Details:
385 tons, Ascough Master,. A.B. Spark agent, The Portland arrived from London 28th March 1832 with male prisoners and government stores
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4017]; Microfiche: 682
Details:
Muster Roll of the Portland with 178 English male convicts, Joseph Cook Surgeon Superintendent. Arrived in Sydney Cove 26 March 1832. Muster held on board 29 March 1832 by the Honorable the Colonial Secretary. Mustered 178, originally embarked 178
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Millwright, baker and miller. Assigned to Peter McIntyre
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Age 24. Tried in Norwich. Assigned to Peter McIntyre
Source:
Application to Marry
Details:
Thomas Abray aged 33, arrived per 'Portland' application to marry Jane Ann Booth, a native of the colony. Application refused as female under age)
Source:
Invermein Court of Petty Sessions. Deposition Books 1833 -1834 (Ancestry)
Details:
Thomas Smith per ship Captain Cook, assigned to Peter McIntyre, and Thomas Abray per Portland, assigned to Peter McIntyre, charged with absenting themselves from their stations without leave. Donald McPhee states - I am overseer to Mr. McIntyre; Smith and Abray are employed at a sheep station, the one as a watchman and other as a shepherd; on Sunday last I found them near Segenhoe about two miles from where they ought to have been. Smith had not his flock with him; I found the sheep afterwards about three miles from where I saw the men without any body with them. The prisoners admitted the charge and were sentenced to 30 lashes each
Source:
Invermein Court of Petty Sessions. Deposition Books 1833 -1834 (Ancestry)
Details:
Thomas Abray per ship Portland, assigned to Peter McIntyre, charged with neglect of duty. Donald McPhee, states - I am sheep overseer to Mr. McIntyre and on last Monday week I went to the station where the prisoner is employed as a shepherd for the purpose of counting in his sheep; I found two short; I sent him out to look for them that night and he could not find them; next morning I went again to his station and one of the shepherds had found one of the prisoners sheep with a broken leg; the other was found two days after dead and torn to pieces by the dogs. The prisoner states in his defence - asks the overseer if the sheep found dead were his or the other shepherds to which the overseer replied they were his; his were older sheep than the others and it was the old sheep that were found dead. The Bench find the prisoner guilty and sentence him to 75 lashes being his second offence
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4017]; Microfiche: 682
Details:
Thomas Abray age 21. Baker, miller and millwright from Lyne. Tried at Norwich 23 July 1831. Sentenced to transportation for life for highway robbery
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Details:
Shoemaker. Assigned to William Singleton
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4017]; Microfiche: 682
Details:
Thomas Allcock age 22. Shoemaker, complete, from Swaffham. Tried at Norwich 23 July 1831. Sentenced to transportation for life for highway robbery. Note - died in Liverpool Hospital August 1836
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Brickmaker, ploughs. Assigned to Benjamin Sullivan
Details:
Brickmaker, ploughs. Assigned to Benjamin Sullivan
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4017]; Microfiche: 682
Details:
John Anstiss age 21. Plaisterer 3 years from London. Tried at London 6 January 1831. Sentenced to 7 years transportation for stealing tools
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Assigned to T. Coulson
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Farm Labourer. Assigned servant transferred to Henry Coulson
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4017]; Microfiche: 682
Details:
John Attlesey age 25. Farm labourer, milks, reaps. Tried at Cambridge 18 July 1831. Sentenced to transportation for life for sheep stealing
Details:
Portrait painter
Details:
Painted portraits of Mr. & Mrs. Bailey and Captain Pattison