Frances Williams | |
|---|---|
| Born | c. 1760 Flintshire, Wales |
| Died | 1801 (aged around 41) |
| Partners |
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| Children | 4 |
Frances Williams (c. 1760–1801) was a Welsh convict who was an early settler of Australia and Norfolk Island. She is considered to be the first Welsh woman to settle in Australia.
Frances Williams was born in Flintshire, Wales around 1760. Little is known of her early life, except that she lived in the village of Whitford and was employed at the Holywell estate of the artist Moses Griffith. She left Griffith's service by the summer of 1783 and moved to Liverpool with her brother. According to the Dictionary of Welsh Biography , "several reasons have been suggested for this move, ranging from a need to find work in the city to the urge to escape from the clutches of Griffith, who had a reputation for inappropriate behaviour towards women". [1]
On the night of 1 August 1783, Williams broke into Griffith's estate, burglarizing it and stealing clothing. The following morning, the estate's maid found Williams's hat in a neighboring field and reported it to the local magistrate, Thomas Pennant, who also owned the estate property and leased it to Griffith. Pennant's butler apprehended Williams at the port of Parkgate in Cheshire with several items belonging to Griffith. The DWB claims that the items' value totaled two pounds two shillings and one pence, while The Leader claims that their value was one pound seventeen shillings and five pence. [1] [2]
Williams's trial was held on 2 September 1783 at the court of assize in Mold. The trial was overseen by Pennant, who convicted Williams and sentenced her to death by hanging. She was imprisoned in the Flint old gaol. [1] [2] On 24 August 1784, her death sentence was commuted to seven years of penal transportation. [1] [3] According to the DWB, "there is evidence to suggest that Pennant, who had been very prominent in securing the original verdict, felt a particular interest in seeing the back of Frances: the 'precious cargo' among 'the Fflint convicts' whom his acquaintance, judge Daines Barrington mentioned in a letter dated 25 January 1786 was no doubt a reference to her". [1] She was transported from Flint to Portsmouth on 26 March 1787, and was loaded on the Prince of Wales –one of several ships of the First Fleet that transported the first convicts to Australia – on 12 April. [2] [4] The fleet set sail on 13 May 1787, and arrived at Port Jackson in Australia in January 1788. [1] [5] The Leader considers Williams to be the first Welsh woman to settle in Australia. [2]
While on the voyage, Williams began a romantic relationship with Robert Ryan, a Royal Marine from County Armagh. On 16 July 1789, their daughter Sarah Williams was born in Sydney Cove. [1] On 5 March 1790, the family re-settled on Norfolk Island, with Williams and her daughter arriving aboard the HMS Sirius. [5] [6] Ryan was discharged from the navy in December 1791 and was granted 60 acres of land on Norfolk Island. [1] [7] Sometime around this period, Williams began romantic relationships with two other men, fellow convicts John Cropper and Noah Mortimer. [1] In November 1794, she and Ryan moved back to Australia aboard the HMS Daedalus, with Ryan enlisting in the New South Wales Corps. They returned to Norfolk Island aboard the HMS Supply in April 1796. [6] [8]
Williams had three more children between 1791 and 1796, a daughter whose father is unclear, a daughter by Cropper, and a son by Ryan. When Ryan again left for Australia in 1799, Williams remained on Norfolk Island, where she died in 1801. [1] [4] Her daughter Sarah died the following year, [8] and her remaining children were fostered by Cropper and Mortimer when Ryan left the island permanently in 1804. [4] [6]
Arthur Phillip was a British Royal Navy officer who served as the first governor of the Colony of New South Wales.
The First Fleet was a fleet of 11 British ships that took the first British colonists and convicts to Australia. It comprised two Royal Navy vessels, three store ships and six convict transports. On 13 May 1787 the fleet under the command of Captain Arthur Phillip, with over 1,400 people, left from Portsmouth, England and took a journey of over 24,000 kilometres (15,000 mi) and over 250 days to eventually arrive in Botany Bay, New South Wales, where a penal colony would become the first British settlement in Australia from 20 January 1788.
Vice Admiral John Hunter was an officer of the Royal Navy, who succeeded Arthur Phillip as the second Governor of New South Wales, serving from 1795 to 1800.
Scarborough was a double-decked, three-masted, ship-rigged, copper-sheathed, barque that participated in the First Fleet, assigned to transport convicts for the European colonisation of Australia in 1788. Also, the British East India company (EIC) chartered Scarborough to take a cargo of tea back to Britain after her two voyages transporting convicts. She spent much of her career as a West Indiaman, trading between London and the West Indies, but did perform a third voyage in 1801–02 to Bengal for the EIC. In January 1805 she repelled a French privateer of superior force in a single-ship action, before foundering in April.
Alexander was a merchant ship launched at Hull in 1783 or 1784. She was one of the vessels in the First Fleet, that the British government hired to transport convicts for the European colonisation of Australia in 1788. On her return voyage from Australia the British East India Company permitted her to carry a cargo from Canton back to Britain. Thereafter she traded out of London until 1809, when she is no longer listed.
The following lists events that happened during 1791 in Australia.
Henry Lidgbird Ball was a Rear-Admiral in the Royal Navy of the British Empire. While Ball was best known as the commander of the First Fleet's HMS Supply, he was also notable for the exploration and the establishment of colonies around what is now Australia and New Zealand. Specifically, Ball explored the area around Port Jackson and Broken Bay, helped establish the Norfolk Island penal settlement, and discovered and named Lord Howe Island.
Elizabeth Thackery is the last known survivor of the First Fleet, male or female, and was generally known throughout her long lifetime as the first female convict to land in Australia. Her husband, Samuel King, is thought to be the last male survivor of the First Fleet.
Elizabeth Underwood in Norfolk Island, New South Wales, Australia, was a pioneering Australian land owner who founded the village of Ashfield, New South Wales.
Captain Henry Waterhouse was an English naval officer of the Royal Navy who became an early settler in the Colony of New South Wales, Australia. He imported to Australia the continent's first Spanish merino sheep, whose wool became one of the colony's best exports.
Lieutenant Ralph Clark was a British officer in the Royal Marines, best known for his diary spanning the early years of British settlement in Australia, including the voyage of the First Fleet.
Francis was a 41 tons (bm) colonial schooner that was partially constructed at the Deptford Dockyard, England, and sent in frame aboard the Pitt to Australia to be put together for the purposes of exploration. The vessel had originally been designed for George Vancouver’s discovery voyage of the west coast of North America.
Peter Kenney Hibbs was an English mariner and a member of the First Fleet to Australia in 1788.
There are 20 known contemporary accounts of the First Fleet made by people sailing in the fleet, including journals and letters. The eleven ships of the fleet, carrying over 1,000 convicts, soldiers and seamen, left England on 13 May 1787 and arrived in Botany Bay between 18 and 20 January 1788 before relocating to Port Jackson to establish the first European settlement in Australia, a penal colony which became Sydney.
William Baker was a New South Wales Marine and member of the First Fleet that founded the European penal colony of New South Wales.
James Maxwell was an officer in the British Marines and member of Australia's First Fleet which established a penal colony in New South Wales in 1788.
George Atkinson, also known as George Atkins, was an English convict sent to Australia aboard a ship of the First Fleet. He was a chimney sweeper.
Stories of Convicts on the First Fleet contains information about a number of convicts on the First Fleet to the penal colony of New South Wales who meet the following criteria:
Elizabeth Rope (1762-1837) was a First Fleet convict sentenced in 1783 at Thetford Norfolk to 7 years transportation for theft. She was transported to New South Wales on the Friendship and the Prince of Wales, disembarking in Sydney Cove on 6 February 1788. In May that year she married Anthony Rope, a convict from the Alexander, and the family became pioneering settlers.