Stories of convicts on the First Fleet

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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:

Contents

Background

The List of convicts on the First Fleet contains basic information about most of the 775 convicts who were on the First Fleet when it sailed. [1] [2] For about 93 of these individuals useful information is available, often of such volume that it is not suitable for inclusion in the “Other information” column of the list article.

Only 18 of these individuals have their own Wikipedia article, but the stories of the others are both of general interest and an integral part of the early European history of Australia. A further 12 whose names are shown in “External links” have their stories in other online sources and are not included here.

Individual stories

Robert Bails

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1766Reading28 February 1785Death commuted to 14 yearsAlexander

Bails was convicted of highway robbery, value 2s. [3] Originally sentenced to death, the sentence was commuted to 14 years transportation. A police report describes Bails as "near six feet high, wears his own lank hair, pitted with the smallpox, thick lips and stout made." Bails had been discharged from his regiment of guards prior to his arrest. [4] A native of Yorkshire, Bails was one of 12 prisoners who escaped from Reading Gaol on 30 November 1784. A £10 reward was offered for his capture. Bails was found hiding with another escapee in a barn near Shinfield on 6 December 1784.

On 30 April 1788, Bails was charged with three others with the theft of meat and was required to pay the value of the stolen property. In October 1789, Robert was sentenced to 25 lashes for insolence to John Palmer, the purser of the Sirius. In 1801 Robert was listed as an emancipist settler at Port Jackson. By 1806 Bails was listed as a Schoolmaster and in 1820 as a teacher with 25 pupils.

Martha Baker

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1762London30 August 17867 yearsLady Penrhyn

Baker was convicted at the Old Bailey for highway robbery of a silver watch (40s), a watch key (1d), and a seal (2s), that occurred on 2 August 1786. [5] Martha's occupation was listed as servant. [6]

Baker married Walter Batley on 21 February 1788 at Sydney Cove. [7] She had previously been married to Thomas Baker in England prior to her transportation. In November 1789, Baker was sent to Norfolk Island on board the Supply with her husband. By 5 February 1790, Baker was recorded as Off Stores and sharing a sow with Samuel Mobbs, with whom she cohabited on Norfolk Island. On 7 May 1792, Baker sold two pigs to the Government for £2 16s. On 2 November 1793, Baker left Norfolk Island on the Britannia bound for India.

Stephen Barnes

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1765York9 July 17857 yearsAlexander

Barnes was convicted at York for stealing a Great Coat.

He served his sentence without any incidents recorded against him and then left the Colony aboard the Convict Ship 'William' captained by William Folger after he completing its voyage from England, bringing Rev. Samuel Marsden to Sydney in March 1794. The 'William' took the long road back to England, apparently William went whaling. She was reported off the coast of Peru, and then on the coast of Chile in November 1794. She returned to Britain on 29 November 1795 with 64 tuns of sperm oil, 57 tuns of whale oil, and 32 cwt of whale bone.

William Boggis

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1767Kingston upon Thames24 March 17847 yearsScarborough

Boggis, a fisherman, was tried on 3 February 1783 for stealing a sheet (3s), and was convicted with William Hubbard.

In August 1788 he received 50 lashes for gambling, in September 1788 he received 100 lashes for attempting to rape Lydia Munro, and in July 1789 received 200 lashes for stealing a shirt. In 1789 was sentenced to wear a label with the word thief upon it, and was transferred to Norfolk Island and given a plot of land after his sentence expired. He returned to Sydney sometime between the years of 1797 and 1801.

Joseph Buckley

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1748Dorchester16 March 17867 yearsCharlotte

Buckley was convicted at Dorchester of stealing a purse containing 43s on 16 March 1786. He was described by the wardens on the Dunkirk prison hulk as "tolerably decent and orderly." [8]

Buckley left the colony in 1793 on the Kitty as a servant to the surgeons Dennis Considen and Mr Cranston.

Margaret Bunn

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1762London26 April 17867 yearsLady Penrhyn

Bunn was convicted at the Old Bailey of stealing one linen handkerchief (6d), one cotton handkerchief (2s), and twelve halfpence (6d), and one shilling in money. [9] Her occupation was listed as servant.

She married Thomas M'Lean on 18 March 1788. He left her upon the completion of his sentence in 1791. Bunn died in 1825. [10]

Mary Burkitt

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1757London30 August 17867 yearsLady Penrhyn

Burkitt, alias Martha Valentine, a.k.a. Martha/Patience/Pacence Burkitt. Convicted at the Old Bailey of stealing one handkerchief (1s), one rule (6d) and six shillings in money. [11] Her occupation was listed as Servant.

She married James Davis on 13 February 1788 and both were sent to Norfolk Island on 2 October 1788. [12] [13]

Elizabeth Cole

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
1758Exeter20 March 17867 yearsCharlotte

Cole was convicted of Burglary in Exeter, Devon and sentenced to 7 years transportation. She left England on "Charlotte", but due to unruly behaviour was transferred to "Friendship" at Rio de Janeiro and then was transferred to "Prince of Wales" at the Cape of Good Hope, eventually arriving in Sydney Cove on 26/1/1788.

Elizabeth had a relationship with William ELLIS, a Marine Private on the Friendship and had the following child - Thomas COLE 9/8/1789. She was then sent to Norfolk Island on "Sirius" and arrived 6/3/1790

Elizabeth then had a relationship with James TUCKER and they had the following children - Sarah 7/9/1793 - Maria COLE 27/12/1795

Elizabeth then had a relationship with Richard Cornelius BURROWS having the following children - Ann BURROWS 8/5/1800 - John BURROWS 7/3/1803. On 3 September 1808, the Burrows family transferred to Hobart on the sailing ship City ofEdinburgh and were married by the Reverend Robert Knopwood on 25 February 1810 after cohabiting together for fourteen years. Elizabeth died 31/1/1821 of natural causes.

Jane Creek

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London17857 yearsLady Penrhyn

Creek worked as a butcher of birds and seller of feathers. Convicted of stealing and sentenced to seven years transportation.

Worked on Norfolk Island from 1790 to 1796. [14]

James Davis

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London8 December 17847 yearsScarborough

Davis was convicted at the Old Bailey of stealing from William Farrington on 28 October 1784 one man's cloth great coat (5s), one petticoat (10s), one gown (4s), one handkerchief (3s), one silk handkerchief (2s), two other handkerchiefs (2s), one pair of sheets (7s), two shirts (4s), two shifts (4s), one apron (2s), two aprons (1s 6d), two yards of white thread lace (4s) and one yard and a half of linen cloth (12d). [15]

Davis married Mary Burkitt in February 1788 and both were sent to Norfolk Island in October. [16] [17]

Mary Dickenson

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
1761Southwark8/1/17877 yearsLady Penrhyn

Dickenson was tried at the Surrey Quarter Sessions, Southwark, on 8 Jan 1787 and found guilty of stealing eleven waistcoats from the shop of Richard Marks, in the parish of St Saviour, Southwark, Surrey. She was sentenced to transportation for seven years. [18]

She became the wife of William Eggleton on 17th Feb 1788: theirs was the 15th recorded marriage in New South Wales. They had four children, although their infant son, William (aged 1), predeceased his mother in 1792. Mary died on 25 Aug 1799 and her remains were buried in the Old Sydney Burial Ground (now the site of the Sydney Town Hall and surrounds).

William Eggleton (alias Bones)

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
1761Kingston upon Thames23/3/17867 yearsAlexander

Eggleton appeared at the Surrey Lent Assizes together with another man in connection with the theft of clothing, a chest, and a padlock from a house. He was convicted for stealing goods (value 39 shillings), though not of breaking and entering. Only some three weeks after arriving at Sydney Cove, Eggleton married fellow convict Mary Dickinson (see above). In 1791 he was one of a group of 26 men, chosen by Governor Arthur Phillip as being the most reliable convicts, who established a farming district around the area of Prospect Hill to help feed the starving colony. William went on to pursue a career in farming, receiving a 60 acre land grant at Prospect Hill in 1793, leasing land at Petersham, purchasing land at the Field of Mars, and farming at Windsor. By the mid-1810s he was working on land granted to him in the district of Airds (60 acres behind the modern Macarthur Shopping Square at Campbelltown). The 1822 NSW Muster shows him as being employed on the property of his son-in-law Robert Lack. In 1823 he received another grant of land at Bargo (50 acres). [19]

Ann Fowles

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London16 April 17857 yearsLady Penrhyn

Fowles was convicted for the theft of gowns and petticoats (£2 16s). [20]

She was transported with her four-year-old daughter Mary, who was made a ward of the state and resettled on Norfolk Island. [21] [22]

John Hadon

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1756Exeter7 yearsCharlotte

Hadon, aka Haydon, Haidon, was originally convicted with Simon Burn for highway robbery and stealing 39s on 11 August 1783. [23] Hadon was part of the Mercury Mutiny in April 1784. There is no record of Hadon's trial following the mutiny, but he was transported once again. A report from the Dunkirk hulk describes Hadon as "troublesome at times". [24]

In January 1789, Hadon was ordered to receive 100 lashes for being absent from work for three days.

Richard Hagley

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1743Winchester2 March 1784Death commuted to 7 yearsScarborough

Hagley, aka Agely, was convicted at Winchester for assault and highway robbery (2s). [25] Sentenced to death, it was commuted to 7 years transportation.

Hagley married Ann Wicks in March 1792 at Port Jackson. In 1795 he was employed as a labourer in the Windsor area. In 1828 he was employed as a stock keeper in Pitt Town. Hagley died on 10 August 1841 at Windsor. [26]

John Hart

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London12 January 17857 years

Hart was convicted of stealing one linen cloth (1d), one rush basket (2d), 16lbs of mutton (6s), 3lbs of cheese (15d), 4lbs of butter (2s), 4oz of tea (15d), 2lbs of moist sugar (10d), 1lb of loaf sugar (8d). Hart was working as a porter at the time of his arrest and had recently been discharged as a Sergeant. [27]

Hart married Flora Lara/Zarah in February 1788 in Sydney. Hart was sent to Norfolk Island in February 1789. He died there on 3 January 1795.

Ann Inett

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1757Worcester11 March 1786Death commuted to 7 yearsLady Penrhyn

Inett, a Mantua maker from Grimley, was convicted for stealing 1 petticoat (20s) with force of arms. [28] Her death sentence was commuted to 7 years. [29]

In February 1788, Inett was sent to Norfolk Island where she lived with Philip Gidley King, Second Lieutenant in the Royal Marines and had two sons, Norfolk and Sydney. [30] They returned to Port Jackson in March 1790. In October King left alone for England. There he married his cousin, Anna Josepha Coombe and returned with her as Lieutenant-Governor of Norfolk Island, and later Governor of New South Wales. Probably at King's arrangement, Inett married Second Fleeter Richard John Robinson. In 1796 Inett's sons went to England with King. In 1800 Inett was given land in Parramatta where she and Robinson had an inn, the 'Yorkshire Grey'. [31] In 1820 she left on the Admiral Cockburn. Nothing further of Inett is known.

Benjamin Ingram

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1768London8 December 17847 yearsScarborough

Ingram, aka Ingraham, a pickpocket, was convicted for stealing one linen handkerchief (1s) on 8 November 1784. [32] Sentenced to transportation to Africa, he was ultimately sent New South Wales. [33]

He was sentenced to 100 lashes for stealing 2lbs of flour, and absconding in 1789. [34] Ingram was sent to Norfolk Island in January 1790. [35] He escaped in June and received 300 lashes. In 1792 Ingram was caught stealing and was sentenced to life on the island. On 26 January 1795, Ingram ended his life by suicide.

John Irvine

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1761Lincoln6 March 17847 yearsScarborough

Irvine, aka Irvin, Aderson, Anderson, Law, a surgeon, was convicted for stealing a silver cup. [36]

On the voyage and after arrival Irvine proved his worth as a surgeon. On 26 February 1790, his sentence was cancelled and all civil rights and privileges were restored, becoming the first convict to be emancipated. He was posted to Norfolk Island as Assistant Surgeon in March. In May 1791, Irvine returned to Port Jackson. He died in September 1795, before he received news of his formal appointment as Assistant Surgeon with a salary of £50 per year.

Edward Kimberly

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1765Coventry20 March 17837 yearsScarborough

Kimberly, aka Kimberley, was convicted of Grand Larceny.

He was a Night watch member in 1805. Described by convicts in his charge as sadistic, and "considered the convicts of Norfolk island no better than heathens," and that "women were born for the convenience of men". [37] He died in 1829.

Richard Lane

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Winchester2 March 17847 yearsScarborough

Lane, aka Lyne. was convicted at Winchester of stealing a watch and other goods (160s). [38]

Lane was sent to Norfolk Island from Port Jackson in March 1790. He returned to Port Jackson in March 1793. [39]

William Lane

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1756Chelmsford28 July 17847 yearsScarborough

Lane, a labourer. was convicted of stealing 320lbs of pickled pork, 8lbs of salted butter, 6 gallons of shrub, 6 gallons of brandy, 6 gallons of peppermint water, three 6 gallon casks and a brass cock (5s). [40] [41] Lane was sentenced to transportation originally to America.

In 1790 he received two thousand lashes for stealing 13lbs of biscuits. In 1796 he received a grant of 30 acres on the banks of the Hawkesbury River. In 1802, Lane conveyed his grant to John Palmer for £50. By 1806, Lane was mustered as renting five acres of land at Richmond Hill. In 1814 he mustered as a landholder in the Liverpool district. Lane died on 30 September 1815 in Airds, New South Wales.

Jane Langley

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
16 September 1761London29 July 17857 yearsLady Penrhyn

Langley, a tambour embroider, was convicted (with Mary Phyn) of stealing £5 9s 6d in September 1785. [42] During the trial, Langley and Phyn committed perjury with the aid of a smith who lived in their street, John Jeffery Smith. [43] Smith was later convicted on 19 October 1785 for the offence. At their trial, with the offence of perjury made clear, the Judge James Adair sentenced them to seven years transportation. She was described as tall with very curly hair, "quite a black complexioned woman, and her hair grows over her forehead all rough." [44]

Langley was pregnant at the time of her transportation. She gave birth to a daughter, Henrietta, in September 1787. Philip Scriven or Thomas Gilbert, the master of the Lady Penrhyn, is suspected to be the father. [45] During the voyage her young son Philip travelled with her. She cohabited with Philip Scriven. She was sent to Norfolk Island in March 1790 with Henrietta. She later married Thomas Chipp, a marine. The couple had 7 children together and left Norfolk Island in 1794. She died on 18 February 1836.

David Lankey

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1760London26 May 17847 yearsScarborough

Lankey, a tailor, was convicted at the Old Bailey of stealing one silk handkerchief (2s). [46] [47]

Lankey was sent to Norfolk Island in March 1790. [48] In June 1790 he was sentenced to 300 lashes for absconding. Lankey returned to Port Jackson in 1791 where he worked as a tailor for many years.

Flora Lara

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London21 January 17877 yearsPrince of Wales

Lara, aka Zarah, was convicted for stealing a Mahogany tea chest and money (5s). [49] She was described in the court records as "an evil disposed person".

Lara married John Hart in Sydney in February 1788. She was sent to Norfolk Island in November 1789, following John who had been sent in February of that year. She returned to Port Jackson some time before 1814, when she was mustered at Parramatta.

James Larne

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Exeter12 July 17857 yearsCharlotte

Larne, aka La Rue, was convicted for an unknown felony. [50] Reports from Dunkirk hulk state that Larne was "troublesome at times".

In 1791, Larne was on Norfolk Island. That same year, Larne received 50 lashes for theft. In November Larne was caught robbing a house and received 546 of 800 lashes ordered and had his ration of flour limited to five pounds per week as well, he was required to work for one month in heavy irons. In February 1805, James was listed in the Norfolk Island muster as a vagrant. In 1808, Larne went to Van Diemens Land on the City of Edinburgh. He died of exposure while intoxicated on 20 July 1816. His death was reported in the "Hobart Town Gazette" as "Jemmy La Rou, a poor maniac whose death was occasioned by being exposed to the severities of the weather in a state of intoxication. He was a poor harmless being."

Henry Lavell

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London11 September 1782Death commuted to lifeFriendship

Lavell, aka Lovell, an Ivory Turner and servant, was convicted for counterfeiting £10 10s. [51] He was defended by John Silvester, but was sentenced to death. [52] [53] Lavell's sentence was later commuted to transportation for life. [54] Lavell was involved in the Mercury Mutiny. [55] During his incarceration in the Dunkirk hulk, Lavell's behaviour was described as "in general tolerably well behaved but troublesome at times." [56]

In February 1788 Lavell stole food from public stores. Lavell was sentenced to hang for this, but the decision was changed to banishment and he was eventually confined in irons on Pinchgut Island in Sydney Harbour. [57] He was released on the King's Birthday in June 1788. In January 1790 Lavell was sent to Norfolk Island, and returned to Port Jackson in March 1793. In 1801 Lavell was listed as having returned to England after receiving a full pardon.

John Lawrell

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Bodmin18 August 17837 yearsScarborough

Lawrell was convicted of stealing a silver table spoon (5s). He was described as "sometimes troublesome" on the Dunkirk Hulk. [58]

Lawrell was sent to Norfolk Island in February 1789. [59] In August 1789, he could only receive 61 of 100 lashes ordered for gambling on Sunday. He received remaining 39 lashes in September. Lawrell returned to Port Jackson in 1791. In 1792, he established a farm at Eastern Farms. Lawrell died on 23 February 1796 at Mulgrave Place.

Mary Lawrence

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1754London26 May 17847 yearsLady Penrhyn

Lawrence was convicted for stealing one pair of silver salt spoons (3s), five silver table spoons (30s), two silver tea spoons (2s), one pair of tea tongs (3s), a silk gown (15s), two muslin gowns (20s), one muslin petticoat (20s), one pair of stone buckles (2s), a shagreen case (2d), a gold locket (2s), two gold mourning rings (4s), two silk cloaks (5s), one camblet cloak (1s), two linen table cloths (2s), from Lillias Warden, from Elizabeth Delayne one silk gown (10s), and one muslin apron (2s), and from Ann Pearson one satin petticoat (3s), one cotton gown (3s) and one dimity petticoat (2s) on 21 April 1784. [60] She was sentenced to 7 years transportation. [61] She was married to a man named John Lawrence. [62]

In New South Wales, Lawrence married William Worsdell in May 1788. [63] She died in Sydney on 17 May 1804.

Caroline Laycock

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London30 March 17857 yearsPrince of Wales

Laycock, aka Haycock, was convicted for petty larceny. [64]

Laycock had a daughter by a sailor, who was baptised in September 1788. She was listed as having cohabited with a number of people in New South Wales; Robert Hosborn, Robert Bruce, Mark Turner, William Shepherd, William Smyth and Henry Heatley. [64] In July 1789 Laycock was sentenced to 50 lashes for helping William Boggis steal a shirt. Laycock had a daughter by Robert Bruce in 1790. She also bore three sons to a second fleeter Mark Turner. Laycock married Henry Heatley in May 1810 but separated from him in 1814. She died in Sydney Hospital on 17 March 1830.

Jeremiah Leary

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Bristol30 March 1784Death commuted to 14 yearsFriendship

Leary was convicted with Thomas Jones for breaking, entering and stealing.

He was sent to Norfolk Island in March 1790 and received the order to run "the Gauntlet among the Convicts" for theft in March 1790. [65] [66] Leary died on Norfolk Island on 18 December 1807.

John Leary

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Winchester3 March 1783Death commuted to 7 yearsScarborough

Leary was convicted at Winchester of assault and robbery of 133s upon the King's highway with Joseph Morley, Francis Garland and Henry Roach. [67] Originally sentenced to death, Leary's sentence was commuted to 7 years transportation.

He married Mary Jackson in February 1788 at Sydney Cove. [68] Leary was accused of beating his wife and they were ordered separated for a period of time in 1789. Leary left New South Wales in 1791.

Elizabeth Lee

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London23 February 17857 yearsLady Penrhyn

Lee, a cook, was convicted for stealing, on 4 January 1785, 30 gallons of wine, called Red Port (£10), 12 gallons of other wine, called Malmsey Madeira (£12), 3 gallons of White Port (20s), 3 gallons of Malmsey Madeira (40s), 3 gallons of Claret (40s), 3 gallons of raisin wine (6s), 3 gallons of orange wine (6s), 3 gallons of Brandy (36s), 3 gallons of rum (36s), 3 gallons of Geneva (20s), one gallon of Arrack (16s), 424 glass bottles (£3 10s), 100 weight of tallow candles (50s), 2 linen stocks (4s), 2 pairs of stockings (5s), one gold ring with garnets (10s), and 2 crown pieces (10s). [69] Lee was defended by William Garrow at her trial. [70]

Lee was transferred to Norfolk Island in February 1788. [71] She left Norfolk Island in April 1793 aboard the Chesterfield, bound for Bengal via Port Jackson.

George Legg

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Dorchester16 March 17867 yearsCharlotte

Legg, aka Legge, a shoemaker, was convicted for stealing a gold watch and other goods (140s). A report from the Dunkirk hulk described Legg as "tolerably decent and orderly". [72]

In January 1789 Legg was sentenced to receive 100 lashes for illegally disposing of 2 chickens he did not own. In February 1790, he was sent to Norfolk Island. There he married Ann Armsden. Legg returned to Port Jackson with Armsden in July 1794. Legg was a Night Watch member. He died on 9 June 1807 during a storm, his remains were found in late July and buried on the 24th. [73]

Stephen Legrove

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London14 January 17847 yearsFriendship

Legrove, a waterman on the Thames, was convicted for stealing, on 9 December 1783, 118 Norwegian deal boards (£10). [74] Legrove was defended by John Silvester and prosecuted by William Garrow. Legrove was involved in the Mercury Mutiny in April 1784 and returned to England, landing at Torbay, where he was recaptured. [75] A report from the Dunkirk hulk describes Stephen as a "quiet" prisoner. He was later sent to New South Wales.

Legrove received 50 lashes in March 1789 for being absent from work. He was a Night Watch member in August 1789. Legrove left New South Wales as a free man on 28 December 1791. His ship, the Matilda struck a shoal and sank on its way to Peru. The survivors headed for Tahiti using four of the small boats. In April 1792, William Bligh made landfall at Tahiti in HMS Providence and rescued the survivors from Matilda, Stephen Legrove was among those taken on board. He was offloaded at the end of the voyage at Deptford, England, on 8 August 1793. [76] There is no trace of Legrove in records after this date.

Elizabeth Leonard

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1760London20 October 17847 yearsLady Penrhyn

Leonard, aka Leonell, a servant, was convicted of assaulting and stealing 4s from another prisoner on 23 September 1784 whilst being held at New Prison, Clerkenwell. [77] [78] Originally sentenced to death, Leonard's sentence was commuted to 7 years transportation. [79]

She married John Cullyhorn/Callahan in February 1788 at Sydney Cove. [80] However, she left Cullyhorn to live with another man named John Curran. In January 1805, Curran charged Leonard with stripping all movable contents from their home. She was ordered to work for the Crown for two years and sent to Van Diemens Land. She died on 20 May 1807, and was buried St David's, Hobart.

Amelia Levy

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Southwark9 June 17877 yearsLady Penrhyn

Levy, aka Mary Levy, a furrier, was convicted with Ann Martin at Southwark for stealing silk handkerchiefs. [81] She was described as Jewish.

In January 1789, Levy admitted to the theft of a white linen shift and was sentenced to 50 lashes spread out over three consecutive Saturdays. In November Levy received an additional 50 lashes for abusing Marine Sergeant Clayfield. In March 1790, Levy was sent to Norfolk Island. [82] She married William Knight at Norfolk Island, and left aboard the Francis for Port Jackson in July 1794. No further record of Levy or her husband has been traced since.

Joseph Levy

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London26 May 17847 yearsScarborough

Levy was convicted for stealing on 1 May 1784 one copper kettle (8s). [83]

In February 1788, Levy was charged with insolence to William Parr, a convict overseer. Levy was sentenced to 100 lashes but this was later forgiven. He died on 15 April 1788 at Port Jackson, and was said to be the first Jew to be buried in Australia. [84] [85]

Sophia Lewis

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London25 October 1786Death commuted to 7 yearsLady Penrhyn

Lewis was convicted for stealing on 22 October 1786 one cambrick handkerchief (1s), one linen ditto (1s), a coat (40s), a pen-knife (6d), a green silk purse (6d), two guineas (£2 2s), and 14s and 6d in money. [86] Lewis was alluded to being prostitute during the trial.

She married James Walbourne in March 1788 at Port Jackson. [87] Walbourne and Lewis has two sons, William and James, and were sent to Norfolk Island in November 1791. Walbourne was charged with assaulting his wife in 1800, and they were ordered to divide their property and live apart, each with one child. Lewis took James, and Walbourne took William. [88] Lewis did not accompany her husband when he left the colony for Ceylon in 1814. Lewis, having previously attempted suicide, ended her life at Cockle Bay near Dawes point on 3 December 1816. [87]

Samuel Lightfoot

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1753Exeter14 March 1785Death commuted to 7 yearsCharlotte

Lightfoot was convicted at Exeter for stealing 5 linen shirts and 5 linen handkerchiefs (81s). [89] Originally sentenced to death, his sentence was commuted to 7 years transportation. [90] A report from Dunkirk hulk notes that Lightfoot had behaved "remarkably well."

Lightfoot returned to England after his sentence had expired around 1792. He petitioned to return to New South Wales as a settler, with his wife. In February 1794, Samuel received a 30-acre land grant on the north side of the harbour opposite Sydney Cove. Samuel and his wife arrived in the colony in 1803 aboard the Calcutta. He went to Van Diemens Land in 1804. In April 1810, Lightfoot is recorded as an overseer in Hobart. He died there on 17 May 1818.

John Limeburner

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1743New Sarum9 July 17857 yearsCharlotte

Limeburner was convicted at Salisbury for stealing a waistcoat, linen shirt and stockings (20s). [91] Originally sentenced to death, Limeburner's sentence was commuted to seven years transportation. [92] A report from the Dunkirk hulk described John as "tolerably decent and orderly."

Limeburner married Elizabeth Ireland in September 1790 at Rosehill. Limeburner died at Ashfield on 2 September 1847, aged 104. He was the oldest colonist and last first fleeter in Sydney. [93]

Thomas Limpus

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
23 July 1760London10 September 1783Life

Limpus was previously convicted in 1777 of the theft of a handkerchief and sentenced to 3 years hard labour. [94] [95] Due to the rebellion of the American colonies, the British government were unable to find a place beyond the seas to send convicts sentenced to transportation, so Limpus was returned to dry land by 1780. On 8 October 1782, Limpus was before William Mainwairing to 7 years transportation to Africa for theft of a cambrick handkerchief (10d). [96] Limpus was transported on the Benkiasa and was landed at the island of Gorée on the west coast of Africa on 3 December 1782. [97] Many convicts died in Africa, and those who survived proved too unruly for soldiery and managing the region. Subsequently, transportation to Africa became seen as little more than tantamount to a death sentence. [98]

Limpus escaped on a British ship and returned to England in 1783. [99] Limpus was recaptured in London in October 1783. He was convicted for returning from transportation. [100] Limpus was found guilty of returning from transportation at his trial and sentenced to death, but was later commuted to transportation for life in America. [101] Limpus’ second transportation was bound for Nova Scotia. He was involved in the ‘’Mercury Mutiny’’ in April 1784 and returned to England. Limpus was recaptured in Devon, his trial for returning from transportation sentenced him to death once again but this was commuted to transportation for life. [102] Whilst held in the Dunkirk prison hulk, he was described as a "quiet prisoner." [103]

Limpus was sent to Norfolk Island in March 1790. In September 1796, he received a conditional pardon. He died in 1801.

George List

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c.1759London10 September 1783LifeScarborough

List, aka Lisk, a watchmaker, was convicted at the Old Bailey for assault on the King's highway (whilst aiding a robbery). [104] [105]

In July 1791 List established a farm on a 30-acre grant at Prospect Hill. He married Rose Burke in 1793 at Parramatta. In 1800 List was working a farm in Hawkesbury with William Butler. [106] List and Butler sold the farm in 1805 and List returned to Britain in July 1805 aboard the Ferret. [107]

Elizabeth Lock

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Gloucester26 March 17837 yearsLady Penrhyn

Lock, a servant, was convicted for burglary of 11s. [108]

Lock married Richard Morgan in March 1788 at Port Jackson. [109] Richard was sent to Norfolk Island in January 1790. Lock followed him in March. Morgan and Lock did not reunite on Norfolk Island, as he had started living with another woman there. Elizabeth began cohabiting with a marine, Thomas Scully. [110] Scully left Norfolk Island in 1795. Lock may have gone with him because the last record of her was that year.

John Lockley

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London22 February 1786Death commuted to 7 yearsAlexander

Lockley, a watchmaker, was convicted for stealing 12 sets of silver watch cases (£5), and one bag (1d). [111] Lockley was originally sentenced to death but was probably granted a last-minute reprieve. [112] He was defended by William Garrow at his trial.

In March 1790 he was sent to Norfolk Island. [113] In December 1807, Lockley went to Van Diemens Land. He drowned there on 16 April 1808.

Joseph Long

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Gloucester23 March 1785Death commuted to 14 yearsAlexander

Long was convicted at Gloucester for stealing one silver watch (40s). [114]

In October 1788, Long was sent to Norfolk Island. [115] In January 1789, Long received 12 lashes for being absent from work. In October he received 100 lashes for lending shoes he was supposed to have been mending. Long died on Norfolk Island on 15 June 1793.

Love was convicted with Elizabeth Bird for receiving stolen goods. [116] Love was a widow and about 60 at the time of her conviction. [117]

Ann Lynch

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
1746Bristol30 March 178614 yearsCharlotte

Lynch was convicted for receiving stolen goods. [118]

Lynch cohabited and had a son with a marine, Thomas Cotterell. In 1790, Lynch and her son were sent to Norfolk Island, after which she had no further association with Cotterell. On Norfolk Island, Lynch cohabited and married another marine, Thomas Williams. Williams received a grant of 60 acres at Creswell Bay in February 1792. In September 1793, Williams was listed as a constable in the Creswell Bay and West Point streams area and also worked as a miller. By 1814 Williams and Lynch were living together in the Sydney area, although Ann does not appear with him in the 1821 register. In September 1823, Lynch appears in the Muster but she disappears before the 1828 Muster. On 19 November 1823, a woman known as "Ann Williams" is listed in the New South Wales State Records as being admitted to hospital. [119]

Humphrey Lynch

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
New Sarum5 March 17857 yearsAlexander

Lynch, a tailor, was convicted for assault with a stick and highway robbery. [120] Originally sentenced to death, Lynch's sentenced was commuted to 7 years transportation.

In March 1790, Lynch was sent to Norfolk Island. In June 1794, Lynch is listed as living with Second Fleeter Ann Stokes on a farm at Queenborough, Norfolk Island. In November 1807, Lynch and Stokes went to Van Diemens Land. Lynch was granted 30 acres in the Clarence Plains region. On 26 February 1816 Stokes died. A newspaper reported that Humphrey had bequeathed some sheep to a daughter. She has not been identified and may have been adopted. [121] Lynch committed suicide by hanging from a tree on 31 December 1817.

James M'Donnaugh

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
1752Maidstone11 July 17857 yearsAlexander

M'Donnaugh, aka McDonaugh, a labourer, was convicted with Thomas Matson for the theft of a Leaden pipe (£2 or 40s). [122]

M'Donnaugh was sentenced in September 1790 to 200 lashes and to wear an iron collar for six months. He died in 1791, possibly suicide by hanging. [123]

Charles M'Laughlin

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1770Durham21 July 17857 yearsAlexander

M'Laughlin, aka McLaughlin, McLellan, McLennan, MacLaulin, [124] from Devon, was convicted at Durham for the theft of a purse (1s), containing 14s 6d.

He was one of the initial settlers of Norfolk Island in February 1788. In April M'Laughlin received 36 lashes for theft of rum, in May 36 lashes for "seditious and threatening words," and in August 36 lashes for stealing eggs. M'Laughlin received a fractured skull in May 1790 and was not expected to live. He was sentenced in May 1791 to 6 weeks in irons on 2 weeks ration of corn and water for stealing potatoes, but punishment ceased on 12 June. [125] M'Laughlin is marked as having left the colony in January 1793.

Francis M'Lean

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Guildford24 March 17847 yearsAlexander

M'Lean, aka MacLean, McLean, a labourer, was convicted with his brother Thomas M'Lean for burglary of items (63s). Originally sentenced to death, overturned to seven years transportation to America. [126] They escaped and were tried once again together for being at large before the expiration of their sentence.

In April 1788 25 lashes were ordered against M'Lean for refusing to obey an order, however, the punishment was forgiven. [127] Both brothers left the colony in 1791, their sentences having expired.

Thomas M'Lean

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Guildford7 yearsAlexander

M'Lean, aka MacLean, McLean, a labourer, was convicted with his brother Francis M'Lean for burglary of items (63s). Originally sentenced to death, overturned to seven years transportation to America. [126] They escaped and were tried once again together for being at large before the expiration of their sentence.

M'Lean married Margaret Bunn in March 1788. Both brothers left the colony in 1791, their sentences having expired. M'Lean left Margaret behind. [128]

James Morrisby

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London7 July 17847 yearsScarborough

James Morrisby was born on 23 January 1757 at Cawood on the River Ouse between Selby and York in North Yorkshire, England. The Morrisbys were wealthy and influential as Lords of Morrisby in Cumberland in the UK for 500 years until 1499. There were 17 knights in direct succession. [129] James was a blacksmith by trade. He then enlisted in the Scots Guards on 4 May 1776, aged 19 years. He was five foot seven inches tall with brown eyes and wore a black hat, red coat and white trousers while stationed at the Tower of London.

On 6 July 1784 at the age of 27, James was apprehended for attempting to remove an iron bar with a weight of ten pounds and value of 10 pennies or four pence (about eight cents) from a house in St Paul’s churchyard. [130] A day later he was sentenced at the Old Bailey in London to seven years transportation. [131] Two months later he was placed on the Censor hulk ship which held convicts at Newgate. He spent two and half years on the stinking hulk before being transferred to Portsmouth. On 27 February 1787 he saw the shores of England and his first wife and daughter for the last time, setting sail on the Scarborough as part of eleven ships of the First Fleet. He was one of 717 convicts under the command of Captain Arthur Philip and travelled via Tenerife, Rio de Janeiro and Cape Town, arriving in Botany Bay on a very hot January the 18th 1788.

Three months later he was sent to Norfolk Island, home of the famous pine trees, where he became a model settler and in July 1791 at the end of his transportation term became a free settler and farmer owning 12 acres of land. In November 1791, James married another convict Anne Brooks and in 1802 he became a constable. He left Norfolk Island as part of its forced closure aboard the Porpoise on Boxing Day 1807. [130] With his second wife and five children, and about to turn 50, he gave up a house, large assets and successful farm in exchange for 80 acres of virgin land at Clarence Plains east of Hobart in Tasmania, when it was known as Van Diemen’s Land. He called his new home Belmont Lawn which overlooked the beautiful Ralph’s Bay in the River Derwent. He died in 1839, aged 82 years, a wealthy and well respected farmer and has a large gravestone at St Matthews of Clarence Plains Church in Rokeby, Tasmania.

John O'Craft

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c.1750Exeter24 May 1784Death commuted to 7 yearsCharlotte

O'Çraft, aka John Oakraft, was convicted of stealing one pair leather breeches and money (80s) on 17 Mar 1783. [132] In March 1784 O'Craft was involved in the Mercury Mutiny, in which convicts rose up against the crew and returned to England. He escaped to Stoke, Plymouth before being recaptured. On 24 May 1784 O'Craft was sentenced to death for returning from transportation, but this was commuted to 7 years transportation on 9 June 1784. Reports from Dunkirk hulk was that he had behaved "remarkably well". [133]

In March 1791, O'Craft was appointed principal of the night watch at Parramatta. In August 1792 he established a farm on a 30-acre grant at Prospect Hill.

Thomas Oldfield

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. May 1763Manchester20 July 17867 yearsFriendship

Oldfield, a labourer and woolen dresser born in Skipton, was convicted (with his sister Isabella Oldfield) of stealing three pieces of cloth (1s) shilling. [134]

By March 1789, Oldfield was a member of the Night Watch at Port Jackson. In October 1793, Oldfield left the colony on the Boddingtons, bound for Bengal. [135]

Peter Opley

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Maidstone14 March 17867 yearsAlexander

Opley, aka Hopley, a butcher, was convicted for stealing one woman's printed gown (9s). [136] His religion was listed as Jewish.

In April 1788, Opley was sentenced to 100 lashes for theft, next January he was sentenced to 100 lashes for being absent 3 days from the camp and in March he was sentenced to 25 lashes for stealing bread. In March 1790 Opley was sent to Norfolk Island. Within a year, Opley had become self-sufficient and took himself off rations. [137] In 1793 he took out a three-year lease for land on the island and in 1796 he left for Europe. [138]

Thomas Orford

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London7 July 17847 years

Orford was convicted of stealing a man's hat (6d), a sheet (10s), a bed-gown (2s), three shifts (6d), ten shirts (4s), ten handkerchiefs (5s), and three children's aprons (6d). [139] Orford claimed that he came from on board a ship where "a man gave me a pint of beer to carry these to a house." The man said the items, "were to go into the country". [139] Orford was found guilty of stealing the property, but not the burglary. [140] He was listed to be transported to Africa. [141] Orford was described as "a black" who spoke broken English. [142]

He married Elizabeth Osborne in March 1788 at Port Jackson. [143] In April 1794, he received a 30-acre land grant at Bulanaming.

William Parr

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
Liverpool7 yearsAlexander

Parr's full name was Thomas William Parr, a known swindler. Aged 47 on embarkation, he was convicted of cheating a storekeeper.

Soon after arrival in the colony he married Mary McCormack, a convict who had travelled on the Friendship, another ship of the First Fleet. [144] [145] Despite his reputation for criminal behaviour, Parr was employed in the government store where spirits were issued, probably due to his ability as a clerk. In May 1788 he was flogged for misusing his position, and again in 1790 for theft. [144] By 1791 he had been granted 50 acres (20 ha) of land, and had made improvements as required by the terms of the grant. He was visited on the land by Watkin Tench, a government official and author, who found him to be a hard worker but not satisfied with farming work. [144] A research paper by the Australia and New Zealand School of Government (ANSOG) in 2017 reported that by 1793 he and his wife had saved enough money to buy a passage to England. [146]

It is believed by his unnamed biographer that Parr was employed as a sketch artist by John White, the Surgeon-General, to produce natural history drawings. It is also known that he did art work on commission for other customers. In 1814 he sued a publisher named Absalom West for £40 which he claimed West owed him for making four commissioned drawings of Sydney. While the quantity and quality of his work is unknown, and was criticised by some of his fellow artists, he is now accepted by Design and Art Australia Online as a member of the colonial art profession. [144]

A convict named William Parr, aged 39 years, arrived in the colony on the Fortune in 1813. He was a land surveyor and draughtsman by profession, and was employed on arrival as a mineral surveyor. In 1817 he took part in two separate journeys of exploration. [147] [148] [149] In some sources these activities have been incorrectly credited to the older Parr (who would have been about 76 years of age in 1817).

Ann Parsely

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London17877 yearsPrince of Wales

Parsley was sentenced to 7 years transportation for stealing.

In 1791, she bore a son to naval lieutenant James Furzer. She settled in Sydney on expiry of her jail term. [150]

Mary Phillips

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1768Taunton20 March 17867 yearsPrince of Wales

Phillips was convicted on 20 Mar 1786 at Taunton, Somerset of Break /Enter /theft value 18 shillings. Ordered to the hulk Dunkirk 13 Apr 1786. Sailed from Portsmouth 13 May 1787 per Charlotte, transferred at Rio to Friendship, transferred at Cape of Good Hope to Prince of Wales.

She had a son James McDonald in 1789 to Private Alexander McDonald. Had daughter Sarah Spencer Phillips in 1791 to soldier Thomas Spencer. Had son John Stevens in 1793 and daughter Elizabeth Stevens in 1796 to Private James Riley. Had daughter Mary Stevens in 1809 to convict Thomas Stevens. Died 22 Jan 1850 buried Longford, Tasmania.

Mary Springham

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
29 February 1768London25 October 17867 yearsLady Penrhyn

Springham, a hawker, was convicted for stealing cash and a snuff-box, value 51s.

She gave birth to 3 children in the colony and on went to Norfolk Island and she died there.

James Underwood

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1743New Sarum11 March 1786Death commuted to 14 yearsCharlotte

Underwood was convicted for stealing 5 sheep with intent to steal fat & kidneys (100s). [151] Underwood was described in a report from the Dunkirk Hulk as "tolerably decent and orderly."

This James Underwood should not be confused with the Third Fleeter of the same name who was a shipwright and became very successful in the colony. On 4 July 1788, he was marked as "Run from the Colony" and he does not appear in later records.

John Usher

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1769Maidstone17 March 17857 yearsAlexander

Usher, a jeweller, was convicted for stealing 5 yards of linen (39s). [152]

In March 1790, he was sent to Norfolk Island where he lived with Margaret Carter, a Second Fleeter. They had a son John Carter, born on Norfolk Island in 1792. Margaret died on Norfolk Island in 1796. [153] In October 1796, Usher was employed as an overseer. He returned to Port Jackson in 1801. No further records can be traced of him. [154]

William Vickery

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
c. 1762Exeter20 March 17867 yearsCharlotte

Vickery was convicted for stealing money (120s). [155] A report from the Dunkirk hulk described Vickery as "tolerably decent and orderly".

In March 1790, Vickery was sent to Norfolk Island. [156] In July 1808 Vickery left Norfolk Island as a Third Class Settler, bound for Van Diemens Land. There held 30 acres at Clarence Plains, where he died on 28 November 1828.

Charles Williams

Date of birthPlace of convictionDate of convictionSentenceTransport ship
London7 years

Charles Williams alias Christopher Magee / Christopher McGee worked, most likely as a convict, in the American colonies for eight years. On his return to London, he was again tried and convicted and sentenced to transportation. By then, though, the American colonies had declared their independence and America was no longer the destination for convicts under sentence of transportation, so Christopher alias Charles instead sailed with the First Fleet per Scarborough (1788) to a new penal colony: the Colony of New South Wales.

He married fellow First Fleeter Eleanor McCabe [157] and they went on to have two children: James Magee [158] and Mary Magee [159] . James died aged approximately 2 months old and became the first person buried at the Parramatta Burial Ground. [158] (St. John's Cemetery, Parramatta), and Mary drowned in the Parramatta River near Breakfast Point along with her pregnant mother Eleanor and a convict named Mary Green. Christopher buried his wife, daughter and unborn child in unconsecrated ground metres from his doorstep on his farm at Camellia, overlooking the Parramatta River. Christopher alias Charles had been the first to receive a land grant at Camellia. Later, he joined shipmate and neighbour James Ruse to become the first European farmers to work the land in the Hawkesbury. Christopher alias Charles was buried at St. Matthew's Cemetery, Windsor, in 1815, aged 52.

See also

Below is a list of convicts on the First Fleet, not included in this article, who each have their own Wikipedia article:

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Norfolk Island</span> Historical account of Norfolk Island

The history of Norfolk Island dates back to the fourteenth or fifteenth century when it was settled by Polynesian seafarers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">First Fleet</span> 11 British ships establishing an Australian penal colony

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 1400 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.

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.

Margaret Dawson, also known as Margaret Henderson, was a convict sentenced to transportation. She travelled on the Lady Penrhyn as a member of the First Fleet to establish a British colony in Australia. She had a long-term relationship with the surgeon, William Balmain, whose descendants still live in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Esther Abrahams</span> Convict transported to Australia

Esther Abrahams was a Londoner sent to Australia as a convict on the First Fleet. She was de facto wife of George Johnston, who was for six months acting Governor of New South Wales after leading the Rum Rebellion. They later married legally, in 1814.

The following lists events that happened during 1791 in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Convicts in Australia</span> Transportation of convicts to Australia

Between 1788 and 1868 the British penal system transported about 162,000 convicts from Great Britain and Ireland to various penal colonies in Australia.

John Caesar, nicknamed "Black Caesar", was the first Australian bushranger and one of the first people of African descent to arrive in Australia.

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.

James Squire, alternatively known as James Squires, was a First Fleet convict transported to Australia. Squire is credited with the first successful cultivation of hops in Australia around the start of the 19th century. First officially brewing beer in Australia in 1790; James later founded Australia's first commercial brewery making beer using barley and hops in 1798, although John Boston appears to have opened a brewery making a form of corn beer two years earlier.

Robert Sidaway, a convict of the First Fleet, was transported to Australia for stealing in 1788. Robert is known for being baker for the British Marines of Sydney and opening the first theatre in Sydney in 1796.

Charlotte Badger was a former convict who was on board the Venus during a mutiny in Tasmania in 1806. Taken to New Zealand, she was rescued by Captain Turnbull of the Indispensible, and eventually she returned to Sydney. In the intervening centuries, a number of writers have contributed to the fiction that she took an active role in the mutiny and she became known – erroneously – as Australia's first female pirate.

William Bryant was a Cornish fisherman and convict who was transported to Australia on the First Fleet. He is remembered for his daring escape from the penal colony with his wife, two small children and seven convicts in the governor's cutter, sailing to Timor in a voyage that would come to rank alongside that of fellow Cornishman William Bligh as one of the most incredible ever made in an open boat.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Hardy Vaux</span>

James Hardy Vaux was an English-born convict transported to Australia on three separate occasions. He was the author of Memoirs of James Hardy Vaux including A Vocabulary of the Flash Language, first published in 1819, which is regarded as both the first full length autobiography and first dictionary written in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Journals of the First Fleet</span> Contemporary accounts of the European settlement in Australia

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.

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.

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.

Frances Williams 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.

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