[ Voyage Details | Passenger Diary | Passenger List ]
The WARRIOR was a 485 tonne wooden-hulled, copper-sheathed sailing ship which was launched at Chepstow in 1828. She sailed from London and Portsmouth on October 23, 1829 and travelled via St Jago and the Cape of Good Hope to the Swan River Colony, Hobart Town and Sydney. Captain John Stone was in command and she carried 27 officers and 4 guards as well as her 166 passengers.
Ian Richardson's Log of Logs indicates that there were quarrels between Scottish and Irish migrants early on in the voyage and one trouble maker, who is listed later on, was put ashore at St Jago. There was further alarm on November 11 when an "armed and likely pirate schooner" kept the WARRIOR company near the Canary Islands.
Of the 166 passengers, 96 were thought to have disembarked in the Swan River Colony when the WARRIOR berthed in Fremantle on March 12, 1830 [CSR 5/130]. No officially published passenger list has been located for the voyage and one of the aims of this project was to assemble such a LIST.
A chronological account of the voyage has been assembled as well. The narrators are JAMES TURNER and CHARLES BUSSELL and the following diary accounts and passenger details have been gathered from these publications:
In brief, the diarists were:
JAMES TURNER - Sunday 18th October. (1829, sailing from Portsmouth). I do not know how we shall get on for everything on board is so crowded and such confusion we have scarcely room to stir. My own cabins are nearly in total darkness and filth and dirt in every hole and corner. I must have a general turnout of all things in our cabins and if possible to get a few more inches of space so as to turn round without breaking my shins and I really now begin to find a great advantage in being a very little fellow with a very little wife and children, and yet our principal cabin is nearly three times the size of the others. At present our living is as good as I could expect and wish it may continue so, excepting our wine which is very indifferent. There is only two sorts on board- a light Tenerifi and a mixed cape Madeira. The company I have just had a taste of and am not quite so quick in coming to a judgement and must leave them to a future day. Mr Graves is leaving us today and I sent you a letter by him which I have just written. I am extremely obliged to him for his kindness in accompanying my family from Gravesend to here. He is very desirous of going forward with us and says he thinks he will follow us next year. Mr. Boot arrived on board with runaway Lacey who had soon found his way to London, but the boy seemed to be so alarmed or so averse to the sea after the little taste he has had from London to this port that there is no persuading him and I find he has made out various stories I made up my mind not to force him to go, but I am very sorry on Nancy’s account, as her kindness in assisting him to go out in the manner he would have done I think would turn out a most fortunate thing eventually for him. And he seemed so very anxious for it that I thought he would have been the last to have run away I have been obliged to go three times to shore today all through him, and Mr. Graves and myself having unfortunately missed each other. They have been very busy today getting on board two horses and two cows with several sheep and pigs, there is various reports on board that there is not sufficient Food and Water on board to last us to the Cape and it is in contemplation to make a complaint to the legal authorities.
JAMES TURNER - Monday 19 October. One of the horses is a spirited stallion and he has been stamping and knocking himself about to our great annoyance, he being opposite our cabin, but fortunately not over our heads, but the sound seems as though it was. The day has been fine, but the wind still in the west, which is against us. There is some arrangements made respecting the Captain having the management of the supply of water and provisions instead of Mr Sempill, whom everyone is I believe dissatisfied with, excepting some of his own party and countrymen, for they are all Scotch, several more passengers came on board today and it is impossible that we can all sit down at Table for our meals.
JAMES TURNER - Tuesday 20 October. Today my son Thomas and myself have been employed the whole of the day until five o’clock, which is our dinner hour, in moving and stowing the things in our cabins, but are still in sad confusion. We had this evening a few visitors who sang and played on the piano, there are several ladies and gentlemen tolerably proficient. Mrs Rutt the doctor’s lady whom you and I saw in London plays extremely well, and accompanies it with her voice, also another lady a Miss Saunders and Mr Green a medical gentleman plays and sings very chastely and a Mr Northcote a very merry humorsome companion but the gentlemen are rather too wild and giddy in public company, but are very circumspect and well behaved before the ladies, and in our Party I think the time will not pass so tedious and heavily as I anticipated, we have several Military Officers and Irish Gentlemen and Ladies in personal appearance of figure and face and are of the best sample but a little varied in volubility of speech.
JAMES TURNER - Wednesday 21 October. Thomas and myself fully employed as yesterday in arranging our cabins and if you could see them you would think we destined them for a good show at a Rag Fair, we have double triple and quadruple rows of hooks for Hats, Caps, Bonnets, Gowns, Coats, Boots, Shoes, Garters, and stockings &c &c &c ad infinitum and still all our tables chairs and tops of Chests of Drawers groaning with piles of lumber merely to cover our nakedness, I beg pardon I should have said to gratify our vanity, though we cut but a solitary figure amongst our Beaus and Belles on the Quarter Deck Parade. The wind has been very rough all day and against us, they have been getting more provisions and water on board, and water is a very scarce article with us even here it being difficult to get sufficient to keep our flesh passably clean.
JAMES TURNER - Thursday 22nd October. Again employed in the cabins securing all things as much as possible, to prevent them moving about in a rough sea, as I expect the season being so late we shall have much to encounter in the Channel and also in the Bay of Biscay, that bug bear of us fresh water sailors. Our companion the stallion horse is very noisy and troublesome and I have been obliged to change my sleeping cabin for Maria is afraid he will jump out of his stall through one of the squares of our windows and make a meal of us while we are asleep. They began to weigh the anchor this evening and we expect to be off but the wind is unfavourable. Music and dancing on Deck and shooting at seagulls etc we have one or two just pop in for a tune and a song.
JAMES TURNER - Friday 23 October. A light breeze sprang up inclining towards the North, the anchor was weighed and we began to proceed from Spithead but the wind fell off and we only floated up and down with the tide it being a fine lovely day all hands were on the Decks enjoying themselves and shooting and dancing was the order of the day. I was on deck myself about 3 hours the rest of the time being employed securing things in the Cabins and writing a few lines to you to send on shore by the Pilot who left us, about 6 o’clock Favourable light breeze sprung up, we pleasantly passed around the end of the Isle of Wight and the wind increases all the evening.
JAMES TURNER - Saturday 24 October. We had a favourable wind all night and are abreast of Plymouth but are not to stop here, the weather is very fine and we got before the wind with studding sails on each side of the vessel, little or no sickness on board and all appear in good spirits. I feel myself light-hearted and feel less regret than I expected in leaving my native land, though I do not anticipate that we are going to a land flowing with Milk and Honey. Captains Molloy and Burne two of the passengers had two cows in milk on board and they very kindly appropriated their milk for the company which is a great luxury particularly for the children. I begin to relish both tea and coffee without and I fancy they will not continue to give much milk as they already fall off, all our appetites are very good at present.
JAMES TURNER - Tuesday 27th October. (Five days out). The wind has increased all night and we now make 6 knots an hour. Cold and Cloudy, have not seen the sun to-day. Thomas has been sick and not on deck since breakfast. Selina a little so but all in good spirits. But we are sadly cramped and confined and there is no such thing as keeping things comfortable in our berths, being so many of us and so very dark below that we cannot see where to find things when we put them out of our hands and I cannot see to write, read or work without candlelight.
JAMES TURNER - Wednesday 28th October. I find it convenient to write day and date daily to know how time goes. The days pass quickly and our time fully occupied in doing a mere nothing excepting our household concerns of putting the Bedrooms in order or rather making disorder less apparent, unlashing the Chairs and Stools washing ourselves and Children, and by way of harmony it is usually attended with a little music, our late Chamber de Coucher is then transposed to drawing room, parlour. et salle de Musice for the evening.
The children breakfast together about half past eight, we breakfast about 10, lunch about one, then children dine between one & two, we dine about five children have tea about seven and we tea between about eight and nine, then music, singing, cards, backgammon until we retire to rest again, some at eleven others at twelve and one in their own apartments.
JAMES TURNER - Saturday 31st October. We had a rather rough night and could scarcely stand this morning. Thomas, George and Selina Sea Sick and several of the Ladies. I forgot to mention last night there was a general quarrel in the Cabin between the Scotch & Irish passengers, it commenced by finding fault with the general conduct of Mr Sempill. One of the passengers who in general drinks too freely told Sempill to expect to be overboard some evening and went so far afterwards to say that he would hoist him over and I expected there would have been a general fight but the Captain resolutely interfered and all ended in high sounding words without blood shed, and this morning all is as quiet as though nothing had happened
JAMES TURNER - Monday 2nd November. We anticipated yesterday that we should pass so close to Madeira that if we did not stop we might at least have a boat alongside to purchase fruit and send letters home, and our wine is so indifferent that a request was to be drawn up to endeavour to get some fresh supply on board, but today’s wind gives us little hope of seeing Madeira. It has continued strong and contrary. The stallion is very ill and so weak he can scarcely stand keep on his legs. They have been supporting him in slings. The vessel heels so much that it is only at intervals that we can walk on deck. Thomas has been scarcely off the bed today. He is not worse than George and Selina, but wants their life and spirits. Several are a little squeamish but much better than I expected, and as for myself I am neither sick nor sorrowful but I am afraid I may be tired out before the end of our journey with the continued sameness, the prospect from our vessel falls far short of my anticipated conception of the boundless space of the Ocean. For we appear to be in the Centre of a Pool of water of about 6 or 10 miles diameter and Tantalus like, here we appear to be without getting one inch nearer the edge of the horizon and we must look into the mind for the immensity of Oceans space in the daily, weekly, and monthly continuance of the same scene. The sight of a vessel even on the edge of the horizon is a rare sight, but we have our amusements. Even our troubles of endeavouring to fill our bellies is one sortie, for just as your mouth may be open expecting a spoonful of soup in it you find the plate with its contents jumping into your lap or flying in an opposite direction to unite with your opposite neighbours attended with a concert of musical glasses which by their over-exertions ends in a dreadful mortality amongst their species and by way of exciting our gratitude for their services we have just been told there is no more wine out of the hold and if the same kind of weather continues they cannot get at it as there is a great quantity of goods on top of it. Several of the passengers think there is very little if any more on board as being in character with our liberal Charterer.
CHARLES BUSSELL - 2 November. (Twelve days out). A sailor whose conduct had been most uniformly civil towards us all was seized today with a fit of the ague. We had long wished to make the fellow some acknowledgment of his very great civility & this we considered a favourable opportunity. We therefore sent to say that if he would like some Port wine, or any other little delicacy we might posses we should be very happy to supply him. We accordingly received from him in the course of the afternoon a message that he would be much obliged to us for the Wine we had promised him & and were not a little surprised and stagger’d at the appearance of the immense quart pot with which his request was seconded. This however we found to be the vessel, commonly denominated a pannikin, in which sailors are accustomed to receive their Grog & Drink of all descriptions. We did not therefore allow the magnitude of the vessel to influence that of our present, but sent him just so much (and no more) as we thought might be of service to him, and he was not, as you will see in the sequel, at all insensible to our kindness. In the evening about six o’clock our noses were saluted by a most unwonted & sweet smelling savour. This was succeeded by a knocking at the door. The door was opened & in was usher’d by a friend of Morgans a large Basin containing a Stew of potatoes & onions with the ship’s beef washed till it comes perfectly fresh. The whole when well dous’d (and this was dous’d incomparably) forms a dish which would not by any means disgrace an English table. By us who had before tasted nothing like vegetables since our departure it was pronounced the most delicious meal we had almost ever eaten.
CHARLES BUSSELL - 3 November. As I have no memorandum for today worthy of any notice, I think I cannot amuse you better than by giving you a further description of our friend the Sailor. To any of my friends who may be at all familiar with ‘the fancy’ I believe I cannot describe him better than by saying that he is known by the names of ‘William Morgan’ or ‘Josh Hudson Black’ as I understand he is a man of some celebrity in the profession of a prize fighter. To those who are not conversant in such matters, I would desire them to picture to themselves a strong muscular fellow of the sooty tribe standing six feet in height. Nature has not, as Byron says, used him very genteelly, and the effects of this want of politeness on the part of the dame have perhaps been heightened by the enlargement of the cheekbones occasioned by perpetual battering, not to mention the loss of two or three teeth from the same cause. Notwithstanding this however he has the most good humoured countenance I ever saw. He is the very counter part of the English Bulldog. He tells us that he glories in fighting that he was bred in battle & that he hopes he shall die in battle, for that such is the proper end of the true prizefighter. As for myself I fear that I must confess that I am of a nature far too pacific to enter into the merits of his sentiments.
JAMES TURNER - Wednesday 4th November. (Fourteen days out). I generally turn out on deck as soon as it is daylight which is now about six o’clock. We still have the wind against us and very strong. We carry but very little sail all this week and make so little way that it is a damp to our spirits. A pig was killed to-day but by its size and condition I don’t expect many Greasy Chins with it, and I think if any informer, could have incited poor pig before My Lord Mayor and a score of your double chinned citizens, I think not one of you would give credit to the Butcher and a host of evidence, that poor pig who never had one belly full of victuals in his life, could have fairly and honourably come to such an exit of life, and perhaps you would haughtily have ordered him to be burnt in Smithfield, but we begin to have something of a fellow feeling for poor things, and had you seen how we enjoyed it to-day at table you would have had an evidence of the old proverb that nearer the bone the sweeter the flesh.
JAMES TURNER - Friday 6th November. We had a smart gale of wind between twelve and one which awoke us by the dancing of all the Tin mugs and Candle Sticks about the Cabin which we had incautiously neglected to put in durance vile and it is almost necessary to put a ropes and round oneself if you wish to be in perfect security when the ship puts about in a sudden stiff breeze. Some of our passengers rolled out of their beds, and I have got a bruised hip and broken shin in some of my skips on deck. but such things are some of our amusements and serve us to laugh and joke each other. Our servant Girl is as stiff as an old horse with various bruises, several are on the sick list and others a little queer.
JAMES TURNER - Saturday 7th November. Had a moderate favourable wind all night and four sails in sight. One an armed schooner a little ahead of us keeping nearly the same course for some time. The Captain said she was a very suspicious character and all our Rifles, Fowling pieces & Pistols got a little fresh air by our sporting them on deck, and being a moderate steady day for the Vessel, the Swan River Volunteers had a drilling. In the course of the morning the schooner crossed us two or three miles ahead & our fears made us think several times she was for bearing down upon us, and General like I gave my orders to my company of Women and Children what to do, and for myself I felt a little spark of courage rise in my veins to do my duty and trust to providence. After having crossed our course she continued the same direction as we did, and did not make head as she might have done which made us surmise she was reconnoitring us and might still pay us a visit. We have been dissatisfied with our living this week and have been allowed only one glass of porter a day and no wine and only water for the children. We have drawn up a protest against Mr Sempill’s conduct which we signed and then read to him. And we hope to have some amendment in quantity at any rate if not in quality. Though I am very doubtful if we shall have anything except salt provisions for some weeks before we arrive at the Cape. One of the best stock sheep died last night also a small pig and this morning three sheep belonging to a passenger....
CHARLES BUSSELL - 9 November. (Nineteen days out). This morning we were awoke about 6 o’clock by the salutation of Morgan saying that today being Sunday he had bethought himself that a good fresh dinner might not be unacceptable to us & that he had therefore come for a little flour & a good piece of Beef if we had any. You will easily believe that we were not slow in supplying him with what he desired, & we had no cause to repent having done so for as you will presently hear. Towards the afternoon we saw him on his way down to our cabin with a large Iron Basin covered with a pewter plate which we used as a substitute for a tureen. We immediately followed, that we might not appear backward in our commendations of his culinary abilities, to say nothing of the desire of appeasing the hunger which the apparition had excited in us all. He informed us that this dish was called a sea pie. The ‘elements’ (I always like to know the ‘elements’ of a dish before I ate of it, if you remember) are much the same as the former that I have described, except that this is occasionally interspersed with some very nice dumplings. Some of my fair friends will I fear be inclined to quarrel with me for entering thus deeply into the minutia of the kitchen, but they must know that our delicacies of this sort (for delicacies they are altho’ provided by the brawny hands of a pugilist) an object of far greater consideration than they who are accustomed to look for comfortable and well dressed meals in regular succession might be inclined to imagine. Your Voyage to the Swan River, particularly if you have Semphill or anyone who at all resembles him for your Charter will I am sure prove the truth of this assertion. John & I went today by invitation from Mrs Byrne to dine in the Cuddy the dinner as we were apprised beforehand it would be, was very shabby the Wine execrable & scarcely any of it. The passengers are daily becoming more indignant at Semphill’s shabby treatment of them and it does not appear that they will be inclined to bear it peaceably much longer a row appears to be brewing.
JAMES TURNER - Monday 9th November. The wind nearly a calm till mid day then a light breeze which improved as evening approached, when we had one of the finest prospects of sky and water as it is possible to imagine. The brilliant and diversified scene of the setting sun on one side of the vessel with the most glowing bright Crimson that can be conceived, which afterwards mellowed into various tints, with a foreground of dark detached Clouds in all manner of forms and shapes appearing like an immense field or plain of Rocks and mountains. And on the opposite side the gentle Moon with a peculiar silvery clear brightness which gave the scene a magical effect by a turn of the eyes from one side to the other and the busy bustle on the quarter deck of the light fantastic toe with the dulcet notes of a solitary fiddle were nearly lost upon me. All appears peace and harmony and I hope it may continue so for last night after I was in bed there was a quarrel again. I am writing this with my Coat and Waistcoat and in a perspiration.
JAMES TURNER - Tuesday 10th November Last night as doing as above and stopping in the cuddy till the lights were put out which is usually a little after half past ten I went to Bed but it was impossible to get to sleep there was such a confounded noise on deck over my Cabin. Several of the Steerage passengers had been all the evening amusing themselves with sparring and wrestling and most of our young sparks and high bloods turning out of the Cuddy joined them and soon began to partake of the amusement to the great annoyance of all underneath them and I had a general cry out with the girls that the deck would be broke through and I expected myself it was only a prelude to a general row. At last I got up slipped on Trousers and Cap and went on deck to request less noise or assist in a general set to if that was determined upon. Quixote like though I threw myself into the midst of them and began roundly to make my complaint, a warm headed Irishman began upon me by saying it was no business of mine and that they were in the fore part of the Ship beyond the berths of the Cabin passengers. I asserted to the contrary by saying they were standing on my cabin and my family could not get any rest. He denied it and said my Cabin was on the other side of the Ship. One word brought on another and at last I told him he was no Gentleman which roused his high gentlemanly blood and he called me a liar. I happened not to be so very warm as I usually am or I should have given him a smack on the face but I contented myself by retorting it on him and saying that everybody that heard him knew he was one. A brother of his nearly a Giant in size being above six feet high advanced forward swearing that he would throw any Man overboard that dared say Brother was no Gentleman. I turned my front to him and told him I said so and asserted to him his Brother was no Gentleman. He in a rage attempted to pull down some strong Canvas which is fixed to the ship side to prevent the spray from splashing the deck which I suppose he thought would intimidate me that I should take to my heels or ask pardon but as I have seen something of the disposition of a hothead Irishman before and with one do not feel any apprehension for the consequences but with them collectively an injury may be sustained before you can avoid it. I stuck to my post and to my text and like a Game Bantam strutted up to him, (but cautiously keeping my eye on him) and Challenged him or his brother to try their strength with me, but my Age and size protected and not being a Gentleman they could not think of appealing to their Pistols, yet I judge by the language which I have heard amongst them, they keep them and their Gentlemanship for flashes in the pan as quietness was obtained excepting the wordy war between me and my opponents.. I wished the Gentlemen present good night and returned to my berth. This Morning everything is passed off as if nothing had happened, excepting me and my opponent not meeting each others eye and a few private jokes with some of my fellow passengers about my pluck, and I feel easy in the hope that I may not have to talk big words any more.
The wind and the weather has been very favourable and they got the wine out of the hold. At dinner time Mr Semphill tried to put us to an allowance of a bottle of wine amongst three which was roundly resisted. In explanation Mr Semphill admitted there was not sufficient in his stock to allow a pint to each but it was insisted upon and assented to by Mr Semphill that we should have a bottle between two as long as the stock would last and we must seek our redress for any deficiency at the Cape. For my part I expect to lay in a stock of wine as we do not drink I think more than a bottle a day in my family. The evenings are so warm that several of my men sleep on the deck all night. Mrs Rutter the doctor’s lady was put to bed this evening of a boy and doing very well.
CHARLES BUSSELL - 13 November. Such are the staple of our cabin passengers (there are of course exceptions) & such are the men whom Semphill has flattered himself with the idea of cheating. With regard to the provisions with which he has provided us we have nothing of which we can complain with the exception of the bread and that is very, very bad. Our eyes are frequently turned wistfully towards our private stock but this we do not allow ourselves to break in otherwise than by taking half a biscuit now & then by way of treat as we are given to understand that towards the end of the voyage it will be much worse. This circumstance is the more provoking as our store of bread for the Swan River has been laid in by Semphill & is therefore probably the same as what we are now eating. It is now small consolation when this Idea occurs to reflect that we have a small portion of his money in reserve & that we can indemnify ourselves if such be the case. We finished the first of our two hams which it will be needless to say we found a great treat. We had intended as was proposed by our dear Mother to have kept them for our arrival at the Swan but on opening them we found that the hoppers had just commenced their in roads & thought it best & wisest plan therefore to consume them ourselves, before any material damage should take place.
JAMES TURNER - Sunday 22nd November. (Thirty-two days out, at the Cape Verde Islands). This morning we were completely becalmed opposite the island of St. Jago about six miles from shore and we could discern a town or village at a distance but no appearance of any boats or any persons or cattle on shore near us it is very rocky and mountainous and no woods or trees only a few shrubs or stunted trees. The Boat was lowered down and the Chief Mate and Mr Semphill with one of his young men and four sailors set off to go on shore to the town of Saint Jago which is understood was near 14 miles from us. About two o’clock a breeze sprang up and we had a pleasant run along shore and soon could discover some vessels in a harbour and the town of St Jago. There was only one English schooner and two American Brigs. We came to anchor about six o’clock within about one hundred yards of shore. One of the Americans left the place as we got in and passed close to our stern. Our Captain hailed her. We are all elated with the idea of going on shore in the morning. The place and the Port is very small and I should think very insecure in bad weather being quite open to the sea. Mr Semphill and Mate came on board accompanied by several of the Portuguese, who wrote down the name of the Ship, where she came from and bound to etc and left an officer on board to stop all night.
JAMES TURNER - Monday 23rd November. The Captain went on shore early and most of us got ready to go on shore as soon as we could get breakfast. Several boats came alongside with oranges, Coca Nuts, bananas and a few eggs and we were all busily employed for some time driving bargains with them for they are very Jewish in their dealings and like to get Old Clothes in preference to Money, and in the course of the day prices were reduced to nearly half.
While we were at Breakfast the Captain returned on board, he came into the cuddy with a paper in his hand and requesting our attention he read it. It was a warrant from the Consul ordering into Custody and the immediate attendance on shore at his office of most of those persons engaged in last Thursday’s disturbance. All the Gentlemen of the Cabin passengers and several of the Officers and Crew of the ships company etc went ashore and attended as witnesses for and against according to their opinions, language and Conduct had been very violent during the heat of passion and the evidence against several of them wore a very serious aspect having been guilty of mutinous conduct and language and the language and threat of one of them was of a Piratical tendency and the Consul ordered him to be put in to confinement. He was one of them whom the young party looked up to with a good deal of confidence and I really think had he been put into confinement and sent forward in our ship it would have been the occasion of a deal of disturbance on board before we got to the Cape of Good Hope. A petition was drawn up and signed by several of us requesting that he might not be sent forward with us, and as some of the passengers had that confidence in him that they would be bound for his conduct it was at length agreed upon that he was not to come on board again and Mr Semphill was to return a sum of 50 pounds to pay for passage by the first Ship that might call there, as his passage had been paid for and his destination was to Van Dieman’s Land. Another was bound in his own bond and a security to keep the peace. Two others were to deliver up all their arms as a security and others reprimanded and admonished and I hope now we shall have a good and lasting peace.
We were so late in the day making the arrangements that I expected they would be very uneasy on board as I had promised to return at five o’clock and as I found it impossible I sent Thos. with one of my Men down to the beach where we landed in the Morning. to return on board about that time. We were detained until dark and the boat that was to take us on board was at the opposite side of the Bay from where we landed in the morning. When we got there there was only one boat which was only sufficient to take half of us, and some of us were obliged to stop till the boat returned. There is at all times a little surf on the beach and there is generally a ducking for some of us getting in and out of the boat. It was between 8 & 9 o’clock when I got on board and I found that Thos. and several of the Men were left on shore. We learned from the Consul that letters could be forwarded to England tomorrow as the British vessel laying in the port would Sail in the morning for Gambia and Siereleone and I have been writing a few lines to you and leave open until the latest time. A child in the Steerage died this morning.
JAMES TURNER - Tuesday 24th November. I went on shore as soon as I had breakfasted, found Thos. very well. A party of nine of them had been obliged to sleep on the rocks for there is no Houses of any accommodation for Travellers. It was near a spot where some soldiers keep guard and they had one or two of them to watch them all night. One Gentleman had his Hat and Kerchief stolen as he was coming to join the party. We had some little demure today respecting the arrangement made yesterday as the young party wished to get their friend on board again to accompany them, and his Boxes and baggage had been sent on shore in the morning and laid on the beach until evening before they moved them into the town. I intend tomorrow to make a little survey in the Country. The weather is very sultry and we cannot walk about much. The appearance of the Town its inhabitants and the surrounding Country would no wise invite me to have a residence amongst them and their honesty is of a very doubtful cast. There is a small vessel now in the port which was sailing about on Sunday before we came in, at first we were told she was a slave ship, and they say she was rather apprehensive of us as our ship is of a respectable appearance and they thought we were something more than a Merchantman. We now hear that she is decidedly a Pirate under Portuguese Colours, and while we were sitting on the beach this evening waiting for a boat from the ship we noticed them very busy getting stock on board apparently for a cruise.
I have laid in a stock of six hundred oranges and lemons. When the boat landed on Sunday before the ship arrived they bought at one shilling a hundred, next morning they were three shillings. Today I gave a quarter dollar a hundred. They are very large most of them much bigger than any I ever saw in England. The Pineapples are scarce and very small not being in season. The Coca nuts are small and the price generally asked six pence each, Eggs very small and a penny each or 14 a shilling. Turkeys plentiful at a dollar each, a great number of Goats at 3 & 4 Dollars each, but perhaps if a vessel was to purchase for a supply they would be much cheaper. Coffee 1/- per lb, Sugar of native growth about fivepence. The American Consul is a Merchant and keeps a store. There is very few grapes grown on the island. I only saw one bunch, the wine is of Portugal growth. Something of a Port quality but not brandied. We paid one shilling a bottle and if we took the bottles away we paid about 4d each. I took a walk up a valley and one side of the town. There is a fine spring of Water which rises up in a large Well and I believe is the only fresh water in the town, it overflows and forms a little Brook. I drew some out of the well. It was something in taste and warmth like new milk. There is a guard stands on duty by the side of the well and women were fetching water for the town and in the Rivulet several were washing Clothes. The only fruit I saw growing was the Bananas. There were several pretty shrubs and plants around the spot where the Well was. I gave the guard a few Coppers and he was very Civil only shook his head and cried no touch if I was going to get anything, some things were no good eat Bad, and spat of his mouth, as though they were poisonous or disagreeable. The child that died yesterday was buried out at sea early this morning.
JAMES TURNER - Wednesday 25th November. I was awoke this morning by hearing the anchor weighing and when I got on deck found it was determined to be off as early as possible and the native boats with fruit etc were not allowed to come along side. Some boats came and put the stock on board which had been purchased for the Vessel, such as Goats, Pigs, and Turkeys and some wine. The vessel kept tacking off and on in front of the Port until the passengers came on board stopped until the last moment at length all being on board and a favourable breeze we bid adieu to St Jago and Porto Praya, on my own part with great pleasure.
JAMES TURNER - Wednesday 23 December. (Sixty-three days out). Today about eleven o’clock we passed the Tropic of Capricorn and are now in the Southern Temperate Zone and which I now think it is most likely I will end my days in. I think when I set foot on shore in our future anticipated country I shall be a fixture to the soil, and my little Body may help to manure it. I begin to feel uneasy at the probable length of our passage and think we cannot possibly arrive at the Swan River before the middle of March. The wind today light but favourable.
JAMES TURNER - Thursday 24 December. It being Christmas Eve we treated ourselves with a glass of wine and a few Gingerbread Nuts, wished you a Merry Christmas and should have liked to have partaken of your good Ale posset etc.
JAMES TURNER - Friday 25 December. Very little appearance of a Christmas Day though we did not forget the usual greeting each other with the Compliments of the Season, and we often thought of how you were perhaps sitting round the fire enjoying every good luxury while we were thrusting in our plates and bawling out to obtain only a belly full of something inferior to the ordinary fare of a London Tradesman’s family. Not but what our boards had a good extra supply, and I believe everyone had their belly full which is very seldom the case, and after dinner we had a good supply of Claret and several did not leave the Table until 10 o’clock but the company in general kept very sober, two only were disguised in liquor. It was also a holiday with the Seamen. I gave a few bottles of Wine and some Biscuits to my people and good humour pervaded from stem to stern of the ship. Rather noisily while I was in bed, we were all very hungry could not get anything except biscuits to eat so went to bed.
JAMES TURNER - Saturday 26th December. Alas for the good cheer of Christmas has passed away with the day and not a shadow of the wreck to be seen at breakfast. We had however a solitary dish of Maggoty Red Herrings but the pickings of the hams and the remaining bones of the Turkeys were to assist to make shift dinner and today we had no porter being informed there is no more left. Yesterday we had some of the preserved fresh provisions kept in tin cases. It was served up as boulle to eat very fresh but was scarcely warm when put on the table. Unfortunately the things are not half done very often. Lat. 26 degrees 27 degrees S. Long 21 degrees 17 degrees W.
JAMES TURNER - Thursday 31st December. This being the last day in the year the Captain yesterday said he would come and spend this evening with us and to make it more agreeable we invited as many of our musical companions as our Cabins would accommodate and were very busy all the morning to tune the piano which is rather discordant. Just as the party assembled the Captain said he had something to attend to for about half an hour and then he would come down, but he did not come down all evening, and about ten o’clock we were informed the Captain and the other passengers were regaling in the Cuddy and that they had two Tongues for Supper and then two Bowls of good Punch on the Table but they had not the politeness to let us know of it nor to send us any though they did send some to other passengers below. They very soon got noisy and in Liquor and those Ladies of our party who had to pass through the Cuddy left us directly and also two Gentlemen to join the Punch party. We all very merrily saw the Old Year out and the new one in, and the Ship’ until about Four o’clock in the Morning. We did not forget all friends in Old England in our Cabin and about one o’clock went to bed.
JAMES TURNER - Friday 1st January. We had a poor muster at Breakfast Table and most felt the effect of Punch. We have a dead calm and made little progress the last 24 hours. Dancing and merrymaking amongst the Crew and Steerage passengers has been all day and is likely to be kept up until daylight tomorrow morning. Our quarrels and wrangling in the Cuddy has set aside the Dancing which used to take place on the poop and we have not had one since the disturbance that happened previously to our stopping at St Jago. Scarcely could get a wink of sleep until between three and four o’clock and have got bad headaches. Captain Byrne and Mr Green quarrelled. Brown drunk.
Colonial Secretary's Department records indicate that only 96 of the 166 passengers on this voyage of the WARRIOR disembarked in the Swan River Colony. In the absence of any surviving official passenger list, the following list has been gathered from the various publications mentioned at the top of the page and links to more detailed biographical information are given throughout the text.
First off though, here are some passengers who did not disembark in Fremantle:
Name Age Family/Single Occupation Comments BEST George 36 F Agriculturalist ... ... ... ... BEST Sarah Mary 34 F Wife aka Sally, nee GILMORE BEST Elizabeth Sarah 1 F Child aka Ann BURGES William 22 S ... ... ... Applicant BURGES Samuel Evans 20 S ... ... ... Brother of William BURGES BURGES Lockier Clere 16 S ... ... ... Brother of William BURGES BUSSELL Charles 20 S ... ... ... Brother of John Garrett BUSSELL BUSSELL Alfred Pickmore 14 S ... ... ... ... ... ... ... BUSSELL John Garrett 25 S Agriculturalist ... ... ... ... BUSSELL Joseph Vernon 17 S ... ... ... Brother of John Garrett BUSSELL BYRNE Francis Henry 31 F Retired Soldier Brought servants (HANCOCK & CHEVERIL) BYRNE Anna Matilda 22 F Wife nee WESTCOTT BYRNE Frances Eliza 3 F Child Deceased BYRNE Selina Jane 1 F Child Deceased BYRNE John 25 S Servant aka BURN; Farming Servant for BURGES Brothers [Top] Name Age Family/Single Occupation Comments CHEVERIL Jesse 22 F Shepherd & Labourer aka CHERVILLE or CHIVRELL; servant for BYRNE CHEVERIL Elizabeth 20 F Servant nee SOPP; servant for BYRNE CHEVERIL Unknown 3 F Daughter Died on voyage CHEVERIL Charlotte 1 F Child ... ... ... ... CHEVERIL Unknown Infant F Daughter Died on voyage CONNORS Michael 20 S Farming Servant Servant for BURGES Brothers COOPER Joseph 34 F Blacksmith & Miller ... ... ... ... COOPER Elizabeth 35 F Wife nee WRIGHT COOPER Elizabeth Ann 7 F Child ... ... ... ... COOPER Rebecca 5 F Child ... ... ... ... COOPER Joseph 3 F Child ... ... ... ... COOPER Mary Ann 6 mths F Child ... ... ... ... DAWSON Elijah 34 F Indentured servant Servant for MOLLOY DAWSON Ann 25 F Wife nee WAKEHAM [Top] Name Age Family/Single Occupation Comments DEWAR John 46 F General Servant Servant for TURNER DEWAR Mary 40 F Wife aka Jane, nee ROBINSON DEWAR Ann 17 F Child ... ... ... ... DEWAR Alexander 15 F Child ... ... ... ... DEWAR Janet 13 F Child aka Jessie DEWAR Robert 10 F Child ... ... ... ... DEWAR Ralph Thomas 9 F Child ... ... ... ... DEWAR Mary 5 F Child ... ... ... ... DEWAR John 3 F Child ... ... ... ... DEWAR William Smart 1 F Child ... ... ... ... GILLINGHAM Charles W. 20 S Indentured labourer Servant for HABGOOD GRAHAM William Temple 35 F Retired Soldier ... ... ... ... GRAHAM Harriet (Mrs) .. F ... ... ... ... ... ... ... GREEN Alfred (Dr) 25 S Assistant Surgeon ... ... ... ... [Top] Name Age Family/Single Occupation Comments GREGORY John Henry 37 F ... ... ... ... ... ... ... GREGORY Mary Williams 38 F Wife nee MONTGOMERY or DORMAN GREGORY James Dorman 17 F Child Stepson to J.H. GREGORY GREGORY Elizabeth 13 F Child ... ... ... ... GREGORY Sophia 7 F Child ... ... ... ... GREGORY Eliza 5 F Child ... ... ... ... GREGORY John Henry Williams 4 F Child ... ... ... ... GREGORY William John 1 F Child ... ... ... ... HABGOOD William 24 S Agriculturalist ... ... ... ... HANCOCK John 50 F Carpenter Servant for Capt F.H. BYRNE HANCOCK Grace 48 F Wife nee ELDRIDGE HANCOCK James 20 F Carpenter & Labourer ... ... ... ... HANCOCK George 18 F Labourer ... ... ... ... [Top] Name Age Family/Single Occupation Comments HEPPINGSTONE Robert 32 F Servant Servant for Capt. MOLLOY HEPPINGSTONE Ann 26 F Wife nee McKINLEY HEPPINGSTONE Robert 9 F Child ... ... ... ... HEPPINGSTONE Charlotte 7 F Child ... ... ... ... HEPPINGSTONE Ann 11 mths F Child ... ... ... ... HERRING John 50 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... HERRING Elizabeth 46 ... ... ... ... [Erickson] says she married in WA and late in life ??? KEARNEY Judith 20 S Servant Woman Servant for BURGES Brothers KOLLER John Thurston (Dr) 23 F Surgeon Brought several servants KOLLER Mary Emily 20 F Wife ... ... ... ... KOLLER John Thurstan 18 mths F Child ... ... ... ... LLOYD George 25 S ... ... ... He was a brother of James LLOYD. He was accompanied by Joseph Morris (brother of Mrs James Lloyd) whom he employed as a carpenter LONGMATE W. Henry 21 S Servant Servant for TURNER [Top] Name Age Family/Single Occupation Comments MOLLOY John (Captain) 50 F Soldier ... ... ... ... MOLLOY Georgiana (Mrs) 25 F ... ... ... nee KENNEDY MORRIS William 25 S ... ... ... Arrived with brother Joseph MORRIS. Worked as a mechanic with George LLOYD, his sister's brother-in-law MORRIS Joseph 19 S ... ... ... Arrived with brother William MORRIS and his sister's brother-in-law George LLOYD, to whom he was indentured as a mechanic NORTHCOTT Charles Rossmore 20 S ... ... ... ... ... ... ... PEARCE Edward 14 S Servant Servant for BUSSELL PERRONNE Mary 18 S Servant Servant for KOLLER POSTANS Henry 18 S Servant Servant for TURNER ROBINSON Thomas 16 S Servant Servant for TURNER SALKILLD Thomas 24 S Servant Servant for TURNER SMITH Andrew Adam 36 F Servant Indentured servant for Turner SMITH Mary 36 F Wife ... ... ... ... SMITH William 3 F Child ... ... ... ... SMITH James 1 F Child ... ... ... ... SMITH Anne 40 S Servant Widow; Sister-in-law of Andrew Adam SMITH (?); Servant for TURNER [Top] Name Age Family/Single Occupation Comments STAPLES James 35 S Servant Servant for MOLLOY TURNER James Woodward 50 F Agriculturalist ... ... ... ... TURNER Maria 39 F Wife ... ... ... ... TURNER Ann Elizabeth 18 F Child ... ... ... ... TURNER Thomas 16 F Child ... ... ... ... TURNER George 14 F Child ... ... ... ... TURNER Selina 11 F Child ... ... ... ... TURNER John 9 F Child ... ... ... ... TURNER Maria 8 F Child ... ... ... ... TURNER James Augustus 3 F Child ... ... ... ... WILLY Thomas John 32 F Servant aka WILLEY; Servant for TURNER WILLY Susannah 21 F Wife aka WILLEY WOOD John 26 S Mechanic
George BEST, b. March 5, 1794 (UK), d. September 7, 1873 (Beverley, W.A.); m. (UK), Sarah Mary (Sally) BEST (nee GILMORE), b. circa 1796 (UK), d. May, 1838 (W.A.).
George was a farmer in Guildford, and forfeited his grant of 240 acres on the Swan and Avon. He leased land at Helena and was a Member of the Guildford Town Trust between 1845 and 1849.
Children:
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
William BURGES, b. circa 1808 (IRELAND), d. October 16, 1876 (IRELAND).
His brothers, Samuel and Lockier, travelled with him on the WARRIOR. They are listed next.
William was listed as the applicant who was granted 8053 acres of land. He settled first on the Upper Swan district. In 1837 he moved to Tipperary in the York district. In 1850 he moved to Bowes in Champion Bay area where he was appointed Resident Magistrate between 1851 and 1860. He was appointed visiting Magistrate for the Convict Depot at Port Gregory in May 1853. As a pastoralist he bought 1003 acres in the Victoria district in 1868. He returned to Ireland between 1841 and 1844 and again on January 26, 1860 on the Lord Raglan, briefly returning to WA on the Hastings on January 28, 1868 briefly and in 1875 to 1876. He was a Member of the Legislative Council in 1875.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Samuel Evans BURGES, b. circa 1810 (IRELAND), d. May 24, 1885
(Perth, W.A.); m. December, 1843 (W.A.), Vittoria Ellen Jane MEARES, daughter of Captain R.G.
MEARES.
His brothers, William and Lockier, travelled with him on the WARRIOR. They are listed
above and below.
Samuel was granted 8053 acres and settled first on the Upper Swan. He transferred as farmer
and pastoralist to Tipperary in the York district. He was a Justice of the Peace, a
member of the York Agricultural Society in the 1840s, a member of the York Race Club and the
York Board of Education. He retired to Perth in March 1879.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Lockier Clere BURGES, b. circa 1813 (IRELAND), d. July 31,
1886 (Perth, W.A.).
Lockier's brothers, William and Samuel, travelled with him on the WARRIOR. They are
listed above.
At first Lockier farmed on his brother’s Upper Swan grant and after it was sold they moved
to Tipperary in the York district. They were in partnership until 1850 when he and
William moved to the Champion Bay district. In 1851 Lockier was in partnership with E.
Hammersley and S.P. Phillips and held huge pastoral leaseholds on the Irwin River. He was the
manager at Irwin House until the partnership was dissolved. Lockier retained the area
as his share in 1867. He returned to Ireland on January 26, 1860 on the Lord Raglan with
his brother William and returned on November 20, 1862 on the Gloucester. He was nominated
for the Legislative Council between January 1879 and July 1884.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Charles BUSSELL, b. circa 1810 (UK), d. August 5, 1856 (Broadwater, W.A.).
His brothers, Alfred, John and Joseph, travelled with him on the WARRIOR. They are listed below.
Charles was the Government storekeeper in Busselton.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Alfred Pickmore BUSSELL, b. June 21, 1816 (UK), d. October
18, 1882 (W.A.); m. August 27, 1850 (W.A.), Ellen HEPPINGSTONE.
His brothers, Charles, John and Joseph, travelled with him on the WARRIOR. They are
listed above and below.
Alfred was a farmer and pastoralist at Augusta and Vasse in partnership with his brothers.
After he married he moved to Ellensbrook and Wallcliffe near Margaret River. He
was nominated for the Legislative Council between November 1870 and October 1874. He was a
Justice of the Peace as well.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
John Garrett BUSSELL, b. August 16, 1803 (UK), d. September
17, 1875 (Vasse, W.A.); m. August 22, 1838 (UK), Charlotte COOKWORTHY, a widow with 2 children.
His brothers, Alfred, Charles and Joseph, travelled with him on the WARRIOR. They are
listed above and below.
John returned to England in 1837 and returned on May 22, 1839 on the Montreal with
his new bride and family.
He was a pioneer settler of Augusta in 1830 and moved to Cattle Chosen in the Vasse
district in 1834 as a farmer and grazier. In 1855 he was the Justice of the Peace for Vasse.
He served on the Vasse Board of Education from 1861 and taught at the Hale School in Perth in
1864. He was a Member of the Legislative Council between November 1870 and June 1872.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Joseph Vernon BUSSELL, b. circa 1813 (UK), d. September 3, 1860
(W.A.); m. February 9, 1853 (Albany, W.A.), Mary Elizabeth PHILLIPS.
His brothers, Alfred, Charles and John, travelled with him on the WARRIOR. They are
listed above.
Joseph held a 20,000 acre pastoral lease at Blackwood in 1850. His house at Vasse was burnt
down in 1854.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Francis Henry BYRNE, b. circa 1798 (UK); m. (UK), Anna Matilda BYRNE (nee WESTCOTT), b. circa 1808 (UK).
Francis was a retired captain in Rifle Brigade. He brought servants (HANCOCK and CHEVERIL) and goods with him and that allowed him to qualify for a selection of 11,000 acres in the Avon district, nearly 2000 acres in the Swan district and 10 acres at Rottnest Island. He was Harbour Master in Fremantle for a short time in 1830, the first Acting Resident Magistrate at York, and a Justice of the Peace for the Lower Swan district. Later, he held land grants at Toodyay and Murray. He contracted to supply meat to the government in 1834. His wife and family left the colony on March 29, 1837 on the Shepherd. Francis followed them in September 1838 on the same vessel.
Children:
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
John BYRNE (BURN), b. circa 1805 (UK); m. October 13, 1841 (W.A.), Ann MARSHALL of Upper Swan.
John was a Farming Servant for the BURGES Brothers. He held stock at Northam in 1850.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Jesse CHEVERIL (aka CHERVILLE, CHIVRELL), b. circa 1807 (UK); m. (UK), Elizabeth CHEVERIL (aka CHERVILLE, CHIVRELL) (nee SOPP), b. circa 1810 (UK).
Jesse was an indentured shepherd and Labourer for Francis BYRNE and his wife was a servant.
Children:
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Michael Connors, b. circa 1810 (IRELAND).
He was a farming servant for the BURGES Brothers but intended leaving the colony in 1835.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Joseph COOPER, b. circa 1796 (UK), d. November 1847 (W.A.); m. (UK), Elizabeth COOPER (nee WRIGHT), b. circa 1795 (UK), d. circa 1876 (W.A.).
Joseph was a blacksmith and miller. He was granted 640 acres which he selected in the Murray district. He built a mill at Yunderup and died in an accident with his cart at Woodman's Point. His son Joseph carried on the family property at Pinjarra.
Children:
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Elijah DAWSON, b. September 29, 1794 (ENG), d. May 12, 1885 (Newton, W.A.); m. (UK), Ann DAWSON (nee WAKEHAM), b. circa 1803-5 (UK), d. February 6, 1880 (W.A.).
Elijah was indentured as a servant to the MOLLOYs but was originally a veteran of the Battle of Waterloo where he held the rank of corporal. He accompanied the BUSSELLs to the Vasse District in 1834 for 6 months; was a Police Constable at Augusta in 1835; lived at Wonnerup between 1841 and 1845; and then lived on "Westbrook", his farm in Dunsborough.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
John DEWAR, b. circa 1782-4 (SCOTLAND), d. October 23, 1854 (Upper Swan, W.A.); m. (UK), Mary (Jane) DEWAR (nee ROBINSON), b. circa 1790 (UK), d. July 1, 1853 (Upper Swan, W.A.).
John was a general servant for J.W. TURNER. He and Mary initially settled at Augusta where they worked as servants. They moved to Perth in 1832 and John became a small farmer in the Upper Swan District. He was also a mailman in Toodyay in 1845.
Children:
* For further information on this family, please contact Christine Uphill.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Charles W. GILLINGHAM, b. circa 1810 (UK).
Charles was indentured as a labourer to William HABGOOD. He was appointed as a Government messenger in February 1832.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
William Temple GRAHAM, b. circa 1795 (UK), d. June 28, 1841 (Fremantle, W.A.); m. (UK), Harriett GRAHAM.
William was originally a Captain in the Royal African Regiment. He was granted 117.5 acres and in 1841 received titles to Leschenault 18 of 678 acres. He was a Public Notary, solicitor and Justice of the Peace in Fremantle in 1830. He resigned as Coroner for Colony in 1832. In that year he was also tried for his part in the fatal duel in which Johnson lost his life (the other duellist, Clark, was transferred to Albany).
William acquired a printing press from Tasmania per Weavell and published the "West Australian Colonial News" in 1833.
By 1838 he was living with Paul Lockyer’s wife in Perth and his will was made out in favour of her daughter, Eliza Clark.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Alfred GREEN, M.D., b. circa 1805 (UK), d. September 7, 1895 (Northam, W.A.).
Alfred was appointed to the position of Assistant Colonial Surgeon in 1830. He moved to Augusta in 1831 and then on to Vasse. By 1856 he was the Resident Medical Officer at Toodyay. He lived in Northam during the 1870s.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
John Henry GREGORY, b. circa 1793 (UK), d. May 12, 1866 (Northam, W.A.); m. (UK), Mary Williams GREGORY (nee MONTGOMERY), formerly the widow DORMAN, b. circa 1792 (UK), d. October 13, 1857 (Northam, W.A.).
John was granted 800 acres and opened the "Pineapple Inn" on the Swan River. He also farmed at York in the Avon Valley District on a property called "Carolin".
Children:
* For further information on this family, please contact Mark Schipp.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
William HABGOOD, b. circa 1806 (UK), d. January 29, 1845 (W.A.).
William was an agriculturalist and was granted 2400 acres. He was a merchant in Perth and was also noted for painting a scene on Melville Water, near Perth in 1842.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
John HANCOCK, b. circa 1780 (Devon, ENG), d. circa 1839 (W.A.); m. (UK), Grace HANCOCK (nee ELDRIDGE), b. circa 1782 (UK), d. 1833 (W.A.).
John was indentured as a carpenter to Capt F.H. BYRNE and leased his grant "Belmont" on the Swan River. He was granted a hotel licence in 1832 for the "Mermaid". He and his sons worked as sawyers and he was permitted to select 640 acres. He only took up 100 acres of his land allocation in the Avon district in 1832.
Children:
* For further information on this family, please contact Mark Schipp.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Robert HEPPINGSTONE, b. circa 1797 (UK), d. April 29, 1835 (Cape Leeuwin, W.A.); m. (UK), Ann HEPPINGSTONE (nee McKINLEY), b. circa 1804 (UK), d. April 15, 1878 (Busselton, W.A.).
Robert was an ex-soldier with the Rifle Brigade and served with Capt. MOLLOY in the Napoleonic Wars. He accompanied Capt. MOLLOY to Augusta as an indentured servant and owned a Town Lot in Augusta. Robert was a staunch Freemason and Orangeman, and was drowned when he was washed off rocks at Cape Leeuwin.
Children:
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
John HERRING, b. circa 1780 (UK), d. April 16, 1866 (W.A.); m. Elizabeth HERRING, b. circa 1784 (UK), d. March 31, 1857 (Busselton, W.A.).
There is a bit of doubt surrounding Elizabeth as [Erickson] suggests that she may have married John in WA and late in his life, but maybe a second marriage was being referred to???
John was granted 900 acres which he farmed. He was a postmaster at Augusta and a tidewaiter and postmaster at Vasse from the 1840s until 1862. He held two Town Lots in Busselton in 1853.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Judith KEARNEY (KEARNAN), b. circa 1810 (UK).
Judith was employed as a servant woman by the BURGES Brothers. Her son, Thomas BURGES, b. March, 1831 (W.A.), was fathered by Samuel BURGES. Judith and her son were sent back to Ireland.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
John Thurston KOLLER, M.D., b. circa 1807 (UK); m. (UK), Mary Emily KOLLER, b. circa 1810 (UK).
John brought goods and several servants with him which entitled him to a grant of 10,306 acres. Records show that Dr. GREEN assisted him during 1830 but KOLLER appears to have left the colony by mid-1832 when his villa grant in Perth was taken over by Robert COLLINS.
Children:
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
George LLOYD, b. circa 1805 (UK).
George selected 500 acres in the Avon District on June 23, 1836. He was accompanied on the voyage by Joseph Morris whom he employed as a carpenter. Joseph MORRIS' sister was married to George LLOYD's brother James.
George left for New South Wales on the Truelove in October 1836.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
W. Henry LONGMATE, b. circa 1809 (UK), d. December 1855 (W.A.).
Henry was employed as a servant by James TURNER. In 1844 he worked as a tidewaiter in Augusta. He was murdered in 1855 by John SCOTT, a convict who was hanged for his crime on January 14, 1856.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Captain John MOLLOY, b. September 5, 1780 (ENG); d. October 6, 1867 (Vasse, W.A.); m. August 1829 (UK), Georgiana MOLLOY (nee KENNEDY), b. May 23, 1805 (ENG); d. April 8, 1842 (W.A.).
John was with the 95th Rifle Brigade and was a veteran of the Napoleonic Wars. He became the pioneer settler at Augusta where he was appointed resident magistrate and Justice of the Peace in 1830.
He was granted 12,813 acres of land and in 1839 he moved his establishment to the Vasse, relocating his grant and building his homestead "Fairlawn".
In 1850 he visited England, going via South Australia on 9 March 1850 to visit his daughter, Mrs Vale, who was living there. He was gazetted Lieutenant Colonel and returned to W.A. about 1852.
His wife, Georgiana, was an amateur botanist and sent many collections of wildflower specimens back to Mangles in England. She is commemorated by a brass plaque in the Perth pavement for the year 1843.
For further information about this couple, refer to Alexandra Hasluck's book "Portrait with Background."
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
William MORRIS, b. circa 1805 (UK).
William arrived with his brother Joseph who is listed below. He worked as a mechanic for another fellow passenger, George LLOYD, who was his sister's brother-in-law.
William announced his intention of leaving the colony on January 24, 1835.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Joseph MORRIS, b. circa 1811 (UK).
Joseph arrived with his brother William who is listed above.
He was indentured as a mechanic to another fellow passenger, George
LLOYD, who was his sister's brother-in-law.
Joseph worked with Edward Pratt in 1830 and built the ship River Chief in Mandurah in
1844-5. He was declared a bankrupt in May 1846.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
[ Top | Passenger List ]
Charles Rossmore NORTHCOTT, son of General Sir Amos, b. circa 1810 (IRELAND); d. March 7, 1838 (IRELAND).
Charles was allocated 10 acres of land on Rottnest Island where he planned to establish a fishing venture in January 1831. When the venture failed he sought a Government appointment and was posted to Guildford as Assistant Superintendent of Native Tribes in 1834.
In 1835 he accompanied STIRLING and ROE on their exploration trips. He was also promoted to Superintendent of Mounted Police.
Charles left for Ireland on May 28, 1836 on the Sally Ann, planning to return to W.A with stock but died at his father’s home, "Marybro Park", while abroad.
He had formed a liaison in W.A. with Rachel BURROWS who was in service to Lady Stirling but he died with no knowledge of the birth of Rachel’s daughter, Mary Lucille.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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Edward PEARCE, b. circa 1816 (UK).
Edward was a servant for the BUSSELLs and his intention of leaving the colony on April 19, 1834 was announced in the Perth Gazette.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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Mary PERRONNE, b. circa 1812 (UK).
Mary was a servant for the KOLLERs.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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Henry POSTANS, b. circa 1812 (UK).
Henry was a servant for the TURNERs.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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Thomas ROBINSON, b. circa 1814 (UK).
Thomas was originally a servant for the TURNERs but by 1843 he was living in Toodyay and employed by PHILLIPS and HAMERSLEY of Culham.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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Thomas SALKILLD, b. May 30, 1805 (ENG); d. January 27, 1880 (Perth, W.A.).
Thomas was originally a servant for the TURNERs. He was apprenticed as a stonemaker and later as a bricklayer. He spent five years at Augusta and departed for England in 1837, returning the same year with his wife and brother John.
After his return to W.A. he settled in Perth and served as a Police Constable from 1841 to 1849. He went to Victoria in 1852 with the TURNERs.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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Andrew Adam SMITH, b. circa 1794 (UK); d. September 1849 (Perth, W.A.); m. (UK), Mary SMITH, b. circa 1794 (ENG); d. March 28, 1835 (Augusta, W.A.).
Andrew was indentured as a servant to the TURNERs and worked as a blacksmith at Augusta. He moved to Perth and was drowned while crossing the river with a horse and cart.
Children:
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
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Anne SMITH, b. circa 1790 (UK).
Anne was a widow and was originally a servant for the TURNERs. She was possibly a
sister-in-law to Andrew Adam SMITH who is listed above.
It is also possible that Anne was employed by YULE in the Swan District at the time of the
1837 census. It is also possible that she was the woman who married William DODD in 1841.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians]
... Please confirm with other sources
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James STAPLES, b. circa 1795 (UK).
James was a servant for the MOLLOYs. He moved to Albany and was listed as a gardener on the 1836 Census.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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James Woodward TURNER, b. circa 1780 (ENG); d. June 13, 1862 (Perth, W.A.); m. (UK), Maria TURNER, b. September 6, 1791 (UK); d. August 1, 1869 (Perth, W.A.).
James was a London businessman and brought out a pre-fabricated house. He was granted 20,026 acres at Augusta where he was a pioneer settler. He built the ship Alpha.
After the settlement at Augusta was abandoned by MOLLOY and the BUSSELLs he returned to England in 1847 to plead for support. He moved his home, "Lismore House", to Perth and was listed as a General dealer in Howick Street.
His sons scattered throughout the land and some even moved to Victoria.
Children:
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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Thomas John WILLY (WILLEY), b. circa 1798 (UK); d. May 13, 1870 (Beverley, W.A.); m. (UK), Susannah WILLY (WILLEY), b. circa 1809 (UK); d. May 25, 1873 (York, W.A.).
Thomas was a servant for the TURNERs. He worked as a sawyer for TURNER briefly at Augusta before moving to Fremantle and then to the Murray district. By the 1850s he was established in Beverley with his sons. He was a box & trunk maker.
* For further information on this family, please contact Bruce Powell and Jacqueline Walles.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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John WOOD, b. circa 1804 (UK).
John was a mechanic. He was granted 253 acres of land and at the time of the 1832 Census was in Perth working for WITTENOOM. By 1837 he had moved to Beverley.
[Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians] ... Please confirm with other sources
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Apr 9, 2001
Rob Nelson.
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