About The Britten Family
Welcome to the Britten(Brittain) and associated family's pages.
"I saw behind me those who had gone, and before me those who are to come.
I looked back and saw my father and his father and all our fathers,
and in front to see my son and his son,
and the sons upon sons beyond.
And their eyes were my eyes.
As I felt so they had felt, and were to feel, as then, so now, as
tomorrow and forever.
Then I was not afraid for I was in a long line that had no beginning
and no end.
And the hand of his father grasped my father's hand and his hand was in mine,
and my unborn son took my right hand and all, up and down the line that
stretched from
Time That Was to Time That is Not Yet,
raised their hands to show the link.
And we found that we were one......" - Richard Llewellyn
When WILLIAM BRITTAIN landed in Sydney Cove in 1791 on the ship ACTIVE, age 27, he
came as a Private in the NSW Army Corps, battalion 102 and was listed as a shoemaker
by trade.
He certainly could never have imagined, in his wildest dreams the lasting footprint
of
new life and achievement, he would leave behind him, on these shores, and indeed
elsewhere, around the globe.
In those days the achievement of making it to this vast new country "Australia was in
itself nothing short of amazing! The fear, day to day trials and adventures for nine
months on the open seas, with a ship full of starving convicts in a heavy clunker of
a
boat,was impossible to even contemplate, from the comfortable perspective that we
enjoy today.
Much has been written about his ship on that particular journey
As The poor unfortunate convicts and their minders bounced around on the
unpredictable ocean, one judge's words said it all....
"I sentence you," says the Judge, "But to what I know not? Perhaps to storm and
shipwreck? Perhaps to infectious disorders. Perhaps to famine? Perhaps to be
massacred
by savages? Perhaps to be devoured by wild beasts. Away, take your chance; perish or
prosper, suffer or enjoy; I rid myself of the sight of you. The ship that bears you
away saves me from witnessing your sufferings, I shall give myself no more trouble
about you."
Also much has been written about the infamous Rum Corps, of which he was a small part.
It should be remembered that rum was a comfort currency for the poor and displaced
convicts and these men shouldn't perhaps be judged as harshly as the Rum Corps is by
today's standards, for providing rum and using it as currency.
By offering rum as payment paddocks that otherwise would not have been
cleared with crops were planted, and would have stood unattended bleak and
uninviting had it not been by offering an incentive to work. More particularly what
was needed, to blot out
their unhappy lot. The work,forced on an a rag tag group of convicts, most of them
with no farm knowledge whatsoever, it could be successfully argued, would never have
been
done,and the food situation would have been so much worse for all in the colony.
They managed to get work out of these convicts,who otherwise, were according to the
records of the day, almost useless for the tasks required.
The Rum Corps did get a bad press, yet their members didn't for the most part opt to
go back to England, but stayed to populate, and farm their lands, unlike many of the
convicts as soon as their sentences were ended they were on the boat and out of the
place. For sure rum played a big part, but I think if I was back there, I would need
something to warm me and deaden the pain of being banished to a wilderness on the
other side of the globe.
So too, is it impossible for us to imagine how it would have been for the young
seventeen year old CHARLOTTE SUTTON, who was born in the Colony, and who took refuge
in
the comfort of WILLIAM BRITTAIN'S arms in 1813, as his wife.
How uncomfortable and silent would she have been, on the many occasions when the
stories from home were
told? She was a blank canvas in relation to the sharing of past experiences.
About places she had never seen, and a London, she couldn't even imagine, and an
Ireland and its stories, that was way beyond her reason. How much of a foreigner she
must
have felt, to those around her, to have known only bush tracks and canvas shanties
and
later wattle and daub buildings that let the rain in.
Indeed Charlotte must have endured a kind of loneliness, about what was possible, in
more populated places.
So in her short life Charlotte concentrated on creating her own proud Australian
heritage, a special something, in all of us, to be extremely proud of,the Britten
blood that continues to flow through our veins.
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