New South Wales Government Gazette 1846
1,656 documents
Changer de catégorie ou de collection
Nom
Ajouter des infos
Lieu
Mots-clés
Termes exacts
Effacer formulaire
Chercher dans New South Wales Government Gazette 1846
Nom
Ajouter des infos
Lieu
Mots-clés
Effacer formulaire
CollectionDescriptionImage
New South Wales Government Gazette 1846
1 656 résultats
New South Wales Government Gazette 1846. 1846. <p></p>So you&apos;ve heard of Government Gazettes ... but just what are they, and how can they help you with your research?<p><b>What<br><br> is a Government Gazette?</b><br> This is&nbsp;an official publication of all government notices, including the operation dates of Acts of Parliament. Once the notice in the Gazette is published, the public is deemed to have notice of it. They were usually produced once a week, with occasional &apos;Extraordinary&apos; issues.</p> <p><b>What will I find in a New South Wales Government Gazette?</b><br> Tens of thousands of ordinary people and localities, small and large, are mentioned every year in Government Gazettes. You will find details on land transactions, court notices, notice of acts, tenders and contracts, police auctions of stolen property, statistics, unclaimed letters, impoundments of cattle and horses, reward notices and much more ... There is a huge amount of information (which includes physical descriptions) relating to convicts - absconders, those who were granted tickets-of-leave, certificates-of-freedom, conditional pardons, deserters, apprehensions and more.</p> <p><b>How can this information help me?</b><br> Totaling over 1600 pages, the 1846 Government Gazettes contain an enormous amount of historical and genealogical information, with the entire text fully searchable. <i>FastFind</i> searching greatly facilitates searching for names and places as well as keywords for any subject you wish to check out. It can help you reconstruct events and circumstances in the life of individuals and communities.</p> <blockquote> <p><u>Example entry taken from the 2 January 1846 issue:</u><br> General Post Office,<br> Sydney, 27th December, 1845<br> NEW POST OFFICES<br> Notice is hereby given, that His Excellency the Governor having been pleased to approve of the Establishment of Post Offices, at the following places, viz:<br> Ipswich, situated 25 miles from Brisbane, and Darling Downs, situated 90 miles from the same Township.<br> Parties wishing to receive their communications through either of these Post Offices, are advised to caution their correspondents to address their letters and newspapers to the place distinctly, by its name, and so to provide against the chance of their being forwarded to any adjacent Post Office, of the same County of District.<br> James Raymond,<br> Postmaster General</p> <p><u>Example entry taken from the 13 February 1846 issue:</u><br> Colonial Secretary&apos;s Office,<br> Sydney, 7th February, 1846<br> TWENTY POUNDS REWARD OR A CONDITIONAL PARDON<br> Whereas it has been represented to the Government, that on the morning of the 2nd January last, a man named James Lane, who was employed as a shepherd at a station of Messrs. Cheeke and Broadhurst, in the District of Liverpool Plains, discharged a gun, loaded with shot, at his fellow servant, named Samuel Gledhill, and wounded him in the face, from the effects of which the said Samuel Gledhill subsequently died, and that the above mentioned James Lane has absconded, His Excellency the Governor directs it to be notified, that a Reward of Twenty Pounds will be paid to any free person or persons who shall apprehend the said James Lane and lodge him any of Her Majesty&apos;s Gaols, and if the person apprehending him be a Prisoner of the Crown, application will be made to Her Majesty for the allowance of a Conditional Pardon to such Prisoner of the Crown.<br> By His Excellency&apos;s Command,<br> E. Deas Thomson</p> <p>Description:-<br> Name - James Lane<br> Country - England<br> Condition - Free by Servitude<br> Height - About 5 feet 5 inches<br> Complexion - Dark<br> Hair - Black and straight<br> Eyes - Black and rather small<br> Age - About 33 years<br> Remarks - Very small head, very low forehead, dark heavy eyebrows, with a down look or a scowl upon his countenance; at the time of his absconding he wore thick black whiskers, very large, upper teeth project outwards and are of a large size.</p></blockquote> <p>If you&apos;ve got an interest in early New South Wales and it&apos;s people, you&apos;re bound to find something of interest in this amazing resource.</p>
Catégories de données connexes :