141 relations: Alexander Pearce, Alfred Chopin, Andrew Bent, Billy Blue, Charles Rodius, Charlotte Badger, Convicts in Australia, Daniel Cooper (convict and merchant), Daniel Herbert (convict), David Davies (Dai'r Cantwr), Denis Cashman, Dorothy Handland, Edward Davis (bushranger), Edward Eagar, Elizabeth Callaghan, Elizabeth Steel, Enoch Moore (loyalist turned rebel), Esther Abrahams, False pretenses, Fenian Rising, First Fleet, Francis Greenway, Frank the Poet, George Barrington, George Howe (printer), George Johnston (British Marines officer), George Jones (bushranger), George Mealmaker, Henry Browne Hayes, Henry Fulton, Henry Kable, Henry Savery, Henry Wildman, Ikey Solomon, Irish Rebellion of 1798, Isaac Nichols, Jack Donahue, James Blackburn (architect), James Bloodsworth (convict), James Davis (escaped convict), James Goodwin, James Hardy Vaux, James Oatley, James Ruse, James Squire, James Walsh (convict), James Wilson (Irish nationalist), Jørgen Jørgensen, John Baughan, John Boyle O'Reilly, ..., John Cadman (convict), John Caesar, John Casey (Australian convict), John Eyre (painter), John Frost (Chartist), John Guard, John Knatchbull (Royal Navy captain), John Lynch (serial killer), John Martin (Young Irelander), John Mitchel, John Richardson (convict), John Tawell, Joseph Backler, Joseph Gerrald, Joseph Lycett, Joseph Potaski, Joseph Samuel, Joseph Wild, Kevin Izod O'Doherty, Knud Bull, Laurence Hynes Halloran, Lawrence Kavenagh, Margaret Catchpole, Mark Jeffrey, Martin Cash, Mary Bryant, Mary Hyde, Mary Reibey, Matthew Brady, Maurice Margarot, Michael Dwyer, Michael Howe (bushranger), Michael Massey Robinson, Moondyne Joe, Nathaniel Lucas, National Portrait Gallery (Australia), National Trust of Australia, Ned Kelly, Newport Rising, Owen Suffolk, Patrick O'Donoghue (Young Irelander), Penal transportation, Queen Victoria, Radical War, Ralph Entwistle, Ralph Hush, Rebecca Riots, Rebellions of 1837–1838, Reform Act 1832, Richard Browne (artist), Richard Burgess (murderer), Richard Read Sr., Robert Francis Burns, Robert Pate, Robert Sidaway, Royal Bull's Head Inn, Ruth Bowyer, Samuel Lyons, Samuel Terry, Sarah Bellamy, Shoni Sguborfawr, Simeon Lord, Solomon Blay, Solomon Levey, Solomon Wiseman, Terence MacManus, Thomas Bock, Thomas Francis Meagher, Thomas Fyshe Palmer, Thomas Griffiths Wainewright, Thomas Muir of Huntershill, Thomas Pamphlett, Thomas Watling, Tolpuddle Martyrs, Valentine Marshall, Westminster, William Bland, William Bryant (convict), William Buckley (convict), William Buelow Gould, William Clackson, William Field (Australian pastoralist), William Henry Groom, William Hutchinson (superintendent), William Jones (Chartist), William Redfern, William Skirving, William Smith O'Brien, William Tucker (settler), William Westwood (bushranger), Zephaniah Williams. Expand index (91 more) »
Alexander Pearce
Alexander Pearce (1790 – 19 July 1824) was an Irish convict who was transported to Van Diemen's Land for seven years for theft.
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Alfred Chopin
Alfred Chopin (1846 – October 1902) was a convict transported to Western Australia.
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Andrew Bent
Andrew Bent (1790 – 26 August 1851) was a printer, publisher and newspaper proprietor, active in Australia.
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Billy Blue
Billy Blue or William Blue (c. 1767 - 7 May 1834) was an Australian convict.
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Charles Rodius
Charles Rodius (1802 – 9 April 1860) was a German-born artist, printmaker and architect.
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Charlotte Badger
Charlotte Badger (1778 – in or after 1818) Is an English born Australian woman, widely considered to be the first Australian female pirate.
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Convicts in Australia
Between 1788 and 1868, about 162,000 convicts were transported by the British government to various penal colonies in Australia.
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Daniel Cooper (convict and merchant)
Daniel Cooper (1785–1853) was a convict transported to New South Wales who became a successful merchant, financier, shipowner and shipping agent.
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Daniel Herbert (convict)
Daniel Herbert (1802–1868), a Tasmanian convict, was a skilled stonemason who, with co-convict James Colbeck, oversaw the building of the Ross Bridge and embellished it with interesting carvings.
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David Davies (Dai'r Cantwr)
David Davies, also known as Dai'r Cantwr (David the singer) (c. 1812–1874), was a Welsh poet and lay-preacher.
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Denis Cashman
Denis Bambrick Cashman (c. 1842 – 8 January 1897) was an Irish political prisoner and diarist who was transported to Western Australia due to Fenianism and wrote of his experiences in a diary.
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Dorothy Handland
Dorothy Handland (born Dorothy Coolley; c. 1705/26 -) was perhaps the oldest convict transported on the First Fleet.
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Edward Davis (bushranger)
Edward Davis (1816–1841) was an Australia convict turned bushranger.
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Edward Eagar
Edward Eagar (1787–1866) was a lawyer, merchant and criminal.
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Elizabeth Callaghan
Elizabeth Callaghan (1802-1852; also Eliza Thompson, later Elizabeth Batman and Sarah Willoughby) was a convict born in Ireland in 1802 and shipped to the penal colony in New South Wales at the age of 17 for passing a counterfeit bank note for £1 with intent to defraud the Bank of England.
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Elizabeth Steel
Elizabeth Steel (c. 1766 – 1795), also known as Betty Steel, was an English convict sent to Australia aboard a ship of the Second Fleet.
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Enoch Moore (loyalist turned rebel)
Enoch Moore (April 16, 1779– August 1841), son of Samuel Moore U.E. and Rachel Stone, married Elizabeth Smith, daughter of James Smith and Hannah Hawksworth, on March 30, 1803 in Old Holy Trinity Church, Lower Middleton, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia.
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Esther Abrahams
Esther Abrahams (c.1767 or 1771 – 26 August 1846) was a Londoner sent to Australia as a convict on the First Fleet.
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False pretenses
In criminal law, property is obtained by false pretenses when the acquisition results from intentional misrepresenting of a past or existing fact.
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Fenian Rising
The Fenian Rising of 1867 (Éirí Amach na bhFíníní, 1867) was a rebellion against British rule in Ireland, organised by the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB).
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First Fleet
The First Fleet was the 11 ships that departed from Portsmouth, England, on 13 May 1787 to found the penal colony that became the first European settlement in Australia.
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Francis Greenway
Francis Howard Greenway (20 November 1777 – September 1837) was an English-born architect who was transported to Australia as a convict for the crime of forgery.
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Frank the Poet
Frank the Poet (ca. 1810–1861) (real name Francis MacNamara) was a convict, transported to New South Wales from Cashel, County Tipperary, Ireland, who composed improvised verse expressing the convict's point of view.
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George Barrington
George Barrington (14 May 1755 – 27 December 1804) was an Irish-born pickpocket, popular London socialite, Australian pioneer (following his transportation to Botany Bay), and author.
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George Howe (printer)
George Howe (1769 – 11 May 1821) was a poet, printer, and editor of the first Australian newspaper, the Sydney Gazette.
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George Johnston (British Marines officer)
Lieutenant-Colonel George Johnston (19 March 1764 – 5 January 1823) was briefly Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales, Australia after leading the rebellion later known as the Rum Rebellion.
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George Jones (bushranger)
George Jones (c. 1815 – 30 April 1844) was a convict bushranger known for escaping from Port Arthur, Van Diemen's Land (the so-called escape proof colony), with Martin Cash and Lawrence Kavenagh.
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George Mealmaker
George Mealmaker (10 February 1768 – 30 March 1808) was a Scottish radical organiser and writer, born in Dundee, Scotland.
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Henry Browne Hayes
Sir Henry Browne Hayes (1762–1832) was an Irish-born convict, transported to New South Wales.
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Henry Fulton
Henry Fulton (1761 – 17 November 1840) was an Irish-Australian clergyman and schoolmaster.
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Henry Kable
Henry Kable (1763–1846), born in Laxfield, Suffolk, England, was transported to Australia in the First Fleet and became a prominent business man.
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Henry Savery
Henry Savery (4 August 1791 – 6 February 1842) was a convict transported to Port Arthur, Tasmania, and Australia's first novelist.
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Henry Wildman
Henry Wildman (born circa 1837; (27 January 2016). date of death unknown) was a convict transported to Western Australia, whose claims to have found gold in the Kimberley region prompted exploration of the area during 1864.
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Ikey Solomon
Isaac "Ikey" Solomon (1787? – 1850) was an English criminal who became an extremely successful receiver of stolen property.
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Irish Rebellion of 1798
The Irish Rebellion of 1798 (Éirí Amach 1798), also known as the United Irishmen Rebellion (Éirí Amach na nÉireannach Aontaithe), was an uprising against British rule in Ireland lasting from May to September 1798.
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Isaac Nichols
Isaac Nichols (29 July 1770 – 18 November 1819) was an English Australian farmer, shipowner and public servant who was a convict transported to New South Wales on the Third Fleet, on the Admiral Barrington.
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Jack Donahue
Jack Donahue (1804 – 1 September 1830) was a bushranger in Australia between 1825 and 1830.
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James Blackburn (architect)
James Blackburn (10 August 1803 – 3 March 1854) was an English civil engineer, surveyor and architect best known for his work in Australia, where he had been transported as a sentence for forgery.
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James Bloodsworth (convict)
James Bloodsworth (7 March 1759 – 21 March 1804) was a convict sentenced for the theft of one game cock and two hens at Esher, Surrey.
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James Davis (escaped convict)
James Davis (known for a period as Duramboi) (1808 – 7 May 1889) was a Scottish-born convict, notable for escaping custody in Australia and living with aboriginals.
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James Goodwin
James Goodwin (1800 – after 1835) was a convict escapee and explorer in Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania).
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James Hardy Vaux
James Hardy Vaux (born 1782, date of death unknown) was an English-born convict transported to Australia on three separate occasions.
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James Oatley
James Oatley Snr (c. 1769–1839) was a British-born colonial Australian watch and clock maker and one-time convict.
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James Ruse
James Ruse (9 August /17605 September 1837) was a Cornish farmer who, at the age of 23, was convicted of breaking and entering and was sentenced to seven years' transportation to Australia.
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James Squire
James Squire (alternatively known as James Squires, 1754 – 16 May 1822), was a first fleet convict transported to Australia.
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James Walsh (convict)
James Walsh (1833–1871) was a transported convict and artist.
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James Wilson (Irish nationalist)
James Wilson (6 February 1836 – 6 November 1921) (Séamas Mac Liammóir) was a Fenian who was transported as a convict to Western Australia.
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Jørgen Jørgensen
Jørgen Jørgensen (name of birth: Jürgensen, and changed to Jorgenson from 1817)Wilde, W H, Oxford Companion to Australian Literature 2nd ed.
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John Baughan
John Baughan (1754 – 25 September 1797) was a carpenter who was convicted at Oxford, England, in 1783 as Baffen (alias Bingham and Baughan), and sentenced to be transported for 7 years for stealing 5 blankets.
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John Boyle O'Reilly
John Boyle O'Reilly (28 June 1844 – 10 August 1890) was an Irish poet, journalist, author and activist.
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John Cadman (convict)
John Cadman (1772 – 12 November 1848) worked as a publican in England, before becoming a convict and being transported to Australia.
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John Caesar
John Caesar (1764 – 15 February 1796), nicknamed "Black Caesar", was the first Australian bushranger and one of the first people of African descent to arrive in Australia.
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John Casey (Australian convict)
John Casey (died 1882) was an Irish rebel, who was caught and tried in 1824 and transported to Australia in 1826.
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John Eyre (painter)
John Eyre (1771–), a pardoned convict, was an early Australian painter and engraver.
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John Frost (Chartist)
John Frost (25 May 1784 – 27 July 1877) was a prominent Welsh leader of the British Chartist movement in the Newport Rising.
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John Guard
John 'Jacky' Guard (ca. 1791/92 – 1857) was an English convict sent to Australia who was one of the first European settlers in the South Island of New Zealand, working as a whaler and trader.
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John Knatchbull (Royal Navy captain)
John Knatchbull (c. 1791 – 13 February 1844) was a naval captain and convict found guilty of murder in 1844.
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John Lynch (serial killer)
John Lynch (1813 – 22 April 1842) was an Irish-born Australian serial killer, convicted for the murder of Kearns Landregan, but is believed to have killed 10 people in the Berrima area of New South Wales from 1835 to 1841.
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John Martin (Young Irelander)
John Martin (8 September 1812 – 29 March 1875) was an Irish nationalist activist who shifted from early militant support for Young Ireland and Repeal, to non-violent alternatives such as support for tenant farmers' rights and eventually as the first Home Rule MP, for Meath 1871–1875.
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John Mitchel
John Mitchel (Seán Mistéal; 3 November 1815 – 20 March 1875) was an Irish nationalist activist, author, and political journalist.
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John Richardson (convict)
John Matthew Richardson (28 April 1797 – 28 July 1882) was an Australian convict who accompanied several exploring expeditions as botanical collector.
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John Tawell
John Tawell (1784–1845) was a British murderer.
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Joseph Backler
Joseph Backler (24 May 1813 – 22 October 1895) was an English-born Australian painter.
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Joseph Gerrald
Joseph Gerrald (9 February 1763 – 16 March 1796) was a political reformer, one of the "Scottish Martyrs".
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Joseph Lycett
Joseph Lycett (c.1774 – c.1825) was a portrait and miniature painter, active in Australia.
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Joseph Potaski
Joseph Potaski or John Potaskie (c. 1764 – 31 August 1824) was the first Pole to settle in Australia, and one of the first convicts to arrive in Van Diemen's Land on ''Ocean''.
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Joseph Samuel
Joseph Samuel (c. 1780 – April 1806) was an Englishman legendary for the manner in which he survived execution.
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Joseph Wild
Joseph Wild (also Wilde) (c.1759 or 1773–1847) was an early explorer of Australia.
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Kevin Izod O'Doherty
Kevin Izod O'Doherty (7 September 1823 – 15 July 1905) was an Irish Australian politician.
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Knud Bull
Knud Geelmuyden Bull (10 September 1811 – 23 December 1889) was a Norwegian painter and counterfeiter.
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Laurence Hynes Halloran
Laurence Hynes Halloran (29 December 1765 – 8 March 1831) was a poet, unordained clergyman and felon who became a pioneer schoolteacher, journalist, and bigamist in Australia, founder of the Sydney Public Free Grammar School.
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Lawrence Kavenagh
Lawrence Kavenagh (c. 1805 – 13 October 1846) was a convict bushranger known for escaping from Port Arthur, Van Diemen's Land (the so-called escape proof colony), with Martin Cash and George Jones.
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Margaret Catchpole
Margaret Catchpole (14 March 1762 – 13 May 1819) was an English adventuress, chronicler and criminal.
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Mark Jeffrey
Mark Jeffrey (1825-1903) Mark Jeffery (or “Big Mark”) was an English convict who departed England on the 12th of December 1849 and arrived in Australia on the 30th of April 1850.
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Martin Cash
Martin Cash (baptised 10 October 1808 – 26 August 1877) was a notorious convict bushranger known for escaping twice from Port Arthur, Van Diemen's Land.
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Mary Bryant
Mary Bryant (1765 – after 1794) was a Cornish convict sent to Australia.
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Mary Hyde
Mary Lord nee Hyde (1779–1864) in the period 1855 to 1859 sued the Commissioners of the City of Sydney and won compensation for the sum of over £15,600 (plus costs) for the inundation of her property at Botany.
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Mary Reibey
Mary Reibey née Haydock (12 May 177730 May 1855) was an Australian merchant, shipowner and trader.
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Matthew Brady
Matthew Brady (1799 – 4 May 1826) was an English-born convict who became a bushranger in Van Diemen's Land (modern-day Tasmania).
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Maurice Margarot
Maurice Margarot (1745–1815) is most notable for being one of the founding members of the London Corresponding Society, a radical society demanding parliamentary reform in the late eighteenth century.
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Michael Dwyer
Michael Dwyer (1772–1825) was a United Irishmen leader in the 1798 rebellion.
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Michael Howe (bushranger)
Michael Howe (1787 – 21 October 1818) was the leader of a gang of bushrangers in Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania) being a convict transported to Australia.
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Michael Massey Robinson
Michael Massey Robinson (1744 – 22 December 1826) was a poet and author of the first published verse in Australia.
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Moondyne Joe
Joseph Bolitho Johns (February 1826 – 13 August 1900), better known as Moondyne Joe, was an English convict and Western Australia's best known bushranger.
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Nathaniel Lucas
Nathaniel Lucas (1764–1818) was a convict transported to Australia on the First Fleet.
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National Portrait Gallery (Australia)
The National Portrait Gallery in Australia is a collection of portraits of prominent Australians that are important in their field of endeavour or whose life sets them apart as an individual of long-term public interest.
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National Trust of Australia
The National Trust of Australia, officially the Australian Council of National Trusts (ACNT), is the Australian national peak body for community-based, non-government non-profit organisations committed to promoting and conserving Australia's indigenous, natural and historic heritage.
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Ned Kelly
Edward "Ned" Kelly (December 1854 – 11 November 1880) was an Australian bushranger, outlaw, gang leader and convicted police murderer.
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Newport Rising
The Newport Rising was the last large-scale armed rebellion against authority in Great Britain, when, on 4 November 1839, almost 10,000 Chartist sympathisers, led by John Frost, marched on the town of Newport, Monmouthshire.
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Owen Suffolk
Owen Hargrave Suffolk (4 April 1829 – ?) an Australian bushranger, poet, confidence-man and author of Days of Crime and Years of Suffering (1867).
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Patrick O'Donoghue (Young Irelander)
Patrick O'Donoghue (died 1854), also known as Patrick O'Donohoe or O'Donoghoe, from Clonegal, County Carlow, was an Irish Nationalist revolutionary and journalist, a member of the Young Ireland movement.
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Penal transportation
Penal transportation or transportation refers to the relocation of convicted criminals, or other persons regarded as undesirable, to a distant place, often a colony for a specified term; later, specifically established penal colonies became their destination.
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Queen Victoria
Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria; 24 May 1819 – 22 January 1901) was Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 20 June 1837 until her death.
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Radical War
The Radical War or also known as the Scottish Insurrection of 1820, was a week of strikes and unrest, a culmination of Radical demands for reform in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland which had become prominent in the early years of the French Revolution, but had then been repressed during the long Napoleonic Wars.
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Ralph Entwistle
Ralph Entwistle (c. 1805 – 2 November 1830) was an English labourer who was transported to the British penal colony of New South Wales as a convict in 1827 and later became a bushranger.
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Ralph Hush
Ralph Hush (1779 – 2 June 1860) was a convict sent from Northumberland to Australia in 1820.
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Rebecca Riots
The Rebecca Riots took place between 1839 and 1843 in South and Mid Wales.
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Rebellions of 1837–1838
The Rebellions of 1837–1838 (Les rébellions de 1837) were two armed uprisings that took place in Lower and Upper Canada in 1837 and 1838.
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Reform Act 1832
The Representation of the People Act 1832 (known informally as the 1832 Reform Act, Great Reform Act or First Reform Act to distinguish it from subsequent Reform Acts) was an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom (indexed as 2 & 3 Will. IV c. 45) that introduced wide-ranging changes to the electoral system of England and Wales.
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Richard Browne (artist)
Richard Browne (1771–1824) was an early Australian convict artist and illustrator who was transported from Ireland to the new colony of New South Wales.
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Richard Burgess (murderer)
Richard S. Burgess (14 February 1829 – 5 October 1866) was a notorious murderer known for the "Maungatapu murders" which occurred on the Maungatapu track, south-east of Nelson, New Zealand.
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Richard Read Sr.
Richard Read Sr. (ca. 1765 - ca. 1829) was a British-born artist who was sent to Australia as a convict.
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Robert Francis Burns
Robert Francis Burns (c 1840 – 25 September 1883) was an Irish convicted murderer who was hanged at HM Prison Ararat in 1883.
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Robert Pate
Robert Francis Pate, Jr (1819–1895) was a former British Army officer, best remembered for his assault on Queen Victoria on 27 June 1850.
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Robert Sidaway
Robert Sidaway (14 January 1758 – 13 October 1809), a convict of the First Fleet, was transported to Australia for stealing in 1788.
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Royal Bull's Head Inn
The Royal Bull's Head Inn is a heritage-listed hotel at Brisbane Street, Drayton, Toowoomba Region, Queensland, Australia.
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Ruth Bowyer
Ruth Bowyer (c. 1761 – 5 June 1788), also known as Ruth Baldwin, was an English convict sent to Australia aboard a ship of the First Fleet.
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Samuel Lyons
Samuel Lyons (1791 - 3 August 1851) was a pardoned convict from London who rose to prominence in the Australian colony of New South Wales as a landowner and businessman.
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Samuel Terry
Samuel Terry (c. 1776 – 22 February 1838) was transported to Australia as a criminal, where he became a wealthy landowner, merchant and philanthropist.
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Sarah Bellamy
Sarah Bellamy was a convict on The First Fleet to Australia.
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Shoni Sguborfawr
Shoni Sguborfawr (Johnny Big Barn) (1811–1858) was a notorious Welsh thug, most notable for his part in the Rebecca Riots and his subsequent attempts to blackmail fellow 'rioters'.
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Simeon Lord
Simeon Lord (– 29 January 1840)D.
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Solomon Blay
Solomon Blay (20 January 1816 – 20 August 1897) was an English convict transported to the Australian penal colony of Van Diemen's Land (present-day Tasmania).
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Solomon Levey
Solomon Levey (1794–1833) was a convict transported to Australia in 1815 for theft who became a highly successful merchant and financier, at one time issuing his own banknotes in New South Wales.
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Solomon Wiseman
Solomon Wiseman (16 April 1777 - 28 November 1838) was a convict, merchant and ferryman.
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Terence MacManus
Terence Bellew MacManus (born 1811 or 1823-15 January 1861) was an Irish rebel who participated in the Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848.
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Thomas Bock
Bock was born in Sutton Coldfield, Birmingham, England.
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Thomas Francis Meagher
Thomas Francis Meagher (3 August 1823 1 July 1867) was an Irish nationalist and leader of the Young Irelanders in the Rebellion of 1848.
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Thomas Fyshe Palmer
Thomas Fyshe Palmer (1747–1802) was an English Unitarian minister, political reformer and convict.
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Thomas Griffiths Wainewright
Thomas Griffiths Wainewright (October 1794 – 17 August 1847) was an English artist, author and suspected serial killer.
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Thomas Muir of Huntershill
Thomas Muir (24 August 1765 – 26 January 1799), often known as Thomas Muir the Younger of Huntershill, was a Scottish political reformer.
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Thomas Pamphlett
Thomas Pamphlett (1788?–1838), sometimes Pamphlet, also known as James Groom, was a convict in colonial Australia.
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Thomas Watling
Thomas Watling (19 September 1762 - 1814?), was an early Australian painter and illustrator, notable for his natural history drawings and landscapes.
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Tolpuddle Martyrs
The Tolpuddle Martyrs were a group of six 19th-century Dorset agricultural labourers who were arrested for and convicted of swearing a secret oath as members of the Friendly Society of Agricultural Labourers.
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Valentine Marshall
Valentine Marshall (born 1814, died 12 September 1887) was a British man who was tried and charged for his alleged involvement in the Nottingham Reform Bill riots.
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Westminster
Westminster is an area of central London within the City of Westminster, part of the West End, on the north bank of the River Thames.
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William Bland
William Bland (5 November 1789 – 21 July 1868) was a transported convict, medical practitioner and surgeon, politician, farmer and inventor in colonial New South Wales, Australia.
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William Bryant (convict)
William Bryant (c. 17571791) was a Cornish fisherman and convict who was transported to Australia on the First Fleet.
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William Buckley (convict)
William Buckley (178030 January 1856) was an English convict who was transported to Australia, escaped, was given up for dead and lived in an Aboriginal community for many years.
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William Buelow Gould
William Buelow Gould (1801 – 11 December 1853) was an English and Van Diemonian (Tasmanian) painter.
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William Clackson
William Clackson (born c. 1799) was a shoemaker living in Glasgow at the time of the "Radical War" of 1820.
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William Field (Australian pastoralist)
William Field (1774–1837) was a Tasmanian pastoralist, meat contractor and publican.
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William Henry Groom
William Henry Groom (9 March 1833 – 8 August 1901) was a publican, newspaper proprietor, and member of the Parliament of Queensland and the Parliament of Australia.
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William Hutchinson (superintendent)
William Hutchinson (1772 – 26 July 1846) was a British convict who was transported to the Australian colonies, ultimately to become a successful public servant and businessman.
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William Jones (Chartist)
William Jones (1809–1873) was a political Radical and Chartist, who was a former actor, working as a watchmaker at Pontypool in Monmouthshire and also kept a beer house.
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William Redfern
William Redfern (1774 – 17 July 1833) was an English-raised surgeon in early colonial Australia who was transported to New South Wales as a convict for his role in the Mutiny on the Nore.
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William Skirving
William Skirving (c. 1745–1796) was one of the five Scottish Martyrs for Liberty.
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William Smith O'Brien
William Smith O'Brien (Liam Mac Gabhann Ó Briain; 17 October 1803 – 18 June 1864) was an Irish nationalist Member of Parliament (MP) and leader of the Young Ireland movement.
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William Tucker (settler)
William Tucker (c. 16 May 1784 – December 1817) was a British convict, a sealer, a trader in human heads, an Otago settler, and New Zealand’s first art dealer.
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William Westwood (bushranger)
William Westwood (7 August 1820 – 13 October 1846), also known as Jackey Jackey, was an English-born convict who became a bushranger in Australia.
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Zephaniah Williams
Zephaniah Williams (1795 – 8 May 1874) was a Welsh coal miner and Chartist campaigner, who was one of the leaders of the Newport Rising of 1839.
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References
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_convicts_transported_to_Australia