Details:
Assigned to Arthur Little
Details:
Obtained ticket of leave
Source:
State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4016]; Microfiche: 679
Details:
Age 21. Braidmaker from London. Tried Newgate 27 May 1830 and sentenced to 7 years transportation for shop lifting. Assigned to P. Murphy at Aberfoil on arrival
Source:
State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4016]; Microfiche: 679
Details:
Age 22. Smith apprentice from Bristol. Tried in London 17 Feb 1831 and sentenced to 7 years transportation for stealing a clock. Assigned to Thomas Crawford at Wallambie on arrival
Surname:
Britain (Brittain)
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4016]; Microfiche: 679
Details:
Age 19. Native of Co Mayo. Tried at Newgate 11 September 1830 and sentenced to 7 years transportation for false returns. Assigned to William Burnett at Port Stephens on arrival
Details:
Ticket of leave holder
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
UK Prison Hulk Registers. Ancestry
Details:
Richard Chandler age 22 tried at Winchester 19 July 1830. Sentenced to 7 years transportation for house breaking. Received from Winchester on to the Hardy Hulk 4 October 1830. Transferred to the Georgiana 24 March 1831
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4016]; Microfiche: 679
Details:
Age 23. Sweep and bricklayer from Gibraltar. Tried in Winchester 19 July 1830 and sentenced to 7 years transportation for house breaking. Assigned to John Cobb at Hunter River on arrival.
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
State Archives NSW. Gaol Description Book. Item: 2/2016; Roll: 759
Details:
Born c 1812. 5ft 4in, slight build, fresh complexion. Admitted to Newcastle gaol
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4016]; Microfiche: 679
Details:
Age 18. Indoor servant from London. Tried January 1831 and sentenced to transportation for life for picking pockets. Assigned to Rev. F. Wilkinson at Windsor on arrival.
Source:
Invermein Court of Petty Sessions. Deposition Books 1833 -1834 (Ancestry)
Details:
William Shearman per ship England assigned to H.C. Sempill; John Connor per ship Georgiana assigned to H.C. Sempill; James Simpson per Portland assigned to H.C. Sempill, charged.....Henry Nisbett states that it is his request that the men may all be detained when taken as he has several charges to bring against them
Source:
Invermein Court of Petty Sessions. Deposition Books 1833 -1834 (Ancestry)
Details:
William Shearman per ship England, James Simpson per ship Portland, John Connor per ship Georgiana all charged with bushranging. Constable Thomas Dunn states that Williamson the farm constable on Segenhoe estate delivered the prisoners up to him as runaways on Monday night. The Bench find the prisoners guilty and sentence them to receive fifty lashes each
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4016]; Microfiche: 679
Details:
John Connor age 20. Fire engine maker and brass turner from London. Tried in London 6 January 1831. Sentenced to transportation for life for stealing from a dwelling house. Assigned to Hamilton C. Sempill at Sydney on arrival
Source:
Invermein Court of Petty Sessions. Deposition Books 1833 -1834 (Ancestry)
Details:
William Shearman per ship England, assigned to T.P. Macqueen; James Simpson per ship Portland assigned to H.C. Sempill; John Connor per ship Georgiana assigned to H.C. Sempill charged with disobedience of orders and neglect of duty....Henry Nesbitt states - I am overseer at Segenhoe and the prisoners are employed as shepherds; on the 24 and 25th February I was going up the river to one of the sheep runs and found the three prisoners together with their sheep; Simpson had come about two miles away from his run; and I have repeatedly found Shearman and Connor together with their sheep and on one occasion I found them about the middle of the day with their sheep mixed in the hurdles; and on another occasion Shearman told me he would take his sheep where he liked. The General order to all shepherds are that they are not to be together. The Prisoner Shearman stated that if I took him to Court, that he would have satisfaction. The prisoner Shearman states in his defence that on the occasion that the sheep were mixed they got in the hurdles in the night and they had not had time to separate them when the overseer came up. John Connor states in his defence that he was never out of his own run; Simpson states nothing in his defence. The Bench acquit the prisoners Shearman and Connor of that part of the charge where they state the sheep got mixed in the hurdles but find them guilty of the remaining charges and sentence Shearman to receive thirty five lashes; John Connor twenty five lashes and James Simpson 25 lashes, all to inflicted this day week the 10th inst.
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4016]; Microfiche: 679
Details:
Age 27. Stonemason from Maidstone. Tried in London 17 October 1831 and sentenced to 7 years transportation for stealing linen. Assigned to James Busby at Hunter River on arrival. - Notes - Uncle John Jenkins already in the colony
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Description Books 1841 - 1848. Roll 759. Page 2
Details:
Born 1806. 5ft 5 in, slight build, sallow complexion, brown hair, hazel eyes. Admitted to Newcastle gaol
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4016]; Microfiche: 679
Details:
Age 23. Reaps, mows, sows, Native place Essex. Tried at Chelmsford 19 October 1830 and sentenced to 7 years transportation for stealing fowls. Assigned to James Whalan at Emu Valley on arrival