Eliza Studdert

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Summary

Born
Dec 1813
Conviction
Theft - larceny
Departure
Mar 1831
Arrival
Jul 1831
Death
Unknown
Step 0 of 0

Personal Information

Name: Eliza Studdert
Gender: Female
Born: 31st Dec 1813
Death: Unknown
Age at death: Unknown
Occupation: Nursery maid

Crime

Convicted at: Ireland, Dublin City
Sentence term: 7 years

Voyage

Departed: 23rd Mar 1831
Ship: Palambam
Arrival: 31st Jul 1831
Place of Arrival: New South Wales

Transportation

Eliza Studdert was transported on the Palambam, departing 23rd Mar 1831 and arriving 31st Jul 1831 with 122 passengers.

394 tons. 1831 voyage from Cork, Ireland to New South Wales, Australia. Capt. Willis. 114 female prisoners. Also 50 girls from the Foundling Hospital, Cork with 2 Matrons and their husbands and children. Also 4 female wives of convicts already in Australia and their children. Register of passengers currently being updated and not yet complete.

PalambamPalambam (generic)

References

Primary SourceNSW Convict Indents, 1788-1842, Annotated Printed Indentures 1831

Claims

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Convict Notes

Maureen Withey avatar
342
on 2nd May 2026

Convict Permission to Marry. John Asling, per Mary (2), age 33, 7 years, Life; Bond; and Eliza Studdert, per Palambam, age 21, 7 years, Bond. Date of Permission, 25 Nov 1835, Sutton Forest. Convict Permission to Marry. John Asling, per Mary (2), age 33, 7 years, Life; T of L; and Eliza Studdert, per Palambam, age 21, 7 years, Free. Date of Permission: no place or date. NSW BMD Marriage Ref:1411/1835. John Asling and Eliza Studdord, CV district. (Church of England, Berrima; Bong Bong; Sutton Forest; All Saints (Co. Camden) NSW Convict Index. Eliza Studdert, per Palambam, 1831, Ticket of Leave, No 35/705. District, Sutton Forest; Born Dublin; Trade, Nurse girl; Tried, Dublin city. Eliza Studdert, per Palambam, 1831, Certificate of Freedom, No 44/0063, 16 Jan 1844. Remarks: TL 35/705; wife of John Ashley, per Mary, 1822, free (as stated on her CF) Deaths Reg: 5998/1875. John Asling, age 73 years, Died Eden, Eden district. Reg 4091/1866. Eliza Asling, Father’s given name. John, Died Eden district. John was awarded grants of land, for a farm and for a house. He sold this in 1866, the year Eliza died, and it was advertised in the newspaper. TWOFOLD BAY -Beautiful seaside RESIDENCE and FARM, within one mile of the seaport town of EDEN Title direct from the Crown. For positive SALE by private contract, a farm of 21 acres, with a run capable of depasturing 250 head of cattle, or an equivalent number of sheep, being well grassed and watered. There are sixteen acres cleared and cultivated, and a portion of the purchased land contains a most valuable freestone quarry close to a safe harbour. The homestead comprises a comfortable verandah cottage, with the usual number of detatched outbuildings. There are a nice garden and orchard in full bearing, and a snug boat harbour With the above will be sold fifty head of cattle, more or less, twenty of which are quiet milkers; three valuable draught horses, and a splendid hack , also, carts, harness, plough, harrow, and, in fact the entire plant of farm implements, household furniture, domestic effects , &c, as well as a good boat. Those on the look out for real pretty seaside property, with which they can command other sources of profitable investment, should not miss so golden a chance as the present. The property is in the occupation of the proprietor, Mr John Asling, who will be glad to allow inspection and fullest particulars as to terms, &c, may be had on application to Messrs BARCLAY and TEAS, Eden. Sydney Morning Herald, 27 Mar 1866.

Maureen Withey avatar
342
on 12th November 2024

Scailtin seemed to be their downfall! Scailtin (Irish Whiskey Milk Punch) is a beverage dating back to the 1700's. Some early versions of this recipe were served in a punch bowl. Alcohol was used as a preservative, so the beverage was also sold bottled. This was such a popular drink that in 1838 Queen Victoria granted Nathaniel's Whissof's company exclusive rights to be the sole purveyors of scailtin to the crown.

Maureen Withey avatar
342
on 12th November 2024

Recorder’s Court. THIRTEEN THIEVES. The Recorder, with Aldermen M'Kenny and Fleming, presiding. Patrick Furlong, John Magennes, John Rooney, Catherine Rooney, Ellen Donovan, Eliza Studdart, Catherine Murphy, Eliza Fitzierald, Mary Bennett, Anne Tierney, Ellen Dawson, Ellen Bryant and Jane Lawler, stood indicted for stealing two kegs, four gallons whiskey and twenty pounds sugar, the property of Patrick Kernan, from his house in Halston-street, on the night of Friday last. The trial of these persons was interesting, chiefly from the circumstances of their being arrested about seven o'clock on Saturday morning, a few hours after the commission of the robbery, while regaling themselves on scatldez, for which Mr. Kernan's shop had supplied the necessary ingredients,-and of Furlong, who is a good looking, respectable and intelligent man in appearance, being now about to yield to those laws which, for the last fifteen years, he has been transgressing with a notorious impunity. Patrick Kiernan, waiter to the proprietor of the house, No. 8, Halston-street, deposed -I examined the house on the on the night of the 27th March, at 10 o'clock, when all was right, and I closed it up; about six the next morning, when I went there from my master's residence, I found the door broken open, and the shutters taken down ; two panels were taken out of the shutters, two kegs with spirits and two loaves lump sugar carried away ; I cannot identify the kegs or sugar now produced' as my master's property-but there were kegs like them in the house, and I can identify the broken shutter on the table, it was left in the house on the morning of the 27th ... I found the keg on the table; it was wet, and from the smell l am of opinion it was spirits that wetted it; Mr. Kernan instantly identified it as his property; Mrs. Donovan denied any knowledge of it, and so did Furlong; I found five or six gallons of whiskey in a butter tub near the fire; with the assistance of some watchmen we made the prisoners get up, and removed them to Church-street watch-house; Bennet and Furlong endeavoured to escape; Bennet made great resistance; I got the two loaves of: sugar among some ashes in a recess under the stairs; all the prisoners denied any knowledge of the whiskey, sugar, and keg; there were bottles of whiskey, glasses, and a bowl containing spirits, which I tasted some of the prisoners were asleep in the inner room, the rest were awake in the shop, amongst whom was Furlong, who appeared drunk; all the parties, except Rooney, had their clothes on, even those lying in the beds. Cross-examined -I found no implements there of the kind used in housebreaking; I don't recollect that Mary Bennet was charged with stealing a communion cross out of Denmark-street Chapel, though I know her well. Henry Damsela, private 8th Foot -I was sentry at the corner of Halston-street on the night of the 26th; Kernan's house is about sixty yards from the sentry-box; about two in the morning I saw through the door a light and people inside; there were upwards of a dozen persons passing to and fro' out of the door and round the corner of Newgate; I left my post at three o'clock; the light was then gone; no watchman frequents that street, at least I did not hear one during the two hours that I was on guard. Cross-examined-I heard no noise like house breaking. Another witness was examined, from whom no material fact was elicited. The jury returned a verdict, finding all the prisoners guilty, some of whom set up hideous lamentations in the Court, while others seemed regardless of their fate. The RECORDER, in pronouncing …. to the long career of iniquity of Furlong - and to his frequent exhibitions in that Court, since he came to preside in it; him and Tierney and Eliza Studdart, be sentenced to seven years' transportation; John Magennis to seven (months) ,Rooney to six months' imprisonment in the Newgate; and all the others to the same in the Smithfield Penitentiary, and hard labour. During the observations of the learned Recorder, he was frequently interrupted by some very severe remarks from Furlong, who, amongst Other things said This is, indeed an unhappy situation, a man who knows nothing at all about the matter was found guilty without a cringe, and you hang the innocent while you let the guilty escape. Freeman’s Journal, 2 April 1830.

Dianne Jones avatar
218
on 23rd June 2020

Crime: Stealing whiskey; Eliza had a previous conviction (crime not stated) with a sentence of 7 months (see NSW Convict Indents, 1788-1842, Annotated Printed Indentures 1831).

Dianne Jones avatar
218
on 23rd June 2020

Occupation: Nurse girl.