Tag: Convict

  • Ann Territt (aka Ann Terrett)

    Ann Territt (aka Terrett)

    She was born in or around Gloucester between 1786–1789.

    She was tried before the Gloucester Easter Quarter Sessions in 1810, charged with larceny. At that time, Ann had been a servant. She received a seven year term and was kept in prison for another two years prior to her transportation. Ann was first sent to NSW in 1812 aboard ‘Emu’ with about 40 female convicts on board. The ship was hijacked by American privateers and the passengers and crew were put onto the Cape Verde Islands until they were picked up and returned to England.

    Ann was re-sent to Sydney on the ‘Broxbornebury’, which left England on February 22, 1814.

    She worked at the female factory in Parramatta and one year later was given leave to marry William MAKEPEACE. She was given her freedom and after William’s death, she was listed as the publican of the ‘Black Swan Hotel’ in Sydney.

    Ann next married John WHEELER, a convict who had been assigned to work for Ann in 1826.

    Ann’s son, Jonas Wheeler, married Rebecca Hoy, daughter of Timothy Hoy (Admiral Gambier, 1808) and Bethia Freeman (daughter of James Freeman, Alexander 1788 and Mary Edwards (Mary Ann 1791).

  • Mary Edwards (nee Mary Hopely, Mrs William Edwards)

    Mary Edwards was a convict aboard The Ship Mary Ann which sailed from England, on Wednesday, 16 February 1791 and arrived in Port Jackson on 9 July 1791, the first ship in the Third Fleet to arrive in Sydney. The ships Master was Mark Munroe. 

    Mary Edwards (maiden name Mary Hopely), wife of William Edwards, was born around 1766 in Herefordshire.

    In August 1789, both of them were arrested in Leominster where they then lived, and charged (Hereford 9 MAR 1790) with stealing shoes etc from a shop. William was acquitted, Mary sentenced to 7 years’ transportation. (It was that time in NSW history when the appeal had gone out for More Women, to redress the imbalance.) Mary was confined in Hereford Gaol until her departure aboard “Mary Ann” in February 1791.

    She lived with James Freeman, eventually married Abraham Martin, she retained her first husbands name from England.

    She had two children with James Freeman (Alexander 1788), Mary 1792-1801 and Berthina or Berthia 1794. Berthia married Timothy Hoy (Admiral Gambier, 1808). She had one child, Susannah 1800, with Abraham Martin.

  • Christopher Nowlan (aka Christy, aka Nolan)

    Christopher NOWLAN (also NOLAN) came here as a convict in 1826 on the ship Phoenix III, arriving 25 Dec 1826.
    He was tried in Trim in 1826 for Murder.
    He was 23 years old
    Sentenced to LIFE, he got a ticket of leave and a conditional pardon.
    He got permission to marry a Mary EDWARDS (daughter of Matthew Edwards, Portland 1833) in West Maitland who was aged 15 years and she came free (not a convict).
    Christopher’s calling or trade was Farmers Man.

  • James Freeman (Update)

    James was born in Watford, Herefordshire, England, around 1768. He lost his father when less than 18 months of age. By his teens, he was associating with a gang of thieves. In August 1783, James and his accomplices, Thomas Taylor & Thomas Rust, stole a watch & chain and a seal, worth eleven shillings, from John Seymour of Watford. On 11 Dec 1783, James and Thomas Taylor stole a half guinea, a shilling and sixpence from Thomas Baldwin. Thomas Taylor stole again in January 1784. Thomas Taylor, aged 30, & Thomas Rust, aged 21, were both hanged. 

    At 16 years of age, James was tried at the Lent session of the Hertford Assizes on 3rd March 1784, by Sir William Henry Ashurst Knight & Jerome Knapp Esq. Justices. He was convicted of highway robbery on the King’s Highway at Aldenham and was sentenced to death by hanging, but this was changed to 7 years transportation. This was the first prosecution from the Hertfordshire County which resulted in the convict being transported. He was sent to the Justitia hulk, where he spent 3 years before being transferred to the Alexander on 27th February 1787. 

    Three months later, at 19 years of age, he sailed from Portsmouth with the First Fleet on 12th May 1787. There were 11 ships commanded by Captain Arthur Phillip, who was commissioned as the first Governor of Australia. The 15,000 mile journey took just over eight months. The Fleet anchored at Botany Bay on 18th January 1788, then finally settled at Sydney Cove on 26th January. It arrived with 717 convicts, of whom 180 were women, guarded by 191 marines under 19 officers. The convicts’ average age was about twenty-seven years. The Alexander was Captained by Duncan Sinclair. It was the ship that had the most number of deaths on board. Sixteen deaths occurred before the ship had even set sail, mostly from typhus. 

    Four weeks after their arrival, on 27th February 1788, James was again in trouble for stealing flour, with a mate, William Shearman from Berkshire. They were charged with feloniously and fraudulently taking and carrying away 15 half pounds of flour valued at 15 pence, the property of Michael Dennison, Robert Abel, and William Waterhouse. Shearman was sentenced to receive 300 lashes, and James was sentenced to death. He received Australia’s first Conditional Pardon on 1st March 1788, on the condition that he became the Public Executioner till he served out the remainder of his sentence, and remain in NSW for life. So James became Australia’s first hangman. He was reluctant to do his duty but complied when the Marines were ordered to shoot him. After he served out his sentence he worked as a farmhand. 


    James earned 100 lashes and stoppage of his grog 11 Dec 1789 for being drunk and out of his hut after 10.45pm, this was only two weeks after he had to hang Ann Davis. He remained a labourer, labouring at Richmond N.S.W. He died a pauper at Windsor 28 Jan 1830, buried St Matthew’s Anglican Church in an unmarked grave, aged 67.

    He had two children by Mary Edwards (maiden name Mary Hopely (Maryann 1791)) [q.v. https://goo.gl/F1hwKw], Mary 1792-1801 and Berthina or Berthia 1794. Mary Edwards had left him by 1800 for Abraham Martin.