The Bourneuf’s Tragic Last Voyage

Cross section of emigrant ship Bourneuf. From Illustrated London News 10 July 1852.

   On 3 August 1853, the 1500-ton Bourneuf sank in Torres Strait as she was returning to England. It was ironic that her return was cut short, for her voyage out to Melbourne, Victoria, had been no less tragic. She had left Liverpool in mid-July the year before carrying some 800 impoverished emigrants keen to start new lives in Australia. But one in ten would never make it.

   Convict transportation to New South Wales had ceased two years earlier, and the recently constituted Victorian Government had introduced an assisted migration program to try to solve a chronic labour shortage. The colony had long been short of domestic servants, farm labourers, and other workers, but the recent discovery of gold had only exacerbated the problem. Meanwhile, England was still grappling with the social dislocation brought about by the Industrial Revolution. There were more people than there was jobs. On the surface, the migration program appeared to solve both intractable problems; however, transporting the migrants halfway around the world proved costly. Not surprisingly, there was an incentive to transport the largest number of people at the lowest cost to the Government.

Emigration Depot at Birkenhead, Liverpool. A ship, possibly the Bourneuf, about to depart for Australia in 1852.

   The emigrants, many of them families with young children, were crammed into the Bourneuf’s two tiers of tiny cabins. Passengers were required to prepare their own meals in tightly packed communal kitchens. Bathing and toilet arrangements were rudimentary at best and maintaining good hygiene was impossible from the outset in the overcrowded confines of the ship. The close, fetid conditions were the ideal environment for the spread of communicable diseases. And, it was not long before people started coming down with dysentery. By mid-voyage, measles and scarlet fever were sweeping unchecked through the ship, taking a terrible toll.

   Isolating the sick proved impossible, and for much of the passage, ten or more people, mostly children, died every week. By the time the Bourneuf dropped anchor off Geelong on 20 September, disease had claimed the lives of 83 passengers. The ship was immediately placed in quarantine while 20 desperately ill passengers recovered.

   It would be nice to think that this had been an incident, but that was not the case. Four ships packed with assisted migrants made the long passage out to Victoria in 1852; the Wanota, the Marco Polo, the Ticonderoga and, of course, the Bourneuf. All were grossly overcrowded, even by the standards of the day. Disease outbreaks raged on all four ships with terrible consequences. No fewer than 279 passengers died on the four voyages. Many more passengers had to be hospitalised and quarantined on arrival. However, the lesson was eventually learned, and the Emigration Commissioners limited future migrant ships to carrying no more than 350 passengers.

Example of immigrant accommodation on the 1874 James Craig barque at the Maritime Museum in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Photo C.J. Ison.

   The Bourneuf remained in Port Phillip Bay for ten months, eventually setting sail on 18 July 1853 divested of her passengers. She sailed from Melbourne bound for Bombay before continuing back to England.

   Captain Bibby made his way up Australia’s east coast, pushed along by a south-easterly trade wind. After first passing through the Tasman Sea, he continued north into the warm tropical waters of the Coral Sea. The Bourneuf remained several hundred kilometres off the coast and well outside the Great Barrier Reef. This had become known as the “outer passage” and was considered by mariners to be safer than navigating close to land inside the reef. Captain Biddy intended to cross through the Great Barrier Reef at the Raine Island entrance so he could carefully pick his way through the labyrinth of shoals that lay in Torres Strait.

   Unfortunately, it appears that Captain Biddy had miscalculated his run towards the entrance. At 1 a.m. on 3 August 1853, a lookout spotted a thin white line of breaking surf looming out of the darkness. By the time the danger had been seen, it was too late to take evasive action. The ship slammed into the Great Detached Reef about 15 kilometres south of the Raine Island entrance. Unrelenting swells from the Pacific Ocean pounded the stranded vessel. Captain Bibby gave the order to abandon ship. Thirty-nine people took to three lifeboats that night.

   Two of the boats managed to get clear of the stricken vessel, and the survivors were later rescued by the Dutch ship Everdina Elizabeth. Captain Biddy, his wife, sister-in-law, and five crew drowned when huge waves capsized their lifeboat while they were still alongside the Bourneuf.

   The Bourneuf is just one of 37 ships known to have been lost in or near the Raine Island Entrance during the 19th Century.

© C.J. Ison/Tales from the Quarterdeck, 2020.

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Comments

9 responses to “The Bourneuf’s Tragic Last Voyage”

  1. Kylie Avatar
    Kylie

    Hello I had ancestors who emigrated on the Bourneuf. I can not find a passenger list? Can anybody help?

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    1. cjisontftq Avatar

      Hi Kylie, The Public Records Office of Victoria (prov.vic.gov.au) has a searchable database of assisted migrants. select “Assisted Passenger Lists (1839 – 1871) then enter the ship’s name “Bourneuf” and the year 1852. It should give you a list of all the passengers who arrived in Victoria on that ship. Regards, Chris

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  2. Robert Avatar
    Robert

    Hi, I’m also researching my family tree and those who emigrated from Scotland to Australia. I found your account of life aboard the Bourneuf fascinating. However, I have to question the date of departure from Liverpool as mid-July 1852 as the actual passenger list gives a departure date of 21st May 1852 and arrival at Geelong as 3rd September 1852

    Regards Robert

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    1. cjisontftq Avatar

      Hi Robert. Thank you for passing that along. I have double-checked, and the dates in the shipping news when she arrived recorded that she departed on 20 May and arrived at Geelong on 2 Sept. The story has been corrected. Thanks again. Chris.

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  3. Ann Dennis Avatar
    Ann Dennis

    My great great grandmother came out on the Bourneuf with her family as a 14 year old. There is plenty of info about Captain Bibby . I have been writing an historical Fiction about my family members. It’s not completed yet but I hope to publish one day. If you are interested I can forward you the section relevant to the Bourneuf.
    Ann Dennis

    Liked by 1 person

    1. cjisontftq Avatar

      Good luck with the book. It looks like you will have plenty of good raw material. I can only barely imagine the ordeal people faced on that voyage. As for Capt. Biddy, thanks for the offer but the Bourneuf was peripheral to a project I was working on but I thought it was a story worth sharing. Cheers.

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    2. Jennifer Herring Avatar
      Jennifer Herring

      Hello Ann,
      My GGgrandparents and their family came out in this ship in 1852 from Scotland. They eventually settled in Uralla which is in the New England district of northern NSW.
      Any information would be greatly appreciated.

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    3. Janelle Burns Avatar
      Janelle Burns

      Hi Ann
      My 3 x Greatgrandfather came to Australia on this ship. I would love to have more information about this please.

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  4. sharyn moodie Avatar
    sharyn moodie

    Nicely written tale

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