Surname:
Leppard (Leopard)
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4009A]; Microfiche: 654
Details:
Charlotte Leopard age 30. House maid from Fulham. Tried at Newgate 15 April 1824. Sentenced to 7 years transportation.
Details:
Servant aged 23. Assigned to G. Wyndham
Source:
Application to marry
Details:
23 yrs of age; bond. Application to marry Thomas Anderson
Source:
Squatter s Castle
Details:
Described in the book as a wild, red headed girl assigned to George Wyndham at Hunter River and employed as a housemaid until the Wyndhams found her bashing their child s head against a tree stump
Source:
State Archives NSW; Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930; Series: 2514; Item: 4/6429; Roll: 850 (Ancestry).
Details:
Admitted to Sydney Gaol via the general sessions, Sydney, having no further use of her services. Sent to the Female Factory at Parramatta.
Source:
State Archives NSW; Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930; Series: 2514; Item: 4/6431; Roll: 851.
Details:
Admitted to Sydney gaol - unfit for service. Sent to the 1st Class Female Factory, Parramatta
Source:
State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Title: Bound manuscript indents, 1788-1842; Item: [4/4009A]; Microfiche: 654. (Ancestry)
Details:
Nursery maid from London age 20. Tried 12 December 1823 and sentenced to 7 years transportation. 5ft 3in, fair complexion, chesnut eyes, dark brown hair, behaved well on the voyage.
Source:
NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825, 1826-1827 (Ancestry)
Details:
Jane Moore per Grenada, in the service of William Ogilvie, charged with insolent and threatening language to her mistress and general misconduct. Mrs. Ogilvie states....I yesterday felt obliged to reprimand Jane Moore for inattention to her work, when she replied to me in such a disrespectful manner and made use of such threatening and violent language that I do not consider my self or children safe. Mr. Ogilvie being absent at his farm, whilst she remains under the same roof. The prisoner denies having made use of violent or threatening language but admits having said that the cells of Newgate were Paradise in comparison to her present service. Jane Moore sentenced to the Factory at Parramatta for six months after which period to be returned to Mr. Ogilvies service should he require it.
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4009A]; Microfiche: 654
Details:
Jane Moore age 27. Milks, makes butter. Native place Suffolk. Tried London 17 February 1824. Sentenced to transportation for life. Very well on the voyage out
Ship:
Grenada 1825 (came free)
Source:
Squatter s Castle
Details:
Wife of William. Took a liking to convict Ellen Partridge and employed her as a cook after arrival in the colony
First Name:
Mr. and Mrs. William
Ship:
Grenada 1825 (came free)
Details:
William, wife and four children free passengers on the Grenada from London
Details:
Arrived with wife Mary and four children Edward, Ellen, Frederick and William
First Name:
William and Mary
Source:
NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825 (Ancestry)
Details:
Jane Moore per Grenada, in the service of William Ogilvie, charged with insolent and threatening language to her mistress and general misconduct. Mrs. Ogilvie states....I yesterday felt obliged to reprimand Jane Moore for inattention to her work, when she replied to me in such a disrespectful manner and made use of such threatening and violent language that I do not consider my self or children safe. Mr. Ogilvie being absent at his farm, whilst she remains under the same roof. The prisoner denies having made use of violent or threatening language but admits having said that the cells of Newgate were Paradise in comparison to her present service. Jane Moore sentenced to the Factory at Parramatta for six months after which period to be returned to Mr. Ogilvies service should he require it.
First Name:
William, Mary, Edward, Frederick, Ellen
Ship:
Grenada 1825 (Came free)
Source:
Ancestry.com. New South Wales and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters. Class: HO 10; Piece: 20
Details:
William Ogilvie and wife Mary with sons William, Edward, Frederick and daughter Ellen residing at or near Newcastle
Surname:
Ogilvie (nee White)
Source:
Squatter's Castle
Details:
Daughter of Edward White of the Swan Inn in Bishopgate. Sons William Kitchenman b. 1813, Edward David Stewart b. 1814 and Frederick Henry b. 1816
Details:
Servant to William Ogilvie at Newcastle. Petition from Ogilvie to have Mary's daughter Ellen returned from Derwent and assigned to him
Details:
Ticket of leave holder age 60
First Name:
Mary the elder
Source:
Squatter s Castle p. 21
Details:
A formidable lady known as Partridge the elder as her daughter Ellen had been transported on an earlier ship. Described as a gigantic woman six feet in her stockings. Sentenced to transportation for Life at Lancaster Assizes. Mary Ogilvie took a liking to her and she accompanied the Ogilvies on their trip to Merton
Surname:
Partridge the elder
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4009A]; Microfiche: 654
Details:
Mary Partridge age 47. House and dairy maid from Cumberland. Tried at Lancaster 29 December 1823. Sentenced to transportation for life. 5ft 8 1/2 in in height. Hazel eyes, black to grey hair. Well behaved on the voyage out
Details:
Housemaid. Aged 27. Assigned to T.V. Bloomfield