Summary
Personal Information
Crime
Voyage
Transportation
Job Element was transported on the Thomas Arbuthnot, departing 6th Jan 1847 and arriving 4th May 1847 with 289 passengers.
Built 1841 at Aberdeen, Scotland. Wood ship of 621 Tons. Thomas Arbuthnot, 1847. “The Thomas Arbuthnot convict ship, Captain Thomson, sailed from Spithead this morning for Port Phillip, with a superior class of delinquents, officially called “exiles.” These are the first “exiles” sent to the above settlement, which the inhabitants of that respectable place are very wroth at, and have memorialised the Government on the subject. The most ingenious trades and professions are carried on, on board this ship; in fact, we believe, all trades in vogue have their representatives on board. The most ingenious affair, however, is a newspaper in manuscript, published every Saturday, having its foreign and domestic correspondence, advertisements, and, indeed, all the necessary accessories to an apparently well-conducted journal. The articles are well written and the arrangements well made. The name of this paper is the Citadel, and the conductors dub the captain of the ship ” the governor.” The Citadel having no opponents enjoys a large circulation. The editor is a man who has been of considerable note in the legitimate literary world; but all names and circumstances in connexion with their present position is strictly preserved secret with regard to these “exiles,” the greatest majority of whom are juvenile offenders from Millbank, Pentonville, and Parkhurst (Isle of Wight) prisons.”—Times, January 12. Published in the Launceston Examiner, 2 June 1847. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/36252218?searchTerm=Thomas Arbuthnot There was a lot of public criticism of the arrival of these “Exiles” in New South Wales, and of their treatment, by being offered training, etc, to the detriment of honest but poor labourers.
Thomas Arbuthnot (generic)References
| Primary Source | Australian Joint Copying Project. Microfilm Roll 92, Class and Piece Number HO11/15, Page Number 139 (71) |
| Source Description | This 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 Source | Great Britain. Home Office |
| Compiled By | State Library of Queensland |
| Database Source | British convict transportation registers 1787-1867 database |
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Convict Notes


Job Element's wife died while he was in Pentonville Prison, leave three young children. Job's mother Ann Element petitioned for clemency unsuccessfully. Job Element married Margaret Fearon in January 1853. Margaret died in March 1853. He then married Elizabeth Griffiths.




4/1/1845 Bucks Gazette Buckinghamshire, England: Job Element was indicted for stealing, at Chesham, on the Sept., 19lbs. of lead, value Is., the property of John Hearn. The prisoner pleaded guilty. He also pleaded guilty to a former conviction for felony, and was sentenced to 10 years transportation. Job Element was disembarked in Victoria and arrived as an Exile. 1853: Job Ellement married Eliza Griffiths in Victoria. Children: 1856: Amelia - Joseph & Eliza Ellement 1858: Charles Joseph - Job & Eliza 1861: Edwin George 21/5/1883 1864: Augustus Job - Ditto 1866: Eliza Annie 29/5/1855: Elector in the Villamanta Ward, Geelong, Victoria. 5/1/1881 Geelong Advertiser: At the hospital yesterday the following casualties were treated: __ Job Ellement, aged 60 years, a resident of Ashby, contusion of the chest, caused by a fall. 10/12/1898 Geelong Advertiser: ELLEMENT—On December 7th, 1898, at the Geelong Hospital, Job Ellement, aged 78 years, the beloved father of Henry and Charles Ellement, and Mrs C. Harris, and Mrs L. Lang, of Port Melbourne. A colonist of 50 years. " Until the day dawn." The funeral cortege will leave the residence of his son, Mr Henry Ellement, Thorne-street, off Drysdale-road, near Orchard-street, East Geelong, this day (Saturday). the 10th inst.. at 3,30 p.m., for the New Cemetery, Herne Hill. Friends please receive this intimation. Richard N. Carbines, Undertaker,, 231 Moorabool-street, Geelong.