Surname:
Cruttenden (Cruttendon)
Details:
Ticket of leave cancelled for gross prevarication in giving evidence and receiving a bribe not to prosecute
Surname:
Cruttenden) (Cruthernoon) (Cruttendon)
Details:
Labourer from Kent. Ticket of leave holder. Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Maitland. Sent to the watchhouse. Ticket of leave cancelled and sent to a road gang
Source:
Register Book of Christ Church (Cathedral) Newcastle. Baptisms, Marriages and Burials 1826 to May 1837
Details:
Free Pauper. Died at Newcastle hospital aged 37. Burial
Source:
Register Book of Christ Church (Cathedral) Newcastle. Baptisms, Marriages and Burials 1826 to May 1837. p 23
Details:
Free Pauper. Died at Newcastle hospital aged 37. Burial
Surname:
Curtain (Curtin)
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Details:
Age 44. Assigned to H.G. Watson
Details:
Granted Certificate of Freedom
Source:
General Muster of New South Wales 1823, 1824, 1825
Details:
Prisoner under sentence of 7 years transportation. Assigned to government employment at Newcastle
Source:
NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825 (Ancestry)
Details:
Francis Davey, John O Brien per Recovery, Joseph Walker per Admiral Gambier charged with destroying the benches in the strong room at the hospital. John Clancey, overseer at the hospital states. The prisoners were exempted by the surgeon from labour and were shut up in the strong room as usual during the hours of public labour. In the course of the day I went to the room and found the benches broken and part of them burned. Davey has often been in the room at the hospital and is a troublesome character. I dont know anything of the others. O Brien and Walker state that Davey was the person who broke and burnt the stools. In consequence of the general good character of O Brien and Walker they are discharged. Francis Davey sentenced to solitary confinement for one week
Source:
NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825 (Ancestry)
Details:
Francis Davey in the service of govt charged with insolence to the overseer of the Prisoners Barracks. Proved by Robert Douglas, overseer. Admitted by the prisoner in part. Sentenced to solitary confinement for one week
Place:
Newcastle district
Source:
Archives Office of NSW. Colonial Secretary: Misc records (4/4570D)pp1-88
Details:
On list of assigned convicts who are not mechanics. Assigned to Duncan Sinclair
Source:
Colonial Secretary's Papers. Monthly Return of Corporal Punishments inflicted at Newcastle
Details:
Government servant. Sentenced to 50 lashes for neglect of duty and being absent without a pass
Details:
Attached to Carters Barracks. On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle per 'Elizabeth Henrietta'
Ship:
Earl St. Vincent 1820
Details:
Runaway from Newcastle sent to Port Macquarie per 'Sally'
Details:
On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle per 'Lady Nelson'
Details:
Parish clerk and schoolmaster
Details:
Parish Clerk of Christ Church
Details:
On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle
Details:
Petitioned to have his family sent out to the Colony at Govt. expense
Details:
Aged 45. Ticket of leave holder .Employed as clerk by Francis Beattie