Two large visitor information display boards, giving the history on the ruins of the long penitentiary that at one time had 136 separate cells at Port


Two large visitor information display boards, give the history of the ruins of the long penitentiary that at one time had 136 separate cells at Port Arthur. It served as the main prison between 1833 and 1877. The prison grounds consist of 30 historic buildings, ruins, gardens and parkland on the southeast coast of Tasmania in Australia. By 1840 the former prison area accommodated 2,000 hardened convicts, guards and government civil servants from the UK and Ireland. The historic site is 60 miles from the State capital of Hobart and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and World Heritage List as the Australian Convict Sites World Heritage property. Port Arthur was named after its first lieutenant governor, George Arthur, a sadist who meted barbaric treatments to the convicts


Size: 6048px × 4024px
Location: Port Arthur, Tasmania, Australia
Photo credit: © richard sowersby / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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