Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW. Roll 136
Details:
Sentenced to 21 days in the cells for disobedience of orders. Returned to service 28 February 1840
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW. Roll 136
Details:
Labourer from Buckinghamshire. Admitted to Newcastle gaol. Sentenced to 4 months on the treadmill for refusing to work. Sent to Sydney 23 May 1840
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Books. State Archives NSW; Roll: 757
Details:
Sent to Newcastle gaol from Newcastle. Charged with feloniously stealing and carrying away from the dwelling house of Charles (...) a Spanish mahogany box the said box being with its contents at the time it was stolen of the value of five pounds at least. Sent for trial at the Quarter Sessions
Surname:
Weldrake (Weldrike)
Details:
Granted Conditional Pardon. Dated 5th October 1849
Surname:
Weldrike (Wheldrake) (Weldrake)
Details:
Age 25. Assigned to John Uhr at Cassilis
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Details:
Age 19. Assigned to Mrs. William Harper
Details:
Cotton facotry worker aged 34 from Lancashire. Ruddy and freckled compl., brown hair, brown eyes, cast inwards in right eye, scar over left eyebrow, arms freckled, scar cap of each knee. Ticket of leave holder. Absent from his district since March
Details:
Ticket of leave cancelled for being absent from district
Details:
Lost Ticket of Leave. Request to return it to police office. Native place Hampshire. Per 'Henry Porcher' in 1835. Sentenced for life. Farm servant. 5'31/2" brown hair grey eyes.
Details:
Age 32. Assigned to Rev. G.K. Rusden
Details:
Granted Conditional Pardon. Dated 10 July 1848
Details:
Age 21. Assigned to Colonel Dumaresq (two convicts by this name by this vessel)
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW; Roll: 136
Details:
Labourer from Liverpool. Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Maitland. Withdrawn from the service of Mr. Pawsey. To await the governors decision
Ship:
Henry Porcher 1835....
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW. Microfiche 712. (Ancestry)
Details:
Age 19. Native place Sussex. Sailor, cuddy servant. London jail delivery 10 April 1834. Sentenced to 7 years transportation for picking pockets. Mermaid on upper left arm, anchor on upper and anchor inside lower, right arm
Ship:
Henry Porcher 1835....
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW. Microfiche 693. (Ancestry)
Details:
Boat boy age 16 from Lancashire. Tried at liverpool 9 July 1832 and sentenced to 7 years transportation for stealing spoons. Sentenced to an ironed gang for 12 months in January 1836 by the Liverpool Bench for stealing.
Details:
Factory boy aged 17. Tried Lancashire. Absconded from J.T. Hughes since Oct 12
Details:
Age 18. Assigned to the iron gang at Newcastle
Source:
Newcastle Court of Petty Sessions, Bench Books, 1833-1836 (Ancestry)
Details:
John Williamson per Henry Porcher, assigned to William Dun at Paterson River, charged with an assault on Margaret Jones....Margaret Jones testified....I think it was on Saturday fortnight that myself and prisoner had a row.. I shoved the prisoner when he struck me. It was in the kitchen. I then gave him a good beating. He struck me with his fist on the ear, the blow did not knock me down. He only struck me once. He did not tear my clothes. I have no more to say about the prisoner. He did not tear my cap, it fell off. I do not remember telling any of Mr. Dun s family of the circumstances. I do not remember having said to Miss Fanny Dun that the boy would have murdered me if she had not come into the kitchen.....Mr. Dun testified...I think it was last Thursday month when I came home Mrs. Dun told me of the boy having assaulted the woman. I called the woman and boy before me and after having questioned the woman as to what she had told Mrs. Dun and then I questioned about the usage she had received from the prisoner. She said she had gone into the kitchen after telling Mrs. Dun when the boy struck her two or three blows. She was on the ground, the boy kicked her several times that had not my daughter came in at the time considered she would have received much worse usage. I then asked her if he had been quarrelling with her she said no. I then questioned the boy. He said she had no business to tell about him and he implied he had given her worse, it served her right. The woman begged me not to take him to court for it as she had given him a good beating when she got up and she did not wish to get him punished. The prisoner has been flogged twice. He has received thirty and fifty lashes. Guilty of disorderly conduct. Sentenced to 75 lashes, half on the breach and half on the back.
Ship:
Henry Porcher 1835....
Source:
Newcastle Court of Petty Sessions, Bench Books, 1833-1836 (Ancestry)
Details:
John Williamson per Henry Porcher, assigned to William Dun, charged with an assault on Mrs. Dun....Mr. Dun testified..On Saturday month I believe I was in the garden when I heard a noise in the house I went to the house and I saw Mrs. Dun supported by two female servants. I asked what was the matter and asked her if she was hurt. She said no dont be frightened I am not hurt. The servant told me that she was standing at the front kitchen door that she saw the prisoner strike Mrs. Dun in the face. She said that she was so surprised that the prisoner had time to strike Mrs. Dun three times before she could come to her assistance. When she ran to Mrs. Dunn and received the fourth blow intended for Mrs. Dun in her own bust. I asked Mrs. Dun if she had occasion to find fault with the prisoner that day. She said no she was walking through the kitchen without taking notice of him. She did not observe that he was in the kitchen when he came and struck her.....Margaret Jones testified....On Saturday about a month since I was going through the kitchen to the tobacco shed to Mrs. Dun. She was coming back with me I was before Mrs. Dun. I heard her scream out and I turned round, I saw the prisoner striking her. I ran to her and prevented her from getting another blow. I received the blow myself. The first blow I saw was on the cheek, the second blow I believe was on the breast. I do not know what the boy said. I do not believe that he spoke. The boy said something about using an axe to Mrs. Dun some days before. Guilty. Sentenced to 12 months in an iron gang