Details:
Farmer of Wollombi. Testified in the court case of Thomas Whitty Toby that assigned servant John Stone could not write
Details:
Donated to the Patriotic fund
Source:
AO NSW Convicts Indents. Fiche No. 676
Details:
Age 23. Ploughman and shepherd from Lincoln. Tried 6 March 1830 and sentenced to transportation for life for burglary. Assigned to Mrs. Fennell, Hunter River district on arrival
Details:
Granted conditional pardon
Source:
Application to Marry
Details:
Thomas Cabourn age 33 arrived per 'Lord Melville', application to marry Jane Beattie age 17 arrived per 'Rogers' (came free)
Source:
Convict Families That Made Australia - Smee
Details:
Spouse Jane Beattie. Issue 1. James Beattie b. 1842; 2. Thomas b. 1843; 3. Francis Beattie; 4. Robert b. 1847; 5. Jane b. 1849; 6. William b. 1851; 7. John Christopher b. 1854; 8 Florence; 9. Alice Jessie. Thomas Cabourn died at Wollombi in March 1875
Surname:
Cabourn (Calburn)
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
Australian Almanac
Details:
Agent for the Northern Fire and Life Assurance Company
Source:
Australian Almanack
Details:
Agent for the Northern Fire and Life Assurance Company
Source:
Australian Almanack
Details:
Agent for the Northern Fire and Life Assurance Company
Details:
Henry Cadell, second son of Thomas Cadell of Capton Somersetshire and brother of Thomas Cadell of the firm of Corner & Cadell of Maitland, accidentally drowned in attempting to cross the Balone Creek on 17th March
Details:
Death of Mrs. Elizabeth Cadell, in Somerset, England, mother of Thomas Cadell of the firm of Corner and Cadell of Maitland
Place:
Capton House, Campbells Hill, West Maitland
Details:
Death on 23rd May 1865 of Alfred, son of Thomas Cadell, aged 1 yr and 2 mths
Source:
Biographical Register of the New South Wales Parliament 1856-1901 C.N. Connolly (Online)
Details:
Thomas Cadell - Co. dir. B. c. 1831 Somerset, Eng., s. Thomas, gentleman, and Elizabeth, nee Boyce; m. 29 Jan. 1859 Syd., Sophia Richabella Doyle; 3s.4d. D. 25 June 1896 Elizabeth Bay, NSW. C. of E. funeral. Arr. NSW c. 1855. Lived first at Campbells Hill, W. Maitland. At first farmer, but by 1860 auctioneer and stock agent, W. Maitland; very successful, and by 1866 held 5 properties in NSW as squatter. Retired from business, visited Eng., then settled in Syd. Became dir Bank of NSW and of Life Assurance co. MLC 29 Dec. 1881-22 Sept. 1886
Details:
Birth at Campbell s Hill, West Maitland, on 7th December, the wife of Mr. Thomas Cadell, of a daughter
Source:
Newcastle Chronicle
Details:
New saleyards at Darlington completed and first sale of fat cattle to be held
First Name:
Thomas junior
Details:
Marriage of Thomas Cadell junior of Windsor and Ann Catherine, daughter of William Bowman of Richmond on 12th October. Minister Rev. H.T. Stiles
First Name:
William Thomas
Source:
The Aldine centennial history of New South Wales illustrated / W. Frederic Morrison Morrison, W. Frederic Sydney. The Aldine Publishing Company, 1888
Details:
WILLIAM THOMAS CADELL, Deepwater Station, was born at Raymond Terrace in 1845, and received his education at the same place. His father Dr. Cadell, arrived in this colony and settled at Raymond Terrace about the year 1830, where he practised his profession until the time of his death in 1885. On completing his studies , the subject of this biography went on to his father s station at Dungowan, on the Peel River , twenty miles from Tamworth. Here he fulfilled the duties of manager for a period of sixteen years, when he became the manager of the Deepwater Station. Of this he is now managing partner with the Hon. J. D. Macansh and John Windeyer, of Kinross , Raymond Terrace. The station contains an area of 195 square miles, and is situated on the western slopes of the New England tableland. It is stocked with 30,000 merino sheep and 4000 Durham cattle. Of late years the proprietors have gone to great expense in improving the breeds of their sheep and cattle, with the result that at present the wool and carcasses of the Deepwater sheep are celebrated throughout the colony. The wool always commands a high price on the London markets ; while the cattle are reckoned among the very best. Attached to the run is the Myall Downs Station, on the McIntyre River -an estate of 26,000 acres, covered with the finest myall in the country. This run is used for fattening the surplus stock from Deepwater Station. On the north of this property is the Annandale Station, containing 43,000 acres, and here are situated the famous Pye s Creek silver mines. This run is entirely stocked with cattle
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4011]; Microfiche: 660
Details:
Farmer s labourer from Kildare. Married with a child. Tried in Wicklow 3 March 1825 and sentenced to 7 years transportation for stealing a watch. Troublesome on the voyage out. Assigned to Richard Pritchett in Sydney on arrival
Surname:
Cafferey (Caffery) (Caffrey)
Date:
Burial 1827 December
Source:
Register Book of Christ Church Cathedral, Newcastle . Burials p4
Details:
Age 40; Occupation: labourer