Details:
Convict servant of T.V. Bloomfield. To be victualled from the Stores at Newcastle
Place:
Dagworth, Wallis Plains
Details:
Labourer assigned to William Broomfield (Bloomfield)
Source:
Application to Marry
Details:
Ticket of leave holder aged 33. Application to marry Eliza Giltrap. Clergy John Wood
Source:
A.O. NSW. Convict Indents Fiche No. 647
Details:
Tried at Bedford Assizes 2 August 1831 and sentenced to Transportation for 14 years. Ploughman age 20
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Details:
Granted Certificate of Freedom
Place:
Mt. Pleasant, Paterson Plains
Details:
Servant. Employed by Edward Lamb
Source:
NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825, 1826-1827 (Ancestry)
Details:
Charles Reece per ship Asia, George Thomas per ship Asia and William Burton per Shipley, all in government service, charged with neglect of work....James Gallaghar, overseer of the road party, states - On Wednesday last I gave the prisoners a reasonable task to perform and having occasion to visit another part of my gang about two miles distance, I left them telling them before I went I expected they would finish the task before they left off. I did not stay away very long. On my return about 1/2 four, they had gone off to the hut and had not touched the work I had pointed out; these are the idlest of my gang and Reece is the inciter of all of them to idleness and opposition to me. The prisoners state that the overseer does not allow regular hours fr meals, that he sets them to work after breakfast and does not permit them to go to dinner until near sunset. George Thomas and William Burton express sorrow for having disobeyed the overseers orders; Burton says he was unwell when he left off work. Sentences: Charles Reece sentenced to 12 lashes on the breech. Burton and Thomas admonished by the Bench. the Overseer ordered to establish regular hours for meals
Details:
On list of runaways from Newcastle on 25 March
Source:
NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825 (Ancestry)
Details:
William Dodd, late in government service charged with absconding from Newcastle settlement in March 1825......It appears from the statement of the prisoner that soon after he left this settlement he was taken into custody and lodged in the gaol at Sydney where he became troubled with a disease in his eyes which eventually terminated in total blindness. It also appearing that there is every probability that the blindness in incurable, the prisoner is ordered to be returned to Sydney to be placed at the disposal of the authorities there
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW. Microfiche 647. (Ancestry)
Details:
Native place Cheshire. Age 22. Occupation ploughman. Tried Stafford Assizes September 1821 and sentenced to 7 years transportation
Source:
In the Service of the Company: letters of Sir Edward Parry, Commissioner to the Australian Agricultural company: volume 1, December 1829 - June 1832 Letter no 273
Details:
Waggoner. Sentenced to 14 years transportation at Gloucestershire on 13th January 1829. Assigned to A.A. Company and arrived at Port Stephens on the cutter 'Lambton' on 4th December
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Details:
Aged 37. Servant assigned to A. Whitfield
Details:
Clerk in H.M. Dockyard. Application for free passage for his wife from England
Details:
On list of prisoners assigned. Assigned to Margaret Emmerson (Emerson)
Details:
On return of convicts discharged from the Establishment, Emu Plains. To Mary Emmerson (Margaret Emerson)
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
A.O. NSW. Convict Indents Fiche No. 647
Details:
Tried at Bedford Assizes 2 August 1821 and sentenced to Transportation for Life