John Foreham

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Summary

Born
Jan 1806
Conviction
Sheep-stealing
Departure
Jul 1833
Arrival
Nov 1833
Death
Unknown
Step 0 of 0

Personal Information

Name: John Foreham
Gender: Male
Born: 1st Jan 1806
Death: Unknown
Age at death: Unknown
Occupation: Soldier
Aliases: Forde

Crime

Convicted at: Ireland. Kerry
Sentence term: 7 years

Voyage

Departed: 24th Jul 1833
Ship: Java
Arrival: 18th Nov 1833
Place of Arrival: New South Wales

Transportation

John Foreham was transported on the Java, departing 24th Jul 1833 and arriving 18th Nov 1833 with 208 passengers.

Embarked: 206 men Voyage: 117 days Deaths: 5

JavaJava (generic)

References

Primary SourceIrish Convict Database, by Peter Mayberry.

Claims

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Convict Notes

Maureen Withey avatar
343
on 24th March 2025

Absconded Foreham John Ford, Java, 33-3013, 30, Kerry, soldier, 5 feet 8 inches, brown comp., brown hair, hazel grey eyes, lost three front upper teeth, scar left eyebrow, scar right thumb, scar left forefinger, breast hairy, from G. Tribe, Penrith, since October 21, second time of absconding. NSW Govt Gazette, 26 Oct 1836.

Maureen Withey avatar
343
on 24th June 2023

Irish Convict Database, by Peter Mayberry. John Foreham, alias Forde, age 27, Per Java, 1833, Tried Kerry, 1833, 7 years for stealing sheep. DOB, 1806 native place, Kerry. Single. Catholic. Trade: Soldier. Remarks: Iron gang. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Assize Intelligence - Kerry Assizes - The following are the convictions which have taken place at the Kerry assizes: Michael Meenehan, manslaughter, to be transported for life - Garret Lynch, pig stealing, seven years transportation - Michael Berkely, larceny, seven years’ transportation - Patt and Darby Foley, sheep and goat stealing seven years transportation; John Foreham sheep stealing, seven years transportation....The prisoners Meenehan was a schoolmaster; a child of nine years old, a son of the deceased, was one of his scholars - The first day the child went to school the prisoner beat him most unmercifully, so that the child on his return home was found beaten black and blue and shockingly welted. Cornelius Neill, the deceased, called the next morning on the prisoner and told him he would carry him before the parish priest for his cruelty to his son, and while laying his hand on the prisoners' shoulder for that purpose, the prisoner stabbed him in the side with a penknife, of which wound Neill died in a few days after. Mayo Constitution, 21 March 1833.