Free Settler or Felon
Convict and Colonial History


Search Result


185502
Surname: Fitzgerald
First Name: William
Ship: Bengal Merchant 1838
Date: 9 June 1841
Place: Newcastle gaol
Source: Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book - State Archives NSW; Roll: 757
Details: Sent to Newcastle gaol from Hyde Park Barracks via Scone. With drawn from Assignee


11670
Surname: Fitzgerald
First Name: William
Ship: Bengal Merchant 1838......
Date: 1844 18 May
Place: Scone
Source: MM
Details: Ticket of leave granted.


127305
Surname: Fitzgerald
First Name: William
Ship: Bengal Merchant 1838......
Date: 1840 4 November
Place: Scone
Source: GG
Details: Labourer age 33 from Brighton. 5ft 10in. Sallow complexion, brown hair, haze grey eyes, scar on upper part of nose, another on left cheek, small moles on right cheek, six moles on right arm, 3 small moles on back of upper part of left arm. Absconded from James Bowman 25 October.


166418
Surname: Fitzgerald
First Name: William
Ship: Bengal Merchant 1838......
Date: 1838
Place: -
Source: Convict Indents (Ancestry)
Details: Age 21, Married. Reads and writes. Labourer from Brighton. Tried CCC 23 October 1837 and sentenced to 10 years transportation for picking pockets. No prior convictions. Sallow complexion, brown hair, hazey grey eyes.


176520
Surname: Fitzgerald
First Name: William
Ship: Bengal Merchant 1838......
Date: 14 February 1840
Place: Scone
Source: The Scone Advocate 22 February 1921
Details: Assigned to Dr. Bowman of Muswellbrook. Charged before Edward Denny Day with neglect of duty and harboring a bushranger. William Davies deposes - Prisoner is placed under my care and is employed as a watchman. On the 21st of last month I went to prisoners station and found that he was harboring a bushranger there. I cautioned him against harboring men and that if I found him doing so again I should take him to Court. He replied with an oath that he did not care for all the flogging in the country. He added that any men who came to the station should be welcome to stop as long as they liked and that he was glad to see them. He was grossly insolent at the same time making use of blasmephous language which he is in the habit of doing. On, I think, the 24th prisoner absented himself from his station without leave, and neglected to remove his folds. Guilty of insolence and nelgect of duty and sentenced to 50 lashes. Remanded to Muswellbrook on the charge of harboring a bushranger