Joseph Lucas Horrock

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Summary

Born
Nov 1803
Conviction
Forgery
Departure
Oct 1851
Arrival
Jan 1852
Death
Oct 1865
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Personal Information

Name: Joseph Lucas Horrock
Gender: Male
Born: 18th Nov 1803
Death: 7th Oct 1865
Age at death: 61
Occupation: Unknown
Aliases: Horrocks

Crime

Crime: Forgery
Convicted at: Central Criminal Court
Sentence term: 14 years

Voyage

Departed: 30th Oct 1851
Ship: Marion
Arrival: 30th Jan 1852
Place of Arrival: Western Australia

Transportation

Joseph Lucas Horrock was transported on the Marion, departing 30th Oct 1851 and arriving 30th Jan 1852 with 281 passengers.

Built 1834 at Calcutta. Wood ship of 684 Tons. The 1847/48 voyage sent to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) BUT also went on to Port Phillip Bay, Victoria where 300 exiles disembarked. (The newspaper source says they were from Millbank, Pentonville & Parkhurst prisons.)

MarionMarion (generic)

References

Primary SourceAustralian Joint Copying Project. Microfilm Roll 92, Class and Piece Number HO11/17, Page Number 258 Old Bailey case t18510407-848
Source DescriptionThis 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 SourceGreat Britain. Home Office
Compiled ByState Library of Queensland
Database SourceBritish convict transportation registers 1787-1867 database

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Convict Notes

D Wong avatar
221
on 24th February 2020

Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser Lancashire, England 22 Mar 1851 LOCAL AND PROVINCIAL CHARGE OF FORGERY AGAINST A MANCHESTER MERCHANT.___ In a recent number of the Courier we reported the apprehension, in Manchester, of Mr. Joseph Lucas Horrocks, drysalter, of New Brownstreet, on a charge of having feloniously and knowingly uttered a forged bill of exchange for the payment of £430 9s 7d., with intent to defraud the London Joint Stock Bank. As we then stated, Mr. Horrocks was brought before the Lord Mayor of London, at the Mansion House, when he said that he was not the delinquent, and that the whole was a tissue of cunning temptation and treachery to which he had been a victim, and that he chose openly to admit the fact and plead "guilty" to the charge.___On Tuesday las he was brought up for final examination, when he was further charged with having feloniously and knowingly uttered a bill of exchange for payment of £602 3s 5d., with intent to defraud Edward Loyd the younger and others......the item continued...Mr. Bush siad, there were other forgeries with which it might be considered necessary to charge the prisoner at the Central Criminal Court, one of which was for £572 7s., and another for £215 7s 2d.___The prisoner was then committed for trial on the two first accusations. From Wikipedia: Joseph Horrocks Joseph Lucas Horrocks (1803–1865) was born in Anderton, Lancashire, near Bolton, on 18 November 1803, the first son of William Horrocks, a corn merchant, and Jane Smith. As a convict he was transported to Western Australia in 1851, becoming a prominent early pioneer of the town of Northampton. Little is known of his early life, except that he was educated, and that at some point he worked as a sick bay attendant in the Royal Navy. In the 1850s he was carrying on business as a merchant and drysalter in Manchester, trading as Horrocks, Schaer, and Co, and in London, in partnership with Gustav Kober, as Gustav Kober and Co. He was declared bankrupt on 21 March 1851 at Manchester.[3] His secured creditors received 3/10 (£0.19) in the pound. The UK Census of 31 March 1851 showed Horrocks to be resident at London's Newgate Prison. On 9 April 1851 he pleaded guilty at the Old Bailey in London to forging and uttering three bills of exchange totaling £1,247/0/2 (£1,247.01) and was sentenced to fourteen years transportation. Horrocks departed Woolwich on 23 October 1851 and Portland on 2 November 1851 on board the Marion, arriving at Fremantle on 31 January 1852. In 1852 Horrocks worked in the medical section of the Convict Establishment at Fremantle. He was granted a ticket of leave in June 1853. The scarcity of medical officers led him to apply for the post of medical attendant at the Convict Hiring Depot at Lynton, seven miles from Port Gregory, a position that he accepted at a reduced salary of £20 a year because of his limited qualifications. In September 1853 he left Fremantle in the brig Hero. At Lynton his duties were to attend the medical needs of all officers of the civil establishment, ticket-of-leave men and sick natives in the area. He became the depot's unofficial medical superintendent and was referred to locally as Dr Horrocks. He also, against regulations, treated and dispensed to the settlers of the area, which eventually saw him reprimanded and in 1854 he resigned. Horrocks received a conditional pardon on 19 April 1856, and set up as a storekeeper and postmaster at Wanerenooka (Northampton), while continuing to provide for the community's medical needs, free of charge. Although he was married, his wife does not appear to have joined him in Western Australia. In 1859, Horrocks took up a 100 acres (400,000 m2) of land, and, with the help of George Shenton Sr, began to develop a copper mine which he named "Gwalla". Between 1862 and 1856, he employed sixty ticket-of-leave men on the mine. He had a road surveyed, along which he built stone cottages which he leased to the married miners at low rent. He encouraged agriculture, experimenting with various crops. In 1861 he began construction of the colony's first interdenominational church, which was opened in October 1864. In November 1863 he applied to the Government for an acre of land for a schoolhouse and garden. The school was completed in 1866. Horrocks died on 7 October 1865 at Wanerenooka. The town of "Gwalla" became Northampton.

Pauline avatar
4
on 22nd February 2020

Horrocks Beach, Western Australia named after him. Born Bolton, Lancashire. Left wife Harriet and 3 children. Died w.Australia. In English census records 1841, 1851