The First 
        Fleet journal of Jacob Nagle (1762– 1841), written some forty years after the 
        events it describes, provides the perspective of the common sailor. Born in 
        Pennsylvania in America, Nagle joined the crew of the Sirius as Able 
        Seaman in March 1787. 
He was one of the sailors who, days after their arrival at Botany Bay, rowed Governor Arthur Phillip and his party to Port Jackson searching for a better site for the Colony. He was aboard the Sirius when it was wrecked at Norfolk Island in March 1790. Unusually for a sailor, he was a good swimmer and greatly involved in helping people ashore and rescuing goods and provisions.
His account of the capture of Bennelong and Coleby differs significantly from that of Lieutenant William Bradley who led the expedition. Where Bradley asserts no guns were used, Nagle records that spears flew and shots were fired by some of the marines.
The Library holds nine of the eleven extant manuscript journals written by those 
          on the First Fleet. In 2009, the journals were officially included in the UNESCO
          Memory of the World Register. 
    Display item Jacob Nagle’s Journal
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