
Name/TitleThe Transport; With All Thy Faults I Love Thee Still
About this objectAn early lithograph depicting a tearful young woman standing at the sea shore as her young man is forced in to a small rowboat waiting to take him to a sailing ship and transport him to Australia.
The line of verse below the title, With All Thy Faults I Love Thee Still is derived from William Cowper's poem from The Task, Book II: The Time-Piece. The lines are evocative of the emotions played out time after time as spouses and lovers were separated by the harsh strictures of transportation to New South Wales.
Many transportees never returned to England and often took a new lover in Australia, often within days of arriving in the colony, if not even on the ship during the outward voyage.
MakerAlfred Carlisle - Artist
Maker RoleArtist
Date Madec 1800
Period19th century
Medium and MaterialsPaper and ink.
TechniqueLithograph
Measurements27cm x 19.5cm.
Object TypeCartoons
Object numberSF000851
Copyright LicenceAttribution - Non-commercial - No Derivatives (cc)
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The mug is decorated with an underglaze and a blue transfer print. On the body, it is titled ‘Emigrants to Australia’. This type of body and glaze was discontinued by 1840. Comparison of the handle shape and the profile of the foot, point to the attribution of manufacture by the Davenport Factory.
Delta was a ship-rigged vessel with two decks and three masts. It was built in Dordrecht, Netherlands in 1839 at the shipyard of Jan Schouten and registered in the same port. Its hull was constructed of oak and sheathed in ‘yellow metal’. Delta was owned by H. van der Sande at the time of its loss and was engaged as a cargo trader.
The Delta carried 29 crew and passengers, while sailing from Melbourne to Batavia in ballast when wrecked at Kenn Reefs on 30 May 1854 whilst under the command of Captain J.G. Kunst. This vessel loss supports the pattern of shipwrecks located on a well-travelled shipping route that was poorly charted until the mid-nineteenth century. The crew of the Delta could see four other shipwrecks at Kenn Reefs at the time of their vessel’s loss.
Important image of a ship associated with Matthew Flinders, that would shortly become one of the most famous early shipwrecks in eastern Australian waters. This is a fine ship’s portrait, by one of the great exponents of the art