Source:
The Convict Ships - Charles Bateson
Details:
Master And. Barclay; 140 male convicts; 41 female convicts
Details:
Received prisoners at the Cove of Cork and departed from Falmouth 21st January. Arrived Rio 23rd March and Port Jackson 2nd July. Three male prisoned died on the passage out and two females..
Details:
On list of prisoners to be sent to Newcastle per Estramina
Details:
Prisoner at Newcastle . Time expired
Source:
Colonial Secretary Papers. (NRS 936) Copies of letters sent to Van Diemens Land, Newcastle and Norfolk Island, 1810-1813
Details:
Richard Brown per Providence, Charles Adams per Sinclair and Robert Johnson per Maria sentenced to 1 year at Newcastle penal settlement
Source:
Colonial Secretary's Papers
Details:
Deceased. Late of Castlereagh st Sydney. Correspondence re the daughters of his widow Sarah be admitted to the female orphan school (Mary aged 8 and Elizabeth age 7)
Source:
State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Title: Bound manuscript indents, 1788-1842; Item: [4/4004]; Microfiche: 633
Details:
Tried in Dublin in February 1810. Sentenced to 7 years transportation.
Source:
Newcastle Art Gallery
Details:
Richard Browne - A focus exhibition 30 June - 12 August 2012 A focus exhibition of seven works by Richard Browne, including two recent acquisitions to the Newcastle Art Gallery collection. Richard Browne (1776-1824) was an Irish born artist who lived in Newcastle from 1811-1817. The water colours in this focus exhibition portray the Indigenous people from the Hunter Region and Sydney..........Richard Browne Coola-benn, Native Chief of Ashe Island Hunters River, New South Wales; Cobbawn Wogi, Native Chief of Ashe Island Hunters River New South Wales (1820) 47.0 x 36.0 cm; 33.0 x 27.0 cm water colour and body colour on paper
Source:
State Library of NSW. Discover Collections
Details:
Richard Browne was born in Dublin in 1771. He was sentenced to transportation in 1810 and arrived in Sydney in 1811 on the Providence. Within a few months of arriving, he reoffended and was removed to the secondary penal colony of Newcastle. In Newcastle, Browne came into contact with the commandant of Newcastle from 1811-1814, Lieutenant Thomas Skottowe. Skottowe was interested in natural history and commissioned Browne to create drawings of his collections to illustrate a manuscript entitled, Select Specimens From Nature of the / Birds Animals &c &c of New South Wales, Collected and Arranged by Thomas Skottowe Esqr. The Drawings By T.R. Browne. N.S.W. Newcastle New South Wales 1813.
Details:
Obtained Ticket of Leave
Place:
Bengalla, Newcastle
Details:
Labourer. Assigned to Captain Wright
Details:
On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle per Elizabeth Henrietta
Details:
Sentenced to 25 lashes and 2 yrs at Newcastle settlement for absconding from prisoners barracks and absenting himself from public labour
Details:
Died about 2 yrs previously
Source:
1814 Muster. p59.
Details:
Assigned to John Smith. Off the stores.
Source:
State Archives NSW. Convict Indents. microfiche 633
Details:
Tried Co. Galway in 1810 and sentenced to transportation for life. Died in the service of Mr Glennie of Hunters River
First Name:
Patrick (Constable)
Details:
Appointed constable in place of Constable Russel who was dismissed
Details:
On list of prisoners sent to Newcastle. Arrived as convict per "Providence", 1811 and received a ticket of leave on arrival; he was Clerk to D'Arcy Wentworth from 1811 to 1817; he practised as an attorney from September 1812; his ticket of leave was revoked on 27 February 1813 and restored in December 1813; he received a conditional pardon on 13 June 1814 and resumed his legal practice together with mercantile dealings and keeping a public house; he was admitted to act in the civil court on 4 July 1814; he received an absolute pardon on 1 January 1816; and returned to England in 1817
Details:
Absolute Pardon. Returned to England 1817
Source:
Selection of reports and papers of the House of Commons: Prisons...Volume 51 - Letter from Mr. Justice Bent to the Earl Bathurst (Sydney 1st July 1815)
Details:
.......The individuals who have practised, or who claim a right to be admitted as attornies, are, George Crossley, Edward Eagar, George Chartres, Michael Robinson,and William Fleming.........George Chartres was convicted at the Dublin assizes, July 1810, of a felony, and was transported to this colony in the year 1811, and only received a conditional emancipation in June 1814 and he has been sent, once since his arrival in this colony, to the Coal River for misconduct, and is also still under the sentence of the law. George Crossley and Edward Eagar, petitioned the Governor, and requested his interference, fearing they should be excluded from their practice; and, together with George Chartres, petitioned the Supreme Court to be admitted as attornies. The two latter have contented themselves with silently waiting the event of their application.