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Research in Other Countries => Australia => Australia Lookups completed => Topic started by: k1_oz on Thursday 17 May 12 19:21 BST (UK)
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Hello,
I was wondering whether anyone out there had the list of passengers of the "David Malcolm", from England to Norfolk Island, leaving England in May 1845 and arriving in Norfolk Island on Aug 25, 1845.
In particular, I am interested in the group of British 11th Regiment. I am wondering whether James Osgood or William James Osgood might have been a member of this group (and his wife Mary and possibly his son William James Osgood).
Thanks for taking the time to read this post!
Karina
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Hullo Karina, It would appear that james Osgood was indeed a member of the 11th.
See
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~garter1/o11th.htm
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~garter1/11th.htm
Neil
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Excellent! Thank-you Neil.
I don't suppose you might also know where I could find the passenger list for the "David Malcolm" on the Plymouth-Norfolk Island leg online?
Thanks again for taking the time to respond.
Karina
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Hi Karina,
The David Malcolm was a convict ship and the 11th Regiment were the convict guard. Onboard were:
220 male convicts (newspaper says 250)
Captain Currer/Conran?
3 Sergeants
3 Corporals
43 Privates
All of the 11th Regiment
Also Paymaster Timbrell and one private of the 58th Regiment.
The Master was James Cable and the Surgeon was Harvey Morris.
When the ship arrived into Sydney on 20 Sep 1845, onboard were:
Captain Conran
Paymaster Timbrell
48 Rank and File of the 11th Regiment (newspaper says 50)
7 women
2 boys
2 girls
This is the closest you will get to a list of those onboard and it does seem to imply that the Regiment stayed onboard and went to Sydney.
Sometimes you will find mention of individual people in the Surgeon's Log and this is at the UK National Archives.
Medical journal of the David Malcolm, hired convict ship from 9 May to 21 September 1845 by Harvey Morris, Surgeon and Superintendent, during which time the said ship was employed in conveying prisoners to Norfolk Island.
Covering dates: 1845
Held by: The National Archives, Kew
Legal status: Public Record(s)
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/displaycataloguedetails.asp?CATID=5038555&CATLN=6&accessmethod=5#summary
Debra :)
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9 Dec 1845
The Waterlily schooner was under engagement to convey a detachment of the 11th Regiment to Norfolk Island.
http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/37159625?searchTerm=%2211th%20regiment%22&searchLimits=l-decade=184|||l-year=1845
You really need to look at those early baptisms. In my experience they always state the rank and Regiment of the father if he was a soldier.
Would this be William James' baptism in England?
William James OSGOOD
Baptism/christening date: 06 Jul 1845
Baptism/christening place: St. Mary, Chatham, Kent, England
Father: James OSGOOD
Mother: Mary OSGOOD
https://www.familysearch.org/
...and the matching birth registration
OSGOOD, William James
Births Jun Quarter 1845
District: Medway
Volume: 5
Page: 386
http://freebmd.rootsweb.com/cgi/search.pl
There were military barracks at Chatham.
If this is the correct birth then these dates make it not possible for Mary and son to have been onboard the David Malcolm.
Debra :)
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Thanks for those links, Debra. That's great. I didn't know (and am happy to learn) that William James was born near the Army Barracks.
I guess that a heavily pregnant woman staying behind and then joining her husband later makes sense....I cannot find reference to a boat that transported the troops from the 11th after July 1845 and before Dec 1846 (when the next son was born on Norfolk Island), so a temporary separation seems likely.
Thanks for the point about the Waterlily...I'll see if I can get a passenger list for that. However, it seems that the soliders are FAR harder to track than convicts (who travelled at least under their own names!).
Thanks for taking the time to respond.
All the best,
Karina
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Oops! My mistake. I just realised that I was looking at the england departure dates for the Castle Eden and Ramilies not the arrival dates! In which case, either boat would fit with the established birth places & dates quite nicely!
Its looking like the Ramilies to Hobart arriving 24 Nov 1845, and then the Waterlily departing in Dec 1845 for Norfolk Island would be the most likely path. Now all I have to do is to find the passenger lists!
Thanks for your help: its really clarified events for me.
All the best,
Karina
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I am also interested in the 1/11th Foot Regiment as my great, great grandfather was a member and either arrived in Australia (Hobart then Sydney) on the Castle Eden or Ramilies in 1845. I have had no luck searching for his name on ships' lists. His name was John Howarth. His brother, Shepherd Howarth was also a member of the regiment and his name does appear on the Castle Eden list.
Any help would be very much appreciated.
Rosalie
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I also have an interest in the 11th Regiment and am trying to narrow down the information to find the ship on which my ancestor, Richard Bruce, and his wife and two children, arrived. It seems there were a number of ships carrying varying numbers of members of the 11th from the U.K. to the colony. Happy to supply more information. J.
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To J. Any further information you can supply on the 1/11th and the ships that carried them to Sydney would be very much appreciated.
Rosalie
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Hi Rosalie, I'll get my notes together and get back to you. J
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Here's something to get you started:
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~garter1/shipsthe11th.htm
There are possibly other ships as well.
More later.
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I've prepared a tabulation of all the ships I was able to locate which appeared to carry members of the 11th Devonshire. I cannot guarantee accuracy nor completeness and would appreciate input and editing. I've put links in the attachment to all the sources I used. If there was more than one date for the same event, I've entered both. If there was more than one port of origin listed, I've put them both in. My challenge is to figure out which ship my ancestor came in and my next task is to compare arrival dates etc to the paylists for the regiments (available at the NLA and some other major libraries). J
Oh heck, it won't allow me to attach a word document and it is in table form so it won't paste neatly in this forum. Please send personal message (via the "My Messages" towards the top of the page) and I will give you my email address. Ditto anyone else interested.
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Just a follow-up. I am still trying to sort out the ships which carried the 11th Regiment and I remain interested. J
This link for your information:
https://thebloodyeleventh.blogspot.com.au/2012/06/november-1845-happenings.html?showComment=1496918317519#c4448571293799658350