It has been three years since I first visited Port Arthur and for Silent Sunday I thought reposting the original post would be fun. Enjoy your Sunday.
Silent Sunday – Reposting Port Arthur
A couple of weeks ago I showed you some photos of the Isle of Dead at Port Arthur. I have been meaning to show you more images from my day there, but I took so many it has been hard to choose which ones to show. I have done a selection and will show them in few lots here, and in separate galleries.
Port Arthur was a convict penitentiary in Tasmania. Most of the convicts that were sent there were re-offenders, meaning that once that got here they committed another crime. It opened in 1830, taking over from other places around Tasmania and ceased operating in 1877. Australia did start as a penal colony and it is great to see places like this that remind us of part of our history.
The Penitentiary
There is no doubt that the big penitentiary building is the most impressive and most recognisable building there. When you go it is basically the first building you see. It sits near the water and even in its ruined state is an impressive building. I photographed a little plaque that has the history of the building and you can read that.
The Separate Prison and Asylum
At Port Arthur you will find a building called the separate prison. This building was made up of solitary confinement cells. It was thought that the best way to treat prisoners was not by flogging and hard labour, but to look them away in cells where they had no communication with anyone else. They were not allowed to talk unless a guard asked them a question. The whole place was a quiet zone, and even the guards used sign language between them.
We now know that putting people into solitary confinement sends them mad, but back then the connection wasn’t made. We have learned a lot from places like this, however, at the time they didn’t know so a separate asylum was built for those that went mad, (the last two images in the gallery).
Surrounding Port Arthur
The gardens are really beautiful around the site. With it being winter there were a lot of trees that had lost their leaves. Still it was very green and perhaps the sunniest day we had while there. As we stayed for the ghost tour we were there also for the sunset. I have shown you some other photos of it, but here a few more as well.
Port Arthur Massacre
As much as we like to think of this place as a place for convicts, sadly it is also the place for Australia’s worse gun shooting and massacre. In 1996 Martin Bryant went a shooting rampage and killed 35 people and wounded 23 others. There is a separate memorial there for it. The cafe where he started has been stripped and only the shell of it remains today.
One positive outcome from this was a rethink on our gun laws. An amnesty was set up where people could turn in guns, get paid for them, with no repercussions and they did. Thousands and thousands of guns were turned in at police stations and other sites. We now have very strict gun laws, and to tell the truth most of us are very happy about that. We certainly feel a lot safer. I’ve never seen a gun except those that police carry and even they are starting to look for alternatives.
Before Port Arthur we had, on average, one mass shooting a year, since, we haven’t had one.
Government Cottage and Church Ruins
By the time we had finished the tours we went on we realised that we didn’t have enough time to see all that was there. If you are going to do the tours then you should plan to be there for two days. So after a cup of tea we decided to see what we could before the sun went down and the start of our ghost tour.
We went to the ruins of Government Cottage and the convict Church. Both destroyed in bushfires in the 1890’s so that all that remained where the walls. We don’t see a lot of building in Australia like this, and the Church was incredible.
Port Arthur
Without a doubt an incredible place and one I can’t wait to go back and finish exploring. Next time, no tours, just spend the day taking photos. See as much as I can. If you are planning a trip there, I suggest doing it over two days, and maybe spread the tours over the two. I didn’t take photos on the ghost tour, I put the camera away and decided to just join in the fun and experience. It was very dark when we did it, so the photos wouldn’t have been great anyway.
If you would like more information at Port Arthur I suggest you visit their website.
I love ruins. Yours are so well done.
I love them too, thank you Sherry.
Thanks for sharing these images about that facility at the end of the world – as seen from the British Mainland in those days.
I visited it in 2015 during our trip around Melbourne, Tasmania and Western Australia.
Places like these stay in mind with mixed feelings, reading their history.
Posted some nice images about that trip on my tiny blog and on my Flickr page.
You’re welcome Reinhold, it is an amazing place really, It is a good way to see the history of how Australia got started, well after the British landed.
I know what you mean about them staying with you. Leave a link so I can take a look.
Thank you
You can find it here http://wenweb.de/2017/10/05/australian-adventure-iii/, there‘s a link to flickr included.
Great, thank you, I have had a look at them, they are great.
Thought I left a link, but it’s gone now?
You did, I just approved the comment and have had a look.
These are very nice. Funnily enough I just put up 3 photos of Port Arhur on my Instagram page today. I took them in February when we had overseas visitors.
Oh what is you Instagram page Pam, I will check them out. It is a great place, I’ve been a couple of times now. Thank you.
My blog is Travellinpenguin.com and my Instagram is travellin_penguin.
I will have to check them out, thanks Pam.
wonderful share
Thank you.