, and for that matter it is of
course, sheer slavery to compel a man to work for nothing. To be
strictly accurate the remuneration amounts to almost nothing. When we
went there the rule was to give a man when he had finished his time,
ten shillings (that is if he had no money of his own), whether he had
been there twelve months or twelve years. Now the retiring convict,
if his conduct has been exceptional, is entitled to the munificent
sum of one penny per working day. That regulation came into force on
the first of June, 1892.
BARBAROUS
PUNISHMENTS.
And on the same
date many other rules came into force on St. Helena – some of them
barbarous rules. Under them prisoners can be strapped up and flogged
for the offence of using obscene language or insulting a warder, and
they may be (and very often are) sentenced by a visiting J.P. To long
terms of imprisonment. Under these circumstances a man may get an
additional sentence of eighteen months for a single offence and if he
is unlucky or obstinate the justice has the chance of piling it on
until the convict who went there to do a modest twelve months finds
himself doing as many years. Now I ask the public if it is fair to
give J.P.'s such power? Is it right to try any man and give him an
additional sentence in the office of a penal establishment. Should he
not rather be taken out and tried in some public court where he
could, if able, obtain the assistance of counsel and where, at any
rate, free people would be watching the proceedings.
THE RIGHT OF
PETITION.
The
“authorities” say that the prisoner can petition if he has a
grievance. A lot of good that would do him. It is looked upon by
prisoners as a farce to petition at all from inside. They believe
that as a rule petitions to the Governor of the Colony or the
Executive Council never get past some under strapper, and certainly
never leave the “Island.” This I know that prisoners with good
grounds for appeal have petitioned times out of number and that it
has all been of no avail. The same old answer comes back - “The
Executive will take no action.” The reason I have written at such
length on this subject is because from bitter experience I know there
are scores of fellows, not to mention my own mates, undergoing long
sentences for offences that in any other civilised country with three
or six months.
SAUCE FOR THE
GOOSE, ETC.
Here is an
example. A new chum up North got hold of a watch and sold it to
another man. They were both arrested, the new chum for stealing the
watch the other for receiving stolen property. They were sentenced to
seven years each, and served their sentence although they petitioned
for mercy several times. It was their first offence. Sometimes,
however, men are released, that is if they have influential friends
outside. While I was there three or four well connected prisoners who
had held good positions and taken advantage of them to perpetrate big
swindles were released, it is supposed, through the intervention of
their friends. Now I don't object to the release of these men, Quite
the contrary. Seeing that the chances of their committing other
offences are small I maintain that they should be released. But that
is the way I would like to see all prisoners treated. When there is
every reason to believe that a man will lead an honest life why not
let him go? If a commission were appointed consisting of fair minded
men it would be found, I am sure, that at least half of our gaol
inmates could be set at liberty to-morrow without the slightest
danger to society.
THE
SUPERINTENDENT.
St. Helena as a
prison, judging by what I heard from men who had been in nearly every
gaol in Australia, is in many respects not so bad after all. It is a
rule in most prisons, so I have been told, to punish every man
brought before the superintendent for a breach of gaol discipline.
Luckily for the prisoners of St. Helena Captain Pennefather isn't
built that way. He recognises that in telling the truth the warders
are just about on a par with the prisoners, and generally he gives
all prisoners tried by him fair play. Consequently there is a feeling
of confidence among the men, for they know they will get every
opportunity to clear themselves when charged with offences against
the rules.
CHOOSING A
TRADE.
After working
all in one gang for a week we were separated, some put here, some
there, and never by any chance did we all work together afterwards.
It is not necessary to describe the work each man was put to. Some
remained outside at field work and some were put into the shops to
learn trades.
And here I
would like to say a word about the learning of trades. I think that
in this respect the prisoner's wishes ought to be to a certain extent
considered. It is far better for the prisoner and the authorities too
that, if possible, a man should be put to the trade he has a fancy
for. But this is just what is not done at St. Helena. If you ask to
be allowed to learn one trade it is a hundred to one that you will be
put to another, or perhaps to none at all. In my own case I had a
great desire to learn boot making. But the Superintendent told me
that I could learn tailoring if I liked and that if I didn't take
that I wouldn't get anything else. Now, I detested the idea of
sewing, but I thought that the Super was trying to bluff me off the
shops altogether so in an evil moment I elected to be a tailor. An
evil moment, I
say because having always been used to an active outdoor life the
sudden change-cooped up in a closely packed shop, badly ventilated
and hot as an oven – soon began to tell on my health. My digestion
became so bad that I constantly required medicine which, although it
relieved me temporarily, was quite powerless to effect a cure. After
suffering for a considerable time I wanderd my way out to the
Superintendent one night and asked him if he would kindly allow me to
resume outside work: but no, he would not. I went back and suffered
for a few months longer and then appealed again, but with the same
result. Another long spell and I became so bad that this time I
almost begged to be allowed out in the fields. The Superintendent
said that he wouldn't let me out unless the doctor recommended it on
the grounds of ill-health. But I had such a horror of the doctor that
nothing could tempt me to face him.
A CHANGE OF
DOCTORS.
At length I
got an attack of fever, and was removed to the hospital, where I was
visited by Dr. Jackson and a young medical man whose name I have
forgotten, Dr. Wray fortunately being away. What a contrast was the
bearing of Dr. Jackson and his friend to that of Dr. Wray. Their very
presence gave you confidence, while Dr. Wray's made you tremble and
wish that you were ten times worse than you really were so that there
would be less danger of your being charged with malingering when in
reality you were lingering in pain. While on this subject I would
like to mention another matter that wants looking to. When the doctor
lands on the “Island” a flag is hoisted as a signal of his
arrival. Then all those who are desirous of seeing him are brought
out and placed at attention along a fence, where there is neither
shade from the burning summer sun nor protection from the wintry
blast, and in that position the unfortunate sick convict is kept
sometimes over an hour because the doctor rarely attends to the
prisoners before driving to the Super's house – presumably for
refreshments. Surely it would be possible to provide a shelter for
sick men to wait in. to ask that a room should be set aside for that
purpose is of course out of the question. Dr. Wray resumed his duties
before I recovered from my attack of fever, and I plucked up courage
to ask him to recommend me for outdoor work after my discharge from
the hospital telling him that I blamed the shops for my sickness. He
did this, and to my great satisfaction, after suffering in it for
twelve months, I got out of the tailors' shop for good. I was not the
only one that the shops didn't agree with. Fully fifty per cent of
the shopmen were as bad if not worse than I was. And the reason is
not far to seek. The food, which is plentiful but coarse, is
altogether unsuitable for men engaged at sedentary occupations.
Outside men working hard can manage to digest it and are rarely bad,
but men locked up thirteen hours out of the twenty-four and sitting
down eight hours more would require the stomach of an ostrich. What
is wanted for shopmen is more digestible food, and arrangements for
their getting at least one month's outdoor work in every six.
EDUCATION AT
A DISCOUNT.
Another thing
that requires, attention is the prison school. At present it is a
mere farce. The schoolmaster appears to be retained on the “Island”
for no other purpose than to educate the Super's children, to whom he
attends four or five hours a day five days a week, while the
prisoners get the advantage of his instruction but three hours a week
or thereabout. Now if he is paid to teach the Superintendent's
children he is of course doing merely what he is paid for, but that
does not say that it is a good thing that the prisoners should have
so little tuition, and the impression certainly exists amongst the
prisoners that it is his especial business to teach them. Surely
Captain Pennefather ought to pay for the education of his own
children. At any rate the present system, as far as the inmates of
the gaol are concerned, is absurd. If education has the power of
elevating men the prisoners, large numbers of whom are very
imperfectly educated or quite untaught, ought to have the benefit of
it. But what a farce it is for one man to be sent to teach some fifty
or sixty when he can only give his attention to them for about an
hour on Mondays and Wednesdays and an hour and a quarter on Saturday.
INTO THE
WORLD AGAIN.
At first we had
the impression that we should be released before long. Soon, however
we found that the only condition upon which the doors would be
unbarred for us was that we should petition for mercy and then we
settled down to do our time, for we had made our minds up from the
start that come what might we would not cringe to the Government –
the Government that had so unjustly imprisoned us. Two who couldn't
stand the strain did petition and were released; two more, Jeffries
and Irwin, upon the advice of the Colonial Secretary and with the
full concurrence of their mates, also petitioned and after being
tortured with hopes of immediate release were cruelly kept in
confinement for a period of several months, being eventually set at
liberty when they least expected it. The time rolled on, Davie Bowes
manfully did his 18 months and went out ; five months later Dover and
I bade our comrades good-bye and I don't know who felt the more sad,
they or is. Of one thing I am certain, not one of our mates begrudged
us our release. We were welcomed back to freedom by Mr. Glassey,
Albert Hinchcliffe, Mat Reid and many other sympathetic friends, and
I must confess that I felt miserable through it all, because my mind
would run back to the brave, patient fellows I had left behind me on
the “Rock.” Their time, however, has not long to run. The day is
fast approaching when the prison doors will open wide and the world
will know them again. Side by side with them I hope to fight a battle
for Queensland in the future, and if our hopes are realised none of
us will regret the days we spent on St. Helena.
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