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SAMUEL
BRADLEY CONVICT 804/1824
1st count: Samuel was charged with
William Robinson and John Costellow with stealing, on 27th January
1824, 1 coat (value 40 shillings), 2 waistcoats (10s each), 8
handkerchiefs (1s each), 4 pairs of stockings (1s each), 4 shirts
(5s each), 3 yards of shirting (3s), 1 sheet (10s), 1 silk
handkerchief (5s), 1 handkerchief (5s), 1 Bible (5 s) and 2 books
(2s each) all belonging to John Spear: also 8 aprons (2s each), 1
cloak (20s), 2 frocks (5s each), 2 shirts (5s each), 3 gowns (6s
each), 1 silk handkerchief (5s), 1 handkerchief (5s), 1 scarf (20s),
1 sheet (10s) and 2 Bibles (5s each) all belonging to Josephus
Milner Smith in the dwelling house of John Spear.
2nd
count: Samuel was charged
with William Robinson with stealing from John Spear, 1 coat, 2
waistcoats, 8 handkerchiefs, 4 shifts, 1 silk handkerchief and from
J.M.Smith 1 cloak, 3 gowns, 1 scarf, 1 silk handkerchief (values as
for above items).
They all pleaded not
guilty.
J. Costellow was found not guilty on the 1st count;
but Samuel and William Robinson were found guilty and sentenced to
be hanged.
Ref: PL 26/94 Lancashire Spring Assizes Samuel had
his death sentence commutated on 16th April 1824. This was learned
at the Lancaster Record Office. Ref: "Orders for the commutation
of death sentences to "Transportation", Samuel Bradley sentenced to
New South Wales for Life"
Ref: DDCM/1 Assize
Papers Lancaster Record Office Samuel was born on December 1st at
Pendleton and baptized on December 29th at the Eccles Parish Church.
His parents were Thomas Bradley and Thamar Johnson, having
married at the Eccles Parish Church, on June 30th 1793. There
were also three girls in the family: Rachael baptized June 23rd
1799; Mary baptized April 2nd 1797 and Elizabeth baptized
January 12th 1794.
Occupation of Thomas was given as:
crofter or bleacher and later as a sizer working in the finishing
process of cloth.
In my research I did not find a baptism for
Thomas. The name Bradley is uncommon in the Eccles parish so maybe
he was born in an adjoining one.
However, I had more success
with Thamar's lines. 1768 September 10th Thamar baptized
daughter of William and Thamar Johnston at Eccles.
In 1764
June 26th William Johnston married Thamar Markland at Eccles 1737
March 5th Thamar baptized daughter of John Markland at
Eccles.
One can see the name Thamar goes back a long way in
the Bradley family.
Thomas Bradley was a worker in the large
cotton trade in Manchester. At the time of Samuel's transportation
he qualified as a dyer.
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Old Bailey
(England) Court Records
1829-1830 Index
1 | Index 2
| Index
3 useful for
finding the sentence a person received upon being convicted in
the court |
© Desmond Bloyd
2004 | |
Samuel was tried at the
Lancaster Assizes on March 10th 1824, situated in the stronghold of Lancaster Castle.
The castle itself dating back to the Romans time. The Romans founded a
formidable fortress here to the West of the great Roman road through
Barrow, behind Hadrian's Wall. In the fifth century the Romans were
recalled to Rome and abandoned the early castle. I visited the castle in
April 1988 and actually followed in Samuel's footsteps, up the spiral
staircase, from the dungeons into the dock, situated in the centre of the
courtroom.
The first thing one observes, in the courtroom, is
the large painting of George III who approved the sending of convicts to
Australia. The Crown Court is still regularly used. One can well imagine
the feeling of doom which Samuel felt, when the dreaded sentence of death
was pronounced. To be hung by the neck until dead.
We learn more of Samuel from
his transportation indent Transported for burglary-Samuel Bradley convict
804/1824. Goal Report-Convicted of felony before: Hulk
report-orderly. Stated this offence-Burglary: prior three months
sentence given at the New Bailey sessions, MANCHESTER. Status-single:
Occupation, Dyer. Tried March 10 1824 at Lancaster: Sentence: Life. Two
sisters and a brother alive, in Pendleton, in 1826. Father: Thomas
Bradley, Dyer. Worked last for Mr. Morton, farmer near Pendleton. This
offence Burglary: Prosecutor, Crop: Once three months Manchester:
Prosecutor, Busby. Weak eyes. Large scar just above wrist joint, inside
left arm. Scar on forehead high up above left eye.
Also on the
voyage to Van Diemens land Samuel's indent is marked: Sick in hospital, so
he must have been fortunate to survive the long journey out, in the
stinking prison hole where the convicts were chained in like sardines. He
arrived in Van Diemens Land on the convict transport
"Lady East" The vessel being of 590 tones, built at Calcutta, in 1818. The
master was Andrew Talbert. Ships surgeon William McDowell. The "Lady East"
set sail from England, via St.Jago on 16 December 1824. A total of 210
convicts embarked for the soul destroying trip. Two died on the voyage. So
in all 208 arrived to serve their sentences in V.D.L. A report was filed
against the ship's Surgeon-Superintendent, William McDowell.
The convicts experienced brutal treatment and
complained of gross ill-treatment and excessive punishment at McDowell's
hands. While the "Lady East" was berthed at Falmouth 15 convicts were
punished for having filed through their irons with an intention to escape.
Five were given 36 lashes, one 30, seven 24, one 18 and another 12. Samuel
wasn't involved in the attempt for freedom. The "Lady East" arrived at
Hobart-Town on 9th April 1825.
Notes on the transportation System
obtained, at Hobart, in May 1986, at the Tasmanian archives, Murrey
Street, Hobart.
The practice of banishing undesirables had a long
history in England, but it was not organized as a definite system until
the transportation act of 1717 (4 George 1 c. 11).
The prisoners
transported under this system were sent to America until the revolution of
1775 ended this traffic. The British Government was then forced to look
for alternative routesand ways of handling the thousands of felons
awaiting disposal in the hulks in Britain. Successive governments regarded
the building of penitentiaries as prohibitively expensive whereas
transportation seemed to offer many advantages: it was cheap and was
regarded as a deterrent to potential criminals; it removed those criminals
it failed to deter and at the same time assisted their reformation by
providing them with opportunities in a new environment away from their
criminal connections; and it also provided a labor force to assist the
economic development of new settlements.
Botany Bay was the site chosen for the first penal
settlement in Australia in 1788 and in 1803 convicts were among the
colonizers in Van Diemen's Land, first at Risdon and the following year at
Sullivan's Cove and Port Dalrymple. Transportation to Tasmania continued
until 1853 by which time more than 74,000 convicts had been sent to the
colony, of whom between 12,000 and 13,000 were women.
If a convict was well behaved, he was usually
assigned to a private settler as a farm laborer. Female convicts were
usually employed as house servants. A convict's family could be brought
out to join him at government expense if he was thought worthy of this
indulgence, and the family was given a small grant of land. However, minor
misdemeanors were frequently punished by flogging, time on the treadmill,
or for slightly worse offences, assigned to a road gang. For serious or
frequent offenders, the most severe punishment, short of execution, was to
be transported to a penal settlement. The most important of these was at
first McQuarie Harbour and later Port Arthur and Norfolk Island.
The archives office of Tasmania
holds many of the basic legal records of the convict department. These
records contain invaluable information on the main aspects of a convict's
life-on his conviction and arrival, assignment, petions for mitigation of
sentence, receipt of ticket of leave or pardon, arrival of family or
marriage, release and death.
I spent three days at the
archives searching the records for information on Samuel and two of my
other convict ancestors: Margaret Clark and James Butcher.
The
first mention of Samuel was his first marriage to Sarah Prosser on 18th
May 1830. The marriage certificate No. 315 states Samuel was still serving
time as a convict, a bachelor and arrived in V.D.L. aboard the "Lady East".
Sarah was a spinster. They were married by the senior chaplain William
Bedford. Neither Samuel nor Sarah could write. Both having to place their
mark, where they had to sign.
The marriage was solemnized in the
parish of Hobart-Town in the county of Buckingham. I was disappointed in
finding the record of the marriage first up and I was convinced I had
researched the wrong Samuel Bradley. The decision was made to search the
death register, and there was the answer: Sarah had died on 20th June 1830
at Clarence Plains. The death certificate states Sarah was 29 years of
age, arrived in the Colony as a free woman, and was a farmer's wife. The
Rev. R. Kropwood performed the burial service.
So Samuel must have
been a model prisoner and was rewarded with a small grant of land by
Lieut. Governor Arthur and was tilling the land.
On 7th April 1831 Samuel
received his ticket of leave.
At St.David's Church, Hobart-Town Samuel married
Marion Mortimer who was the daughter of George Mortimer and Mary Curnock
who lived in Brentford Middlesex. The marriage was celebrated on 29th
April 1833.
Their first child Charles George was born on November
15th 1834. Samuel's occupation on the birth certificate was given as a
Carter. So he was in business as a carrier. Quite evident he was a
responsible and hard working man.
Disaster then struck and Samuel
found himself before the police magistrate charged with, on the 18th July
1836, being a ticket of leave convict "Being in a public house after
hours". He was admonished. Marion was due to have her 2nd child. No doubt
mercy was shown and his clean slate would have been taken into
consideration.
Their second child Thomas William was born on 16th
August 1836. One can imagine the shattered peace of mind Samuel
experienced, when a further charge was laid against him. He had to appear
before the police magistrate again on the serious charge of , while being
a ticket of leave convict, receiving 1 ton of coal the property of the
king well knowing them to have been stolen. Receiving one ton of coal
would have been a serious matter.
Again luck was on the side of
Samuel and he was acquitted. A guilty verdict could have been warranted
the cancellation of his ticket of leave, the lash, chain gang or prison.
Lieut. Governor Arthur the ruling authority of V.D.L. was credited for
being extremely hard but also fair.
On 13th June 1837 conditional pardon No 1315 was
approved for 1824/804 Samuel Bradley. He served over 13 years as a
convict. Rosanna was born on the 16th August 1838. Anne Jane was born on
26th July 1840, on both of the births certificates, Samuel's occupation
was recorded as: Carter. My Great Grandmother Tamar was born at the Union
Hotel, Campbell St. Hobart on 10 September 1842, he was the licenced
Victualler of the Union Hotel, on the corner of Liverpool and Campbell St.
Hobart.
Ref. 1148/1842. Tamar
Bradley's Birth Certificate.
Nothing other than the above
is known of the Bradley's life in the young penal colony of V.D.L. Credit
must go to Samuel for surviving the harsh life of a convict. He did the
right thing and was rewarded for his diligence and became the owner of a
hotel.
The exact date that the
Bradley's packed up and left V.D.L. is not known. However, according to
Tamar's death certificate she spent the first four years of her life in
Hobart-Town. Charles George's states that he was in V.D.L. ten years,
Thomas William 12 years and Rosanna also 10 years.
I've heard the
family arrived Victoria approximately 1846 at Portland. There was a big family break-up between Samuel
and Marion and they went their separate ways. Marion went to live with
James Thomas Moore at Drumborg and had five more children. They were
married on 25-8-1873 after the death of Samuel on 10-5-1869, at Bullarook.
Marion and James were married at Heywood and Marion died at
Heywood on 14-11-1889.
An interesting observation was made in
regards to Anne Jane Bradley on the death certificates Samuel and Marion.
At the time of Samuel's death in 1869 Anne was alive and aged 26. When
Marion died in 1889, Anne was listed as being deceased. Most certainly a
mystery what became of Annie. Absolutely nothing to my knowledge is known.
There's different stories being put around concerning the family,
especially notable that of Marion marrying James Moore after Samuel's
death.
This statement cost me plenty chasing up Samuel's place of
death in 1850. Tamar was named after her ancestors. The families of
Charles George Bradley, Thomas William Bradley, Rosanna Ainsworth and
Tamar Turley are well known and documented. They were pioneers of the
Western District, Victoria.
In the early days there were a lot of
dry gullies to cross, sickness and hardship brought about by flood and
drought and they survived in the maiden bushland. Now, the dust of the
falling trees has settled the land cleared and tilled, the towns built,
one cannot but admire the spirit and industry of the early pioneers who
contributed so much in the making of our nation.
Written by
Desmond Bloyd, Great, Great, Grandson of Samuel Bradley,
6-5-1989. |