Commemorating Convicts: Grangegorman to Tasmania
Wed 7 Aug 2024 13:00 - 14:30 IST
TU Dublin East Quad, D07 XFF2
Description
Grangegorman Histories is delighted to welcome Tasmanian Prof Hamish Maxwell Stewart for a lunchtime lecture exploring Grangegorman's, and Ireland's transportation history and how different research methods are being used to tell this story
Between 1787 and 1868 around 40,000 convicts were transported from Ireland to Australia, including 3,200 women and about 500 girls transported from the Richmond Penitentiary at Grangegorman. There they were joined by others of Irish descent convicted in courts across the British empire. Over the last two decades many of the records documenting this forced labour migration have been digitised, coded and linked to tackle questions as diverse as the impact of solitary confinement on convict life expectancy, levels of reoffending and patterns of convict resistance. A spinoff of this research has been the creation of the largest and most complicated historical dataset assembled in Australia to date. This is now being used to drive new heritage interpretation initiatives. This includes an interactive exhibition unveiled in March 2024 in the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery (Unshackled: The True Convict Story) and a digital Convict Memorial in the Hobart Penitentiary unveiled in November 2023.
Grangegorman Histories is delighted to welcome Australian Professor Hamish Maxwell Stewart to Grangegorman where his lecture will explore some of Ireland’s transportation history and the ways in which cutting edge digital humanities research using the latest AI techniques is being used to tell the story of Irish and British convict transportation to Australia and how this might develop in the future.
Hamish Maxwell-Stewart is a professor of heritage and digital humanities at the University of New England. The author of over a hundred books and articles, Hamish has long been an advocate of the necessity of connecting cutting edge research with heritage interpretation. His previous heritage collaborations have included the Lottery of Life visitor gallery at the Port Arthur Historic Site, viewed by over 2,000,000 visitors, and the Digital Panopticon website.
This event will take place in Room EQ116, which is on the first floor of the East Quad building on the TU Dublin Grangegorman Campus. Tea, coffee and sandwiches will be provided.
Grangegorman Histories
Grangegorman Histories is a public history programme of Dublin City Council, Grangegorman Development Agency, the Health Service Executive, local communities, the National Archives, the Royal Irish Academy and TU Dublin. The programme provides opportunities to contribute to the important work of uncovering, cataloguing and commemorating the eventful history of the Grangegorman area. In the past 250 years, Grangegorman, on the northside of Dublin’s city centre, has been the site of a workhouse, a large psychiatric hospital, a prison; now, it is integrating back into the city as a health and education campus for the HSE, TU Dublin and the local community.
Access requirements
Have you got any access requirements that we can assist you with, so that you can fully engage with our event? Please let us know by contacting our access officer, in advance of the event, by email at accessofficer@ria.ie
For all other queries please contact grangegormanhistories@ggda.ie
Location
TU Dublin East Quad, D07 XFF2