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Item: 77649
Surname: Connor
First Name: Catherine
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1813 3 February
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: On list of prisoners to be sent to Newcastle


 
Item: 77650
Surname: Connor
First Name: Catherine
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1817 23 April
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: On list of prisoners to be sent to Newcastle


 
Item: 196263
Surname: Grave
First Name: Hannah
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1812
Place: -
Source: Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4004]; Microfiche: 633
Details: Hannah, wife of William Grave, tried at Cumberland Assizes 31 August 1810. Sentenced to 14 years transportation. Note in indents - dead


 
Item: 46015
Surname: Grave (Greaves)
First Name: Hannah
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1813 4 October
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: On list of prisoners to be sent to Newcastle per Estramina


 
Item: 19368
Surname: Hannell
First Name: Elizabeth
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: -
Place: Newcastle
Source: -
Details: Mother of James Hannel, the first Mayor of Newcastle


 
Item: 46113
Surname: Hannell
First Name: Elizabeth
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1820 15 June
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: To be transported to Newcastle for life


 
Item: 170819
Surname: Hannell
First Name: Elizabeth
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1825
Place: Newcastle
Source: Ancestry.com. New South Wales and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters. Class: HO 10; Piece: 19
Details: Under a colonial sentence. Assigned to government employment at Newcastle. Daughter Mary Ann age 4 residing with her


 
Item: 181172
Surname: Hannell (Walton)
First Name: Elizabeth (Betsey)
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 18 April 1825
Place: Newcastle
Source: NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825 (Ancestry)
Details: George Smith in the service of the Rev. G.A. Middleton, charged with various acts of robbery at the Parsonage and for harbouring improper persons at unseasonable hours.....Elizabeth Hannell alias Walton, in the service of government, charged with being an accessary to the said robbery. Margaret Lawrence, prisoner of the Crown states....About two months ago Betsey Walton came to my house between eight and nine clock at night and asked me to go out with her. She took me to the parsonage. Mr. and Mrs. Middleton were at Pattersons Plains at the tie. We found a supper prepared by George Smith - it consisted of boiled fowls, pickled pork, vegetables, milk and a bottle of white wine. After supper Smith and Walton retired to Mrs. Middleton s Bedroom. They were absent nearly a quarter of an hour, when they came back, I saw in Walton s possession a piece of striped muslin. The muslin I know Walton has since made into the trimmings of a gown. About the same time I purchased a yard of blue crossed bar d cotton from Walton which I made into an apron. I have good reason to believe that Smith some months since gave a number of yards of cotton to a woman named Elizabeth Robinson, not now on the settlement, with whom at that time he was in the habit of intimacy. About three weeks since I called in the morning early at Walton s house and asked her where she had been sleeping all night as the evening before the man with whom she usually cohabits had been at my house to seek her. Walton was lying on her bed with her clothes on. She told me she had been at the Parsonage all night. She then got from off the bed and shook herself and from under her petticoats I saw drop another piece of striped muslin which I believe she has since made into a child s dress. My motive for making this discovery in the first instance not because Smith wished to favour Walton in the work at the Parsonage and impose all the hard labour on me......James Calvert, chief constable, states....In consequence of instruction from the Police Office, I went to Elizabeth Walton s House and on searching her box, I found a gown, part of which was made with white striped muslin which matched a pattern I had been furnished with. Margaret Lawrence also delivered this morning at the Police Office a blue gross bar d cotton apron. .......The Rev. Middleton states....The striped muslin composing part of the gown now produced I have no doubt is my property. Mrs. Middleton has lost about 5 or 6 yards of it. There has also been stolen from the parsonage about 30 yards of blue cross bar d cotton of the same pattern and quality now before the court. I have also ascertained that the lock of my store room has been picked. I miss as quantity of salt pork, sugar and about 30lb of rice. I had a good opinion of Smith until within the last ten weeks when he has fallen under suspicion. He has lived with me nearly three years. George Smith in his defence denied having at any time robbed his master and states that the accusation of Margaret Lawrence if false and originating in malice. The stock keeper of the Rev. Middleton being called states.... I have seen Smith making rice puddings for himself during the absence of my master and mistress, I have also seen him weight seven or eight pounds of sugar several times when the family were from home and carry it away from the house. Elizabeth Walton in her defence denies having ever slept at the Parsonage and states that she brought the muslin and cross bar d cotton in the market place at Sydney about ten month ago. She produced a Child s frock also made of the same muslin and calls Sarah Perkins who states...on the return of Elizabeth Walton from Sydney last year, I saw some striped muslin and blue cross barr d cotton in her possession which is very like that now before the court...Both prisoners found guilty. Sentence - George Smith sentenced to 50 lashes and returned to his master. Elizabeth Hannell sentenced to Port Macquarie


 
Item: 13087
Surname: Hannell (Walton) (White)
First Name: Elizabeth
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: -
Place: -
Source: -
Details: Three relationships/ marriage - 1. James Walton, 2. John White, 3. James B. Hewson


 
Item: 70124
Surname: Lucas
First Name: Mary
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1814 29 April
Place: -
Source: CSI
Details: On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle


 
Item: 196264
Surname: Lucas
First Name: Mary
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1812
Place: -
Source: Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4004]; Microfiche: 633
Details: Mary Lucas tried at Surrey Quarter Sessions 4 March 1811. Sentenced to 7 years transportation


 
Item: 70374
Surname: Maulton
First Name: Mary
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1818
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: On list of prisoners to be sent to Newcastle


 
Item: 70673
Surname: Mitchell
First Name: Martha
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1814
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: On list of prisoners to be sent to Newcastle


 
Item: 70674
Surname: Mitchell
First Name: Martha
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1822
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: Prisoner at Newcastle. Petition for mitigation of sentence


 
Item: 170023
Surname: Mitchell
First Name: Martha
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1825
Place: Newcastle
Source: Ancestry.com. New South Wales and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters. Class: HO 10; Piece: 20
Details: Assigned to government employment at Newcastle


 
Item: 68314
Surname: Mitchell (Reynolds)
First Name: Martha
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1828
Place: Patterson Plains
Source: 1828 Census
Details: -


 
Item: 127872
Surname: Mitchell (Reynolds)
First Name: Martha
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1836 - 37
Place: Paterson
Source: GRC
Details: Age 45. Assigned to her husband John Reynolds


 
Item: 77462
Surname: Pearce
First Name: Elizabeth
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1814 10 December
Place: Newcastle
Source: SG
Details: Absconded from Newcastle settlement


 
Item: 166976
Surname: Pearce
First Name: Elizabeth
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 20 December 1823
Place: -
Source: Colonial Secretary's Letters
Details: Tried at Gloucester Assizes on 9th March 1811 and received a sentence for 7 years and was tried at the Criminal court 18th March 1822 and further sentenced to three years transportation


 
Item: 71612
Surname: Pierce
First Name: Elizabeth
Ship: Minstrel 1812
Date: 1812 21 December
Place: Newcastle
Source: CSI
Details: On list of prisoners to be sent to Newcastle



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