Surname:
Babaloe (Indigenous)
Place:
Sugar Loaf near Newcastle
Source:
Colonial Secretary Correspondence. Reel 6066; 4/1806 p.76
Details:
Six natives Babaloe, Obero, Gorman, Young Crodgie, David Lowe and Tamiraire fatally speared Private Peter Connachton of 46th regiment while he was out Kangaroo hunting with prisoner George Little near Sugar loaf
Surname:
Bagot (Indigenous)
Source:
Australia Birth Index (Ancestry)
Details:
James Bagot, son of Edward. Birth registered at Dungog/ Stroud
Surname:
Baker (Indigenous)
Details:
Native. Attacked and plundered the store of Mr. Nowland. Reward offered
Surname:
Bambargo (Tom) (Indigenous)
Place:
Maitland Circuit Court
Source:
Sydney Morning Herald
Details:
To be tried at Maitland Circuit Court with wounding with intent to murder
Surname:
Bartering (Indigenous)
Details:
....They know well the difference between a gift and a loan; barter takes place among different tribes; bundles of spears are sent into the interior by the Newcastle tribes, in return for which they receive cord made of the skin of the wallaby by other tribes in the interior.
Surname:
Bayliss (Indigenous
Source:
Australia Birth Index (Ancestry)
Details:
Birth registered in Maitland district
Surname:
Bellinger (Indigenous)
Source:
Australia Birth Index (Ancestry)
Details:
Son of Jane. Birth registered at Hexham
Surname:
Ben (Indigenous)
Source:
The Present state of Australia: A Description of the Country,etc and the manners, customs and condition of its aboriginal inhabitants ...Robert Dawson
Details:
Husband of Nanny. Accompanied Robert Dawson from Newcastle to Port Stephens
Surname:
Ben Davis (Indigenous)
Source:
State Library of NSW - Diary by a servant of the Scott family, 8 Aug. 1821-Mar. 1824 p. 49
Details:
Accompanied Robert and Helenus Scott on their expedition from Maitland to Glendon
Surname:
Ben Davis (Indigenous)
Source:
Hunter Estates Comparative Heritage Study
Details:
From the diary of John Brown, servant of Robert and Helenus Scott - Similarly, the journal kept by a servant of the Scott brothers who helped establish their estate at Glendon show how Aboriginal people such as Ben Davis and Mytie assisted in many of the early activities carried out on the property. Similar Aboriginal-European interactions on some other of the project estates can also be inferred to have occurred in the early 1820s.
Surname:
Betsey (Indigenous)
Place:
East Maitland gaol
Source:
State Archives NSW; Roll: 2372 Source Information Ancestry.com. NSW Gaol Description book
Details:
Born at Port Stephens. Married. Age 40. 5ft 3in stout build, tattoo on forehead
Surname:
Betsy & Nellie (Indigenous)
Source:
Newcastle Bench Books. AONSW Reel 2722
Details:
Betsy & Nellie, two native blacks found guilty of drunk and disorderly behaviour. Constable Rouse deposed that there was a great disturbance by the blacks of the town on 12th Oct., and he arrested Betsy & Nellie who were being beaten by others. Discharged on account of their previous confinement
Surname:
Betsy (Indigenous)
Source:
Newcastle Court of Petty Sessions, Bench Books, 1833-1836 (Ancestry)
Details:
Jemmy, Croasby, Finigan, Betsy and Mary, native blacks charged with drunkenness...Constable William Anthony testified....yesterday evening between five and six oclock the prisoners were drunk and quarrelling in the street. They were very noisy and disturbing the whole neighbourhood. No defence offered. They acknowledged to have been drunk and disorderly. Guilty. Sentenced to pay five shillings each or in default two hours in the stocks
Surname:
Big Headed Black Boy (Indigenous)
Place:
Lake Macquarie/Newcastle
Source:
Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition During the ..., Volume 2 By Charles Wilkes
Details:
In their walks they came across a group of several blacks (natives) seated around a small fire; they were pointed out as the remnant of the tribes which about forty years ago wandered in freedom over the plains of the Hunter and around the borders of Lake Macquarie. Their appearance was wretched in the extreme: emaciated limbs, shapeless bodies, immense heads, deep-set glaring eyes, thickly matted hair, and the whole begrimed with dirt and red- paint, gave them an aspect hardly human. The dress (if such it could be called) of the women, was a loose ragged gown, and of the men, a strip of blanket wrapped round the middle, or a pair of tattered pantaloons, which but half performed their office. Mr. Threlkeld s conveyance did not arrive, and not being able to get another, they determined to walk to Lake Macquarie, and for this purpose they resorted to the natives as guides, and by a great deal of coaxing and promises of bull (grog), their natural repugnance to make an exertion was overcome. An evidence of the pride which characterizes these natives was shown in this interview. One of them, whose sobriquet was Big-headed Blackboy, was stretched out before the fire, and no answer could be obtained from him, but a drawling repetition, in grunts of displeasure
Surname:
Big Jemmy (Indigenous)
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol 30th December under remand for examination. Set at large by order of J. Warner, J.P., 29th January 1835
Surname:
Big Jemmy (Indigenous)
Source:
Newcastle Bench Books. AONSW Reel 2722
Details:
Brown, Harry, Big Jemmy and Boatman fined 5/- or 6 hrs in the stocks for drunkenness and rioting
Surname:
Bill Wicki (Indigenous)
Details:
A native black named Bill Wicki was sent in search of William Cromarty and his son who were drowned when their boat capsized. Bill Wicki found boots and hat and described the boat as being upturned but no trace of the bodies could be found
Surname:
Billey (Corondup) (Indigenous)
Source:
State Library of NSW. Papers relating to Aborigines in the Singleton District, Blanket for Native Blacks, Colonial Secretarys Office
Details:
Age 20. On Return of Aborigines to receive blankets
Surname:
Billy (alias Tombo) (alias Tommy) (Indigenous)
Source:
State Archives NSW; Gaol Entrance Book, Item: 2/2020; Roll: 757 (Ancestry)
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Maitland charged with having assaulted Ellen.... with intent to commit rape. Sent for trial
Surname:
Billy (Corondah) (Indigenous)
Source:
State Library of NSW. Papers relating to Aborigines in the Singleton District, Blanket for Native Blacks, Colonial Secretarys Office
Details:
Age 20. On list of aborigines to receive blankets