Search Result
117981
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: Ellen
Ship: -
Date: 1926 19 March
Place: Campbells Hill Burial Ground
Source: Maitland Burial Records
Details: Died age 80
6631
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: John
Ship: -
Date: 1843 4 February
Place: Newcastle
Source: MM
Details: Free. Charged with drunkenness. Sentenced to 44 hours in solitary in the cells.
172218
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: John
Ship: Elizabeth 1841
Date: 23 August 1841
Place: -
Source: State Records Online Shipping List
Details: John Butterworth, 23, unmarried farm labourer from Lancashire. Emigrant by the Elizabeth in 1841. http://tinyurl.com/l3ey7v7
172219
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: John
Ship: Elizabeth 1841
Date: 1843
Place: Newcastle gaol
Source: State Archives NSW; Item: 2/2016; Roll: 759 Gaol Description Books. Ancestry
Details: John Butterworth, came free per the Elizabeth in 1841, admitted to Newcastle gaol. 5ft 7 1/in, stout build, sallow complexion etc.
173202
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: John
Ship: Elizabeth 1841
Date: 31 January 1843
Place: Newcastle gaol
Source: State Archives NSW; Gaol Entrance Book, Item: 2/2020; Roll: 757 (Ancestry)
Details: Admitted to Newcastle gaol charged with drunkenness. Sentenced to 24 hours in the cells.
66481
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: Robert
Ship: Roslin Castle 1834
Date: 1838 16 January
Place: Paterson
Source: GG
Details: Apprehended after absconding from G. Cory
111695
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: Robert
Ship: Roslin Castle 1834
Date: 1835 9 April
Place: Newcastle gaol
Source: NGE
Details: Cotton Spinner from Lancashire. Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Paterson. Remanded for corporal punishment. Sent to the Police dept. for punishment 11 April
66446
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: Robert Samuel
Ship: Roslin Castle 1834
Date: 1838 12 January
Place: Paterson
Source: GG
Details: Cotton factory worker aged 27. Tried Lancashire; 5' 2 1/2"; sallow compl., brown hair, grey to blue eyes; sml scar ® eyebrow & ® cheek bone & (l) cheek bone & upper nose; finger nails short; top middle finger crooked; blue scar (l) nose. Absconded from G. Cory
142727
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: Robert Samuel
Ship: Roslin Castle 1834
Date: 1837
Place: Paterson
Source: GRC
Details: Age 26. Assigned to G. Cory
200299
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: Thomas
Ship: -
Date: 4 January 1868
Place: Newcastle
Source: Newcastle Chronicle
Details: Granted a Hawkers License, to trade on foot
212825
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: Thomas
Ship: -
Date: December 1863
Place: West Maitland
Source: Ancestry.com. New South Wales, Australia, Assisted Immigrant Passenger Lists, 1828-1896
Details: Elizabeth Butterworth, housekeeper age 34 from Yorkshire; Samuel age 11; Sarah Ann age 9; Walter age 7; Fanny age 5; Emma age 3. Assisted immigrants by the ship Hotspur. Note - husband Thomas Butterworth residing at West Maitland
117980
Surname: Butterworth
First Name: William
Ship: -
Date: 1927 9 October
Place: Campbells Hill Burial Ground
Source: Maitland Burial Records
Details: Died age 82
86707
Surname: Buttesworth
First Name: John
Ship: -
Date: 1851 5 November
Place: Maitland
Source: MM
Details: Cautioned and discharged after being charged with drunkenness
114261
Surname: Button (46th regt)
First Name: Captain Charles Fitzachary
Ship: -
Date: 1854 9 September
Place: Hexham
Source: MM
Details: Death of Captain Charles Fitzachary Button of 46th regiment on 8th September
180480
Surname: Button (Butter?)
First Name: William
Ship: -
Date: 21 August 1835
Place: Newcastle
Source: Newcastle Court of Petty Sessions, Bench Books, 1833-1836 (Ancestry)
Details: Florence Sullivan, patient in the hospital charged with absconding. William Button wardsman in the hospital, testified.....I was at the top hospital about 29 July four weeks ago when the prisoner was sent in from the lower Hospital to work. He worked about the hospital all day. In the evening about sun down he left the hospital to go home to the lower hospital. I have not seen him since until about ten days ago when he was brought down the country by a constable as a runaway....Charles Jones testified....The prisoner left the lower hospital on the 29th July last to go to the upper hospital to work. I took him to the upper hospital myself and gave him in charge of Mr. Craig. It was his duty to return in the evening to the lower hospital in the evening. He did not do so. He absconded and I have not seen him since until he was taken in custody....George Brooks, surgeon testified....The prisoner was a patient in the hospital at the time mentioned by the former witness. I admitted him in consequence of a letter from the Police Magistrate at Patrick Plains. He is of weak intellect but quite accountable for his conduct. I received him from the gaol where he had undergone the punishment of solitary confinement in my medical opinion
198356
Surname: Butts (Ferguson)
First Name: Mary Emma
Ship: -
Date: 7 September 1872
Place: -
Source: Newcastle Chronicle
Details: Marriage on 18 July at Wellington, NZ, at St. Peters Church, Peter Ferguson, Mariner, to Mary Emma Butts, the eldest daughter of Mr. George Butts, Bullock Island, Newcastle
173895
Surname: Buxton (industry)
First Name: Thomas
Ship: LH
Date: 28 April 1902
Place: Newcastle
Source: NMH
Details: Mr. Thomas Buxton senior was one of the earlier residents in Newcastle. Years ago when the Rev. Threlkeld was mining for coal at Lake Macquarie, Mr. Buxton had a sawpit in that locaility and married his wife from the rev. gentlemans house. He continued the sawpit for a considerable time and later started a shop in the city, somewhere about the site of the shop now occupied by Abel and Co. This business was attended to by Mrs. Buxton whose maiden name was Mary Timmins. As the business increased the sawpit was given up and a much larger establishment occupied on the site now occupied by Sorby and Co and afterwards known as the Steam Packet Hotel. Here business flourished and Mr. Buxton rapidly accumulated money and property, acquiring the whole block from the Steam Packet Inn to the Centennial Hotel and the whole of the land from the corner where the Crystal Palace Hotel now stands to Alderman Millers shop. In many respects he was a quaint man and one of his characteristics was a passion for gold. Sovereigns were none too plentiful in the old days and the story is tole that he would give twenty one shillings at any time for a sovereign. If so, it was probably done because sovereigns were more easily stored than paper money. There were no banks in Newcastle at the time, and it is said that many of the old residents were in the habit of entrusting their money to his keeping each account being kept separate, and the money placed in a jar bearing the customers name and deposited upon shelves in a specially prepared room
181713
Surname: Bye (3rd regt)
First Name: James
Ship: -
Date: 1 March 1826
Place: Newcastle
Source: NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825 (Ancestry)
Details: Hymy Franks, government servant charged with theft. ....James Bye, a soldier in the 3rd regt., states - On 25th last month I had a pair of shoes, laced, stolen from me. I saw them yesterday in the possession of the chief constable. I am positive they are mine. The chief constable states......I had been informed that Bye had lost a pair of laced shoes. Yesterday I saw a pair like those described to me as being lost in the possession of William King, a settlers man. I took him and the shoes into custody. He told me he had brought them from Franks.....William King states - I bought those shoes from Hymy Franks. I gave him 8s for them. I asked him if they had come honestly by, he answered that they were and he pointed out the man who he said had made them. We went to Joseph Salters house where my master was. I there called for a gill of rum and paid seven pence, half penny for it, I showed the shoes to my master who approved of my buying them. Duncan Sinclair states - King is my government servant. He came to me yesterday and said a pair of shoes had been offered by him for sale. I approved of his buying them. Hymy Franks and another man were standing together at a short distance. King went to them. I saw him pay money to one of them. I think the other person was Joseph Pritchard. .....Joseph Pritchard states - I was told that a man was enquiring for me yesterday to sell him a pair of shoes. I went to the door and saw Franks and King standing together. I had no shoes to sell. I am not a shoemaker. Franks and King soon went away. I live a little distance from Salters house. I did not go with them to Salters. The prisoner Hymy Franks denied the charge however was sentenced to three years to a penal settlement
212256
Surname: Bye (3rd regt) (Buffs)
First Name: Private James
Ship: -
Date: December 1825 - March 1826
Place: Newcastle
Source: War Office Records. File 2119. AJCP Reel No: 3696/3rd Regiment: East Kent (Buffs)
Details: Stationed at Newcastle
212332
Surname: Bye (3rd regt) (Buffs)
First Name: Private James
Ship: -
Date: March - June 1826
Place: Newcastle
Source: War Office Records. File 2119. AJCP Reel No: 3696/3rd Regiment: East Kent (Buffs)
Details: Stationed at Newcastle