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P @ G McKenzie 7 Frank Freeman Drive Esperance W. A. 08.90712707 |
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cremated Springvale 19Jun 1956 |
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1st wife Griffiths buried St Kilda cemetary 4 children by Caroline Adelaide Griffith - Mary, Caroline, Lucy, David 1 child by Ann Leonard - Emma 7 Nov 1870 |
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1 NOTE 1819 burial register states of Fraddon, age 46 |
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Listed as being on First Fleet, arriving NSW in 1788. Capt. Arthur Phillip, R.N. was commissioned as the first Governor of New South Wales.He set sail on May 13th, 1787 from Portsmouth with 11 vessels. He arrived in N.S.W. with 717 convicts of whom 180 were women, guarded by 191 marines under 19 officers From the "LONDON GAZETTE", October 1788. 'Convicts transported to the new colony. Your Correspondent looks to our Readers and has ascertained as far as possible the names of those who have been convicted of crimesin the Country of England since 1783 and have been sentenced byHis Majesty's Judges to be sent to that part of New Holland known as New South Wales.' Listed as Mary Williams, London, 7 years. on Lady Penrhyn humpheries 1788 married 14 feb 1791, st philips church Sydney, COE, humphrey (in orgiinal docs) or ies he came out on Scarborough --------- http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bluegum/humphries1_2.htm Crime details: Mary was caught on 17 July 1788 for the burglary at the house of David Hoskin where a bundle of clothing, a pair of buckled shoes and some ribband were missing or stolen. Her trial on 19 July 1788 at Monmouth Assizes must have been quite an experience, however she was sentenced to life, at first by hanging to death, but changed to transportation for life. Apparently Mary was docmented to be at the county gaol, presumed to be either at Monmouth or nearby, she was stated to be at the age of 21 by end of May 1789. She was then transferred from county gaol to the embarked on the "Neptune" on November 1789, where they left England with the Second Fleet on 17 January 1790. The Second Fleet, quite well documented, had finally arrived Port Jackson on 28 April 1790 with a large loss of lives. It was not known how much Mary had suffered or what she had to endured on this journey. She only lived long enough to see her children grow a bit before she died, only a year after her husband Edward's death. The HUMPHRIES Family: A First Fleet convict, Edward HUMPHRIES/HUMPHREYS and his wife, Mary WILLIAMS, a Second Fleet convict started their lives and family in Sydney from 1788 and produced over a thousand descendants all over Australia now. Edward's parents were identified, by a cousin, to be William HUMPHRIES and Elizabeth HOLMES - the record shown them to be married at Chislehurst, Kent in England on 19th July 1764. However, any children of theirs, apart from our Edward, have not been traced to this date. Only the earliest five generations are shown. |
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