Samuel Stanyard

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Summary

Born
Unknown
Conviction
Burglary (house breaking)
Departure
Dec 1790
Arrival
Jul 1791
Death
Unknown
Step 0 of 0

Personal Information

Name: Samuel Stanyard
Gender: Male
Born: Unknown
Death: Unknown
Age at death: Unknown
Occupation: Unknown

Crime

Convicted at: Warwick Assizes
Sentence term: 7 years

Voyage

Departed: 31st Dec 1790
Arrival: 9th Jul 1791
Place of Arrival: New South Wales

Transportation

Samuel Stanyard was transported on the Active, Albermarle, Atlantic, Barrington, Britannia, Mary Ann, Matilda, Salamander And William And Ann, departing 31st Dec 1790 and arriving 9th Jul 1791 with 1265 passengers.

The Third Fleet consisted of 11 Vessels. Active, Albermarle, Atlantic, Barrington, Britannia, Gorgon, Mary Ann, Matilda, Queen (from Ireland) Salamander and William and Ann. These vessels were provided by a private company; Camden, Calvert and King to ship convicts to the colony.

Active, Albermarle, Atlantic, Barrington, Britannia, Mary Ann, Matilda, Salamander And William And AnnActive, Albermarle, Atlantic, Barrington, Britannia, Mary Ann, Matilda, Salamander And William And Ann (generic)

References

Primary SourceAustralian Joint Copying Project. Microfilm Roll 87, Class and Piece Number HO11/1, Page Number 141 (72)
Source DescriptionThis record is one of the entries in the British convict transportation registers 1787-1867 database compiled by State Library of Queensland from British Home Office (HO) records which are available on microfilm as part of the Australian Joint Copying Pro
Original SourceGreat Britain. Home Office
Compiled ByState Library of Queensland
Database SourceBritish convict transportation registers 1787-1867 database

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Convict Notes

Virginia Silvester avatar
2
on 15th November 2022

This convict was the same as the Samuel Stannard transported for life to Tasmania in 1818. The newspaper Aris's Birmingham Gazette of 13 April 1818 records his convictions in 1787 and again in Birmingham in 1812 and 1813 for which he received shorter terms of imprisonment.

D Wong avatar
221
on 3rd March 2020

Samuel Stanyard was on the 'Salamander'. Northampton Mercury Northamptonshire, England 7 Apr 1787: At Warwick Assizes, which ended on Saturday last, 60 Prisoners took their Trials,...... Samuel Stanyard, for a Burglary in the House of Thomas Freeth, in Birmingham. Colonial Secretary Papers: STANYARD, Samuel 1803 Jun 30: On list of all grants and leases of land registered in the Colonial Secretary's Office (Fiche 3268; 9/2731 p.132) 6/3/1813 Sydney Gazette: Lot 6. All that Forty Acres, part of Eighty Acres of Land granted to Samuel Stanyard at the Nepean River, by the late GOVERNOR KING, under Seal of the Colony, to the said Samuel Stanyard, his Heirs and Assigns for ever, and by the said Samuel Stanyard, as to the said Forty Acres thereof, assigned to the said John Bowman, his Heirs and Assigns, bounded on the South by an Allotment of Forty acres of the same Farm, held by Lease by one Cooling, and on the North Side by one Pickering's Farm. Nothing else found in NSW. There was a Samuel Stanyard who arrived per 'Lord Melville' to VDL in 1818 - tried at Warwick, same crime, 56 years old and died VDL 1846, aged 80...could be the same man!!