Batholomew Mccann

Edit

Summary

Born
Jan 1820
Conviction
Robbery
Departure
Sep 1834
Arrival
Jan 1835
Death
Sep 1845
Step 0 of 0

Personal Information

Name: Batholomew Mccann
Gender: Male
Born: 1st Jan 1820
Death: 3rd Sep 1845
Age at death: 25
Occupation: Unknown

Crime

Crime: Robbery
Convicted at: Antrim Court (Ireland)
Sentence term: 7 years

Voyage

Departed: 27th Sep 1834
Arrival: 22nd Jan 1835
Place of Arrival: New South Wales

Transportation

Batholomew Mccann was transported on the Royal Admiral, departing 27th Sep 1834 and arriving 22nd Jan 1835 with 48 passengers.

The Royal Admiral was built at Lynn in 1828. Convicts were transported to New South Wales on the Royal Admiral in 1830, 1833, 1835 and to Van Diemen's Land in 1842. 1833 - Ship; Royal Admiral. Commenced fitting as a Convict Transport at Deptford on the 29 March. Surgeon Superintendent [Andrew Henderson] joined on the 3rd April. Guard embarked on the 13th. Sailed on the 17th and anchored in Kingston Barbour near Dublin on the 9th May. 220 convicts embarked on the 16 May 1833 and the ship sailed from Dublin Bay for Sydney on the 4th June and arrived there on the 20 October. Originally embarked with 221 convicts, 5 Died at sea, 1 was Relanded. 11 sick on shore, The convicts were described as 220 such wretchedly debilitated creatures ... Refer to the surgeons journal for full details

Royal AdmiralRoyal Admiral (generic)

References

Primary Sourcehttps://stors.tas.gov.au/CON37-1-4$init=CON37-1-4p376

Claims

No one has claimed Batholomew Mccann yet.

Photos

Become a supporter to manage photos for this convict.

No photos have been added for Batholomew Mccann.

Convict Notes

Robyn Everist avatar
52
on 17th January 2026

3 Sep 1845 - executed at Norfolk Island - died under sentence record: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/CON63-1-1/1355142-15-3

Tim Flynn avatar
42
on 21st November 2022

Buried in Norfolk Island Cemetary.

Tim Flynn avatar
42
on 21st November 2022

10th May. Arrived the "Governor Phillip" from Hobart Town with 14 Free Men for boat crew, 12 free men as Overseers, Lieut. HAY, Judge BROWNE, Mr. STONER Crown Solicitor, 20 prisoners, slops and provisions. JOHN CHARLES a bush constable was missed from his station, Steele’s Point. A strict search was made for him and on the afternoon of the 12th he was found in the Burial Ground Gully – murdered. His throat and hands were cut, his belly was cut across and his bowels protruded, his murderer had laid a quantity of mutton on his body and thrown his Great Coat over him. His stick was found laying by his side. WELSH and BLAXLAND were confined the following day on suspicion and GEORGE MARTIN and JOHN PRICE a few days afterwards. A man of the name of THOMAS WILSON was confined in consequence of some words he was heard to say, and while in Gaol he said he could pick out the parties. He was a stock keeper and on the 20th of May he was taken to the Barrack yard while the men were at Muster and selected THOMAS EDWARDS and BARKLEY McCANN He stated he saw them killing a sheep and after wards saw them on the road in custody of the murdered man on the 10th inst. the day the poor fellow was missed. 1th June. McCANN and EDWARDS were put on their Trial for the murder of JOHN CHARLES. The principal witnesses against Page 114 1845 11th June. against them were THOMAS WILSON a stockman, HENRY CLARKE and W.H. BARBER. The Trial lasted 4 days and the Court adjourned on the 14th. 17th June. The court reassembled this day and continued its sittings till the 19th when the case for the prosecution was brought to a close. 20th & 21st June. Mr. A. PRICE and several others were examined on behalf of the prisoners and the Court again adjourned till the following day. 22nd June. The whole of the proceedings were read over and minutely commented upon by the learned Judge. When the jury asked permission to retire, after a few minutes they returned into Court and pronounced a verdict of Guilty of wilful murder. Sentence of Death was passed upon in the usual impressive manner. The unfortunate men behaved themselves throughout trial in a becoming manner, but strongly asserted their innocence. The Gaol Gang in the lock up in the Barrack Yard made a large hole in the wall for the purpose of making their escape but were prevented by a timely alarm being given. Three of them were confined to the cells for one month. 22nd Aug. Arrived the "Lady Franklin" from Hobart Town with timber for the Engineer Department Stores and 56 prisoners, passengers Mr. WALKER, Mrs. MAGRATH The Revd. Mr. RODGERS to relieve the Revd. Mr. NAYLOR, Mr. & Mrs. FOSSETT etc. The following 12 men under sentence of death were respited:- PETER BYRNES, GEORGE HEAD, JOHN BANNON, GEORGE CRUNDEN, RICHARD ELLAM, JOHN FLETCHER, JOHN JOHNSTON, DANIEL FAGAN, THOMAS STACY, EDWARD STEVENS, JOHN LOGAN and AMBROSE DAWES but ordered to be kept on the Island 4 years. THOMAS EDWARDS and BARTLEY McCANN are ordered for execution. 3rd Sept. THOMAS EDWARDS and BART McCANN were executed in front of the Old Gaol for the wilful Murder of JOHN CHARLES on the 10th May last. Captain HARDY and a company of 58th were in attendance. They addressed those who were to witness the awful scene and protested their innocence to the last. McCANN said to STEPHEN SMITH the Police Runner shortly before the drop fell that he forgave him (Smith) for what he had said and done, and wished him and his family well, but that he might live to repent what Page 118 1845 3rd Sept. what he had sworn against him. McCANN died almost without a struggle but EDWARDS appeared to suffer a great deal and struggled much. They were taken down after hanging the usual time and carried to their graves by 20 of their fellow prisoners. The Revd. Father KAVANNAGH attended them in their cell and on the scaffold. The Prisoners were kept in Barracks till the execution was over. http://archival-classic.sl.nsw.gov.au/_transcript/2017/D25793/a9818.html

Tim Flynn avatar
42
on 21st November 2022

Secondary Conviction in Sydney 1840 and sent to Norfolk Island for ten years. Convicted of murder of constable on Norfolk Island and executed September 1845. Maintained his innocence on the scaffold.