.... finally uncovered a gang of note forgers who had operated here in Birmingham, England, from about 1806 until it came crashing down in 1817 and George, among others, was sentenced to transportation for 14 years, ending up in TAS. His wife remarried, bigamously, two years later.
Bigamous marriages have been discussed at length at RChat, particularly when one of the parties has been sentenced to transportation beyond the seas for seven years or more. May I please suggest that the marriage had effectively ended with that 1817 sentence, and that the injured party (ie George's wife) may have been married the second time, without fear of being charged with bigamy....
See the following link
http://www.aifs.gov.au/institute/seminars/finlay.htmlAnd from the same author (A Professor of Law) :
"Also, in 1820, the Reverend John Youl stated that there was a general belief among the convicts that 'those who had been transported to this country are released from their matriomonial engagements'." from one paragraph (on page 27), of a reference text :
To Have But Not to Hold: A History of Attitudes to Marriage and Divorce in Australia 1858-1975 9781862875425
https://www.federationpress.com.au/bookstore/book.asp?isbn=9781862875425#bookcontentshttps://www.federationpress.com.au/pdf/EvattsSpeech.pdf I now have a mass of information on George but the one thing which eludes me is the cause of his death on 18 Sep 1822. He was buried in Hobart two days later. Please can anyone help me complete the puzzle?
Civil registrations of BDM events commence in VDL in 1837, so you will only find a burial register rather than a death certificate giving a certified cause of death.
The Burial register for St Davids (C of E), Hobart, is available online, free to search, via Tasmania Archives and Johngirl has given you that live link
George Chatterly, died 18th September (1822), buried 20th September, 40 years of age, arrived on the Lady Castlereagh, he was under a current sentence of a court (“Convict”)., and the Rev Knopwood performed the burial.
Have you searched the digitised newspapers from that era?
http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/search?adv=y Hobart Town Gazette and Van Diemen’s Land Advertiser
Hobart Town Gazette and Southern Reporter
Cheers, JM