Summary
Personal Information
Voyage
Transportation
Mary Ann Miller was transported on the Kinnear, departing 16th Jun 1848 and arriving 7th Oct 1848 with 141 passengers.
Built 1834 at Yarmouth. Wood barque of 369 Tons. (Register of persons transported is not yet completed - currently being listed.) 1842 Voyage. OCT. 23. - Arrived the barque Kinnear, Lidderdale master, from Dublin 10th July, with 180 male prisoners, Surgeon Superintendent - G. J. Fox, Esq. The guard consists of Captain Bull (with Mrs. Bull, 4 children, and 1 female servant), and 30 rank and file of the 99th Regt., - 4 women, and 6 children. Colonial Times (Hobart) 25 Oct 1842.
Kinnear (generic)References
| Primary Source | Tasmanian Indents. https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON15-1-5$init=CON15-1-5p46 and https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON15-1-5$init=CON15-1-5p45 |
Claims
No one has claimed Mary Ann Miller yet.
Photos
No photos have been added for Mary Ann Miller.
Convict Notes




Surgeon’s Journal of Her Majesty’s Female Convict Ship Kinnear, Mr J. G. Williams, Surgeon Between the 2nd May and 14th October 1848. Adm. 101-040-06 Mary A. Millar, Æt. 27 Convict, was put on the sick list 18th July and discharged 17th Augt. 1848. Ulcer (scrophulous). This woman has an ulcer of considerable magnitude on the external part of the left thigh; states that she was for four months in the Infirmary of “Grange Gorman Penitentiary”, with an ulcer in the same spot, and that it has again broken out, since she came on board the Kinnear convict ship. It is now the size of a 5 shilling piece being circular, and has the following appearance, viz – that of a pallid and indolent ulcer, the surface is covered with a shining transparent fluid, and the surrounding skin is of a deep brown or livid colour, the edges retorted, thick, and exquisitely painful, the discharge is a whitish curdled matter, her constitution presents the scrofulous diathesis. The treatment consisted in the administration of a common saline purgative, and the ulcer washed twice a day, with sea salts water, from alongside, a common Poultice, made with oatmeal & sea water, was applied twice a day to the ulcer, under this treatment, the ulcer gradually healed, and on the 17th August, it was quite well, and she was discharged into her mess.




Tasmanian Indents. https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON15-1-5$init=CON15-1-5p46 and https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON15-1-5$init=CON15-1-5p45 Mary A. Miller, tried at Tyrone, 10 Jan 1848, 7 years, age 28, height 5ft 3¼. Protestant, can neither read nor write, Single, 1 child at home. Offence, Stg a watch from Alex. McCormick Co Tyrone. Tried and acquitted for a watch. Surgeon’s Report: Middling. Trade, House maid, 18 months on the Town, Native place, Co. Tyrone. Father, Thos; Brs, Jas, John & Thos at NP. Sis, Eliza at Sydney, on Eygpt. --------------------------------------------------- Conduct Record: https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON41-1-19$init=CON41-1-19p108 No 932, Mary Ann Miller.