australia - Family Search

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AUSTRALIA 1700’s and 1800’s.
1770 – Captain Cook landed at Botany Bay Australia. (The people detective ©2001 T
McGregor UK).
1787 - Transportation to Australia began in 1787. Prisons were dangerous places to
be. (Practical family history August 2009) and (The people detective ©2001 T
McGregor UK).
1787-1830 - Botany Bay. The first fleet of eleven ships led by the HMS Sirius left
Portsmouth in May 1787 with 736 convicts, 188 of them women. From 1788-1810
1,000 people a year went from prison ships to Botany Bay. Between 1811 and 1830
many convicts were sent to Australia. Changes to the law said what was and was not a
crime. (Convicts NZ M Wright ©2012).
1787 – 1861 – The first convicts were sent to Australia with the first fleet in 1787.
Transportation ceased in 1861, but the sentence was only abolished twenty years later.
Sentence of transportation. But they left a trail. (The people detective ©2001 T
McGregor UK).
1787 – 1867 - Transportation registers HO11 for Australia. (Practical family history
August 2009)
1788 – The British established their first settlement at Sydney in Southeastern
Australia. (A brief history of the human race. Michael Cook ©2003 UK. ISBN 186207-687-1.)
1788 – 1842 – A list of convict arrivals in New South Wales. (Findmypast.com
Australia. Practical family history August 2009)
1788-1850 – John S Levi and George FJ Bergman. Australian genesis. Jewish
convicts and settlers 1788-1850 Hale 1974.
1788 – 1868 – More than 4,000 orphans were sent to Australia from workhouses in
Ireland. Transport of convicts from Ireland to Australia 1788-1868 begining in 1791.
All transport registers before 1836 were destroyed. (How to trace your Irish ancestors
©2008 Ian Maxwell UK).
1788-1900 – From 1788 to 1899 in NSW there were 2,112 deaths of “unknown” men
women and children, half of these deaths were between 1880 and 1900. (Janet Reaker
How to trace your missing ancestors ©2000 Australia).
January 1788 – A British fleet commanded by Captain Arthur Phillips of the Royal
Navy, carrying officials and 579 convicts, guarded by marines, arrived in Botany Bay
Australia. Discovered by Captain James Cook in 1770. (Family tree mag Sept 2010
UK)
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January 1788 – Among the convicts on the first fleet, arriving in Botany Bay was
Thomas Harwell. He was sentenced to seven years transportation, for stealing two
small things. James Grace aged 11 and John Wisehammer aged 15. The youngest boy
shipped to Botany Bay on the first fleet was John Hudson at nine years old. (Family
skeletons ©2005 R Paley and S Fowler UK).
1791-1853 – Government assisted schemes such as the emigration of workhouse
inmates to Australia from the UK. 5,000 adults were sent in 1847. Between 1791 and
1853 up to 50,000 convicts were transported from Ireland to Australia. (How to trace
your Irish ancestors. ©2008 Ian Maxwell UK).
1797 – Australian sheep farming and merino sheep were bred there in 1797. (Knitting.
Joanna MacDonald ©1962 UK).
1800s – Early 1800s, Goulburn Sydney was a garrison town, police patrols and
highwaymen. A stockade for convicts, penal colony prison for 200 convicts. (Mr
Asia. James Diamond Jim Shepherd ©2010 Australia).
1800-1806 – United Irish were shipped to Australia on 6 vessels which arrived
between 1800 and 1806 prisoners on the “Minerva” in 1800. (The great shame Irish
©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1801-1814 – Australian convicts. Charlotte Green was twice convicted in 1801 for
burglary and sentenced to transportation for life. She landed in Sydney on the “HMS
Glatton” in 1803. Convict to Sydney, Thomas Hyndes, convicted of highway robbery
also sentenced to life. He could read and write. In 1806 Charlotte and Thomas were
married in St Philips church by rev Samuel Marsden. Thomas was granted a pardon in
1912 and Charlotte in 1814. (Heritage NZ. Winter 2012 p5).
1803 – Sydney Australia “HMS Glatton” a convict ship. (NZ Heritage, winter 2012).
1804 – In 1804 Irish convicts rebelled against their captors west of Sydney, Vinegar
Hill. Dozens of the convicts were hanged or sent to Norfolk island 1,000 miles off the
NSW coast. (The great shame Irish ©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1804 – Uprisings, the Castle Hill rebellion of Irish convicts, transported for their part
in the Irish rebellion six years earlier. Executions. (Convicts NZ M Wright ©2012).
1806 – Charlotte Badger. Australian convict ship in 1806 she sailed to NZ to hide
among Maori in the Bay of islands. (Law breakers mischief. ©2009 Bronwyn Sell).
September 1810 – In March 1810, 131 female convicts in the ship “Canada” from the
UK for a long sea voyage. Six months at sea the “Canada” reached Botany Bay in
Australia September 1810. (Practical family history. July 2003 UK).
Between 1815 and 1929 – 12,000 convicts were transported to Australia. (Practical
family history. August 2009)
1815-1829 – From 1787, Between 1815 and 1829, 12,000 convicts were transported
to Australia. (Family history. August 2009 p58).
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25 April 1815 – Jacky Guard (male), was transported from England to NSW
Australia, for a seven year sentence, for stealing a quilt. Sydney 25 April 1815 on the
transport ship “Indefatigable”. In 1820 he went to sea on the “Lynx” sealing to
southern oceans. (Trackless sea. ©2008 Megan Hutching).
1820 – There was no official Catholic church or priest in Australia until 1820. (Janet
Reaker How to trace your missing ancestors. ©2000 Australia).
1821 – The female factory opened in 1821 at Parramatta, meant to house 300 women,
it held 887 women and 405 children, corruption was rampant, orphans schools in
Parramatta run by sisters of charity. Children taken by force from the women. (The
great shame Irish ©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1828 – 1899 - Workhouse inmates from the Channel islands, Jersey and Gernsey.
1,230 emigrants to Australia (Practical family history. February 2010).
January 1828 – 194 female convicts on the “Elizabeth” arrived in Australia. (Australia
family tree. Sept 2010)
1829-1831 – James Gilbert was master of the female convict ship “Edward” from
Cork in 1829, In 1831 the “Edward” brought 153 male convicts from Cork to Sydney
losing 5. (The great shame Irish ©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1830 – The Armstrong’s came to the colony in the ship “Gilmore” and others came in
the “Rockingham” with his mother Miss Leeder in 1830. Rockingham took its name
from the ship. (Western pioneers ©1980 Australia JE Hammond).
1830-1835 – Australia in 1835 there were 7,103 floggings among 30,000 convicts in
NSW. Floggings were ordered by a magistrate until the 1830s. (The great shame Irish
©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1830-37 – In 1837 Mr Joseph Cooper and his father walked from Fremantle to
Mandurah. They arrived in the colony in the ship “warrior”, in 1830 and spent the
first seven years in Fremantle and the following ten years in Mandurah. (Western
pioneers ©1980 JE Hammond).
1830-1851 – Gold was discovered outside Melbourne. Strzelecki and the other Polish
explorers Lhotsky in 1830s. A boy in Melbourne in 1849 had 35 ounces of gold found
in the bush. Gold was also found in June 1851 near Bathurst. (The great shame Irish
©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1830-77 – About 12,500 convicts were locked in Tasmania during this time. (timeline
internet).
1833 – In NSW in one month 2,000 out of 28,000 convicts were convicted and 9,000
lashes were ordered by magistrates in Tasmania. 1,250 convictions of 4,250 lashes
ordered for 15,000 convicts.(Ironback resources.com).
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1834 – In Sydney, sex slavery of women convicts by their masters was shocking,
slavery in disguise. (The great shame Irish ©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
2 march 1834 – The “Permelia” to Sydney, convicts from Ireland. The “Fairlie” a
larger ship with more than 300 English convicts had nearly arrived. The Sydney
Gazette report said. (The great shame Irish ©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1835 – 1897 – Burial and memorial inscription info for Victoria. (Findmypast.com
Practical family history. August 2009).
July 1835 – The “Neva which left Cork in early 1835 with 150 Irish women convicts
and over 50 of their children in July in Bass strait “Neva” struck a rock, all but 20 of
the female convicts and all their 59 children were drowned. (The great shame Irish
(C)1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1836 – Mr Edward Hamersley BA came out to Australia in the later months of 1836,
he left the UK. His home “Pynton”, on the Swan just out from Guildford, had horses.
(Western pioneers. ©1980 Australia JE Hammond).
March 1838 – The “Diamond” which has arrived from Cork with female convicts to
NSW Australia. (The great shame Irish ©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1839-1850 – Book MSU press USA. ISBN 9780870136238 American citizens,
British slaves. Yankee political prisoners in an Australian penal colony 1839-1850.
Cassandra Pybus and Hamish Maxwell Stewart. In 1840, 82 Americans were
transported from Canada to a British penal colony in Tasmania. Political prisoners,
penal transportation as a tool of political repression. 31 Oct 2002 Michigan state uni
press.
1840 – Sydney to Otago NZ “Magnet” ship
July 1840 – William Anderson worked his way to South Australia as a ships
carpenter. The ship reached South Australia in July 1840, the two men deserted. They
stole peas from a shop and lived on them for 3 weeks and hid in the Adelaide hills.
William Anderson married 4 August 1821 and had 16 children. (Practical family
history. July 2003 UK)
5 October 1840 – Immigrants on the “Champion” which left Liverpool on 5 May
1840 and arrived in Sydney on 5 October 1840 with assisted immigrants. (Australia
family tree. Sept 2010)
1847 – Mr Cooper senior built the flour mill on the shore of the estuary at Mandurah.
He was killed at Clarence just as the work was completed. Coopers two sons carried
on the work of the mill. (Western pioneers. ©1980 JE Hammond).
1847-1885 – NSW Australia registers of police employees. (NZ society of
genealogists inc. Nov-Dec 2011 p252).
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1848 – The earliest electoral roles for NSW were completed in 1848. The right to vote
was restricted, only male property owners and rich men were allowed to vote. (Janet
Reaker. How to trace your missing ancestors. ©2000 Australia).
5 July 1848 – The Sydney Morning Herald said of the now 220,000 settlers in
Australia, 80,000 were female. (The great shame Irish (C)1998 Thomas Keneally).
1849-1850 – Worthy of reclamation index to probationary convicts to Sydney and
Morton bay. Australian genealogical education centre Kiama council Australia.
1849-1914 – In 1849 letters from the UK to Australia took up to 5 months to arrive,
even in 1914 the London to Sydney post took a month. (Family history monthly.
March 2004 p18-19).
1850 – Built be convicts in 1850, Fremantle prison was condemned as a health risk
just a few years after it was built in 1850. (Brothers. Antonio Buti ©2011 Aust).
1850 – Ronald Parsons. Ships of Aust and NZ before 1850 parts 1 & 2 Parsons South
Aust 1983.
1850 – During the convict period from 1850 to 1863. (Western pioneers. ©1980 JE
Hammond).
1851 – William Samuel Southgate was born in Williamston Vic Australia.
1852-1899 – The public record office of Victoria has a database of emigrants between
1852 and 1899 when they arrived and the ship they were on. (Family history monthly.
August 2003 p62).
1852-1923 – Passenger lists Victoria Australia outwards to New Zealand. Gold
miners moving. A CD Trade me $30 ISBN 9781877217517
1853 – 1852 a labor shortage in the Australian colonies immigrants were rushing to
the gold fields. One of several McKenzie families from Morefield Scotland. William
McKenzie aged 36, his wife Mary, married early in 1853. Ullapool Scotland
emigrants. They had a daughte,r Isabella born during the voyage to Hobart Australia.
(Migration. Rod Edmond ©2013 NZ).
1854 – Elizabeth Jane Southgate was born in Williamston Vic Australia.
1855 – Edward Hammond. Hardgraves Australia and its gold fields. London . H
Ingram and co.
1856-1862 – Martin Cash, convict, policeman and brothel keeper moved to NZ from
Hobart Australia in 1856. In 1860 he was in Christchurch NZ as a constable in the
Canterbury province armed police force, which he joined in 1859. His main line of
work was brothel keeping. His identity and activities were eventually investigated, in
march 1860 Cash was sacked and fined for keeping a brothel. Many others like him
moved to NZ after the decline of the Australian goldfields. Cash retuned to NZ by
December 1862 he continued operation of several brothels in Christchurch NZ red
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light district and Salisbury st including the Red house. Moved to the Otago gold fields
then returned to Christchurch NZ. (p35 A peoples history. ©1992 NZ).
1857 – Victoria and the Australian gold mining in 1857. By William Westgarth.
London Smith Elder and co Cornwill.
1858 – 250 Chinese migrants to Australia on the “St Paul” from Hong Kong.
Shipwrecked on New Guinea. (Asia making of NZ. H Johnson B Moloughney).
1858-1895 – James John would have been 2 and a half years old at the census in June
1841. On 16 December 1845 William married a second wife, Mary Ann Dunford.
They lived in Helston UK. Mary Ann her step son, James John aged 19, her three
other children took off to Australia on the “Stamboul” They arrived in Adelaide on 1
February 1858. The Australian gold rush of 1851 Ballarat mining from Cornwall.
William died 12 June 1895 Salisbury Adelaide St Johns cemetery.
16 Jan 1859 – Adelaide Pryor, female was born in Adelaide SA Australia.
1860 – Natives of Vanuatu were kidnapped to work on sugar and cotton plantations in
Queensland Australia and Fiji (8 July 2011).
1861 – Melbourne to Port Chalmers Otago NZ “Oscar” ship.
1862 –68 – The year of the great flood in Perth 1862 The William street jetty was
submerged in the flood for several days. Pinjarra people 1862 after the floods no food
could be transported from Perth or Fremantle. Boiled wheat or potatoes were used
instead of bread. They went to Perth in 1868 in a bullock wagon owned and driven by
Mr Key. Workmen on the lead mines were Cornishmen who could sing well. Narra
Tarra lead mines. (Western pioneers. ©1980 Australia JE Hammond).
1862 – 1869 – When the Duke of Edinburgh visited western Australia about 1869 a
group of Pinjarra volunteers went to Perth for his reception. The Pinjarra volunteer
force began in 1862 and existed for 20 years the author’s family was a member of the
force. (Western pioneers. ©1980 Australia JE Hammond).
1863-1870 – Six Americans prospected Keysbrook for gold and found some on Mr
Key’s property and in Drakesbrook three miles near Serpentine. Men who forced the
Wanless company who got a concession for cutting and exporting timber from
Jarrahdale about 1869-70. (Western pioneers. ©1980 Australia JE Hammond).
1863-1879 – Mary Anne Warner. Passenger lists for ships that arrived in Sydney
between 1863 and 1879. More than 5,500 have been indexed. (Family history
monthly. August 2003 p62).
1863 – 1904 – Queensland historical atlas exploitation. Between 1863 and 1904
62,000 south seas islanders were brought to Australia to work in the sugar industry.
Several ports on the eastern coast. (Sugar slaves by Imelda Miller ©22 October 2010).
March 1863 – Mr A Raper city of Hobart to Otago NZ. (Public records office Victoria
Aust )(15 July 2013).
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21 May 1865 – Sarah Williams was born in NSW Australia.
12 Dec 1867 – Murder of gold escort in Queensland. Wanganui Herald NZ.
1868 – The last shipload of Irish convicts arrived in western Australia. (The great
shame Irish ©1998 Thomas Kenealy).
1869-1947 – South Australian police gazette index compendium. Info on police,
criminals and victims of crime. (Australian family tree connections. Sept 2010 p44).
1870 – Messrs Franck and Edward Wittenoom went to the Mirchison in 1870 and
took up farming. Their station was the largest in the colony in those days. They had to
transport their wool and supplies about 200 miles. (Western pioneers. ©1980
Australia JE Hammond).
1870-1877 – Martin Cash autobiography by James Lester Burke published in 1870
The adventures of Martin Cash. He died on 27 august 1877 in Tasmania Australia.
(p35 A peoples history. ©1992 NZ).
1871 – Charles John Mangan was born in Melbourne Victoria Australia.
1871-89 – Mr Vernon Hamersley, a son of Samuel R Hamersley was born at
Guildford in 1871. He started farming at York in 1889. When gold was discovered he
spent time prospecting then returned to York He had a seat in parliament and was a
member of the WA Historical society. (Western pioneers. ©1980 Australia JE
Hammond).
1872 – The author saw William Leeder in William street jetty in 1872 when he left
western Australia for Adelaide. (Western pioneers. ©1980 Australia JE Hammond).
1873-75 – Hardship, John Evett Hammond and the Clarkson party near the
Gasconyne river in 1874. March 1875 Geraldton Joseph Clarkson went to the north
west in 1873 just after the floods in Perth. Began pearling with native divers. Brought
a schooner. He built buildings with money he earned in the pearling industry in 1874.
(Western pioneers. ©1980 Australia JE Hammond).
1874 – Melbourne to Otago New Zealand “Alhambra” ship.
25 July 1874 – “Gipsy” did not arrive in Eden after leaving Sydney on 25 July 1874.
No trace of the ship or crew was ever found. (Australia family tree. Sept 2010)
1877 – Mr C Buggins and the author went to Mt Erin to assist in building additions to
a station at Mt Erin 32 miles north of Geraldton about 30,000 acres. In later years the
government brought Mt Erin for sub divisions. (Western pioneers. ©1980 Australia
JE Hammond).
1879 – Ship “Marpesia” From Liverpool to Melbourne. (Australia family tree. Sept
2010)
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1879 – Winnifred Moore was born in Melbourne Vic Australia.
1879 – 1906 – About 60,000 South Sea Islanders were brought to Queensland by
Blackbirders to be slaves on sugar plantations. Sugar cane farmers seeks recognition
for buried slaves. The Queensland sugar industry was built on slavery. (7 December
2012 ABC net au Tony Eastley).
11 March 1879 – In the 1870’s the south Australian government imported two hopper
barges, the “Kadina” and the “Goolwa” from Scotland. The “Goolwa” 139 tons built
in Glasgow. Its master was Captain Finch. The “Goolwa” left Glasgow on 8 August
1878.made port in Adelaide on 11 March 1879. (Western pioneer. ©1980 JE
Hammond).
3 Sept 1883 – Assisted immigration. The “Assaye” from England to Sydney 3 Sept
1883. Under quarantine due to whooping cough outbreak, not released until 8 Sept
1883. (Australia family tree. Sept 2010)
14 Feb 1884 – Ship left Plymouth England for Australia “Chyebassa” owned by the
British India steam navigation company. (Australia family tree. Sept 2010)
1885 – The first discovery of gold in Kimberley region north, diggers at goldfields.
The Perth mint. (Brothers. Antonio Buti ©2011 Aust).
1886 – Victorian shipping index Melbourne the ship “Iberia” (Australian family tree.
Sept 2010)
1887 – The annual report of the south Australian welfare department contains info on
orphanages or children homes that were operating each year. The department library
has reports dating back to 1887. (Janet Reaker How to trace your missing ancestors.
©2000 Australia).
15 March 1889 – Sydney ship “Ormuz” Immigrants went to the sugar cane industry in
Nerang Berowa area of Queensland. (Australia family tree. Sept 2010)
1890s – Fraud is more common at times of speculation on the stock exchange, such as
investments on the west Australian gold mines of the 1890s. (Family skeletons.
©2005 UK).
18 March 1891 – Opium in Australia. Auckland Star NZ. Papers Past.
8 Dec 1891 – Opium in Australia. Ashburton Guardian NZ. Papers Past.
1892 – Donald Fraser was born in Queensland in 1892. In 1914 Fraser was charged
with a sex assault on a teenage girl in NZ. On 17 Nov 1933 in Christchurch, Riccarton
NZ unsolved murder. (Shot in the dark. Scott Bainbridge ©2010 NZ).
17 September 1894 – Raper. Sydney to NZ. (NZ immigration passenger lists 18551973) (15 July 2013).
26 October 1894 – Raper. Sydney to NZ. (NZ immigration passenger lists)
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1 November 1894 – Raper. Ship “Tasmania” Sydney. British born 1849 aged 45
female. Auckland NZ. (14 July 2013).
12 June 1895 – William Pryor died in Salisbury Adelaide SA Aust.
Coal and ore miners came from many depressed parts of England, notably Cornwall.
During the first 30 years of Victoria’s rule Australia and NZ received one million
migrants from the UK. By 1869 the colonial commissioners had assisted more than
300,000 UK citizens to emigrate mainly to Australia. In the year gold was discovered
in Australia 1852. The use of a penalty to transport was revived in 1788 upon the
founding of a penal colony in Australia. The Fry fleet of ships left Portsmouth for
Botany bay with 1,493 passengers, including 586 males and 192 females, convicts.
For the first 50 years of the new colony’s history about 40% of population were
convicts. (Oxford guide to family history David Hey ©1993 p98)
Official UK statistics record only 485 migrants to Australia and NZ in 1825, then a
rise to 32,625 in 1841. Between 1825 and 1851 222,955 British people emigrated
voluntarily to Australia and NZ. Australia’s fortunes were built on sheep farmers and
the lure of gold. By 1851 its population was 437,665. By 1858 the population reached
one million. By 1877 it was two million and by 1889 it passed three million. 612,531
Australians who in 1861 were recorded as born in the UK. Records of convict ships
1788-1842. Lists of convicts 1788-1820 the registration of births marriages and deaths
in Australia began between 1841 and 1856. The census returns were destroyed in
Australia. (Oxford guide to family history David Hey ©1993).