Details:
Aged 33. Assigned to J.O. Clunie
Surname:
Hanratty (Henratty?)
Details:
Purchased town allotment 2 roods
Surname:
Hanratty (Henratty?)
First Name:
Arthur and Ellen
Details:
William Nowland found guilty of stealing from Arthur and Ellen Hanratty
Details:
Ticket of leave holder charged with breaking into the house of Emma Hayman and sentenced to 2yrs imprisonment under the Vagrant Act. Had been about to leave for the gold fields
Details:
Ticket of leave holder. Died aged 21. Buried in Glebe Cemetery
Surname:
Henratty (Hanratty)
Place:
Maitland Circuit Court
Details:
Arthur Henratty, James Cox, Richard Cox and Barney McCudden, all free by servitude committed for trial for cattle stealing
Surname:
Henratty (Hanratty)
Source:
Newcastle Gaol Entrance Book - State Archives NSW; Roll: 757
Details:
Admitted to Newcastle gaol from Paterson. Sent for trial on a charge of cattle stealing
Surname:
Henratty (Hanratty)
First Name:
Arthur and Elizabeth
Place:
Maitland Quarter Sessions
Details:
Found guilty of stealing a cart belonging to George Jell at Sydney. Indicted for stealing a horse belonging to Timothy Hoy at Liverpool and a mare belonging to John Stapelford at Maitland. Cases not gone into.. Female prisoner said she was not the wife of Arthur Henratty which statement he contradicted. Remanded for sentence
Details:
Accused of killing & taking away a cow belonging to Thomas Holms. Not guilty.
Details:
Convicted of stealing. Sentenced 14 years transportation.
Details:
Robbed by John Quigley. Identified stolen coat and trousers found in John Mees possession as his property
Details:
Timothy Collins and John Mee found guilty of receiving clothing stolen from Hentig
Place:
Brookfield, Co. Durham
Source:
Baillier's Post Office Directory p.59
Details:
Of Darling Downs. Son Edward died aged 3 years
Details:
On list printed in the Gazette for New Commission of the Peace
Place:
Newcastle (Other mines in the area included Old Rows, Happy Flat, The Borehole and Pit-Town
Details:
Superintendent of the A.A. company. Turned to first sod from the ground under which a new coal pit was to be sunk on the A.A. Company property near Newcastle. Known as No. 1 Pit. Robert Whytte employed as manager of the pit
Details:
In 1839 Hodgson moved to Australia, arriving in Sydney, and soon leased Cashiobury run in the New England district. In July 1840, he sought new land further north in the Moreton Bay district (as it was then known, now called Queensland) based on advice from Patrick Leslie. With a partner, Gilbert Eliott, and his brother, Christopher Pemberton Hodgson, Arthur Hodgson took up Eton Vale, the second pastoral run on the Darling Downs in September 1840. In the 1846 publication, Reminiscences of Australia with Hints on the Squatters Life, Hodgson s brother describes the conflict involved in the taking of land ownership from Aboriginal Australians. They named this property Etonvale after Eton College, the illustrious school they both attended in England In 1856–61 he became general superintendent of the Australian Agricultural Company
First Name:
Arthur and Eliza
Source:
Australian Births and Baptisms - Family Search Historical Records
Details:
Baptism of Arthur Henry, son of Arthur and Eliza Hodgson (born 16 May 1847)
Source:
Australian Births and Baptisms - Family Search Historical Records
Details:
Baptism of Arthur Henry, son of Arthur and Eliza Hodgson (born 16 May 1847)
Source:
The Newsletter - an Australian Paper for Australian People
Details:
Born at Rickmansworth (Herts), about eighteen miles from London, in 1818, being the second son of the Rev. Edward Hodgson. He came to Australia in 1839, and the following year was married to a daughter of the late Sir James Dowling, Chief Justice of New South Wales. He be came an MLA. in this State and also in Queensland, in which place he was for a brief period Colonial Secretary. On his marriage he received with his wife as a dowry nearly a whole street of houses in Sydney, which in 1852 were reputedly worth 30,000. But what are they worth now, and how much have they paid by way of fair return to the State which has guarded and improved Sir Arthurs property all this half century. Hodgson was one of the earliest squatters in the famous Darling Downs country of Queensland