Friday, June 5, 2026

Ask A: Describe Alexander and Rachel (Morley) Whittle’s Voyage on the Ship "Brothers" in 1840-1841 – Part 1

 I wondered if my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude could provide me with information about my wife's ancestral family's migration from England to Australia in 1840. My wife's 2nd great-grandparents Alexander Whittle and Rachel Morley married in 1840 and had one child at the time.  I posted an ABC Biography for them in ABC Biography of Alexander and Rachel (Morley) Whittle of Lancashire, New South Wales and California (1818-1861).

I asked Anthropic Claude to create a description of the migration trip from Lancashire, England to Sydney, Australia experienced by the Alexander Whittle family in 1840-1841.  Here is the story based on the biography and social history.  

(AI NotebookLM Infographic -- Whittle Family Adventure)

The Claude Sonnet 4.6 response was (this is Part 1 of 2): 


Alexander and Rachel (Morley) Whittle’s Adventure – Part 1

The Voyage of the Brothers

Liverpool to Sydney, 14 September 1840 – 11 March 1841


Departure — 14 September 1840

The dock at Liverpool smelled of tar, fish, coal smoke, and something else beneath it all that Alexander could not name — something vast and cold that had no smell in Lancashire, because in Lancashire it did not exist. It was the sea. Or rather, it was the idea of the sea pressing in through the narrow streets between the warehouses: the knowledge that beyond the grey stone quays the world opened out into something measureless.

He had never seen the sea before. Neither had Rachel.

They had come down from Bolton on the cart three days earlier and spent two nights in a lodging house near the docks, waiting for the Brothers to take on her final cargo and passengers. The lodging house was loud and smelled of boiled cabbage, and Elizabeth, who was fifteen months old and had recently discovered the usefulness of her own voice, had made her feelings about the sleeping arrangements clear to all concerned. But the room was cheap and dry, and the landlady, a stout Irishwoman named Mrs. Heaney, had a weakness for babies and had twice taken Elizabeth off Rachel’s hands for an hour, which was enough.

The Brothers was larger than Alexander had imagined. She sat low in the water at her berth, a broad-beamed, three-masted sailing ship of perhaps five hundred tons, her hull dark with pitch and her decks already crowded with people. Everywhere he looked there were families: children clinging to their mothers, men carrying trunks, women with baskets balanced on their hips. The noise was extraordinary — a great layered din of English and Irish and Welsh voices, all of them carrying the particular pitch of people who are trying to be brave.

“There she is,” Alexander said.

Rachel looked at the ship for a long moment. She was holding Elizabeth on her hip, and the baby was looking at the ship too, with the solemn attention she gave to things she had not encountered before.

“She’s smaller than I thought,” Rachel said.

“She’s enormous,” Alexander said.

Rachel looked at him. “For what she’s got to do,” she said, “she’s smaller than I thought.”

He couldn’t argue with that.

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They were assigned to the married quarters in the between-decks, the section of the ship below the main deck and above the hold where the cargo was stowed. The space was long and low-ceilinged, smelling already of sawdust and bilge-water, with wooden berths lining both walls two-high, like shelves. Each family had been allocated a berth roughly six feet by four, curtained off with a piece of sailcloth from its neighbours. The long communal table ran down the centre.

Their neighbours to one side were a couple from Rochdale, Tom and Mary Haworth, with three children under eight who immediately attempted to make friends with Elizabeth. To the other side was a young man from Wigan named Croft who was travelling alone and who seemed, in those first hours, to be holding himself together by force of will alone, staring at the hull as if he could see through it to the dock outside.

Alexander stowed their two trunks in the hold, accessible only at the discretion of the ship’s crew. What they’d need for the voyage itself — clothing, Rachel’s wrapped rosemary, the small bundle of oilskin-wrapped documents, Elizabeth’s things — went in a canvas bag that fitted under the berth.

Rachel made up the berth with their own bedding while Alexander found a sailor to ask about the mess arrangements. They had been allocated to Mess Number Eleven: eight adults and a collection of children who would cook, eat, and share rations together for the duration of the voyage. They would draw their weekly ration of salt pork, dried peas, oatmeal, and biscuit from the ship’s stores, cook it at the communal coppers when their mess’s time came, and eat it at the long table.

“It’s like being in barracks,” Mary Haworth said, surveying the between-decks with her hands on her hips.

“It’s like being in a very long, thin house,” Rachel said. “That moves.”

It did not move yet. But late in the afternoon, as the light changed and the noise on deck shifted in pitch from the chaos of loading to the purposeful shouts of sailors preparing to sail, Alexander felt the first tremor through the hull — the hawsers coming in, the ship taking the tide — and he went up on deck to watch Liverpool recede.

He had not expected it to look so small from the water. The warehouses and the church spires and the grey smoke and the whole complicated machinery of a great port city were all there, and then they were further away, and then further still, and he stood at the rail with the wind in his face — a real wind now, salt and cold, quite unlike any wind he had felt before — and watched England go.

He thought of his mother in Chorley, who had pressed a shilling into his hand when they’d said goodbye and told him not to be a fool. He thought of Leah’s face at the gate of the lodging house in Bolton, holding herself very straight, not crying. He thought of the timber yard, the smell of pine.

When there was nothing left to see but water, he went back below.

The Bay of Biscay and the Atlantic — September–October 1840

The sickness came the second morning, with the Bay of Biscay.

The Bay of Biscay had a fearsome reputation among sailors, and on the morning of the third day out of Liverpool the Brothers met it in full character: a deep Atlantic swell rolling in from the west under a grey sky, the ship rising and plunging in a slow, nauseating rhythm that had nothing to do with any motion Alexander had ever experienced on land. By midday, perhaps a third of the passengers in the married quarters were in their berths. By evening, it was half.

Rachel was not among them. This surprised him, and she noticed his surprise.

“I decided not to be sick,” she said, with a composure that was not quite accurate since her face was slightly grey.

“That’s not how it works,” he said, from where he was lying with a damp cloth over his forehead.

“Isn’t it,” she said, and went to see to Elizabeth, who had taken the whole thing philosophically and was attempting to eat a piece of biscuit that had gone soft.

Alexander spent two miserable days in the berth, contributing nothing useful to Mess Eleven, before the sickness passed as suddenly as it had come. The swell eased. The sky lightened. He came on deck to find the Atlantic spread around the Brothers in every direction — endless, glittering, slightly alarming — and felt, for the first time, something that was not quite alarm but was close to it. The sheer scale of what they had undertaken.

There were 278 bounty immigrants aboard the Brothers, and 64 of them were from Lancashire. In those first weeks, as the ship found her rhythm and the passengers found theirs, the between-decks resolved itself into something like a small village. Mess Eleven contained the Haworths, a young couple from Preston, an elderly weaver named Butterworth who had a cough that worried everyone, and a widow named Mrs. Critchley who had no children of her own but took a proprietary interest in everyone else’s.

“She’ll be walking in a month,” Mrs. Critchley said, regarding Elizabeth with the authority of a woman who had raised six.

“She’s already walking,” Rachel said.

“Walking properly,” Mrs. Critchley amended. “Not just lurching.”

Elizabeth, as if to prove a point, stood up, took three extremely confident steps, and sat down hard on the deck planking. She looked at Mrs. Critchley. Mrs. Critchley nodded, satisfied.

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The daily routine established itself within the first week. Up at six. Wash and dress before breakfast at eight. After breakfast, clean the berth, scrub the allocated section of deck, carry out the chores designated to their mess by the surgeon-superintendent, a taciturn Scotsman named Dr. Gillespie who kept a daily log of the ship’s medical condition and conducted weekly musters at which every passenger was required to present themselves for inspection. Dinner at one. Afternoons free. Tea at six. Lights out at eight.

The afternoon hours were when the between-decks became something almost like a community. The women sewed and mended and talked in low voices about what they were leaving and what they hoped to find. The men played cards or talked or simply sat watching the sea through the open hatch when the weather was good enough to have it open. Alexander whittled. He had brought a small knife and several pieces of hard wood from the yard, and in the afternoons he sat at the table and worked at them without any clear plan, his hands finding their own occupation while his mind moved through the distance ahead.

Rachel read. She had two books — a Bible and a small volume of improving essays that Mrs. Critchley had pressed on her before they left — and she worked through them slowly and systematically, her lips occasionally moving, sometimes stopping to ask Alexander what a word meant. He usually knew, and when he didn’t they puzzled it out between them. She had learned her letters well enough over the past months, though reading was still slow work; she approached it with the same deliberate patience she brought to everything difficult.

Elizabeth, for her part, was the most popular person on the ship. She had reached the age of engaging curiosity and boundless goodwill, and she moved through the between-decks greeting strangers with the confidence of a mayor. The Haworth children followed her everywhere. Mrs. Critchley fashioned her a cloth rabbit. Young Croft from Wigan, who turned out to be twenty and homesick and heading to New South Wales to work for a cousin, became her particular champion, spending his afternoons making her small towers of biscuit to knock over.

“She’ll not remember any of this,” Rachel said one evening, watching Elizabeth knock over Croft’s latest tower with extreme satisfaction.

“No,” Alexander agreed. “But we will.”

The Tropics — October–November 1840

The weather changed as they moved south. The grey Atlantic sky turned blue, then a blue so deep it seemed almost unreal, and the sun moved higher each day until it stood almost directly overhead at noon and the deck planking was too hot for bare feet. The wind went light and variable and the Brothers sometimes stood nearly still in the water, her sails hanging slack, the only sound the creak of her spars and the occasional slap of canvas.

These were the doldrums — the belt of calm that lay along the equator, the nightmare of sailing ships that could leave a vessel motionless for days or weeks. Captain Greyburne, a compact, weathered man in his fifties who moved about his ship with the unhurried authority of someone who had made this passage many times, ordered the topsails backed and the courses handed and the crew to the sweeps when the wind fell away entirely. The passengers were sent below.

Down in the between-decks, the heat was oppressive. The hatches were open but the air barely moved, and the smell — of bodies, of the bilges, of the salt pork in the coppers — was something that took getting used to and then continued to need getting used to. Elizabeth wilted. Her cheeks flushed and she was fretful in a way she had not been in the cool Atlantic weeks, and Rachel spent the hot afternoons sitting at the hatch with her in her arms, catching whatever breath of air there was.

Dr. Gillespie moved through the between-decks twice a day in the worst of the heat, checking for fever, dispensing small doses of lime juice against the scurvy that was always a hazard on long voyages, recording everything in his log. He was not a warm man but he was thorough, and when old Butterworth’s cough grew worse in the heat, he moved him to a berth nearer the hatch and mixed him a preparation that seemed to help.

“How far to the Cape?” Alexander asked him one afternoon.

The doctor considered. “At this rate? Three weeks, perhaps four. We need wind.” He looked at the slack sails through the open hatch. “We’ll get it. We always get it. The question is when.”

The wind came back on the fourth day, a fresh south-easterly that filled the sails and set the Brothers plunging forward again, and the between-decks lifted immediately in mood. The hatches caught the breeze. The children ran up on deck. Mrs. Critchley baked something in the coppers that smelled, implausibly, like a cake.

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On the twenty-eighth of November, with the ship somewhere off the western coast of Africa and the Southern Cross just visible above the horizon on clear nights, the trouble began.

The passengers in the between-decks heard it before they knew what it was: a commotion on deck, raised voices, the sound of boots on the planking above their heads. Alexander was at the table whittling; Rachel was nursing Elizabeth to sleep in the berth. He heard the voices sharpen and then heard the captain’s voice — crisp, authoritative, brooking no argument — and then more voices, some of them angry.

“What is it?” Rachel said, from the berth.

“I’ll find out,” he said.

He went up the companionway and came out into the darkness. The watch was gathered amidships, a knot of sailors in the lamp-shadows, and Captain Greyburne was standing before them with two of his officers. A big sailor named Blandford — a man the passengers had noticed for his swagger and his loud opinions at the mess tables — was being manhandled toward the stocks.

The other sailors were refusing to help. They stood with their arms folded and their faces set, and when the captain turned and called on the starboard watch to assist, they shook their heads or looked away. Blandford was shouting something about the women’s quarters, and several of his messmates were saying the captain had no right, and for a moment Alexander could not tell which way it would go.

He took a step forward. The captain’s eye found him in the dimness.

“Stand off, Mr. Whittle,” Greyburne said quietly. “Back below, if you please.”

A sailor at his shoulder added: “Go back down, mate. This isn’t your business.” The voice was not unfriendly but it was firm.

He went back down.

“Well?” Rachel said.

“Trouble with some of the crew. The captain has it in hand.”

By the time the ship was quiet again it was nearly midnight. Blandford was in irons — there were no stocks, as it turned out — and the watch were back at their posts, still resentful but doing their duty. The passengers lay in their berths listening to the creak of the rigging and the sound of the sea, and the between-decks was very quiet.

“Are we safe?” Mrs. Critchley asked in the darkness.

“Yes,” several voices said, from different berths, with the firmness of people who were not entirely sure.

To be continued...

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A Note to the Reader

This is a work of fiction, imagined around documented historical facts. The Brothers was a real ship that sailed from Liverpool on 14 September 1840, carrying 278 bounty immigrants including Alexander and Rachel Whittle and their infant daughter Elizabeth. The ship arrived at Port Jackson on 11 March 1841, having stopped at the Cape of Good Hope on 24 December 1840. A mutiny occurred among the crew at the Cape on 6 January 1841, the details of which are drawn from the trial reported in the Australian Chronicle of 15 April 1841. The captain’s name — Thomas Greyburne — is taken from the trial record. The descriptions of steerage life, weather, and the route are drawn from period accounts. All dialogue, characters beyond the Whittle family, and interior scenes are invented.

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The AI Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is in:  

This is historical fiction based on known events in the lives of my wife's ancestors -- it might have been this way. Alexander and Rachel (Morley) Whittle are my wife's 2nd great-grandparents, and I have significant information about this family from the available records, but I know nothing about their day-to-day lives. 

As always, I am amazed at what life was like in any place over 180 years ago. This description of their adventure form England to Australia is interesting and so different from our current daily activities.

After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit this Whittle family in 1840 abosard the Brothers and witness their daily lives.  I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts. Fortunately, there are records and articles about this voyage -- see Mutiny on the Sailing Ship, Brothers. 1841.

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Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page.  Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.

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