Summary
Personal Information
Transportation
Thady Hasty was transported on the Dorothy, departing 5th May 1820 and arriving 29th Sep 1820 with 193 passengers.
Built In Liverpool in 1815. Transported Male only prisoners from Ireland
Dorothy (generic)References
| Primary Source | 1. NSW, Australia Convict Ship Muster Rolls… 1790-1849 2. UK, Royal Navy Medical Journals, 1817-1856, Dorothy 1820 01 Mar - 1820 29 Sep. 3. NSW Convict Indents, 1788-1842, Bound Indentures 1820-1821 4. NSW Settler and Convict Lists, 1787-1834, NSW Male A-K 1820 5. NSW Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930 |
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Convict Notes




Thady Hasty, for assembling at, night, with others, and assuming the name of Ribbandmen, administering unlawful oaths, and breaking into the dwelling-house of John Congannon. Death. He was recommended to mercy by the Jury; London Chronicle, 15 March 1820.




The following is among the many instances of promptitude evinced in the disposal of the convicts transmitted from the different counties in this kingdom to our depot, for transportation to Botany Bay. On the evening of Sunday last, four Ribbonmen, whose names, Thady Hasty, Bryan Roche, Thady Hanly, and Patrick Guff, are familiar to our readers as being among those convicted at Roscommon Assizes, and whose trial appeared in our paper, reached this city, and were yesterday clothed and otherwise fitted out, and immediately conveyed in the steamboat to the convict-ship, now lying in our harbour. Cork Morning Intelligencer. Saunders News-Letter, 27 April 1820.


1822, 30 October: On list of prisoners transported to Port Macquarie per "Lady Nelson". He was sentenced by the Bench at Windsor to two years (see Colonial Secretary's Papers, 1788-1856, Copies of Letters Sent Outside The Colony, "Foreign", 1814-1856). 1824, 15 November: On list of prisoners assigned – to John Moore, Sydney [Joshua John Moore was Registrar of the Governor’s Court, Windsor, and Colonial Notary Public from 1821] (see Colonial Secretary's Papers, 1788-1856, Special Bundles, 1794-1825). 1825: Thady Hasty is an inmate of the gaol, Sydney (see NSW and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters, 1806-1849, NSW General muster A-L 1825). 1833, 28 February: On list of Return of all male convicts assigned between the 1st and 28th February, 1833 - #366. Hasty Teague, Dorothy, labourer, to John Brown, Sydney (see NSW Government Gazette 3 Apr 1833 (Issue No.57) p 122).


1820: Thady Hasty, per Dorothy, labourer, native place Roscommon, 22yo, 5’9”, ruddy complexion, black hair, hazel eyes (see NSW Convict Indents, 1788-1842, Bound Indentures 1820-1821). 1820: Thady Hasty, per Dorothy, convicted Roscommon, Lent 1820 (see NSW Settler and Convict Lists, 1787-1834, NSW Male A-K 1820). 1822, 24 October: Theddy Hasty was admitted to Sydney gaol, and remanded to be sent to Port Macquarie per “Lady Nelson” (see NSW Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930).


1820: Life for seditious practices, convicted Roscommon, one of 12 men convicted – four got life, eight got 7 years – Lent 1820 (NSW, Australia Convict Ship Muster Rolls… 1790-1849). 1820, 20 May: One of a number of prisoners “single ironed” during the voyage, as reported by the ship’s surgeon superintendent, Robert Espie, in his journal (see UK, Royal Navy Medical Journals, 1817-1856, Dorothy 1820 01 Mar - 1820 29 Sep). 1820, 21 August: One of two men “unironed”, as reported by Robert Espie (see UK, Royal Navy Medical Journals, 1817-1856, Dorothy 1820 01 Mar - 1820 29 Sep).