William Nottage

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Summary

Born
Unknown
Conviction
Unknown
Departure
Sep 1839
Arrival
Feb 1840
Death
Apr 1840
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Personal Information

Name: William Nottage
Gender: Male
Born: Unknown
Death: 14th Apr 1840
Age at death: Unknown
Occupation: Unknown

Crime

Crime: Unknown
Convicted at: Upper Canada
Sentence term: 99 years

Voyage

Departed: 28th Sep 1839
Ship: Buffalo
Arrival: 12th Feb 1840
Place of Arrival: Van Diemen's Land

Transportation

William Nottage was transported on the Buffalo, departing 28th Sep 1839 and arriving 12th Feb 1840 with 90 passengers.

1833 - Voyage. Transported; 179 Female Convicts and 25 Children 1839 - Voyage. On 28th September 1839, the Ship Buffalo left Quebec, Canada, taking 144 prisoners to Van Diemen’s Land and New South Wales, following the Patriot War in Canada in 1837-38. Some of the prisoners were French Canadians patriots and others were American patriots, captured after the Battle of the Windmill. The Ship went first to Van Diemens Land, arriving at Hobart on 11th February 1840, where most of the American prisoners were landed, and then went on to Sydney, arriving on 26th February 1840, where the 58 French speaking prisoners were landed. They were separated mainly because there was hostility between the Americans from Lower Canada and the Canadians from Upper Canada. The prisoners were in the main, literate, idealistic and honest men.

BuffaloBuffalo

References

Primary SourceTasmanian Appropriation Record: https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON27-1-8$init=CON27-1-8p31

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Convict Notes

Maureen Withey avatar
343
on 6th May 2020

502. William Nottage, Per Buffalo, 12 Feb 1840, Tried at Province of Upper Canada, 7 Jan 1839, Life. Transported for Piratical Invasion of Upper Canada. Married and 6 children. Wife Abigail at Michigan. Tasmanian Appropriation Record: https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON27-1-8$init=CON27-1-8p31 502. William Nottage, 5ft 5. age 40, ploughman, tried at Upper Canada, life. Native of Maine. Note- Died in hospital 14 April 1840. -------------------------------------------------- The seventy-six North American political prisoners sent to Sandy Bay were to be employed building a nine-mile stretch of road between Sandy Bay and Brown’s River. … Work consisted of boring and blasting rock in a nearby quarry, breaking stone, and wheel barrowing earth, clay and stone for road building. … During the third week of March, William Nottage was fatally injured in a blasting accident. From https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/onhistory/1900-v1-n1-onhistory04950/1065618ar.pdf