MELINDA KENDALL : HER LIFE AND WRITINGS

19th-century Australian writer, pioneer, teacher.This is the site of the rambling research of Mr Knox’s offsider and is NOT his academic paper. Let us know if we have erred as err we will. Any legit assistance much appreciated.

Archive for the 'BROXBOURNEBURY' Category


OLD BRITISH NEWSPAPERS 19TH CENTURY

Posted by nellibell49 on July 4, 2008

Posted in 0414 627 125, A MISCELLANY, BOOKS, MANUSCRIPTS, NEWSPAPERS AND DOCUMENTS, BRITAIN, BROXBOURNEBURY, CAMPBELLTOWN, CANADA, CONVICTS, ILLAWARRA, IRELAND, LEGAL MATTERS, LINKS OF INTEREST - RANDOM, LINKS: PLANT DREAMING DEEP, MCNALLY, MILITARY 1800S, NSW 19th CENTURY, POETRY AND POETS | No Comments »

Ross Beattie’s CROSS and JACKSON Genealogy Page

Posted by nellibell49 on April 21, 2008

http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Park/2283/families/cross.html

Ross Beattie’s CROSS and JACKSON Genealogy Page

with details of the Broxbornebury including extract from letters or journal of Macquarie .

Posted in BROXBOURNEBURY, CONVICTS, SHIPS, SURREY I | Tagged: , , | No Comments »

ARK - MUSTERS AND OTHER PAPERS RE SHIP

Posted by nellibell49 on April 16, 2008

Posted in BOOKS, MANUSCRIPTS, NEWSPAPERS AND DOCUMENTS, BROXBOURNEBURY, EMU, MCNALLY PATRICK, SHIPS | Tagged: , , , , | No Comments »

ROOTS WEB RE PATRICK AND JUDITH

Posted by nellibell49 on April 10, 2008

http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/LONDON/1999-04/0924816792

On roots web there is one article written in 1998 and responded to in 1999. Essentially the content is

Patrick McNALLY (born Ireland) was court marshalled from the 100th
> Regiment in Chambly, Canada c1812. He was later transported to
> Australia on the ship ‘Surrey’ 1814. He married Judith KILFROY c1808,
> their children - Mary c1808 & William c1810 born in Canada also possibly
> Eliza c1812.
>
>We need to find enlistment if possible to find native place and
> birth/baptism.

The research is by a lady named Maureen and a Researcher named Trevor responds.

It’s just possible that there will be records of William&Mary’s
births.The GRO Chaplains Returns of Marriages records started in 179x
(where x=?3). However, as the 100th Regiment of Foot was a Canadian
regiment, maybe they weren’t included, I don’t know.

Some UK record repositories/libraries (?& LDS) have these on fiche. Try
SKS.

I have sent emails to both but its a long time since the rootsweb article and they haven’t responded . perhaps someone connected will see this and be able to help.

We know Patrick McNally was born in Roscommon in app 1788. We don’t know where the KILFROY originates from. Nor do we have the marriage details. Were they married in Ireland or Canada. Canadian sources have suggested strongly that all 100 Regiment were already in Canada in 1805 way before the marriage would have taken place in 1808.

IF YOU KNOW ANY FURTHER DETAILS WHICH WOULD HELP WITH THIS - WE WOULD LOVE TO HEAR FROM YOU. 0414627125 OR pnk918@mac.com
>

Posted in BROXBOURNEBURY, CANADA, MCNALLY JUDITH KILFROY MCDERMOTT, MCNALLY PATRICK | No Comments »

BROXBOURNEBURY, SURREY I

Posted by nellibell49 on March 19, 2008

Ship: BROXBORNEBURY
Name of convict: Ann Lord and daughter Ruth
Type: ship Class A1 C1 D2
Tonnage: 720 (1814); 751 (1840-43)
Guns: 4
Dimension: 20’ draught
Materials: sheathed with copper over boards
Registered: London
Home Port: London
Master: Thos Pitcher Junior
Surgeon: Colin McLachlan
Where built ?: Gravesend / River Thames, 1812
Sailed: 22nd February 1814 from England
Arrived: 28th July 1814 – taking 156 days
What else did it carry: merchandise
What did it carry on return voyage: coal

Leaving on Tuesday 22nd February 1814 the Broxbornebury sailed in
company with the Surrey.
On board were 120 female convicts (some with children); twenty-eight
free families, several well-to-do passengers and a crew of
seventy.Thirty five of these female convicts had been travelling since
12th November 1812 aboard The Emu which was hijacked in the middle of
the Indian Ocean.

The Surrey, with 200 male convicts, marine guards and crew on board
separated from the Broxbornebury early in the voyage, calling at Rio on
12 April with “gaol fever” or typhus aboard. Departing Rio on 21 April
with the typhus became even more virulent It resulted in a death toll of
51 convicts, guards and crew including the Captain of the ship, the
First Mate, the Second Mate, the boatswain, the ship’s surgeon, six
seamen and four soldiers.

The Surrey was off Shoalhaven in late July when the Broxbornebury
rejoined her. Without anyone to navigate the ship, the Captain Pitcher
transferred a volunteer on board the fever ridden ship, to navigate it
into Port Jackson. Once inside the Sydney Heads on 27 July 1814, after a
voyage of 156 days, the ship was quarantined on the northern shore of
the harbour and the many remaining sick treated in tents erected as a
temporary hospital the beginning of the North Head Quarantine Station.

Only 2 of the female passengers on the Broxonbury died in transit. The
stories of the female convicts from the Broxbornebury are many and
varied and well recorded in many sources especially by

Portia Robinson in The Women of Botany Bay, Sydney 1877 and
Elizabeth Hook in Journey to a New Life: The Story of the ships Emu in
1812 and Broxbornebury in 1814, Including Crew, Female Convicts and Free
Passengers on Board. Minto 2000

Ann and Ruth continued to have eventful lives in NSW, however Ann, age
81, was burnt to death when her dress caught fire while she dozed in
front of daughter Elizabeth’s fire

Posted in BROXBOURNEBURY, MCNALLY JUDITH KILFROY MCDERMOTT, MCNALLY PATRICK, SURREY I | 3 Comments »