Ann Cullen

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Summary

Born
Jan 1814
Conviction
Cow stealing
Departure
Jan 1835
Arrival
May 1835
Death
Jan 1874
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Personal Information

Name: Ann Cullen
Gender: Female
Born: 1st Jan 1814
Death: 1st Jan 1874
Age at death: 60
Occupation: House servant

Crime

Crime: Cow stealing
Convicted at: Ireland. Kildare
Sentence term: 7 years

Voyage

Departed: 8th Jan 1835
Ship: Neva
Arrival: 13th May 1835
Place of Arrival: Van Diemen's Land

Transportation

Ann Cullen was transported on the Neva, departing 8th Jan 1835 and arriving 13th May 1835 with 7 passengers.

The Neva was a Three-Masted Barque built at Hull in 1813, Lloyd's register 1814. Traded between England & Jamaica then refitted in 1830's to carry convicts. Tons burthen: 327 bm (builders old measurement) Length: 104 ft 4 in (31.80 m) Beam: 27 ft 1 in (8.26 m) Height: 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) Armament: 4 × 9-pounder guns Second voyage transporting convicts to Australia ended in a disaster, being shipwrecked near King Island, Tasmania (Van Diemen's Land) in 1835. It is recorded that only 15 survived, 6 being Irish female convict women and several crew including Capt. Peck. They were transported to Launceston. On board were also several free passengers and children. A total of 224 lives lost and one of the worst ship wrecks in history.

NevaNeva (generic)

References

Primary Sourcehttp://www.jenwilletts.com/convict_ship_neva_1835.htm http://search.archives.tas.gov.au/ImageViewer/image_viewer.htm?CON40-1-1,380,369,F,60

Claims

"She is my 4 times Great Grand Mother"

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Iain McKimm

Photos

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Convict Notes

Iain McKimm avatar
9
on 28th January 2021

Was shipwrecked off King Is in May 835 on board the Neva

greg petersen avatar
59
on 29th April 2017

Tried Kildare Summer assizes, "Life" 1834, conduct record states: No offence stated, Single. Marriage permission to William Jones (Norfolk) 25th Oct 1840 & 22nd Dec 1841. freedom certificate: 23/11/1847 newspapers reported the number embarked as 150 female prisoners, 9 free women and 55 children. The Neva departed Cork on 8th January 1835. Three people died in the earlier part of the voyage and one child was born. Following hard on the disaster of the Convict Ship George III which was wrecked on 12th April 1835, the Neva was wrecked north of King Island on 13th May 1835. All perished except six of the women: Ellen Galvin, Mary Slattery, Ann Cullen, Rose Ann Hyland, Rose Dunn and Margaret Drury. Nine of the Ship's Crew Survived: Captain Benjamin Peck, First Officer Joseph Bennett, Thomas Sharp, John Wilson, Edward Calthorpe, Thomas Hines, Robert Ballard, John Robinson and William Kidney.