Details:
Ticket of leave cancelled for being absent from his district
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Details:
Aged 38. Assigned to T. P. Macqueen
Details:
Gardener aged 24 from Edinburgh. 5' 2 1/4"; grey eyes, brown hair, sallow complexion. Absconded from Potter Macqueen
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4011]; Microfiche: 661
Details:
John Haggart age 18. Gardener s boy from Edinbrough. Tried at Edinbrough 17 March 1826. Sentenced to transportation for life for stealing a gown.
Source:
Invermein Court of Petty Sessions. Deposition Books 1833 -1834 (Ancestry)
Details:
John Haggart alias Ward per ship England assigned to Potter Macqueen, charged with absconding. To be forwarded to the Bench of Magistrates at Invermein to be dealt with
Details:
Labourer from Liverpool. Admitted to Newcastle gaol by Newcastle bench. For trial at Supreme Court on a charge of robbery. Forwarded to Sydney gaol 26 October
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4011]; Microfiche: 661
Details:
Peter Hampson age 20. Weaver from Liverpool. Tried 17 Jul 1825. Sentenced to 7 years transportation for shop stealing.
Surname:
Hampson (Hampton)
Place:
Lockenwarn, Luskintyre
Details:
AGed 36. Labourer assigned to Leslie Duguid
Details:
Labourer. From London. 5' 4 3/4"; brown eyes; dark red hair; ruddy freckled complexion; absconded from Leslie Duguid
Details:
Aged 40. Assigned to John Burke
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4011]; Microfiche: 661
Details:
John Harris age 27. Farmer s man from Oxford. Tried at Oxford 2 March 1826. Sentenced to transportation for life for horse stealing.
Source:
Deville, James, Sketches of Phrenological Biography, The Phrenological Journal. 1891
Details:
James Hawkes, involved in an attempted mutiny on the convict ship England.....1st June. Hughes, for assaulting Daniel Dean, was secured and double-ironed on deck under a sentry. Munns applied for protection from being strangled or assassinated as was threatened. He gave the names of those principally concerned ; Robert Hughes (always the first), Thomas Jones, William Brown, James Hawkes, and James Norman. Jones gave himself up, observing, he was not the first bullock that had been sold, and hoped he would have a fair trial. He was double-ironed and handcuffed. Brown, Hawkes, and Norman, were all handcuffed, and placed under the sentries. Other arrangements followed for safety. Crew armed with cutlasses, etc.
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4011]; Microfiche: 661
Details:
James Hawkes age 18. Baker and brassfounder from London .Tried London 11 April 1826. Sentenced to transportation for life for stealing a handkerchief. Florid complexion, light brown hair, hazel eyes. Scar on tip of nose. Numerous powder marks on face. Note - to be allowed two years in reckonning for a Conditional Pardon March 1840
Source:
Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4011]; Microfiche: 661
Details:
William Holsworth age 17. Plaisterer s boy from London. Tried London 7 April 1825. Sentenced to 7 years transportation for stealing boots. Note - right shoulder out of joint
Surname:
Holsworth (Holdsworth)
Details:
Labourer aged 19. Assigned to John Brown
Surname:
Holsworth (Holdsworth)
Source:
Register Book of Christ Church Cathedral, Newcastle. p 67
Details:
Marriage of William Holdsworth (from Morpeth) age 27 and Jane Christian aged 25. Witness Thomas Harrison