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  2. Australian Joint Copying Project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Joint_Copying...

    These handwritten transcripts of records held in the Public Record Office, London (now The National Archives) were published in the series Historical Records of New South Wales (1892-1901). The editor of the Historical Records of New South Wales, F.M. Bladen , was attached to the staff of the State Library of NSW and was Principal Librarian ...

  3. Founders and Survivors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Founders_and_Survivors

    The project relied on the mass-digitisation of over 100,000 images, manual transcription of the convict records, XML record matching, volunteer crowdsourcing, creation of a customised genealogical database for population and family history analysis, and statistical analyses. [3] Example of the convict records held by the NSW State Library

  4. Muster (census) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muster_(Census)

    1820 and 1821 Muster of convicts and their children at Hobart Town. 1822 Muster supplying alphabetical returns of persons in NSW and also of convicts in Van Diemen's Land. 1823 Muster of convicts in Van Diemen's Land. 1825 General muster of all inhabitants in NSW, except the military. 1837 General muster of all convicts in NSW and Norfolk Island.

  5. List of people legally executed in New South Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_legally...

    John Bennett – 2 May 1788 – A 20-year-old convict who was publicly hanged at Sydney Cove for theft. Samuel Payton – 28 June 1788 – Hanged at Sydney Cove for stealing shirts, stockings and combs. He was a 20-year-old convict and stonemason. [5] Edward Corbett – 28 June 1788 – Hanged at Sydney Cove for the theft of four cows. [5]

  6. Cockatoo Island Prison Barracks Precinct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatoo_Island_Prison...

    The mess hall was built west of the convict barracks and, with further walling to the southwest and northwest, completed the enclosed nature of the convict precinct. Following the Industrial School and later prison period, and after the Commonwealth took over, the mess hall was altered for office purposes and the windows were enlarged.

  7. Certificate of freedom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_of_freedom

    A certificate of freedom was a government issued document given to a convict in one of the Australian penal colonies at the end of the convict's sentence. That stated that the ex-convict had been restored "to all the rights and privileges of free subjects", effectively now a free person, and could seek out employment or leave the colony.