John Battaley

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Summary

Born
Unknown
Conviction
Unknown
Departure
Dec 1790
Arrival
Jul 1791
Death
Feb 1863
Step 0 of 0

Personal Information

Name: John Battaley
Gender: Male
Born: Unknown
Death: 19th Feb 1863
Age at death: Unknown
Occupation: Unknown
Aliases: Bately, Bentley, Bently

Crime

Crime: Unknown
Convicted at: Derby
Sentence term: 7 years

Voyage

Departed: 31st Dec 1790
Arrival: 9th Jul 1791
Place of Arrival: New South Wales

Transportation

John Battaley was transported on the Active, Albermarle, Atlantic, Barrington, Britannia, Mary Ann, Matilda, Salamander And William And Ann, departing 31st Dec 1790 and arriving 9th Jul 1791 with 1265 passengers.

The Third Fleet consisted of 11 Vessels. Active, Albermarle, Atlantic, Barrington, Britannia, Gorgon, Mary Ann, Matilda, Queen (from Ireland) Salamander and William and Ann. These vessels were provided by a private company; Camden, Calvert and King to ship convicts to the colony.

Active, Albermarle, Atlantic, Barrington, Britannia, Mary Ann, Matilda, Salamander And William And AnnActive, Albermarle, Atlantic, Barrington, Britannia, Mary Ann, Matilda, Salamander And William And Ann (generic)

References

Primary SourceNSW 1828 census at Liverpool. NSW newspaper reports.

Claims

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Convict Notes

Gavan Rafferty avatar
41
on 10th December 2025

There was a John Bentley named, with 8 others, as "secreted on board" the ship "Pitt", from Port Jackson to Norfolk Island. Named in a letter written by Philip Gidley King, 1792, at Norfolk Island. Stowaways!

Maureen Withey avatar
342
on 4th July 2020

From the "NEW HOLLAND MORNING POST", 18th October, 1791 A list of criminals who have come to our shores in recent months. Our readers will find hereunder a List of Persons transported as Criminals to New South Wales in the Ships as following, via: Atlantic, William and Ann, Britannia, Matilda, Salamander, Albemarle, Mary Anne, Admiral Barrington, Active and Gorgon. John Battaley, Tried at Derby, 7 years. ----------------------------------------------------- For a lot more information about John, read this article: Article: Finding Three John Bentleys by Michael Flynn, published in Descent. https://docplayer.net/100008724-Descent-the-journal-of-the-society-of-australian-genealogists-september-2015-volume-45-part-3.html ---------------------------------------------------- NSW 1828 census at Liverpool. John Bently, age 57, F.S. per Wm & Ann, 1788, 7 years, sawyer, protestant. Margaret Bently, age 53, F.S. per Elizabeth 1818, 7 years, protestant. John Neill, age 14, C.F. Elizabeth 1818, protestant. John Bently signed his mark X. -------------------------------------------------- Colonial Secretary Index. BATELY, John 1821 Sep 30, Oct 5 - Re permission to marry at Liverpool (Reel 6008; 4/3504 p.409) --------------------------------------------------- Marriage at Liverpool of John Bately and Margaret Coultar, 1821. -------------------------------------------------- THE OLDEST MARRIED COUPLE IN THE WORLD There are living at Marulan, in this colony, two persons, husband and wife, aged respectively 111 and 107 years, The old man is stepfather to Mr. O'Neil, publican and wheelwright, at Marulan, and the old woman is his second wife. The former has entered upon his 112th year, and the latter upon her I08th. They both reside with Mr. O'Neill, and have done so for many years, They are extremely feeble and bedridden, but are in possession of both sight and hearing, They were able to move about until very lately, and formerly were extremely active in their habits. The old lady attempts to speak when she is addressed, but cannot make herself understood by strangers. Her utterance is so thick and inarticulate as to be little more than a few unmeaning sounds. The old man, however, although the oldest by four years, and usually lying in an apparently unconscious state, rouses himself occasionally, and can then speak so as to be easily understood. On the occasion of the visit to him a few days since of a gentleman who has known him for many years, the old man, when his arm was lifted by a person in attendance, to show the condition to which it was wasted, suddenly remarked -" That was an arm once," and quickly relapsed into his usual state. The old couple are well cared for by Mr. O'Neil, who, fortunately, is in a position to be able to afford them support in their extreme old age. The old man arrived by the first fleet in 1788, and has, consequently, been seventy-five years in the colony. The Empire (Sydney) Feb 11 1863. DIED, On the 19th instant, at Marulan, Mr. JOHN BENTLEY, in the 112th year of his age. On the 22nd instant, at Marulan, Mrs. MARGARET BENTLEY, in the 107th year of her age. The Goulburn Herald. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1863. The Marulan Centenarians …. He has ever since I knew him, (sixteen years) been remarkably clear in his memory. About twenty minutes before he died, he drank a little warm wine and water, which he conveyed to his own lips. He appears to have slept gradually away. The end of his life, and the beginning of the one he has, we trust, entered upon, could not, I think, be marked. His surviving but dying partner, is hardly, if at all, conscious of his departure from her. I have but just returned from committing his mortal remains to their kindred earth, ashes, dust and never have I had more comfort in a funeral than in this of my dear departed brother buried at Marulan. The plate on the coffin was a sermon: " John Bentley, aged 112 years." I must say also, that never at Marulan was the service of the burial of the dead more reverently attended. All seemed impressed, not hat on at the grave, not a whisper there or in the church - all as it should be in the presence of God, and at the gate of the grave. The responses were audibly and reverently made; and there was a very large attendance of parishioners and friends. "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord: even so saith the spirit for they rest from their labors." Jolhn Bentley came out to this colony in this colony in the first fleet, in the ship Scarborough, Captain Marshall, at the same time as Captain Phillip, first Governor of the colony. This was in 1788. His poor old wife, Margaret, is now at the point of death. She, I understand, was nine years junior to her husband. They lived together in married life for forty years, and will lie together in the same grave; and be buried within a day or two of each other. She came from Belfast, and was mother of three children at the time of the rebellion in Ireland. February 21st, 1863.