Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW; Roll: 136
Details:
Servant from Wiltshire. Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Newcastle. To be admitted to convict hospital. Discharged to the colonial hospital 20 February 1836
Details:
Age 34. Assigned to Henry Clewarth (Cleworth)
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
Return of Female Convicts arrived in NSW between 1 Jan 1833 and 31 Dec 1834. Settler and Convict Lists. Ancestry
Details:
Sent to Newcastle
Surname:
Rose (Rowles) (Cleworth)
Source:
Application to marry
Details:
Aged 21. Application to marry Henry Clewood (Clewarth). Allowed
Source:
State Archives NSW; Gaol Entrance Book, Item: 2/2020; Roll: 757
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol because of illness. To receive medical aid
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW; Roll: 136
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol hospital for medical aid. Discharged to her master 20 January 1837
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW; Roll: 136
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Newcastle to receive medical treatment. Discharged to her husband on 27 June 1836
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book - State Archives NSW; Roll: 136
Details:
Elizabeth Rowe admitted to Newcastle gaol from Newcastle. Sent to the gaol hospital to obtain medical assistance. Discharged to her master Mr. J. Thomas at Newcastle on 10th June
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book - State Archives NSW; Roll: 136
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol. Sent to the gaol hospital for medical treatment. Discharged to her service 10 March 1838
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book - State Archives NSW; Roll: 136
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol on account of sickness. Returned to service, her master having paid 6s hospital fees on 31 August 1835
Date:
9th to 15 September 1838
Place:
Newcastle female factory
Source:
Female prisoners received and discharged from the Female Factory at Newcastle. State Archives NSW; Kingswood, New South Wales; Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930; Series: 2329; Item: 4/3898; Roll: 139
Details:
Received into the female factory having been returned to government service
Date:
16th to 22nd September 1838
Place:
Newcastle female factory
Source:
Female prisoners received and discharged from the Female Factory at Newcastle. State Archives NSW; Kingswood, New South Wales; Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930; Series: 2329; Item: 4/3898; Roll: 139
Details:
Discharged from the female factory. Assigned to Mr. Alexander Flood at Newcastle
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW. Roll 136
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol for medical advice. Discharged 9 November 1839
Surname:
Scull (alias Upton) (Roe)
Source:
Register Book of Christ Church Cathedral, Newcastle p60
Details:
Marriage of Samuel Roe aged 30 and Elizabeth Scull aged 44. Witnesses Henry Stiles and Catherine Stiles
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW. Roll 137
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol. Sentenced to 7 days in the cells. Discharged to her master 15 September
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
Return of Female Convicts arrived in NSW between 1 Jan 1833 and 31 Dec 1834. Settler and Convict Lists. Ancestry
Details:
Sent to Newcastle
Surname:
Scull (Upton) (Roe)
Source:
Newcastle Court of Petty Sessions, Bench Books, 1833-1836 (Ancestry)
Details:
Samuel Roe per Ocean and Elizabeth Scull alias Upton (Roe), wife to the above, arrived per Numa, both assigned servant to Mr. John Thomas, charged with highly disorderly conduct....Mr. John Thomas testified...Last Friday night I sent the prisoner Roe to Newcastle with a dray containing butter for sale. When the dray returned, my mother in law Mrs. Beckett, was on the dray intending to come to my house. When the prisoner told her he was going to Mr. Platts which place is quite out of the road and doing which was against my orders. Mr. Beckett was obliged to get out and walk to my house a distance of ten miles at least. When the man returned to the farm, I asked him why he had gone to Platts. He said he went for Mrs. Dennys flour. I told him he had no business there and that any other Master would take him to court. He replied then damn your eyes take me. Next morning he sent a message to me by his wife saying he would not go for the cows, as he was going to Newcastle. Elizabeth Roe then went away, left her work undone and never came back the whole day. My wife is expecting every minute to be confined and has only the female prisoner to look to for assistance.....In defence Samuel Roe says as he took Mrs. Dennys wheat to Mr. Platts Mill to grind. he thought it was proper to take back the flour. The woman says as her husbane was going to court she determined to do the same and therefore did no work that day. Guilty. Sentenced to thirty lashes for Samuel Roe. The woman Elizabeth Roe three weeks in the cells
Details:
Age 30. Assigned to William Dangar