Umm,
Gov Arthur arrived VDL 1824, and his Calvinist beliefs may well have influenced his re-visiting of the annual licences for publicans.
As I understand it, Green Ponds would have been "out of sight" of the regulars in Hobart Town, thus a Country Licence was available for Thomas Ransom.
VDL became a separate colony in 1825, so Gov Arthur would have been in a position to put in place his own interpretations and/or regulations for administraton of Licquor Licences etc. What were the regulations BEFORE Gov Arthur's administration took over, and also what Bigge's reports said about the regulations when he inspected VDL in circa Feb - March 1820.
I have just re-read Thomas Ransom's will ONLINE, and he makes no attempt to explain his relationship to Catharine Christina McNally or to "
her son" Thomas McNally. I note that this will was found by C C 22 November 1829, ie during her courtship with Von S. Also, there's no mention of "her daughter" Ann Ransom. If Thomas Ransom had a wife surely that wife ought to have benefited .... That's a very long delay between Thomas Ransom dying and Catharine finding his Will. Long enough for Catharine to have waited to see if anyone made a claim on Thomas' considerable estate before finding the will ....
I agree with Robyn, I don't see that Thomas' English marriage would have been the impediment of eleven years standing in that letter to Gov Arthur. If the wife was in Australia, then she would have made a claim on that estate.... or if she preceded Thomas, surely there would have been a RANSOM = McNALLY marriage......
PS I am of the opinion that the brand C N is "N" for NALLY, Mc; I would not expect to see it as C M.
The Points Robyn makes about the impediment (1, power of the law,; 2 known to officials and prying eyes but NOT in the public domain and 3 began in 1814 are worth following up.
Wiggy, can you get hold of the document that the transcript was based on ?
Cheers, JM