Extract from the FACHRS Newsletter

Extract from the FACHRS Newsletter

these had been born in India and one in London, so possibly class seaside holidays, with candy floss stalls and hinting at another army family? amusements. Convicts to the Swan River Colony The 1892 White’s Directory for Suffolk has Mrs Eliza By contrast the area north of the pier, near to the old Durrant at Beacon Villa, Felixstowe, another seaside property Harland House, Vernon Villa, etc., is seen as a much quieter Christine Seal along the Undercliffe, not far from Harland House. area of beach and promenade (although just as crowded in Harland House itself has an interesting history: In the the summer months, it has more upmarket bars and coffee 1920s it was taken over by Barnardo’s as a children’s home shops). It is little known that convicts were sent to Western Australia In 1847 the colonists were in a dire situation with not before becoming St Mary’s Nursing Home by the Sea. In Vernon Villa became part of the Felixstowe Ladies or the Swan River Colony as it was originally known. The enough settlers to labour and build the infrastructure of the 2017/18 this Nursing Home closed and the building is now College in the 1930s and 1940s before returning to a private article will concentrate on the founding of the Swan River new colony. Their only recourse was a request to London and occupied by people renting rooms. Maybe not so different to residence when the college closed in the 1980s. Between the Colony and explore the convict journey from court to the Colonial Office for convicts. The transportation of when it was leased/rented to holiday makers in Samuel north end of the promenade (known as Cobbolds point after conviction, to prison and transportation. convicts to New South Wales (NSW) and VDL had ceased by Durrant’s time. the family who owned most of the land and properties there) Having recently completed a holiday down under, this time. The colony set conditions for the transportation of By 1901 Samuel had retired as a gardener and he and and the Pier there lie the Spa Gardens. These were developed when I had the opportunity to visit various, but not all, penal felons and these were: Emma had moved to the village of her birth, Little Stonham. between about 1907 and 1910. The cliff was layered into colonies in Van Dieman’s Land (VDL or Tasmania), Cockatoo • To make cheap labour available to settlers and thereby Samuel however described himself as a retired builder, rather terraces and each part of the gardens has a distinct character. Island in Sydney Harbour, Perth and Fremantle, together with overcome shortage and expense of free workers; than a gardener.15 As has been stated earlier, the inspiration for the planting State Libraries in various cities, I became even more There are two possible death registrations for Samuel: came from the larger properties, such as Harland House, • To attract imperial funding that was required for fascinated by the development of Australian states. Reading 1. Sept quarter 1906 in Bosmere Registration District Vernon Villa and The Lodge Mansion. Although by the time running the colony providing income for the free Ann Jacobs’ books, some of which have been set in the (which covers Little Stonham) 4a 558 aged 65 — so the gardens were built Samuel Durrant was no longer settlers through the supply and service contracts with colony in the 19th century, they recall information on the born around 1841 employed at these large houses, it is nice to think that through the Convict Establishment; and his work as a gardener for both Lady Login and also the convicts, and provide an interesting background to the 2. Sept quarter 1910 in Woodbridge Registration District • Aid achieving completion of the much needed public Cobbold family, he had some input into the Spa Gardens. In colony at this time. In Farewell to Lancashire Anna Jacobs (which covers Walton and Felixstowe) 4a 436 aged 69 works throughout the colony.3 the early twenty-first century, the Spa Gardens, thanks to a quotes: — also born around 1841 …some men were relatives of expirees who had been Heritage Lottery grant, were refurbished and some have been And the three conditions were that no female convicts transported for various crimes, had served their time and either The first registration relates to Samuel the gardener and replanted to their former Edwardian designs. were to be sent, no political prisoners, and no convict gained a ticket of leave or a conditional pardon. As long as they the second to his cousin Samuel of Walton. convicted of a serious crime. The first condition was didn’t reoffend, they would work for wages or set themselves up After Samuel’s death, Emma moved back to Felixstowe ____________ honoured and no female convict was sent to Western in business, according to their backgrounds. And if they could because in 1911 she was once more a lodging house keeper, Notes Australia as they were deemed to be unsuitable mothers for afford the fares, could send for their families. To add to the living in Ranelagh Road, Felixstowe (not far from Harland future native Australians. The third condition was honoured complications of life in Australia it seemed respectable people House and Vernon Villa).16 Samuel and Emma’s daughter 1. GRO Births 1841 Q1 Woodbridge Vol.12 p.495. in the first few years and then broken. didn’t associate with ticket of leave men and their families Eliza also appeared on the 1911 census, living with her 2. GRO Births 1843 Q2 Woodbridge Vol.12 p.470. socially.1 There were forty-three ships sent to the colony with a husband Edward and her son. Eliza’s occupation was as 3. https://www.familysearch.org accessed December 2019 and Felixstowe total of 9,720 convicts, the first the Scindian in 1850 and the someone who ‘Lets Apartments’.17 The 1912 Kelly’s Baptism registers SRO. To briefly give a background to Western Australia, the last, the Hougoumont in 1868. Thirty-seven of the voyages 4. 1851 Census Felixstowe HO107/1801 f.337 p.17. Directory for Suffolk lists some apartments in Russell Road, first free settlement was at Albany on the southern coast of the carried prisoners from England but one collected their 5. 1861 Census Felixstowe RG09/1168 f.37 p.14. Felixstowe as being let by Emma Durrant, so maybe mother state in December 1826. Major Edmund Lockyer and HM convicts from Bermuda. Six ships brought smaller cargoes of 6. GRO Marriages 1860 Q4 Woodbridge Vol.4a p.1365. and daughter were in business together. Russell Road is Brig Amity with a detachment of twenty troops from the 39th military prisoners from amongst the ranks of British Troops in 7. GRO Births 1841 Q3 Bosmere Vol.12 p.310. further south along the promenade from Harland House and Regiment, and twenty-three convicts to assist in establishing India.4 8. 1861 Census Colneis RG09/1168 f.13 p.19. the other larger properties. It was developed at a later date the settlement, arrived with six months’ provisions. In 1827 My ongoing research is to record what happened to 9. 1871 Census Colneis RG10/1758 f.13 p.18. and consists of a number of roads running at right angles to Capt James Stirling, on behalf of the government, surveyed convicts from the north-east during those eighteen years. I am 10. https://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/image/eaw024313 accessed the seafront. The properties here are much smaller, terraced the Swan River and thought it would make an ideal extracting every felon that was convicted in courts in January 2020, Felixstowe Ladies College 1949. and replicated in many seaside towns in Britain. Clearly they settlement, and bear this statement in mind when you hear Northumberland and County Durham from the shipping lists 11. http://www.visitfelixstowe.org.uk/things-to-do/the-seafront- were aimed at a lower class of visitor than the grander homes gardens/new-great-days-content-page/ accessed January 2020, History more of the colony. The Swan River was settled in June 1829 and researching the newspaper reports of the trial and what on the cliff top. By the 1910s the concept of a ‘seaside of the Spa Gardens. with James Stirling its first governor, and two shiploads of free happened to each prisoner when they arrived in Fremantle. holiday’ had spread to the working classes. Today, these 12. 1881 Census Felixstowe RG11/881 f.18 p.29. settlers. Many problems existed from the beginning including The following information details two felons from the properties are still in multiple occupation as flats; the old 13. 1891 Census Felixstowe RG12/1475 f.7 p.8. the site being more difficult to settle than previously thought, north east. boarding houses and family run hotels of the early twentieth 14. 1891 Census Felixstowe RG12/1475 f.22 p.2. settlement became very spread out and thinly populated, William Watson was on the thirteenth ship, the century having long since closed their doors. The area is 15. 1901 Census RG13/1770 f.92 p.6. making the building of infrastructure difficult, and with land Ramillies, which left London on 20 May 1854 and stopped at much lower lying and is still an area reminiscent of working 16. 1911 Census RG14/469 Schedule No. 234 for Emma Durrant. easy to obtain, few people were prepared to work as Plymouth and Gibraltar. The ship arrived at Fremantle on 7 17. 1911 Census RG14/95 Schedule No. 40 for Eliza Durrant. labourers. Some of the settlers thought they would lead a life August 1854 with 277 convicts.5 The ship’s inventory lists all of a country gentleman.2 the convicts transported and in most cases, the date of the To cut a long story short, the economic state of the conviction and sentence.

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