Search Result
140471
Surname: Linford
First Name: Robert
Ship: -
Date: 1861 20 March
Place: Campbells Hill, West Maitland
Source: SMH
Details: Attempted to rescue Richard Eckford who drowned in the creek
67974
Surname: Linford
First Name: Robert
Ship: John 1832
Date: 1838 28 November
Place: Maitland
Source: GG
Details: Granted Ticket of Leave
98807
Surname: Linford
First Name: Robert
Ship: John 1832
Date: 1841 22 June
Place: Maitland
Source: SG
Details: Granted Ticket of Leave
102081
Surname: Linford
First Name: Robert
Ship: John 1832
Date: 1840 22 January
Place: Maitland
Source: GG 1840
Details: Ticket of leave cancelled for being absent from muster
69623
Surname: Linford
First Name: Thomas
Ship: Clyde 1832
Date: 1832 12 December
Place: Hunter River
Source: 1832 GG
Details: Ploughman assigned to Lawrence Myles
127468
Surname: Linford
First Name: Thomas
Ship: Clyde 1832
Date: 1840 25 November
Place: Dungog
Source: GG
Details: Granted Ticket of Leave
173318
Surname: Linford
First Name: Thomas
Ship: Clyde 1832
Date: 18 November 1843
Place: Newcastle gaol
Source: State Archives NSW; Gaol Entrance Book, Item: 2/2020; Roll: 757 (Ancestry)
Details: Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Paterson for insolence and refusing to do his work. Sentenced to 14 days in the cells
30840
Surname: Linforth
First Name: John
Ship: Albion 1827
Date: 1835 21 March
Place: Patrick Plains
Source: SG
Details: Obtained Ticket of Leave
164127
Surname: Linforth
First Name: John
Ship: Albion 1827
Date: -
Place: Retribution Hulk, Woolwich
Source: UK Prison Hulk Registers and Letter Books. Ancestry
Details: Age 20. Tried at Warwick 25 March 1826 and sentenced to transportation for life for burglary. Sent to the Retribution Hulk at Woolwich on 4th May 1826 and transferred to the Albion convict ship 16 September 1826 for transportation to New South Wales
169369
Surname: Linforth
First Name: John
Ship: Albion 1827
Date: 1827
Place: -
Source: State Archives. Bound Indents. [4/4012]; Microfiche: 663 (Ancestry)
Details: Age 24. Pearl button maker from Birmingham. Tried in Warwick and sentenced to transportation for life for housebreaking. Assigned to the A.A. Company on arrival. Died near Dungog c. 1839
62939
Surname: Linforth (Lingforth)
First Name: John
Ship: Albion 1827
Date: 1828
Place: Port Stephens
Source: 1828 Census
Details: Labourer aged 23. Assigned to Australian Agricultural Company
118892
Surname: Linforth (Lingforth)
First Name: John
Ship: Albion 1827
Date: 1837
Place: Port Stephens
Source: GRC
Details: Ticket of leave holder aged 32
128478
Surname: Linforth (Longforth)
First Name: John
Ship: Albion 1827
Date: 1839 12 October
Place: Dungog
Source: CDR
Details: Death of
12761
Surname: Lingard
First Name: G.E.B.
Ship: -
Date: 1844 7 September
Place: -
Source: MM
Details: Gave subscription for survey of the Hunter River
149500
Surname: Lingard
First Name: John Peter
Ship: -
Date: -
Place: Christ Church Cathedral, Newcastle
Source: Source: alphabetical list of burials Newcastle: Newcastle City Council, 1967
Details: Gravestone of Lingard Family. Samuel Lingard c 1816 - 1871; John Peter Lingard 1847 - 1854; Sarah Lingard c 1850 - 1854; Alice Lingard Dixon. John Peter, son of Samuel Lingard, died 30th November 1854 aged 7 years.
105694
Surname: Lingard
First Name: Mary
Ship: -
Date: Baptism October 1844
Place: Lake Macquarie
Source: Register Book of Christ Church Cathedral, Newcastle. p.13
Details: Daughter of Samuel and Alice. Baptism
146395
Surname: Lingard
First Name: Mary
Ship: -
Date: 1865 8 July
Place: Christ Church, Newcastle
Source: Marriages Register Book of Christchurch Cathedral, Newcastle 1856 - 1868 p33
Details: Marriage of Abraham John Thompson, storekeeper, son of George and Sarah Thompson to Mary Parsons Johns, daughter of Thomas and Grace Johns. Witnesses Thoms Johns, Robert Corner, Sarah Johns, Mary Lingard
144691
Surname: Lingard
First Name: Robert Fisher
Ship: -
Date: 1854 23 July
Place: Newcastle
Source: Register Book of Christ Church Cathedral, Newcastle. Baptisms p. 50
Details: Son of Samuel and Alice Lingard. Baptism
196929
Surname: Lingard
First Name: Robert Fisher
Ship: -
Date: 18 June 1936
Place: Newcastle
Source: NMH
Details: Correspondence from Robert Fisher Lingard - As a native of this city and in my 83rd year, I was much interested to read of the spring found in Hunter Street. I remember the same spring 76 years ago. It ran on an angle from Hunter Street to Bolton street, and came out under a wooden building used as a cordial factory by Ward and Clifton, between Dominion and the T and G. Buildings. By the fall of the hill the factory was 4 ft from the ground on the lower side and underneath were large casks with pipes leading from the spring, the water being used for making the cordials. It afterwards ran to waste down to the harbour front, where the Newcastle railway station now stands. Another spring was in Wolfe street, in front of the house where I was born, and the back of another terrace facing the present stone wall. The property belonged to the late Martin Richardson, a builder, whose last residence was Nuneham Cottage at the back of the Strand Pictures
197385
Surname: Lingard
First Name: Robert Fisher
Ship: William Wallace 1841
Date: 27 June 1931
Place: Newcastle
Source: NMH
Details: There are few residents of the northern district better known than Mr. Robert Fisher Lingard, of Macquarie-street, Merewether, with which locality he has been identified since infancy. His parents arrived at Williamstown (Vic.) on November 28, 1841, making the outward voyage in the sailing vessel William Wallace. In 1843 they came on to Coal Point (Lake Macquarie). where Mr. Lingard s sister, who became the wife of the late Mr. J. Dixon, Inspector of Collieries for New South Wales, was born on July 29, 1844. The family moved onto Newcastle, and it was in this city, in buildings known as Richardson s, Wolfe-street, that Mr. Lingard was born on May 8, 1854. He has spent his whole life in the district, having seen it develop and expand from the primitive condition in which it was when his parents first became acquainted with it until to-day it is recognised as the most important provincial city of the Commonwealth. Mr. Lingard s father had been employed as a weaver in the Old Country, and his earliest employment in Newcastle was in the tweed factory of Fisher and Donaldson, who carried on a business at Stockton in the 50s.