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Hell ship : the true story of the plague ship Ticonderoga, one of the most calamitous voyages in Australian history / Michael Veitch.

Hell ship : the true story of the plague ship Ticonderoga, one of the most calamitous voyages in Australian history / Michael Veitch.
Item Information
Barcode Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Status Due Date Res.
TF1279031 994.02 VEI
Loan   . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 19164 ItemInfo Beginning of record . Catalogue Record 19164 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
Record Number 19164
ISBN 9781760630843 (paperback)
Location 994.02 VEI
Author Veitch, Michael, 1962-, (author).
Title Hell ship : the true story of the plague ship Ticonderoga, one of the most calamitous voyages in Australian history / Michael Veitch.
Published Sydney, NSW : Allen & Unwin, 2018.
©2018.
Collation 260 pages. 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some colour), portraits, facsimiles ; 24 cm.
General Note First published 2002.
Bibliography Note Includes bibliographical references.
Summary Note For more than a century and a half, a grim tale has passed down through Michael Veitch's family: the story of the Ticonderoga, a clipper ship that sailed from Liverpool in August 1852, crammed with poor but hopeful emigrants-mostly Scottish victims of the Clearances and the potato famine. A better life, they believed, awaited them in Australia. Three months later, a ghost ship crept into Port Phillip Bay flying the dreaded yellow flag of contagion. On her horrific three-month voyage, deadly typhus had erupted, killing a quarter of Ticonderoga's passengers and leaving many more desperately ill. Sharks, it was said, had followed her passage as the victims were buried at sea. Panic struck Melbourne. Forbidden to dock at the gold-boom town, the ship was directed to a lonely beach on the far tip of the Mornington Peninsula, a place now called Ticonderoga Bay. James William Henry Veitch was the ship's assistant surgeon, on his first appointment at sea. Among the volunteers who helped him tend to the sick and dying was a young woman from the island of Mull, Annie Morrison. What happened between them on that terrible voyage is a testament to human resilience, and to love.
Corporate Name Portsea Quarantine StationHistory
Ticonderoga (Clipper-ship)
Ticonderoga (Clipper-ship)
Subject Ships -- Health regulations
Immigrants -- Health and hygiene -- Australia -- History
British -- Australia
Emigration and immigration
Immigrants
Ocean travel
Typhus fever
Immigrants -- Health and hygiene
Typhus fever
Ocean travel -- History -- 19th century
Immigrants -- Australia
Geographic Name Australia
Australia -- Emigration and immigration -- History -- 19th century
Catalogue Information 19164 Beginning of record . Catalogue Information 19164 Top of page .

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