It is 475 not 275.
Have done a search of NSW records and most have to be paid for as they are not digitised but did find this which could be our Mary.
I am not sure what the "ticket of leave" does. Perhaps we need to check 1841 or 1851 censuses.
Apparently it means they were free to pursue a new life on the new colony. It does not imply they left Australia.
Neither William or Joseph Jostage absconded from Van’s Land in 1828. Where would the absconders go?
From the Police Gazette or The Hue and Cry.
View attachment 123569
Im interested in William Bolton. I believe he was sent to Tasmania, approx 1821. His wife - Mary - was transported later, and arrived in 1825 with four daughters. Can anyone provide info on this?Going back and looking at the Staffs Lent Seesions there were “28 prisoners capitally convicted, and sentenced to death...including a William Bolton for house-breaking, and a William Bolton for sacrilege...23 of these capital convicts were reprieved before the judges left town, but 5 others are left for execution...
....in the case of William Bolton and Joseph Jostage, they appeared to belong to a gang of depregators, possessed by a variety of implements, by the use of which they were enabled to break into that Sacred place, which probably they have scarce visited since their baptismal rites had been performed, and stealing those things which they admitted were of little value to them; that Book to which the true Christians turned for consolation in the hour of grief, was to them an object of plunder....
...such of them whose lives were spared, must be transported for life.”
The William Bolton convicted of house-breaking at this Stafford Session is not the one to appear as No 482 on the Lord Hungerford. No 482 is (18?) and his trial date was 31 March at Warwick, and not Stafford. Also at Stafford some ages of 16, 17 and 18 are given.
She stayed. Mary Bolton, Died at the age of 67 and was buried 5 October, 1836 in Surry Hills. Parish of St. James. Her daughter Ellen/Eleanor (who was recorded as Hellena on the ship Grenada's muster roll (25 Jan 1925) married William Makin on the 23 Jan 1837. They had five children. She died on 2 March 1890 in Wollongong, NSW, and was buried there. Her son John Makin was convicted of murder and was hung at Darlinghurst gaol, in Sydney in 1893. His wife was also convicted but spared the noose.So it looks like Mary Boulton behaved herself. She had been sentenced to 7 years transportation in 1824 and sailed on the ship Grenada on the 25th September 1824. Her freedom and ticket of leave date from 13th September 1831, 7 years after she arrived. But did she stay in Australia or come home?