Summary
Personal Information
Transportation
Patrick Quick was transported on the Mary, departing 25th May 1819 and arriving 26th Aug 1819 with 161 passengers.
Built 1811, Ipswich,England 361 tons. 1817 Journey On Monday arrived the ship Mary, Capt. ORMON, from Calcutta, with merchandize—Passengers, Captain FAITHFUL and Lieut. HAMILTON: this vessel has brought 6 male prisoners from India, destined for Port Jackson; to which place it is expected she will sail to-morrow. Hobart Town Gazette, 24 May 1817. Ship News. On Thursday arrived from Calcutta, via Derwent, the ship Mary, Captain Ormon, with a various cargo. -Passengers from Calcutta, Captain Faithfull and Lieutenant Hamilton:-The Mary sailed from Calcutta the 23d of February, and left the Pilot the 1st of March. Sydney Gazette, Sat 7 Jun 1817. -------------------------------------------------- Convicts who sailed on the 'Mary' direct from Ireland - 1819 & 1836 - are currently being listed, incomplete data to date.
Mary (generic)References
| Primary Source | NSW Convict Ship Muster Rolls and Related Records, 1790-1849; Irish Convicts to New South Wales 1788-1849, by Peter Mayberry |
Claims
No one has claimed Patrick Quick yet.
Photos
No photos have been added for Patrick Quick.
Convict Notes


1825: Patrick QUIRK (QUICK) – free by servitude – Mary 1819, 7 years; labourer, Sydney (see NSW and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters, 1806-1849, NSW General muster M-Z 1825).


1825, 3 March: Patrick QUIRK or QUICK – Certificate of Freedom #40/3268 – convicted Kildare, Spring 1818, 7 years; native place Dublin; chandler; 36, 5’10½”, sallow complexion, brown hair, blue eyes (see NSW, Australia, Certificates of Freedom, 1810-1814, 1827-1867).


1819, 25 August: Patrick QUICK or QUIRK or QUIRKE 30, 5’11”, fair ruddy complexion, brown to grey hair, blue eyes, native place Dublin city (see NSW Convict Indents, 1788-1842; Bound Indentures 1818-1819).


TRIED: Spring 1818 (see NSW Convict Ship Muster Rolls and Related Records, 1790-1849). 1818, 25 July: Admitted to Kilmainham Gaol, Dublin; prisoner #3911; transferred by the Government (see Ireland, Prison Registers, 1790-1924; Dublin, Kilmainham, 1815-1910).


OCCUPATION: Chandler/ soap boiler (see NSW Convict Indents, 1788-1842; Bound Indentures 1818-1819). The Dictionary of Old Occupations says a chandler was the head of a chandlery, responsible for candles, soap and wax (see https://www.familyresearcher.co.uk/glossary/Dictionary-of-Old-Occupations-jobs-beginning-C3.html#Chandler).