Source:
Ticket of Leave Butts. 41/2518
Details:
John Moylan per Minerva 1819, tried in Galway July 1819. Sentenced to transportation for life. Granted Ticket of Leave for the district of Maitland 16 November 1841. Note - restored ticket 43/1678
Details:
On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle
Source:
Church of England Burials Register Book 1821 - 1825 - University of Newcastle
Source:
Colonial Secretary's Papers. State Records of NSW Special Bundles
Details:
Included in the Return of Funerals at the settlement at Newcastle. Died age 27 on 24 December 1821 and interred 25 December 1821. Cause of death dysentery
Details:
On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle
Source:
Convict Settlement
Details:
Transported for three years to Newcastle settlement per 'Lady Nelson'
Details:
William Murphy, aged 24; native of Limerick; hazel eyes, brown hair, fair ruddy complexion; absconded from the road gang at Newcastle.
Surname:
Myers (?Maher) (?Mylan)
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book. State Archives NSW. Roll 136
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Maitland. Sentenced to 1 month hard labour for breach of agreement. Discharged 20 March 1840
Details:
On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Description Book. State Archives NSW; Roll: 137 (Ancestry)
Details:
Assigned to the Australian Agricultural Company. Admitted to Newcastle gaol charged with attempting the life of a fellow servant
Details:
John Mylan, prisoner per Minerva, was brought forward on a charge, the investigation of which occupied the Bench for a considerable time, nder circumstances of a very singular nature; it appeared that the prisoner and some months since contrived to obtain a certificate of his transportation having expired, in the name of Thomas Gibbons whom he resembled in person, and who came out from the Co. Galway in the ship Earl St. Vincent; that Gibbons term was 7 years, the prisoners for life; that Gibbons about 6 years since suddenly disappeared and a rumour had prevailed that he had been murdered in the bush in the vicinity of Hunter River; the prisoner very strenuously insisted that he was Thomas Gibbons, and disclaimed any pretensions to the name of Mylan, in confirmation of which some of the witnesses declared they Thomas Gibbons, but could give no account of what had become of him, nor was it until after the person of Mylan had been so fully identified, that he would admit it; at length, beset by such a host of evidence, he confessed that he was John Mylan, and had obtained the certificate by personating Thomas Gibbons. The Bench remainded the prisoner in that stage of the enqiry until measures should be adopted, and the result known as to other circumstances connected with the case, and which might throw some light on the darker parts of it.
Details:
On list of prisoners transported to Newcastle per Mermaid
Details:
Granted Ticket of Leave
Details:
Ticket of leave cancelled for repeated drunkenness
First Name:
Brian (Bryan)
Details:
On list of runaways from Port Macquarie forwarded to Newcastle
Details:
Granted Certificate of Freedom
Details:
Extra Clerk. On list of prisoners victualled from H.M. Stores at Windsor
Details:
On lists of prisoners transported to Port Macquarie
Details:
On list of persons who have received orders for grants of land
Details:
Died in Sydney General Hospital. Aged 50