Tuesday, 19 November 2019

IRISH CONVICTS TRANSPORTATION RECORDS TO AUSTRALIA Trove Tuesday 19th Nov 2019





https://crimeanwar-veteranswa.com/ships/nile/

Irish Convicts Transportation Records To Australia






Just a few pages to show what the list contains...







Just on these few pages, you will see some things that stand out..including the youngest shown in the above pages... In this selection there are two 14 year olds.. one transported for 7 years, the other 10 years.. Were they related... possibly siblings, twins or maybe cousins?

Hard to imagine what was going through their thoughts... and that of their families.

Surname: ADAMS; First name: HENRY; 
Sex: M; Age: 14; Place of trial: Antrim; Date of trial: 06/01/1842; Description of crime: Burglary and robbery; Sentence: Transportation 7 yrs;
Record reference code: TR 4, p 193 


https://convictrecords.com.au/convicts/adams/henry/9614


Conviction & Transportation


Crime:-
Convicted at:Central Criminal Court
Sentence term:7 years
Ship:Mount Stuart Elphinstone
Departure date:1st June, 1849
Arrival date:1st November, 1849 
Place of arrivalMoreton Bay
Passenger manifestTravelled with 229 other convicts




https://librariestas.ent.sirsidynix.net.au/client/en_AU/names/search/results?qf=NI_INDEX%09Record+type%09Convicts%09Convicts&qu=Henry&qu=Adams#




Surname: ADAMS; First name: NANCY; 
Sex: F; Age: 14; Place of trial: Antrim; Date of trial: 06/01/1842; Description of crime: Burglary and robbery; Sentence: Transportation 10 yrs;
Record reference code: TR 4, P 193 
We can follow her trail and see some of what happened to Nancy...

https://convictrecords.com.au/convicts/adams/nancy/130631


Name, Aliases & Gender

Name:Nancy Adams
Aliases:Ann
Gender:f


Birth, Occupation & Death

Date of Birth:1826
Occupation:House servant
Date of Death:1917
Age:91 years

Crime:Burglary
Convicted at:Ireland, Antrim
Sentence term:10 years
Ship:Hope
Departure date:10th April, 1842
Arrival date:17th August, 1842 
Place of arrivalVan Diemen's Land
Passenger manifestTravelled with 16 other convicts
Follow further via Libraries Tasmania
https://librariestas.ent.sirsidynix.net.au/client/en_AU/names/search/results?qu=Nancy&qu=Adams

https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON40-1-2$init=CON40-1-2p24


https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON19-1-3$init=CON19-1-3p135

Description...
Trade: House servant
Height : 5'/2 3/4"
Age: 16
Complexion : Fresh
Head: Oval
Hair: Sandy Brown
Visage: Oval rather small (face)
Forehead: Retreating
Eyebrows: Dk brown thin
Eyes: Brown
Nose: Straight
Mouth: Small
Chin:
Remarks: ?? 2 hearts above elbow on left arm

https://librariestas.ent.sirsidynix.net.au/client/en_AU/names/search/results?qu=NI_INDEX%3D%22Marriage+Permissions%22&rw=60&isd=true




Community Contributions

D Wong on 18th October, 2013 wrote:
Nancy, was mostly known as Ann and she was 16 years old when transported for Burglary and Robbery, stealing silver from a dwelling from Mrs Moor.
Nancy had been convicted 3 times before.
She was 5’2 3/4” tall, fresh complexion, tattoos on her arms, brown eyes, sandy brown hair, single and could not read or write.  Her native place was Belfast.
11/11/1845: TOL
30/7/1850: CP
23/4/1855: COF
1844: Married William Neighbour (John Barry 1834) he was free.  They had 9 children.
On the permission to marry, Nancy was listed as Ann.
1917: Nancy died and is buried as Ann Neighbour, together with William at the Old Anglican Cemetery at Campbell Town.

Convict Changes History

D Wong on 18th October, 2013 made the following changes:
convicted at, term 10 years, voyage, source, firstname, surname, alias1, alias2, alias3, alias4, date of birth 1826, date of death 1917, gender, occupation, crime

Nancy
Adams
-
1828
24 Aug 1828
Lenagh
Drumaul
Connor, Drumall, Drumaul, Antrim, Connor, Etc., Drummaul, Randalstown Down and Connor

Antrim Ireland Jno Adams -
Meay
National Library of Ireland
http://registersnli.ie//registers/vtls000633165#page/1/mode/1upBaptism


CONVICT SHIPS TO VAN DIEMEN'S LAND
..NOW TASMANIA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convict_ships_to_Tasmania

"Indefatigable arrived at Hobart Town in 1812 and was the first vessel to transport convicts to Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania). There was a break until 1818 when Minerva arrived. Thereafter one or more vessels arrived each year until 26 May 1853 when St Vincent became the last to arrived. In some cases the vessels concerned simply transferred convicts from Port Jackson."

"Borneo was a merchant ship built in Borneo in 1817. She undertook one convict voyage to Van Diemen's Land in 1828. She was wrecked in 1832 on her first whaling voyage."

"Borneo"
By John Christian Schetky - http://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/150860, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=63100692


 The Australian 8 Aug 1839 x TROVE



Launceston Examiner (Tas. : 1842 - 1899), Wednesday 10 June 1846, page 8
page1image3751136 page1image3754672 page1image3753424page1image3755088
WOMEN CONVICTS FOR VAN DIEMEN'S LAND. The Fairy steam-packet, belonging to the Woolwich Company, brought down 72 female convicts yesterday from Millbank Penitentiary and put them on board the Emma Eugenia hired convict ship, moored off the Royal Arsenal. 100 additional are expected at Woolwich tomorrow for embarkation for conveyance to Van Diemen's Land. We hope that these unfortunate women will have a better fate than those who preceded them some time back, whose condition is thus described by a contemporary:-" The circumstances under which Van Diemen's Land is now placed have attracted the attention of the press, but scarcely any one is aware of the intensity of the evil. The numbers of convicts which are poured forth upon that unhappy land are rapidly destroying all sound public opinion, and substituting a code of convict morals in its place. A few years ago Lord Stanley felt the mischief thus produced, and strongly expressed in a despatch his sense ofit, more especially of the wretched state of female transports when they arrive in that island. Their first home, and their place of return when out of service, was and is a barrack called the Brickfield Factory, an abode of horrors not to be described, as much more dreadful than the Black Hole at Calcutta as moral depravity is worse than physical suffering. It was determined to make a change, and 600 female convicts were sent out in the ship Anson, under the conduct of Mrs. Bowden, the intelligent matron of the lunatic asylum at Hanwell. Another vessel was to be despatched before the Anson, with male convicts, who, according to the intention of Lord Stanley, would have arrived in Van Diemen's Land and been cleared from the vessel by the time the Anson had made the island. This second vessel was not, however, despatched until long after the Anson had sailed, and matters were so thoroughly mismanaged, that when the last accounts came away, viz., three years after the convicts had been put on board the Auson, Mrs. Bowden and such of the women as had not been placed out to service, were still remaining in that vessel. With regard to those who had obtained a service, if for any reason they could not remain with the employers with whom they had been placed, they were sent, not to the Anson, but to this pandemnomium, the Brickfield Factory, to mingle with the most abandoned of their sex. On a visit made by Mrs. Bowden to this wretched place, the poor ereaturcs who had been under her care implored her, with tears and intreaties, to take them again to the Anson; but this was beyond her power. She made application to the shopkeepers in the island who sell ready-made linen to employ her prisoners in making shirts, which they were willing to do, but could only afford to pay 7d. per shirt. This price she gladly accepted, but the regulations of the Government presented an obstacle. Local wisdom had determined that the true price for making a shirt was half-a-crown, and that Mrs. Bowden was responsible for as many halfcrowns as the Anson produced shirts, and she was actually surcharged for the difference between sevenpence and half-a-crown as to every shirt made under her superintendence. In this perplexity it occurred to her that the island furnished plenty of straw of an appropriate species for the manufacture of hats and bonnets. It is true neither Mrs. Bowden nor her prisoners had ever learned to plait straw, but the difficulty of acquiring this art was little, so they set about their work, and soon accomplished a hat, which was presented to the Governor. Since that time they have made hats and bonnets in considerable quantitIes; nevertheless, as this task is not suited to all, Mrs. Bowden is still suffering under want of employment for many of her prisoners."Times, Jan. 20.


South Australian (Adelaide, SA : 1844 - 1851), Thursday 31 October 1850, page 4
National Library of Australia.   http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article71627498
Please click to enlarge





FURTHER READING:


* Miscellaneous Convict Documents

http://tinyurl.com/wlxwxu3



* Convict Life
https://www.libraries.tas.gov.au/family-history/Pages/Convict-life.aspx

* Records of the Tasmanian Convict Department 1803-1893

https://www.amw.org.au/register/listings/records-tasmanian-convict-department-1803-1893

* The companion to Tasmanian History

https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/C/Convicts.htm





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