‘So few words. So much left unspoken behind them. Nothing much to tell – or would tell.’
Samuel Speed, who died on 10/11/1938, in the Old Men’s Home in Perth, was thought to be the last living convict when he was interviewed in August 1938 for an article in the Perth Mirror .
Initially I was surprised to read this: I had forgotten that transportation to Western Australia did not stop until 1868. And when Samuel Speed died, he was an old man aged in his nineties. Samuel’s exact birthdate and age are not known. It is possible that he revised his age up when convicted in 1863, when his age was given as eighteen years.
Mr Hill’s novel was based on the interview conducted for the Perth Mirror and published a few months before his death. The interview was accompanied by a photograph of Samuel Speed, reproduced at the end of the book. While incorporating the known facts about Samuel Hill’s conviction and transportation, Mr Hill imagines the man behind the interview. He takes us into the mind of a young man, a teenager, seeking somewhere warm to sleep and some food. He and Thomas Jones were convicted of setting fire to a stack of barley at Bladon, Oxfordshire and were sentenced to seven years penal servitude on 28 November 1863. On 4 July 1866, Samuel arrived at Fremantle aboard the Belgravia.
According to his convict indent, Samuel was twenty years old when he was transported for setting fire to a hayrick in 1863. He was 5 foot 3 tall, with dark grey hair, hazel eyes, and had a cataract on his left eye. He was able to read and write.
Samuel’s story unfolds as a series of reminiscences (most of which he does not share with the reporter interviewing him). The journalist may be hoping for a scoop, but Samuel is both wary and weary. While Samuel filters what he shares publicly the reader journeys with him through the past. We learn about his love of reading, about the reality of life as a convict, about the difficulties in finding a place in society even after he receives his Certificate of Freedom in 1871.
In an Appendix to the novel, Mr Hill sets out Samuel Speed’s timeline as obtained from public records. Around these facts, he weaves a story which takes a hungry young man through the seventy-two years of his life lived in Western Australia.
It seems that Samuel Speed lost contact with his remaining family in the UK, and never married after his arrival in Western Australia. He may have been alone, but I would like to think that given his refuge in reading, he was never lonely. I enjoyed this novel. It reminded me that the impacts of transportation lasted long after the practice ceased.
‘It’s a good story, Samuel. You’re a piece of living history.’
Jennifer Cameron-Smith