Saturday, March 22, 2014

Richard Webb Reserve - What's in a Name?

Our convict legacy is often found in geographical places name. For example Gladesville in Sydney, New South Wales is named after the convict John Glade; Redfern after William Redfern, mutineer, convict and surgeon; the Cotter Dam, Cotter River and Cotter Flats in the Australian  Capital Territory after the convict Garret (George) Cotter; and Thompson Square at Windsor after the convict Andrew Thompson.*

Richard Webb Reserve in West Pennant Hills in the shire of Baulkham Hills is named after Richard Webb. But who was Richard Webb? 

Richard Webb Reserve, Aitken Road West Pennant Hills.
 Photo taken March 2014

Richard Webb Reserve, West Pennant Hills - Deakin Place entrance.
 Photo taken March 2014

From the records of History Services NSW, Richard Webb was an English convict who was sentenced at Norfolk Assize to life on 20 March 1813, aged 17 years. His crime was burgulary. His occupation was a labourer.
  • He arrived at Port Jackson in the colony of New South Wales on 7 February 1814 in  the  convict ship General Hewitt; 
  • On arrival he was assiged to John Blaxland at Parramatta;
  • Webb was granted a Ticket of Leave. In the General Muster & Land & Stock Muster of 1822 he was listed as a sawyer living at Parramatta.  
  • 5 September 1826 He married Johannah (Hannah) Mocklar (nee Willdinson). They had nine children;
  • in the Census of 1828, Richard Webb was listed as a shopkeeper of Parramatta, aged 28 years, with a Ticket of Leave. His wife Hannah and son Richard were also listed;
  • He was granted a conditional pardon on 28 February 1834; and
  • an absolute pardon of his sentence on 14 October 1840.
After he was granted his conditional pardon, Richard Webb had a timber yard at Parramatta and then purchased land in the West Pennant Hills Valley. By 1840, he owned 260 acres of land  known as Webbs farms.

The bullock track which he made to connect his farm to Pennant Hills Road is today Aitken Road.

In 1989, in recognition of his success as a business man and farmer in the community, Baulkham Hills Shire Coucil named a reserve and playground in Aitken Road, West Pennant Hills, Richard Webb Reserve, after him.

Richard Webb died on 2 October 1881 aged 86 years and was buried in the historic St Johns Cemetery at Parramatta. He is interred in a family grave, with a distinctive white marble pedestal, in Section Two of the cemetery near the grave of John Blaxland.

Grave of Richard Webb, his wife Hannah Webb and other family members
at St Johns Cemetery, Parramatta.
Photo taken 16 March 2014

Headstone of the Webb family grave at St Johns Cemetery,
Parramatta.
Photo taken 16 March 2014

If you would like more detailed information on Richard Webb or are researching your own convict ancestor, you should go to the History Services NSW website at: 
http://www.historyservices.com.au/convicts.htm

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* History Services NSW has detailed records for all of these convicts. Go to the website  at: 
Blog prepared by Mary McGuinness 

All photos taken taken  in March 2014

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Old Sydney Town - the Memories

The recent fire at the site of Old Sydney Town at Somersby, New South Wales, evokes memories of this iconic historical venture in its heyday.


Early guide book and brochure of Old Sydney Town , printed in 1974.
Photo taken January 2014
Old Sydney Town was the dream of architect Frank Fox who wanted "to achieve a re-creation of the birth of our nation" . 

Fox purchased the land at Somersby in 1969. Old Sydney Town was officially opened by the then prime minister, Gough Whitlam on Australia Day, 26 January 1975. At that time it was a joint venture with the Federal Government and the Bank of New South Wales (Westpac).

Old Sydney Town  was the was a faithful reconstruction of Sydney town between the years 1788-1810. Based on extensive research, it reflected the life of the convicts, the military and the emanicipists of the era as well the infrastructure and buildings.



Official guide to Old Sydney Town - 1974
showing key to the buildings
Photo taken February 2014

Map of Old Sydney Town - 1974
Photo taken February 2014


View of Old Sydney Town from Google Earth 2013
showing the remaining structure of the
Brig Perseverance at bottom left.
I
Among its features were:
  • Convict hut of William and Mary Bryant;
  • Government Windmill;
  • Dawes Observatory;
  • Rose Stablers' Eating House;
  • HM Brig Lady Nelson.
Its most significant contribution was in making Australian history popular. Old Sydney Town was an invaluable resource for school groups to gain a general knowledge our early colonial history in Sydney. It was also a fun place for a family outing to enjoy the same.

Original signage at Old Sydney Town.
Photo taken June 2012

Family fun Day at Old Sydney Town - In the stocks
Photo taken May 1986
Coach ride at Old Sydney Town
Photo taken May 1986


Like similar historic villages (Australian Pioneer Village at Wilberforce, Lachlan Vintage Village at Forbes)  Old Sydney Town had a chequered history. It was leased to Warwick Amusements in 1987 and was subsequently bought by that group in 2000. 

Old Sydney Town was closed down in 2003.

In February 2013 it was reported that Peter and Michael Fox (sons of the founder) were in discussions with the park owner, Richard Chiu, to investigate a sustainable and viable future for the Old Sydney Town site [Daily Telegraph, 19 February 2013].

On a visit to the site in 2012, some vestiges of the original layout still remained.


A Redcoat at Old Sydney Town
Photo taken June 2012

View of Entrance to Old Sydney Town
Photo taken June 2012
View of Entrance to Old Sydney Town
Photo taken June 2012


View of entrance to Old Sydney Town after the fire
Photo taken February 2014

View of entrance to Old Sydney Town after the fire
Photo taken February 2014










































It was with a certain sadness then that we revisited the Old Sydney Town site after the recent fire in February 2014, realising that it had been robbed of a little bit more of its history.


The fight to save Old Sydney Town is not over. Maybe something good can come out of the ashes!

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If you are interested in researching Australian history, go to our website at: http://www.historyservices.com.au/

Blog prepared by Mary McGuinness

All photos taken and dated from my collection.


Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Carrington and Tahlee - Off the Beaten Track

Today the settlements of Carrington and Tahlee lie proverbially "off the beaten track" on the northern shores of Port Stephens, New South Wales.

In their heyday in 1830's and 1840's as headquarters of the Australian Agricultural Company, (AAC) they were thriving settlements.

In 1834 at the end of the term of Sir Edward Parry as Commissioner (1830-1834) of the AAC, "there was a busy settlement at Carrington of nearly 500 souls and a school  for 50 children." [Port Stephens Story published by the Port Stephens Historical Society 1980, page 16]. The School which opened on 17th May 1830 was the first in the Port Stephens area with Mr and Mr Mawson as schoolmaster and mistress. [Port Stephens Story, page 55]

On a recent visit we were able to tap into the colonial and some more recent history of the area:

1 Church of the Holy Trinity, Carrington


Convict Church at Carrington circa 1847 - Front view
Photo taken January 2014

Convict Church at Carrington circa 1847- Rear view
Photo taken January 2014
Built by convict labour in 1847, this sturdy stone church was the first permanent church established by the AAC at Carrington by Commissioner Phillip Parker King (1839-1949). 

It was consecrated as the Church of the Holy Trinity in 1851. With the relocation of the headquarters of ACC to Stroud, it was closed in 1862 in favour of St Johns at Stroud.It was restored in 1880 under the patronage of Robert Hoddle White MP and rededicated as the Church of St Andrew in 1888. It was finally closed in 1947 and is today a private property.

The church's bell was a relic of the convict days at Carrington. From an article in the Sydney Morning Herald we have the following description:

"An interesting relic of early the days is attached to the church; this consists of a bell made in England in 1829, and brought out by the company and used for the purpose of sounding an alarm when a convict escaped: with the departure of the convicts the bell was no longer required for this purpose, and it was attached to the church by means of a wooden belfry. Unfortunately the woodwork rotted and the bell fell, being cracked in the fall, and could not, of course, be rung....... "[Sydney Morning Herald, Saturday 29 December 1934].

At time of this article being written, the bell could be seen outside the entrance porch of the church, securely concreted to a plinth. But where is it today?

 2) Tahlee House

Tahlee House - January 2014. View looking up from walkway
Tahlee House situatedt 600 metres to the west of Carrington was originally built by convict labour in 1826 as the residence for the Commissioners of the ACC. 

It first occupant was Robert Dawson (1826-1828). He supervised the construction of a Boat Harbour below the house to protect small boats from the south westerly winds. Built by convict labour under the supervision of stonemason Daniel Ivey, it is still intact today.

In the 1830s, Sir Edward Parry made several additions to Tahlee House.  Captain  Phillip Parker King was the last Commissioner to reside there House in 1840s. He oversaw the relocation of ACC to Stroud in 1853.

Mr Frederick Manton purchased the Tahlee Estate from the ACC in !854 for 2500 pounds. The house however burned down in 1860 leaving only the walls standing.

Tahlee House was to come into it own again in 1880's following its purchase by Robert Hoddle Driberg White for 850 pounds. Robert White was a member of Legislative Assembly of the New South Wales Parliament for the seat of Gloucester (1882-1887).

He fully revitalised Tahlee House adding a billiard room and ballroom. He entertained the social set being well known for bringing guests from Sydney on his steam yacht, Kingfisher. The ground were beautifully landscaped. In 1886 White also bought a valuable Hele organ for house.

Tahlee House with distinctive cannon - January 2014
One interesting feature at Tahlee House is the six pounder cannon on the front lawn. It has the Royal Cipher of George III (GR) inscribed on it. It is one of several cannons that were on the Tahlee property which have casting dates of 1812 and 1819. It is believed that they originated  from the Dawes Point Battery (Sydney) on its dismantling in 1870s and 1880s. 


Cannon on front lawn at Tahlee House.
Photo taken January 2014


Close-up view of cannon on front lawn at Tahlee House.
Photo taken January 2014

Royal Cipher "GR" inscribed into the cannon.
Photo taken January 2014


3) Tahlee Bible College

In 1949, the Christian missionary group, Gospel Fisherman Mission (now Tahlee Ministries Inc) leased the property from Alfrey Beecher Stewart White (son of Robert). In 1959, the Mission purchased the property from Alfrey White after a large donation was given to the group.

The Tahlee Bible College commenced operations in June 1959.

In the early 1960s, the college purchased disused  buildings from the Greta Migrant Camp which has closed in 1960. These Included the picture theatre and ten accommodation huts. In 1963, eight Nissan huts each containing five rooms were purchased for twenty pounds each from the Australian Army at Rutherford.


Picture theatre, now admimstration building at Tahlee Ministries
 January 2014
Accommodation huts at Tahlee
January 2014
Nissan hut at Tahlee - January 2014
Tahlee Bible College is heritage listed on the NSW State Heritage Register.

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The Australian Agricultural Company established in 1824 was a very important part of the settlement of Carrington and Tahlee from 1826-1849.

The charter of the company encompassed the grant of one million acres of land at Port Stephens New  South Wales. This was contingent upon certain conditions being met, including the employment of a large number of convicts.

History Services NSW in its Convict Database has records of: 
  • 1225 convicts in the Port Stephens district, of whom
  • 1096 were assigned to the Australian Agricultural Company.
    If you are researching a convict ancestor in the Port Stephens area, you should go to our website at: http://www.historyservices.com.au/convicts.htm

    *********************************************************************************
    Blog prepared by Mary McGuinness

    All photos taken taken  in January 2014

    Tuesday, January 21, 2014

    Under the Southern Skies - A Rich History of Astronomy in the Colony of New South Wales

    Under our clear southern skies, there is a rich history of observing the stars in the Colony of New South Wales: 

    Dawes Point Observatory - 1788

    At the time of the arrival of the First Fleet in Sydney Cove in 1788, astronomical observations were vital to navigation and meteorology. 

    No time was lost in giving Lieutenant William Dawes the task of setting up the Colony's first observatory. He did this In April 1788, on the site of what is today Dawes Point, under the southern pylon of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. The point was named Point Maskelyne after the Astronomer Royal who had supplied Dawes with books and instruments to carry out his work.

    Site of William Dawes' Observatory at Dawes Point, Sydney
    [photo taken September 2012]
    Extract from signage at Dawes Point
    showing Dawes' correspondence during the
    establishment of the Observatory.
    [photo taken September 2012]
    Dawes lived on site at the observatory, and it was here that he befriended the Cadigal woman, Patyegarang, and recorded the local aboriginal language.

     After Dawes left Australia in 1791 the Observatory fell into disuse.

    Parramatta Observatory - 1822

    It was not until the appointment of Thomas Makdougall Brisbane as Governor New South Wales in November 1821, that Sydney was to get its next observatory.

    Brisbane was a keen astronomer and privately built an observatory in Parramatta Park, next to Government House.*  It was completed in March 1822. He employed two astronomers, Carl Rumker and James Dunlop who did some very active work.

    Obelisk in Parramatta Park marking the founding
      of Governor Brisbane's Observatory on 2 May 1822.
    [photo taken February 2013]











    Wording on obelisk
    [photo taken February 2013]



    Signage giving information on the Observatory
    [photo taken February 2013]


    Signage showing plan and elevation of the Observatory c 1822
    [photo taken February 2013]

    When Governor Brisbane left the Colony in December 1825, he sold his instruments and books to the Government which then took over the control of the Observatory.

    Carl Rumker was appointed as New South Wales' first Government Astronomer (1827-1830). James Dunlop succeeded him in 1831, holding the position until 1846. By this time activity had declined and the Observatory was in a state of disrepair.

    The building was demolished in 1847 except for two stones which still stand in Parramatta Park. The instruments were put into storage for use in a future facility.

    Remains of the original transit circle telescope stones used inside the observatory domes.
    .Parramatta Park - February 2013
    [ Conservation in progress]
    Sydney Observatory 1858

    Plans were then made for a time ball observatory in Sydney. However, Governor General Sir William Denison who arrived in New South Wales in January 1855, saw an observatory as an important addition to the Colony. He commissioned  the Colonial Architect, Alexander Dawson to draw up plans for a completely new observatory at 'Observatory Hill' at Millers Point.

    Completed in 1858, the Sydney Observatory is an impressive sandstone building in Italianate style. At that time, it comprised a four-storey tower for the time ball, a dome to house an equatorial telescope, a room with long narrow windows for a transit telescope, an office and a residence for the astronomer. A western wing was added in 1877 with office and library space and a second dome for another telescope**.

    Facade of Sydney Observatory
    [Photo taken June 2011]


    View of Observatory looking south, showing time ball tower.
    [Photo taken June 2011]
    Telescopic dome, Sydney Observatory
    [Photo taken June 2011]

    Initially the main function of the  Sydney Observatory was time-keeping with the installation of the time ball. This is still raised today to the top of its post and dropped exactly at 1.00pm.

    With the appointment of Henry Chamberlain Russell as Government Astronomer (1870-1905), the Sydney Observatory gained international recognition. Russell was a competent administrator and scientist. Initially he made use of some of the instruments from Parramatta but was successful in gaining funding for further instrumentation including a new Schroeder telescope to be housed in an enlarged Muntz metal dome. He introduced weather maps in daily newspapers in 1877.

    His most significant project was the commitment of the Observatory to theAstrographic Catalogue, a project of the 1887 Congress of International Astronomers  to photomap the night skies of the Southern Hemisphere. 

    With the brief to map the stars of the Sydney sky, this project would take up the  resources of the Observatory for some eighty years till the 1960's and subsequent publication in 1971.


    Pennant Hills Observatory - 1898

    Site of Observatory Park, Pennant Hills
    [Photo taken February 2013]
    One requirement for the Astrographic Catalogue was a clear sky away from the interference city lights. Henry Russell was successful in moving the astrographic telescope for the project to a site, known as Red Hill on the corner of Pennant Hills and Beecroft Roads at Pennant Hills. 

    Construction of an Observatory on the site was completed in 1898. It was operated for 32 years by James Short, an astronomical photographer.


    Photo showing Pennant hills Observatory circa 1890
    [Source: TROVE - Powehouse Museum Collection]
    In 1931, the impending retirement of James Short and lack of funding during the Depression years saw the closing of the facility and relocation of the telescope back to the Sydney Observatory.

    Much good work had been accomplished at Red Hill.  A memorial has been erected indicating where the telescope stood.


    Memorial at Observatory Park, Pennant Hills
    [Photo taken February 2013]



    Wording on memorial plaque
    [Photo taken February 2013]


    The Sydney Observatory isheritage listed on the NSW State Heritage Register.

    It remained in continuous use as an Observatory until 1982, when it was was passed to the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, now the Powerhouse  Museum. 

    Today the Observatory is maintained as a museum and public observatory with an important role in astronomy education and public telescope viewing.

    Some of the more interesting exhibits include the Parramatta Observatory's original collection of instruments which is largely intact.

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    *History Services NSW in its Convict Database as a record of one, Daniel Jackson ( per 
    Somersetshire, arriving at Port Jackson on 16 October 1814) as having been employed in 1824 as a "Stonemason at the Observatory at Government House and when that work was completed he had the Governor's permission to be exempt from Government duty and to work for himself."

    If you would like further information on Daniel Jackson, or if you are researching a convict ancestor go to our website at :


    **Historyy Services NSW in its Government Contract and Contractors Database has seventeen records of government contracts being awarded for work on the Sydney Observatory during the period 1862 to 1900 including:

    • 1868 to David Jones & Company - for carpets and blinds for Sydney Observatory;
    • 1874 to T.R.Robinson - for supply and erection of Muntz Metal Dome for Equatorial  Tower, Sydney Observatory;
    • 1877 to Goddard & Pitman - for additions to Sydney Observatory;
    • 1880 to Stewart & Smith - for additions to residence at Sydney Observatory;
    • 1896 to Shuker & Males - for building fireplaces, repairs,  Messenger Quarters, Sydney Observatory;
    If you would like further information, go to our website at:


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    Blog prepared by Mary McGuinness - January 2014

    Thursday, January 16, 2014

    Convict Relics - Where are they now?

    Using the resources of TROVE (online information service of the National Library of Australia) it is interesting to find newspaper articles relating to relics from the convict days of our history. In particular:

    Copper Coins At Emu Plains
    "There has come into my possession this week half a dozen copper coins which were ploughed up by the gardner in the orchard of Mr L Chapman, of Emu Plains, near the spot where the whipping-post once stood in the old penal station established by Governor Macquarie, west of the Nepean River............." 

    Coin at Epping
    "During excavations on the site of the new Catholic church-school at Epping, a relic of the old days was found in the shape of a coin dated 1799. In the early days a convict sawpit at this spot supplied timber to Sydney".

    Stone at Curzon Hall, Marsfield

    Curzon Hall as it stands today - January 2014
    "Reminiscent of old medieval castles, it was entirely built from second-hand material, and such was the skill of the workmen that its turreted towers and wonderful carvings are the relics of bygone days. The main portion of stone is taken from old convict-built cottages.........."

    Waverley House
    "One of the most notable of the old landmarks of Sydney that are fast disappearing in order to make way for modern buildings, is Waverley House. For over three quarters of a century this relic of early days, which was erected as a mansion for Mr Barnet Levy in 1827 has occupied a commanding site on the Old South Head Road near the Bondi Junction. The house was constructed at a period when building was brisk, and when convict labour was largely availed of by the early residents  of Sydney........

    The land having been recently sold in building allotments, the old landmark has been demolished. In the pulling down process several interesting relics of "convict" days were unearthed. These included portion of a prisoner's leg-irons and chain, a convict's chisel (with name stamped on), old coins, a gold brooch and other articles...."
    Leg Irons at Lithgow

    Example of Convict Leg-irons
    "A pair of leg-irons, a relic of the convict days, has been found by the postmaster at Tarana. They had been lying so long in the roots of a tree that they had been worn with rust and exposure. They had evidently been discarded by a convict as they were filed through. The irons now weigh four pounds. It is suggested that the convict escaped from Glenroy, on Cox's River, where a stockade was built in the twenties of last century." 

    "A relic of the convict days, portion of a leg-iron, has been found in the bush near Hassan Walls look-out. A stockade was maintained on the Great Western-road below Hassan Walls, and it is suggested that the leg-iron was cast off by an escapee. The discovery was made by Mr J Griffiths  who came upon the relic half-buried in the earth." 

    "A leg-iron, rusted and broken, has been found on the ridge east of Hassan Walls Lookout. It is assumed that it was cast off by a runaway convict,one of a gang which constructed the road to Bathurst in 1832. One link is broken, and the ring round the ankle has been altered in shape to allow the convict to slip his foot through.

    A pair of leg-irons, excellently preserved, is in the possession of Mr Charles Mathers, of Lithgow, whose son found them on the mountain-side near Hartley Vale. They were bound with calico, which crumbled at a touch."  
    [Sydney Morning Herald, Monday 28 March 1938 page 6]

    Convict Relics on the road over the Blue Mountains

    "A relict of the days when convicts were constructing the road over the Blue Mountains - a round ball of iron attached to an iron bar, such as were used to fasten the legs of convicts to prevent them running away - was unearthed yesterday by the Blackheath postmaster (Mr. E.Kleist) in the yard of the Blackheath post office. The ball weighs 12 lb.

    Another convict relic is a pair if leg-irons whihc are embedded in teh fork of a gum tree in Blackheath Municipal Gardens...."

    "Councillor W. J. Lees of Mt. Victoria, makes a hobby of collecting relics of convict days. He has obtained a number of implements used in the construction of the Great Western Highway, including a rake employed to level the surface. He has a private museum, and adds to it as opportunity offers."
    [Sydney Morning Herald, Monday 22 June 1936 page 7]

    Convict Chains at West Maitland 
    "Relief workers leveling the old banks at West Maitland have found several interesting relics of the early days. About a month ago a man dug up a set of old chains which were thought to be those of the convict days, This was followed by the discovery of a lock 15 feet below the surface, which West Maitland's Deputy Sheriff (Mr O.S. Morisset) identified as a lock of the type used to chain convicts to ring bolts. He said it might have been dropped when the man was released. It was at least 100 years old."

    Convict Handcuffs
    Example of convict handcuffs
    "A workman's pick unearthed an old, rusty, pair of handcuffs on Wednesday, at the corner of Liverpool and Sussex streets, where the City Council excavation work is in progress. It is surmised that the handcuffs were part of the old military barracks and convict prison which occupied  an adjacent site in the early days of Sydney."

    Leg Irons At Goulburn
    "A few days ago a relic of the convict days, in the shape of a pair of leg-irons weighing 8lb., was unearthed near the soil by a man who was digging near Old Sydney road near the city.
    There are the remains of an old stockade [Towrang] a short distance away."

    Convict Stones at Parramatta
    "Mr. W.Hulks, vice-president of the Parramatta sub-branch of the Returned Soldiers' League, said the building in Macquarie-street,Parramatta which is being remodelled for a soldiers' hall, was erected nearly 120 years ago. It was used as officers quarters for the regiments stationed at Parramatta. Subsequently it became a private school, known as Linden, and still later a laboratory for Meggitt's Ltd.

    Beneath the building is a deep dungeon-like cellar, the walls of which are sandstone blocks two feet thick. This was evidently used as a prison, for the walls contain several scarcely legible markings............ 

    Some of the stones bear the broad arrow marks of the convicts, denoting it was built  by prisoners, and the nails used throughout the building are of the old hand-made square variety........"

    Leg Irons at West Dapto
    "A relic of the days of old has been unearthed at West Dapto by Mr Percy Harvey. It consisted of rust-eaten leg-irons apparently 80 years old. ..............They were unearthed among the debris of the old West Dapto quarry. It was here in 1838-39 that the quarry near Mr Harris's was in operation, and it was here the stone was hewn by convicts for the foundation of the bridge ar Brownsville. In 1840 or 1842 Governor Gipps caused the prisoners to be removed, when the stockades at Brownsville, Unanderra then called Charcoal, Figtree and the Cross-roads were demolished."

    Dripstone at Windsor
    " The Fitzroy Hotel, at Windsor, has a quaint relic of the early days of New South Wales. It is a huge earthen bowl known as a dripstone. Encased in a cedar cabinet, a product of convict labour, as is the stone itself, the bowl is an object of curiosity to the many tourists who visit the hotel................... 
    The stone was presented to Governor Macquarie, by a convict, 120 years ago."
    Cooking Pot at Glenhaven
    Convict Cooking Pot
    SMH article 28 December 1940 {source TROVE}
    "Tilling the land on his orchard and poultry farm at Glenhaven News South Wales, Mr S. Yarrow, a retired Boer War Veteran, unearthed a relic of Australia's early convict days-an iron cooking pot. Attached to the handle of the pot was an old rusted handcuff.

    Apparently the hapless convict cook had been attached to the pot whilst performing his duties.....
    [Sydney Morning Herald, Saturday 28 December 1940, page 5] 

    Underground Cells At Gosford
    "Until a few years ago, the quaint building depicted below, standing on an old estate [Wyoming[ about half a mile from Gosford, was an object of great interest to visitors. It was originally owned by Francis Hely [Frederick Augustus Hely], a superintendent of convicts, who employed large numbers of prisoners on his estate.

    Nearby an old building used for their accommodation is still standing, strongly built of stone quarried in the locality. What the real object of the former was remains uncertain, but an inspection by the writer some years ago revealed a number of cells below the ground which could have been used for only one purpose..............

    The old building has vanished, the site being marked by a lofty Norfolk Island pine. "
    [Sydney Morning Herald, Saturday 20 January 1940].

    Carlton Hotel Foundations
    "The Old Carlton hotel, at the corner of Short-street and Carlton-parade, Carlton, is at present being converted into modern flats and shops. In the rebuilding operations it was found necessary to remove part of the foundations, and two stones were found with convict markings on them........


    These newspaper articles are so interesting to read because:
    • they illustrate the geographic spread of convicts in the first decades of the Colony of New South Wales and how important their contribution actually was to the establishment of our settlements and infrastructure.  
    • having been written only one hundred or so years after the peak of convict activity in NSW, they reflect attitudes to the then convict heritage. The convict finds were obviously significant. 
    The emphasis on the convicts as being "prisoners" with the descriptions of the leg-irons,  handcuffs and cells is interesting. It should be noted that at the turn of the twentieth century,  there were still some living convicts in Australia.

    History Services NSW has extensive convict records for research purposes.
      If you are researching a convict ancestor, you should go to our website at: http://www.historyservices.com.au/convicts.htm

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      Blog prepared by Mary McGuinness

      I refer you to Trove's newspaper collection which includes digitised historic and modern newspapers which are accessible on line, as well as newspapers in microform and paper formats. Go to the website:
      http://trove.nla.gov.au/