Summary
Personal Information
Crime
Voyage
Transportation
Dorothy Huldie was transported on the Princess Royal, departing 6th Jan 1829 and arriving 9th May 1829 with 100 passengers.
Princess Royal (generic)References
| Primary Source | Australian Joint Copying Project. Microfilm Roll 89, Class and Piece Number HO11/6, Page Number 503 (253) |
| 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




NSW State Archives Collection: Sydney Gaol Entrance Book 1829: Citation: NRS-2514-1-[4/6431] Page 233 Reel 851; In the name of Ann MULDIE [Ann/ Dorothy HALDIE/ HULDIE/ HULDA/ HALDIN; Dorothy LESTER/ DAVIS] per Princess Royal [1829]: Offence: Drunk and insolent; Sentence 3rd Class 3 months: sent to Factory at Parramatta: 25/09/1829. Ann also spent time in the Queen Street Female Factory in Moreton Bay Penal Settlement. The Queen St Factory was established in 1829 and used as a factory until 1848. She was transported to Morten bay per the Governor Phillip 24/09/1832 and at the end of her sentence returned to Sydney NSW 05/08/1834




Dorothy was sent to Moreton Bay following a colonial sentence. Moreton Bay Convict Record: Dorothey, the wife of Thomas Hudlie ali Ann, the wife of Thomas White Pss. Royal 2 Huldie, age 39, native of Newcastle, tried at Northumberland Q.S. 16 Oct 1828, sentence 7 years for Unlawfully pledging. Trade – nurse. Colonial sentence, Sumy. Jurisn. Windsor, 2 July 1831 for theft – sentence 3 years. To Sydney, 15 Aug 1834.




On Wednesday last, Dorothy Davis, better known in North Shields, by the name of Lester, was committed for trial at the next sessions, on a charge of having, on that day week, stolen a table cover, from an Irish hawker, named Michael Jennings, in a public house on the Quay. This woman, not long ago, was convicted at the Durham sessions under the name of Ann White, of stealing a silver watch from a person in Gateshead, and sentenced to six months imprisonment. Newcastle Courant, 14 June 1828 Sessions of the Peace for Newcastle upon Tyne, held yesterday, there were only three prisoners charged with larceny, viz.: Dorothy Davis, of South Shields, a notorious offender, for stealing a table cover from an Irish hawker; … Dorothy Davis was acquitted. Newcastle Courant, 19 July 1828 Yesterday, at the general Quarter Sessions of the peace for this town, Dorothy Huldie, alias Davis, alias Lester, alias White, a most notorious thief, was convicted of stealing wearing apparel from a poor old widow woman named Ann Ramsay, belonging to North Shields, and sentenced to be transported for seven years. 18 Oct 1828 Newcastle Courant