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Convict love token
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This love token, a numismatic artefact of the highest importance to Australia, relates to the First Fleet transportee, Thomas Tilley who was sentenced to seven years transportation for theft with force. To achieve a more gracious immortality, Thomas Tilley was untruthful on the token he left for his loved one. On one side is a bird chained from its neck to the ground, and on the obverse is inscribed, 'Thomas Tilley TRANSPORTED 29 July 1785 for signing a note sent the hulks Jan 24 1786'. Vanity perhaps led him to ascribe his own crime to fraud rather than theft with force - a detail suitably sanitised for immortality on a token of love. After languishing in the hulks, Tilley was put on the transport 'Alexander' in 1777, bound for Botany Bay, after which the ship went to Port Jackson and laid anchor in January 1788 at the place that was soon to be called Sydney.

The token was possibly made by an itinerant engraver in England as facilities for traders to visit the prisons and hulks for commerce were readily available. There they would have found a ready market for these trinkets, manufacturing the ever popular love tokens to order from smoothed-down coins, the tokens then being left behind in England with loved ones.

H P Bolond, 1987
Probably Portsmouth, England

Note on blue file says 1786 - 1787 (May)

 This text content licensed under CC BY-NC.

Description
Convict love token, First Fleet, copper, NSW/Great Britain, 1786-1787
Circular copper disc, fully hand engraved. Obverse: inscription "Thomas / Tilley TR / ANSPORTED / 29 July 1785 / for signing / a note sent / the hulks / Jan 24 1786". Reverse: shows a bird with a chain around its neck [Jail Bird]

Designer: unknown; Great Britain

Maker: unknown; Great Britain; 1786 - 1787


Owner: unknown; Great Britain
Marks
See description
87/1494
Height
1 mm
Diameter
27 mm

 This text content licensed under CC BY-SA.
Acquisition credit line
Purchased, 1987
Subjects:
+ Convicts
+ Convict life
+ Colonial history of New South Wales
+ First Fleet, 1787-1788
+ Birds


Copyright
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