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Item: 71233
Surname: Temple
First Name: William
Ship: -
Date: 1820 10 - 15 January
Place: Newcastle
Source: Convict Settlement
Details: Overseer at Macquarie Pier, Newcastle. Employed loading trucks, attending cranes, wheeling away rubbish


 
Item: 71250
Surname: Temple
First Name: William
Ship: General Hewitt 1814
Date: 1817 16 September
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: On list of prisoners to be sent to Newcastle per 'Mary', sentenced to one year at Newcastle


 
Item: 169436
Surname: Temple
First Name: William
Ship: General Hewitt 1814
Date: -
Place: -
Source: Convict Indent Item: [4/4004]; Microfiche: 634
Details: Carpenter and joiner. Age 34.Tried in Lincoln 6 March 1813 and sentenced to transportation for life


 
Item: 169437
Surname: Temple
First Name: William
Ship: General Hewitt 1814
Date: 1825
Place: Sydney
Source: Ancestry.com. New South Wales and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters, 1806-1849
Details: Employed as a cabinet maker in Sydney


 
Item: 169438
Surname: Temple
First Name: William
Ship: General Hewitt 1814
Date: 1821
Place: -
Source: Colonial Secretary's Papers. (NRS 900) Petitions to the Governor from convicts for mitigations of sentences Item: 4/1863 Page: 80
Details: Memorial of William Temple - had been exclusively employed under the Governor's direction for the previous 18 months at Government House and had always tried to conduct himself with propriety. Humbly requesting that he be bestowed with a Conditional Pardon before the Governor leaves the colony


 
Item: 169439
Surname: Temple
First Name: William
Ship: General Hewitt 1814
Date: 10 June 1813
Place: Portsmouth
Source: UK Prison Hulk Registers and Letter Books. Ancestry
Details: Age 34. Capital Reprieve. Received onto the Perseus hulk from Lincoln on 10 June 1813. Transferred to the General Hewitt for transportation to NSW


 
Item: 169440
Surname: Temple
First Name: William
Ship: General Hewitt 1814
Date: c. 1821
Place: Sydney
Source: Lachlan and Elizabeth Macquarie Archive
Details: Towards the end of his governorship in New South Wales, Lachlan Macquarie commissioned two convict artisans, William Temple and John Webster, to make him two large ornamental chairs. These chairs appear to have been designed for matters of state rather than personal comfort. They are likely to be the two large armchairs referred to in the inventory of the contents of the drawing room of Government House, Sydney drawn up by Macquarie's aide-de-camp, Henry Colden Antill, in March 1821.....http://www.lib.mq.edu.au/digital/lema/chair/index.html



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