Summary
Personal Information
Voyage
Transportation
James Hagarty was transported on the Calcutta, departing 19th Apr 1837 and arriving 5th Aug 1837 with 342 passengers.
HMS Calcutta was the East Indiaman Warley (1795), converted to a Royal Navy ship. This ship of the line served for a time as an armed transport. She also transported convicts to Australia. The French Magnanime captured Calcutta in 1805. In 1809, after she ran aground during the Battle of the Basque Roads and her crew had abandoned her, a British boarding party burned her. In 1803 the Calcutta sailed into Port Phillip bay where at least 4 convicts escaped , in Sydney in April 1804 it was reported that 8 had died on the trip. Of the four known escapees one was shot on escape, 2 turned back after 2 days to reattach to the group at the camp in bay before the boat left , one continued on ...into Australia's history books. At least 13 convicts were transferred on to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), Australia.The ship also carried officers, wives and free settlers.
Calcutta (generic)References
| Primary Source | Irish Convict Database, by Peter Mayberry. |
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Convict Notes




Absconded. Hagarty James, Calcutta, 37-1852, 20, County Antrim, laborer, 5 feet 1 inch, ruddy and pockpitted comp., bald, grey eyes, small pockpit inside right knee, scar inside right shin, from Stockade, Carter's Barracks, since December 13. NSW Govt. Gazette, 20 Dec 1837. LIST OF RUNAWAYS APPREHENDED DURING THE LAST WEEK. Haggerty James, Calcutta, Stockade, Carters' Barracks. NSW Govt Gazette, 5 Jan 1838.




Irish Convict Database, by Peter Mayberry. James Hagarty, alias Heagarty, age on arrival, 20, per Calcutta II, 1837. Tried at Antrim, 1837, Life for House breaking. DOB, 1817, native place, Antrim Co. Single, Catholic. Labourer.