Tuesday, November 26, 2019

#52 Ancestors Week 48 Thief

#52 Ancestors Week 48 Thief




Sadly, there is no shortage of candidates for this week’s blog.  All of the convicts I have researched in Paul’s family were thieves.

The first to arrive was 4 x great grandfather Peter McCann, aged about 30, who came on the convict ship Minerva which left Cork on 24 August 1799 and landed in Sydney Cove on 11 January 1800.  We do not know the nature of Peter’s theft, but he was tried at Monaghan, Ireland and sentenced to 7 years.  This was a standard sentence – in reality very few convicts ever returned to their native lands.

In Sydney, Peter met Mary Fitzgerald, who had arrived on the Atlas 1 in 1802.  Mary was only 16 at the time of her arrest and trial, in Waterford, Ireland.  She was given 7 years, and sentenced with her, for the same crime, was Eleanor Fitzgerald, aged 31.  We have never been able to ascertain whether Eleanor was Mary’s mother or sister or aunt, or another relative but they remained close throughout Eleanor’s life.

The Atlas 1 was a hell ship.  Of the 179 convicts who embarked, three died before the voyage began and another 63 men and 2 women died at sea.  Four more died before the ship made anchor and the large number of deaths resulted in an official inquiry which found that Captain Brooks had been greedy and negligent,*(1) although he managed to escape punishment.

Peter and Mary had two children before Peter drowned at Windsor, NSW in 1806.  Their eldest child, Nicholas married Catherine Johnston in 1826.  Catherine had arrived in the colony at the age of 6 with her mother, Rosetta Johnston, (4 x great grandmother) who was transported for 7 years for stealing.  Rosetta was born in County Louth, Ireland in about 1787 and tried at Surrey Assizes in March 1814.  She stole “three pieces of sheeting, value 27 shillings, and one shawl, value 30 shillings.

Rosetta and Catherine travelled on the Northampton which arrived in June 1815.  Dr Joseph Arnold had been appointed Ship’s Surgeon on the Northampton, which no doubt accounts for its low mortality rate (4 deaths).  The surgeon reported to Governor Macquarie:

“I have the honour to report to your Excellency that Anne Williams, Anne Watling and Rose Johnson, three convicts embarked in this Ship, have made themselves useful during the voyage as attendants on the sick, and have acquitted themselves to my satisfaction.”

Rosetta met and married John Beale *(2) in the colony; their marriage performed by the infamous Samuel Marsden (“the flogging parson”), and four months later Catherine was discharged from the Female Orphanage at Parramatta into their care.

Although John Beale was not a blood ancestor, he made such an impact on the family that two generations later, one of Charles and Mary McCann’s sons was named “John Beale McCann”

Charles and Mary’s eldest son, Charles William McCann was Paul’s great grandfather.  His wife, Esther was also descended from convicts.  Her mother, Lavinia Roberts was the daughter of William Roberts and Agnes McMillan. (3 x great grandparents) I have written about Agnes before (#52 Ancestors – Week 2).  She was transported at the age of 15 after a tough life on the streets of Glasgow, and several convictions for theft.  The final conviction was for stealing some clothing in the company of her friend, Janet Houston, who was also sentenced to 7 years to “parts beyond the seas”.  This was to be Van Diemen’s Land, a notoriously inhospitable place for convicts.

Agnes survived her incarceration.  She gave birth to a son, Frederick Lee, in 1841, and somehow managed to keep him alive at a time when the children of female prisoners had an horrific mortality rate.

When she was finally free, William was waiting for her.  She had met him in 1840 when she was being held in Oatlands Prison (Van Diemen’s Land) for being insolent.  William had been there at the same time - for celebrating his ticket of leave rather too boisterously.  He had ridden a horse recklessly ( and drunkenly) through the main street of the town and for this transgression had been given 14 days of solitary confinement on bread and water. 

William Roberts was born William Watson, in Lancashire, England.  His was apparently a ‘good’ family – his father Isaac was a coach builder. As a young man, William had tried his hand at picking pockets but he seemed not to be skilful enough.  He was arrested in 1827 for stealing one shilling and sixpence, and three halfpence and because it was his second offence the judge imposed a sentence of 14 years transportation to parts beyond the seas. He arrived in Van Diemen’s Land in 1828 on the William Miles.

William was not a model prisoner.  Less than a month after his arrival, he was punished for absconding with “two days on the treadwheel”.  Six weeks later he was given two more days, this time for skipping the mandatory church muster.  A year later while working on a road gang, he was punished with 25 lashes for insolence.  The lashes were delivered with a cat-o-nine-tails – nine knotted leather strips with lead weights fastened to the ends, designed to rip and tear into the skin.


The treadwheel
 Agnes and William raised a family of 8 children, including Fred Lee.  They moved from Tasmania to the goldfields of Ballarat and then finally to the northern rivers of NSW.  None of the family seems ever to have been in trouble with the law again.

Paul’s paternal grandmother, Alma Barrow was also descended from convicts - Rebecca Bloxham and John Hooper (3 x great grandparents.)  Rebecca was sentenced to death in 1826 for the crime of “Robbery On A Person”. This sentence was commuted to transportation for “the period of her natural life” following petitions for clemency by her widowed mother, Ann Bloxham and the rector of her local parish. The petition tells of a “steady, industrious girl who, after being forced to move to Leicester to look for work, had her morals corrupted but was now penitent.”  Rebecca arrived on the Harmony on 27 September 1827 and married fellow convict John Hooper in Newcastle in 1829.

John Hooper too was sentenced to life imprisonment and sent to Van Diemen’s Land, but he managed to escape from Hobart and head north, where he survived for a short time before being found and charged with bushranging and theft.  He received 200 lashes and was sent to the much harsher penal settlement of Newcastle.

The cat - o - nine tails

A public flogging

It has become a cliché that convicts were transported for “stealing a loaf of bread” but it is nevertheless true that the nature of the thefts for which many were transported seems paltry to our eyes.  Many so-called criminals were poor and attempting to support themselves and their families on meagre earnings.  Stealing food and clothing was a matter of survival.  Like many other convicts, those in this story went on to build families and become good citizens of the fledgling nation of Australia,

*(1) Captain Brooks had stowed the ship with private goods for sale in Sydney.  Because the ship was so overcrowded, the air scuttles had to be closed in heavy weather, which meant that no fresh air reached the prisoners below deck.  During the passage they were all confined with two leg irons and one on their necks, secured by a heavy padlock.  Scurvy was a major cause of illness and death due to inadequate rations and poor water supply.

*(2) John Beale was charged with burglary in 1812 and sentenced “to be hanged by the neck until he be dead.”  He was reprieved and sentenced to be “transported beyond the seas for the rest of his natural life”.  His crime was “burglarously with force and arms attempting to steal two prayer books value fifteen shillings and sixpence, the goods and chattels of James Gattey and one other prayer book value two shillings and sixpence the good and chattels of John Hough Jackson”

On 17 April 1819, John Beale was appointed by the Governor to be Keeper of His Majesty’s Prison at Parramatta.

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