Robert Sidaway

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Summary

Born
Jan 1758
Conviction
Unknown
Departure
May 1787
Arrival
Jan 1788
Death
Oct 1809
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Personal Information

Name: Robert Sidaway
Gender: Male
Born: 14th Jan 1758
Death: 13th Oct 1809
Age at death: 51
Occupation: Watch chain maker
Aliases: Robert Sideway

Crime

Crime: Unknown
Convicted at: Old Bailey
Sentence term: 99 years

Voyage

Departed: 13th May 1787
Arrival: 21st Jan 1788
Place of Arrival: New South Wales

Transportation

Robert Sidaway was transported on the Friendship, departing 13th May 1787 and arriving 21st Jan 1788 with 107 passengers.

This convict ship, being 274 tons and 75 feet long was one of the light weight ships in the fllet and was skippered by Master Francis Walton. Built in Scarborough in 1784, she carried 76 male and 21 female convicts. During her return voyage to England her crew came down with scurvy and with insufficient crew to man her, she was scuttled in the straights of Macassar. The survivors were transferred to the Alexander.

FriendshipFriendship

References

Primary Sourcehttp://www.convictcentral.com/index.html http://srwww.records.nsw.gov.au/ebook/list.asp?Page=NRS12188/4_4003/Sadler-Syney/12188_4_4003_0421-422.jpg&LinkedImg=12188_4_4003_0423-424.jpg http://srwww.records.nsw.gov.au/ebook/list.asp?Page=NRS1150/SZ115/1788 Order in Council 2/1150_SZ115_0019.jpg&LinkedImg=1150_SZ115_0020.jpg http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/sidaway-robert-2660 https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/JM7S-KV9

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Convict Notes

Penny-Lyn Beale avatar
338
on 4th October 2024

The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1803 - 1842) Sun 15 Oct 1809 Page 2 Family Notices On Friday, at his house in Sydney, in his 52d year, Mr. Robert Sidaway, after a long and painful illness. —He was one of the first inhabitants of this Colony; during his very long residence in which he ever supported the reputation of a true philanthropist, and in all other respects a valuable member of society, in which he was universally respected.

Eric Harry Daly avatar
60
on 23rd December 2012

name: Robert Sidaway gender: Male baptism/christening date: 05 Feb 1758 baptism/christening place: SAINT LEONARDS,SHOREDITCH,LONDON,ENGLAND birth date: 14 Jan 1758 father's name: John Sidaway mother's name: Elizabeth indexing project (batch) number: C04081-1 system origin: England-ODM source film number: 396229, 396230 Robert Sidaway was previously indicted and sentenced at the Old Bailey on the 6 May 1778 for stealing goods to the value of 20s. Robert Sidaway (1758-1809), a watchcase maker, was born on 14 January 1758 and baptized on 5 February at St Leonards, Shoreditch, London, son of John Sidaway of Horse Shoe Alley, and his wife Elizabeth. Robert was sentenced to transportation for life at the Old Bailey in September 1782 for stealing, and arrived in New South Wales in the First Fleet transport Friendship in January 1788. Although Ralph Clark mentioned in his journal that Sidaway, a 'daring and villainous fellow', was put in leg irons for a month on the way out, apparently he behaved better after his arrival, for he received a conditional pardon on 29 November 1792, an absolute pardon on 27 September 1794, and was given a contract as baker for the troops. In January 1796 Sidaway opened the first theatre in Sydney. It had been built by convicts under the management of John Sparrow. It was in Bell Row and was used until 1798, when Governor John Hunter ordered that it be closed as it was a corrupting influence, probably because of the robberies taking place on theatre nights. It operated again for a time in 1800 and then ceased altogether. Sidaway held a 130-acre (53 ha) farm, partly purchased and partly leased, at the Field of Mars, on which he grew maize and wheat. He was one of those settlers permitted by Hunter to buy goods at moderate prices from the Minerva in 1800. He kept a public house and in 1805 obtained a wine and spirit licence. He died on 13 October 1809, described by the Sydney Gazette as a philanthropist and a respected member of society. He had formed an alliance with Mary Marshall, who had been sentenced to transportation for life at the Old Bailey on 23 February 1785 and had arrived in the First Fleet in the Lady Penrhyn. As Sidaway's residuary legatee, she sent Governor Lachlan Macquarie a memorial applying for a renewal of the lease on Sidaway's property in Sydney, but this was refused. She continued in Sydney as a publican.