Anson

List of Convicts

New Town Farm

Employees

Convict Clothing

 

 

 

From 1844 to 1850, female convicts arriving in Van Diemen's Land were immediately sent to the Anson for six months' probation.  This was the only designated probation station for women, though New Town Farm operated temporarily as a station for female convicts in early 1844 and again in 1850. 

During this time, it was considered desirable to keep the newly arriving convicts separate from the 'old hands'.

 

Prior to the fitting out of the Anson, it was planned to build a probation station for female convicts at Oyster Cove.  An article in the Hobart Town Advertiser on 2 February 1844 (p3 c2), an account of a voyage down the channel, recounted, Lower down is Oyster Cove, the seat of the new factory for the control of female prisoners, and which exhibits a small piece of rich cultivation in its recess ...  This probation station, however, was never built.

 

The Anson

The HMS Anson was a 1870 ton warship which arrived at Hobart in 1844 landing 499 male convicts.  After disembarking her 'cargo', she was refitted as a prison and towed to Prince of Wales  Bay, Risdon, near Hobart, where she was moored. 

The Anson hulk was used to house female convicts from 1844 in an attempt to alleviate the overcrowding at Cascades Female Factory.

The Hobart Town Courier of 29 October 1844 (p2 c7) had the following to say about the Anson and Mrs Bowden's management of it.

We had the pleasure a few days since to pay a visit, too long deferred, to the female penitentiary on board the Anson, under the superintendence of Dr. and Mrs. Bowden.  As we ascended the ship ladder we were agreeably saluted by the singing of the prisoners, who are assembled on Wednesdays for afternoon service.  The singing, as well as the general service, is conducted by the Rev. Mr. Giles, and with very great effect, his congregation appearing to unite with him throughout.  Through the politeness of Mrs. Bowden, who appears desirous to afford strangers an opportunity of acquainting themselves with the system pursued by her, we were conducted through every particular of our inquiries.  We found that besides the necessary duties of the establishment in washing and cooking, the women were employed in various descriptions of needlework, in the manufacture of shoes, straw-hats, door mats, &c., as far as the very limited means at Mrs. Bowden's command will allow.  Every part of the ship exhibited remarkable cleanliness, and we could not have expected to witness such general health, and to find the ventilation so good, where so large a number are collected together in a limited space.  But these physical appearances constitute the least recommendation of those who superintend the arrangements on board the Anson.  We remarked with great satisfaction the subdued, respectful, and throughout proper deportment of the women, exhibiting a very striking contrast with what we have been too long accustomed to in similar establishments in this country.  No one who is acquainted with the trying circumstances in which the best disposed are placed in service in this colony, will expect too much from the subjects of Mrs. Bowden's management when they are again turned into society; but this reflects nothing upon that lady's management, from which, in more favourable circumstances, the best results could not fail to arise.  We only lament that one so well fitted for her sphere of duty, and actuated by principles so high, and distinguished by energy so great, should not find everything favourable to her permanent success.  As a mistake—arising from the letter of the Colonial Secretary to the Bench of Magistrates—generally exists, that the depôt at the Brickfields is peopled from the Anson, we may as well state that this is not the case at present, whatever may be contemplated by the Government.

 

On 2 March 1847, the Colonial Times published the following article on the assignment of female convicts from the Anson.

FEMALE SERVANTS.—We are authorised to state, that on Friday, the 5th instant, at noon, upwards of one hundred women who have finished their period of probation on board the Anson, will be eligible for private service, and that previous to that hour of Friday, no one will be at liberty to engage them as servants, or to communicate with them. This precautionary measure has been adopted that the public generally may be placed on the same footing as to obtaining female servants from the Anson. There exists at present a great demand for female servants of this class.

 

The Colonial Times and Tasmanian printed the following article on the Anson on 28 April 1848 (p3 c5).

THE ANSON.—We have more than once had occasion to impute blame to the officers on board the Anson, in their mode of awarding female pass-holders to the various applicants; and we are much pleased in being enabled to state, that yesterday, when the first of the new draft was assignable, the greatest attention was paid to the applications by Mr. A. B. Jones and Mr. Emmett, who rendered every accommodation to the public, both to the saving of time, and the judicious appropriation of the servants.

 

The Anson also acted as a hiring depot. On 25 January 1848 the Hobart Town Gazette (p.102) announced that female convicts who had arrived on the Asia on 21 July 1847, having completed their six months probation on board, were eligible for private service as probation passholders on Friday, 28 January 1848. "The contracts for service will be entered into on board the Anson, between the hours of 10 and 4."

 

List of Convicts

A list of 257 female convicts known to have spent 6 months probation on the Anson probation station is provided here. This list has been extracted from the Female Family Founders Database and is current as at 7 May 2008. It is by no means complete and will continue to be added to as our database grows. Come back regularly for updates.

Convicts on the Anson Probation Station
(an incomplete list)

 

New Town Farm

When the Bowdens arrived in Van Diemen's Land to take up their positions as Superintendent and Matron of the female probation station, the Anson was not yet ready and the female convicts were housed temporarily at New Town Farm probation station, near the Queen's Orphan Schools.

On Friday, 26 January 1844, nine women who had arrived on the East London on 21 September 1843 were involved in a riot at New Town Farm station. They were about half way through serving their six months probation. The female convicts were:

bullet

Mary BRADY – Police No.632, sentence 7 years

bullet

Catherine KEMP – Police No.230, sentence 7 years

bullet

Catherine SHAW – Police No.585, sentence 10 years

bullet

Mary DOOLEY – Police No.397, sentence 7 years

bullet

Eliza MORAN – Police No.475, sentence 7 years

bullet

Mary CONNELL – Police No.600, sentence 7 years

bullet

Ellen CRONON (or CRONIN) – Police No.599, sentence 7 years

bullet

Mary HANNON – Police No.506, sentence 7 years

bullet

Mary Ann or Margaret SMITH – Police No.563, sentence 7 years, tried at Chester

They were charged by Dr Bowden, Superintendent, with insubordination in resisting in a turbulent manner and with violence opposing the lawfully constituted authorities on 26 January 1844 at New Town Farm Station. All pleaded not guilty except for Catherine KEMP, Ellen CRONON and Margaret SMITH. The evidence given at the hearing was as follows (ref: AOT, AC 480/1/1).

Mr George Hestell sworn states, I am one of the free warders who accompanied Dr Bowden the Suptt of the female Penitentiary from England in the ship Woodbridge for the purpose of taking charge of females placed under Dr. Bowden’s management. I was directed by Dr. Bowden to take charge of the New Town Station as male Warder, but Miss Carr is the responsible person as Assistant. I have been at the station from the 10th of January instant and the whole of the women have known me as male Warder there. I have assisted in mastering them and in their general management. The whole of them know that I am placed as one of the officers in charge. In the forenoon of yesterday it was reported to me that Catherine Kemp had absconded. I immediately left the stores and went into the day room and found the women in a state of excitement and disorder. I found Kemp in the room the generality of the women in that room were in a state of mutiny and making a great uproar. I spoke to Kemp I called to her three or four times to come with me and she refused I called to the Constable to take her into custody. The Constable came and endeavored to take her. She resisted in being taken by the Constable. Mary Connell and Mary Ann Smith assisted Kemp in resisting the Constable. Miss Carr came into the room before the Constable and I left, and altho’ Kemp would not allow herself to be taken into custody I persuaded her to be quiet, which she did for sometime. There were in that room at that time the major part of the women. I left the room and went to other duties the women appearing to be a little quelled and not so riotous as at first, but still without having affected the object in taking Kemp into custody. I about ten minutes afterwards one of the cooks named Edwards reported to me that two of the women were making their escape. Connell and another woman were the two, and while these two women were in the bush having left the station, another row took place among the women in consequence of Mr District Constable Eskdale who had been sent for, coming to take Kemp into custody. Moran Dooley, Cronon & Smith were prominent on this occasion assisting in the resistance offered to the district Constable. Mary Dooley had a shovel in her possession with which she threatened to split my head open, I saw the District Constable’s face it was bleeding from a woman. It was not so wounded before he went in the room among the women. Miss Carr the principal female officer in my presence attempted to get the women quiet by advising them not to resist but they refused to attend to her after being spoken to and warned by Miss Carr they continue in their riotous behaviour the sashes and windows in the day room were broken by the women during the riot. I cannot say whether any of the nine women present took an active part in breaking the windows excepting Kempt but the whole of them were in the riotous crowd. I saw Kemp with a piece of board in her hand about four feet long smashing the windows. During my absence outside the station the bread store was broken into and through the interstices of the paling I saw the women in the bread store. The bread is under my charge and there is the quantity of about fifty four loaves missing in consequence of the store being so broken into, the Watch Box which is placed inside the yard was also broken in pieces during the time I was absent from the yard. Mr Eskdale had two or three Constables to assist him but was unable to take them into custody. In consequence of the open and riotous conduct of the women we were obliged to go away from them and leave them in possession of the yard, the door leading into which was fastened on the inside by the women. We were therefore obliged to send off to Hobart Town for more assistance and the women were in a turbulent and disorderly state yesterday when the Principal Superintendent came to the Station.
Xd by Brady
You left your bed about half past ten and I saw you in the yard when the disturbance first commended after the Constable came I saw you exciting the other women against the English women. I was outside at this time and saw you distinctly through the palings.
Xd by Dooley
I saw you one of the most active among the women excepting Kemp and I saw you trying to rescue Kemp from the District Constable.
Xd by Connell
After you were brought back from the Bush I distinctly saw her smashing the windows and throwing about pots and plates.
Miss Eliza Carr sworn states, I am the Principal female officer in charge under Dr. Bowden at the female station and the females now present are under my orders. Yesterday at the station there was a riot among the women they generally refused to obey my orders. Kemp in particular, it was in consequence of her riotus behaviour that I desired her to sit down, which she did for a short time and she afterwards became as tumultuous as before. The major part of the women openly resisted my authority. I cannot particularise any of the women now present excepting Kemp and Connell they were two of the worst in the tumult their conduct being calculated to excite others to a disturbance. None of the women offered me any personal violence but Connell was very impudent. During the time of the riotus conduct of the women yesterday I was in the day room I was present there when the windows were broken, they were broken by the women throwing pannicans and various other missiles. I saw Kemp standing on the forms and tables and throwing pannicans and plates. I saw the District Constable on his arrival at the station and he then had no wound on his face but after he had been among the women his face was bleeding. I did not hear of any actual bad language made use of, with the exception of Kemp. She made use of very bad words, words which I do not like to repeat and which no female of common decency ought to hear. From their riotus conduct I lost all authority over them and Moran, Dooley & Brady were worse than the others during the day.
Xd by Moran
I spoke to you several times and you set me at defiance and so did Kemp and Dooley after the Constables came.
Xd by Brady
I saw you exciting others by your conduct and manner.
Miss Mary Wills Stroud sworn states, I am one of the female officers under Dr. Bowden in the New town Station. The women at the station yesterday were very riotus, they disobeyed the orders which were given to them, the major part of the women were in an open state of mutiny. I perceived the whole of these women excepting Cronan in the riot and tumult and as busy as any of the rest of them Kemp was worse than any of them. She struck me in the face with a tin plate and gave me this injury on my mouth Kemp striking me was a consequence of her resistance to the Constable and my going up to her to endeavour to persuade her to go with the constable. I was present when Mr Eskdale the District Constable wished to take Kemp into custody and she openly resisted him. Mr Eskdale was wounded on the face and the wound was caused by some of the women. In consequence of the violent conduct of the women the officers of the station were obliged to go outside excepting Miss Carr and I was obliged to go outside for my personal safety. Kemp in particular threatened to take my life. All the women now present excepting Cronan were forward in the riot. I saw Brady in the yard among the other women after the Constables came I saw the windows smashed in by the women but I cannot particularize and particular woman there was such a riot and confusion at the time. During the time the Constable was there I beckoned to Hannon to come away she called me very bad names and said she would dor for me, and this could be heard by the other women. After the women commenced the riot I know the bread store was broken into.
Mr Joseph Eskdale sworn states, I am District Constable at New Town, I was called on duty to the female Establishment at New Town yesterday in consequence of the disturbance which had taken place on the station. When I got there I found the women very noisy. I went with Mr Heskitt among the women and he pointed out Kemp. He stated that one of the female officers had been struck by Kemp and he directed her to be taken into custody. I attempted to take her into custody and she resisted, the whole of the women now present I recognise as assisting in that tumult when I was prevented taking Kemp into custody, particularly Smith, Cronan and Dooley they were more riotus than the rest and were the principals one that first came to the rescue of Kemp. It was in the execution of my duty yesterday among these women that I received this wound in my face. I cannot particularize the woman that wounded me because there were a great many round at the time but I believe it to have been done by a stone. I recalled that Smith & Cronan were among the women round about me at the time of my receiving the wound and I recollect seeing Dooley with a shovel in her hand which she flourished round her head threatening to strike the first that came near her. I could not do my duty in taking Kemp into custody in consequence of the women’s violent conduct fearing some further personal violence would take place. A large body of Constables were eventually obliged to be sent for. I saw the windows broken and identify Kemp as being principally concerned. I saw her strike two blows at the windows with a stick. The riotus conduct of the women continued about half an hour after my arrival.
Xd by Connell
I am not quite certain that you were not of the prominent ones, on reflection I do no recollect seeing her in the riot. I am quite confident as to all the rest.
George Ross Constable sworn states, I accompanied Mr Eskdale on duty yesterday to the New Town Station when we got there the women were kicking up a row, it was a riot. I went inside the station. I took hold of Kemp and took her outside and several of the other women surrounded me. Mary Dooley had a spade in her hand and she struck at me but missed me. I got this black eye among the women from a stone after we came out having been regularly stoned out they set too & broke the windows. I did hear some woman call out don’t throw stones but I don’t know whether it was Hannon or not.
Ellen Cronan states in her defence she was scolding and talking as well as any other but did not take any weapon.
The rest of the prisoners state they have nothing to say in their defence.
Sentences: Catherine Kemp & Mary Dooley – their existing sentences of transportation extended for two years with a recommendation that they be moved from the Establishment and placed on probation in the Female House of Correction; Mary Connell & Eliza Moran – their existing sentences of transportation extended for one year with the same recommendation as above; Mary Ann Smith, Mary Hannon & Catherine Shaw – each to be placed six months to hard labor with a recommendation that they serve such period in the separate working rooms in the female House of Correction; Ellen Cronan & Mary Brady – each to be placed ten days solitary confinement.
James Simmons JP, J Spode
(ref: AOT, AC 480/1/1)

 

Employees

On 25 December 1843, the ship Woodbridge, master Dobson, arrived at Hobart Town, having sailed from London on 3 September 1843 with 204 female convicts. Government passengers for the [female convict] Probation System (ie, the Anson) on board were:
Dr, Mrs and Miss Bowden; Mr, Mrs and two Misses Giles; Elizabeth Carr; Sarah Holditch; Elizabeth Richardson; Margaret Powers; Sarah Hislet; Mary Ann Boxshall; Mary M Stroud; Sophia Wright; Sarah and Mary Richardson; Martha Holditch; Eliza Serviss; Sarah Pearce; Hannah Cox; and Jane Holditch. Male warders: George Hislet; Robert Wright; John Serviss; and Edward Pearce.
(Austral-Asiatic Review 29 December 1843, p.2)

In 1849, Anson employees listed in the 'blue books' (AOT, CSO 50/26) were:

Position
Name
Date of Appointment
Chaplain
Revd Giles
1843
Acting Superintendent
Revd Giles
March 1848
Assistant Superintendent
Susannah S Holditch
1843
School Mistress
Jane C Holditch
1843
Roman Catholic Catechist
Sarah A Troy
16 October 1846
Laundress
Eliza Serviss
1843
Principal Warder
Martha E Abbott (nee Holditch)
1843
Warder
Margaret Power
1843
Warder
Sarah Pearce
1843
Warder
Sophia Wright
1843
Warder
Jane McCausland
1843
Warder
Sarah Lacey
November 1847
Warder
Sarah Baker
September 1848
Warder
Sarah Richardson
October 1848
Warder
Hannah Workman (nee Cox)
March 1849
Warder

John Serviss

1843
Warder
Edward Pearce
1843
Warder
Robert Wright
1843
Officer in Charge of Vessel
GS Cotterele[?]
April 1842
Boatman
Thomas Rowe
March 1844
Boatman
John Jones[?]
1848

Many of these employed in 1849 when the Anson was closing down were those who arrived to begin work on the Anson in 1843. Revd Giles took over as Acting Superintendent after Dr Edward Bowden died in September 1847 and his wife, Phillipa Bowden who had been Matron, returned to England.

 

Convict Clothing

Edward Bowden, Superintendent of the Anson probation station sent a letter regarding the clothing of female convicts on board to the Principal Storekeeper on 10 February 1845 (ref: ML, CY 2283).

Anson
10 February 1845

Sir

For the information of the Comptroller General and in explanation of the accompanying return of clothing issued to the Females in this Establishment I have the honor to state that each woman on joining the Ship is supplied with the following articles.

Shift
one
Petticoat
blue
one
Petticoat
brown
one
Dress
blue
one
Apron
blue
one
Neckerchiefs
one
Caps
day
one
night
one
Stockings
pairs
one
Shoes
pairs
one

These articles, shoes excepted, are changed, washed & mended weekly, the blue dress every third week. The whole are kept as far as possible in thoro' repair.

Each woman leaving the Establishment and having no clothes of her own is furnished as follows.

Shifts
two
Aprons
one
Neckerchiefs
two
Petticoat
brown
one
Dress
brown
one
Cap
day
one
Stockings
pairs
two
Shoes
pairs
one

The blue dresses are never parted with but are reserved for successive wear as the livery or uniform of the Establishment.

It will be seen by the return that the consen...tition[?] of clothing is very durable in this Establishment, not exceeding one entire suit per annum, & must be attributed to the arrangement in question as well as to the care taken in keeping the several articles in repair.

The blue cotton stripe dress is also a stronger material than the ordinary brown prison dress & consequently wears better.

If I may be allowed to give an opinion as to the clothing required annually for this Establishment I should consider that one blue dress and one brown suit with two of each of the other articles would be amply sufficient at least according to our present experience.

I beg to add that as a matter of economy as well as of discipline I consider the use of the blue stripe cotton dress as a uniform for this Establishment of the greatest importance and beg that if possible we may continue to be supplied with it and to hope that every effort will be made for that purpose.

I have the honor to be Sir Yr very obedient Servant
Edwd Bowden

 


TOP OF PAGE

Last updated 8 June 2008

                             

Site designed by Research Tasmania.  Site hosted by info-bulletin.com.  Graphic images by Chris Downes.