James Booth

Edit

Summary

Born
Jan 1828
Conviction
Arson
Departure
May 1865
Arrival
Aug 1865
Death
Unknown
Step 0 of 0

Personal Information

Name: James Booth
Gender: Male
Born: 1st Jan 1828
Death: Unknown
Age at death: Unknown
Occupation: Labourer - general

Crime

Crime: Arson
Convicted at: Montgomeryshire, Welshpool Assizes
Sentence term: 8 years

Voyage

Departed: 19th May 1865
Ship: Racehorse
Arrival: 10th Aug 1865
Place of Arrival: Western Australia

Transportation

James Booth was transported on the Racehorse, departing 19th May 1865 and arriving 10th Aug 1865 with 279 passengers.

This ship began her life as Matilde Wattenbach built by Frederick C Clarke in St Heliers, Jersey in 1853. Her principal owners were J J Melhuish of Liverpool and T H A Wattenbach, of London. In 1863, after trading for some years out of London to the Cape of Good Hope and to New Zealand, she was acquired by Philip Blyth, of London and the following year she was sold. Within a few days she was purchased by Alexander Fotheringham and renamed Racehorse. Racehorse was surveyed at Sunderland shipyards in January 1864 and at that time her specifications were 1077 tons, length 209.3 ft., breadth 36.1 ft. and depth 20.0 ft. For her voyage to the Swan River Colony another owner would be on the scene – John Smurthwaite, a Sunderland merchant. Racehorse left Portland on May 26, 1865 bound for Fremantle. She carried the thirty second of 37 shipments of male convicts destined for Western Australia. The voyage took 76 days and the Racehorse arrived in Fremantle on August 10, 1865 with 172 passengers and 278 convicts. M H Seward (DPS) or J Mann (Lloyds Register) and Dr Alexander Watson were the captain(s) and surgeon respectively.

RacehorseRacehorse

References

Primary SourceAustralian Joint Copying Project. Microfilm Roll 93, Class and Piece Number HO11/19, Page Number 80
Source DescriptionThis record is one of the entries in the British convict transportation registers 1787-1867 database compiled by State Library of Queensland from British Home Office (HO) records which are available on microfilm as part of the Australian Joint Copying Pro
Original SourceGreat Britain. Home Office
Compiled ByState Library of Queensland
Database SourceBritish convict transportation registers 1787-1867 database

Claims

No one has claimed James Booth yet.

Photos

Become a supporter to manage photos for this convict.

No photos have been added for James Booth.

Convict Notes

Dianne Jones avatar
218
on 18th October 2023

From: WA Police Gazette, Wednesday March 1, 1876, No. 1, p4: PORTS OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA . Register of Expirees and Conditional Pardon Holders who have left the Colony during the Quarter ending December 31st, 1875. James Booth, exp., #8211 (tried 17/12/1863), dep. 18th December, per S.S. Clarence, to Sydney. Remarks: Middling stout; 47 years; 5ft. 6¼ in.; light brown hair, grey eyes, thin visage, sallow complexion; two flags, star and sailor right arm; woman, crown, wreath, anchor, star, D 1863 left arm; medal on breast. --00--

Dianne Jones avatar
218
on 18th October 2023

From his FREMANTLE JAIL record: BOOTH, James; inmate #8211, arrived 10 Aug 1865 per Racehorse Date of Birth: 1829 Marital Status: Unmarried Occupation: Labourer Literacy: Semiliterate Sentence Place: Welshpool, England Crime: Arson Sentence Period: 8 years Previous Convictions: Yes Ticket of Leave Date: 11 Sep 1868 Certificate of Freedom Date: 30 Dec 1872 Comments: General servant, labourer, sawyer, gardener. To New South Wales per SS Clarence, 18 Dec 1875 (https://fremantleprison.com.au/history-heritage/research/convict-database/). --00--