Showing posts with label Kangaroo Valley Hobart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kangaroo Valley Hobart. Show all posts

Prisoner George CHARLTON, photo by T. J. Nevin, September 1874.

Thomas J. NEVIN's photography: a prisoner mugshot and a New Town stereograph
George CHARLTON, prison records, aliases and monikers
SIMS' Excelsior coal mine, Kangaroo Valley, Hobart, Tasmania

The Mugshot
Prisoner George Charlton, photographed by T. J. Nevin, Hobart Gaol, September 1874.



Prisoner CHARLTON, George
TMAG Ref: Q15571
Photographer: Thomas J. Nevin
Date and Location: Hobart Gaol, September 1874.

The numbering on recto "58" was applied in 1983 when this cdv was removed from the Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery (QVMAG), Launceston, together with another three hundred or more 1870s mugshots taken at the Hobart Gaol by government contractor Thomas J. Nevin which were acquired by the QVMAG as part of the bequest from the estate of convictarian John Watt Beattie in the 1930s. When they were removed from Beattie's collection and taken down to the Port Arthur prison heritage site for an exhibition as part of the Port Arthur Conservation Project in 1983, they were not returned to the QVMAG. They were deposited instead at the TMAG where this cdv is currently held .



Verso of cdv of prisoner CHARLTON, George
TMAG Ref: Q15571
Photographer: Thomas J. Nevin
Date and Location: Hobart Gaol, September 1874.

The verso information is incorrect. George Charlton was not photographed at the Port Arthur prison in 1874, he was photographed in the week ending 14th September 1874 on discharge from the Hobart Gaol by government contractor and professional photographer Thomas J. Nevin.

Police and Court Records
George Charlton aliases, monikers and misspellings:
George Charletan, Geordie, John Scott, George Chilton



6th July 1844
Convict transport Blundell arrived Hobart 6 July 1844
Charlton, George
Record Type: Convicts
Ship: Blundell
Place of origin: Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland
Origin location: Latitude and Longitude
Voyage number: 365
Index number: 11912
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1380271

3rd June 1858
Charlton, George
Record Type: Court
Status: Ticket of leave
Trial date: 3 Jun 1858
Place of trial: Hobart town
Offense: Burglary in the dwelling of Martha Wilcox with intent to steal
Verdict: Guilty
Prosecutions Project ID: 100095
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1504770

31st January 1868

TRANSCRIPTS
HAMILTON.-On the 29th instant, by J. F. Sharland, Esquire,
J.P., for the arrest of George Charletan [sic], per Blundell,
charged with house-breaking, and stealing £26 (since
recovered) the moneys of Mrs. Smith, Ouse.
Description.
50 or 52 years old, 5 feet 1 or 2 inches high , brown to
grey hair, light complexion, bald, wore a new black
billy-cock hat, brown vest (new), old brownish trousers,
striped jumper, and blucher boots, slight made, a miner,
an Englishman. He is likely to make for the coal
mines at New Town
, where he formerly worked. He
was convicted 10 years ago for a similar offence at Mrs.
Williams's. See Crime Report of the 27th October, 1865,
page 174, prisoners discharged.( Tasmania Reports of Crime, 31 Jan 1868, p. 16)

14th February 1868
Vide Crime Report of the 31st ultimo, page 16. Referring to George Charletan charged with housebreaking, &c. He is likely to get on one of the crafts trading from Hobart Town to the Huon. He is known as Geordie. A Reward is offered for his arrest if effected within two months from the 5th instant.(Tasmania Reports of Crime, 14 Feb 1868, p. 24)

7th August 1868
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION.
Vide Crime Report of the 31st January 1868, page 16.
Referring to George Charletan charged with housebreaking, he left the service of Mr. Kermode about a month ago, having been employed as cook to the Mechanics under the name of John Scott. He wore Bedford-cord trousers and a long blackcoat. Was heard of at Campbell Town about a fortnight ago. (Tasmania Reports of Crime, 7 Aug 1868, p. 124)

14th August 1868
Vide Crime Report of the 31st January, 14th February, and the 7th instant, pages 16, 25, and 124. George Charletan has been arrested by Sub-Inspector Stevens, of the Campbell Town Municipal Police. Vide Crime Report of the 17th April, 1868, page 60. (Tasmania Reports of Crime, 7 Aug 1868, p. 128)
15th September 1868
Trial id: 110237
Name: GEORGE CHARLTON
Sex of offender: MALE
First offence for which indicted: LARCENY IN A DWELLING HOUSE
Date of trial: 1868-09-15
Location of trial: HOBART TOWN
Judge: FLEMING
Verdict first offence: GUILTY
Sentence: 8 YEARS
Source: Prosecution Project
https://prosecutionproject.griffith.edu.au/



Conduct register - Port Arthur
Item Number:CON94/1/1
Start Date:01 Jan 1868
End Date:31 Dec 1869
Source: Archives Office Tasmania Ref: CON94-1-1_00004_L

George Charlton's name was misspelt as CHILTON, George per Blundell (folio 6) on this index to the Conduct Register, Port Arthur, 1868-1869, though correct on his record of payments while serving time at the Port Arthur prison, arriving there on 30th September 1868, sentenced to eight years, discharged on 14 September 1874.



George Charlton, CON94-1-1 Image 29
Conduct register - Port Arthur
Item Number:CON94/1/1
Start Date:01 Jan 1868
End Date:31 Dec 1869
Source: Archives Office Tasmania

16th October 1877



TRANSCRIPT:
GLENORCHY POLICE COURT.-Mr. Harry Gordon writes complaining that in our report of the last sitting of the Police Court at Glenorchy, a man named Charlton, charged with using bad language, was described as being a lodger in his house. Mr. Gordon says that he does not keep a lodging-house, and that Charlton was a farm servant employed by him.
Source: The Mercury (Hobart, Tas.) Tue 16 Oct 1877 Page 2

Coal Mines at New Town (Tasmania)
George Charlton had worked in the New Town coal mines in the 1860s, located at Kangaroo Valley, Hobart (now Lenah Valley), Tasmania, and was thought to make his way there again when he was sought for housebreaking and stealing at Ouse in January 1868. He may well have encountered Thomas J. Nevin in the vicinity while acting as guide and photographer for visiting tourist groups to the Lady Franklin Museum.



TRANSCRIPT:
HAMILTON.-On the 29th instant, by J. F. Sharland, Esquire,
J.P., for the arrest of George Charletan [sic], per Blundell,
charged with house-breaking, and stealing £26 (since
recovered) the moneys of Mrs. Smith, Ouse.
Description.
50 or 52 years old, 5 feet 1 or 2 inches high , brown to
grey hair, light complexion, bald, wore a new black
billy-cock hat, brown vest (new), old brownish trousers,
striped jumper, and blucher boots, slight made, a miner,
an Englishman. He is likely to make for the coal
mines at New Town
, where he formerly worked. He
was convicted 10 years ago for a similar offence at Mrs.
Williams's. See Crime Report of the 27th October, 1865,
page 174, prisoners discharged.

Source: Tasmania Reports of Crime for Police
31st January 1868, p.16

Sims' Excelsior Coal Mine
Thomas J. Nevin offered more than just photographic services from his studio at 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart from 1868 to 1876 while operating as both a commercial photographer and government contractor. He organised events on the social committees of the Benevolent Society and the Loyal Odd Fellow's Lodge, and acted as the city agent for several businesses such as Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine, Kangaroo Valley, New Town . He took orders at his studio for coal deliveries from Messrs Sims and Stops'  mine which was located not far from the family house built by his father John Nevin on land in trust to the Wesleyan church in 1854 adjacent to  the Lady Franklin Museum. A lengthy geological report was published on Christmas Day in the Mercury, 25 December 1883 (p. 3) - (see Addendum below), on the coal mines and seams around kunanyi/Mt Wellington, including a description of the methods of mining at Mr Ebenezer Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine and an account of the formation of anthracite, shale and sandstone in the Kangaroo Valley area.

This photograph of the horse-drawn whim working the coal mine at Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine, Kangaroo Valley, New Town, was taken by Thomas J. Nevin in the late 1860s. He printed it as a stereograph on an arched buff mount.



Detail: single image of double image stereograph
Horse-drawn whim at Mr Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine, Kangaroo Valley, New Town, Tasmania
Stereograph on arched buff mount by Thomas J. Nevin, 1870s
"Thos Nevin New Town" studio stamp on verso
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Collection. TMAG Ref: Q16826.11



Sims Coal Mine, T. J. Nevin photo

Verso: Horse-drawn whim at Mr Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine, Kangaroo Valley, New Town, Tasmania
Stereograph on arched buff mount by Thomas J. Nevin, 1870s
"Thos Nevin New Town" studio stamp on verso
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Collection
TMAG Ref: Q16826.11

Addendum
Extract from the report on carboniferous deposits in New Town near Hobart, Tasmania by the Inspector of Mines and Geological Surveyor, G. THUREAU, F.O.S., published in the Mercury, Christmas Day, Tuesday 25 December 1883, page 3:



TRANSCRIPT
THE CARBONIFEROUS DEPOSITS NEAR NEW TOWN.
The following report has just been issued from the Government Printing office :-
These occur at the north-eastern slopes of the spurs or foot-hills descending from Mount Wellington, and therefore within the western parts of New Town.
As the question whether the diamond drill could be recommended to be beneficially employed in that locality formed the principal part of my instructions, an extensive surface examination has been made in order to ascertain, from the lithological and palaeontological character of the carbonaceous strata and that of the contained seams of coal* whether boring to greater depths could possibly give good results or otherwise.
It is deemed necessary, before going any further, to give a few particulars as to the principal coal-yielding mines, in order to be able to refer to same in the following portions of this report.
Mr. Tim. Meredith's mine is worked by means of a horse-whim and a shaft 200ft. deep from the surface, in which the second seam of this district was intersected at 195ft. ; the coal varies from 1ft. 3in. to 2ft. 6in. in thickness, and is subjected to numerous faults and jumps, rendering it some-times difficult to recover the faulted or missing continuations of this seam. The main fault observes a bearing of south 67 deg. east, and a nearly parallel fault close by, south 40 deg. east. The coal is of a better quality generally at this greater depth than any other, as it is disposed of at from 22s. to 25s. per ton. Five men and a whim-boy are employed at this private mine.
-----------
* The word coal, continued throughout this report, though, as it is explained, it is not really the coal as known to consumers.
-----------
The Enterprise Coal Mining Co. (private) is the only one that employs steam winding machinery for working their mine. Their shaft is 110ft. in depth, and they are also working the second seam from the top, which averages 22in. of useful coal, the seam itself, with a parting of shale or "clod," being 2ft. 10in. thick. In the direction of the dip of the coal, or south 44 deg. west, they have extended their workings to a distance of 200yds., thus following the best description of the coal : and their experience has been that, towards Hobart, as exemplified in the adjacent Jarvis and Old Rosetta mines - now abandoned - the seams become very disordered, and that towards the south rises considerably and gets much thinner and therefore unremunerative. In following that seam from the shaft along its dip, the subterranean water follows the workings as they in-cline in that direction, necessitating the employment of an underground force-pump to permit the coal hewers to work. Fifteen to 17,000 gallons of water are raised daily from this mine, and the cost of cutting the coal is at the rate of 8s. per ton, fetching 22s. in the market.
Mr. Ebenezer Sims' coal mine, adjoining the last named, is wrought by means of a horse-whim. The coal occurs at 65ft., and at 70ft. or 80ft. below that measuring 18in. in thickness. From the upper seam, which is about 2ft. 6in. thick, 16 tons are raised by five miners per week on the average, which are sold on the " bank" at 7s. per ton, and at 22s. if delivered to consumers at their houses. The average dip is in the same direction as last, at the rate of 6in to the yard, indicating either a fault or other disturbance between this and the Enterprise Co.'s shafts. The coal in its undulating dip has been found quite irregular, "clumpy," and of but little value if inclining to the south-east ; there is also a considerable influx of water per diem, at the rate of from 18,000gals. to 20,000gals.
The region, in the near neighbourhood of the above described coal mines, now working or abandoned, presents some remarkable features, directly due to the close vicinity of "vents" of volcanic rocks, and the actual protrusion of dense basaltic dykes through the formations carrying the coal. The results of the penetration of the coal measures by these volcanic vents and dykes appear to have led to and caused, in the first instance, the conversion of the pre-existent true coal measures into carbonaceous shales and sand-stones, and of the seams of coal into "Anthracites."
As regards the former, they are of considerable thickness, as seen on the top of the New Town-road near the old tollgate ; their lower series exhibit occasionally very thin veins of black carbon-non-bituminous. The embedded seams, belonging also to the series of converted coals, -i.e., anthracites, -presents the usual appearance of black vitreous to half metallic and iridescent lustre, with a black streak ; they are not easily ignited, but burn with an evolution of great heat, very little smoke and smell, leaving residues after burning almost the same in bulk as the raw mineral itself before, combustion. They are non-bituminous, forming a natural stratified and compact, coke as the result of contact with and in the vicinity of igneous rocks. With an admixture of other suitable fuel they are very useful for the production of quicklime, and for smelting raw iron ores for rough cast-iron.
I did not succeed in observing or collecting any paleontological specimens of any kind.
The New Town anthracites, occurring in close contiguity to Mount Wellington, the extinct ' crater or centre of stupendous volcanic action, lose their character as such whenever they approach any of those more recent eruptive igneous rocks. It appears that from this great centre of pre-historic upheavals and convulsions, the adjacent or overlying strata was shattered and disrupted by fissures radiating from the former, and those clefts were filled with volcanic matter which converted not only the coal measures and scams of coal as described, but caused likewise many faults and other irregularities.
As a matter of fact the New Town carboniferous deposit may be regarded as the lower series or the remnants of coal measures that were altered or transmuted into non-bituminous deposits by the action of under-lying volcanic rocks or of analogous dykes traversing the country. Under these circumstances the permanency of the present seams of anthracite depend on the more or less frequent intrusion of those dykes, and consequently, as the latter occur at uncertain and irregular intervals and places, the output of this mineral is also subjected to the same... [etc etc - end of extract]

G. THUREAU, F.O.S.,
Inspector of Mines and Geological Surveyor.
Source: THE CARBONIFEROUS DEPOSITS NEAR NEW TOWN. (1883, December 25). The Mercury p. 3.
Link:https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9013224

RELATED POSTS main weblog

A few drinks on Christmas Eve 1885 at New Town

ELIZABETH Street and NEW TOWN Road HOTELS
THOMAS NEVIN's NEW TOWN STUDIO




Above: Stereograph by Thomas J. Nevin of the Maypole Inn and Congregational Church behind, ca, 1870. The verso is unstamped, inscribed by an archivist with location details . Sourced from eBay March 2016. Below is the same image reprinted by Nevin at his new Town studio in the 1880s.



Title: Maypole Corner of Newtown Road and Risdon Road looking north
In: Allport album III No. 59
Publisher: Hobart : s.n., [ca. 1888] [s.n.= no name]
ADRI: AUTAS001126183722
Source: Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts

William Curtis was a shoemaker, a friend of William Ross, Thomas Nevin snr's apprentice at The City Photographic Establishment, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart in the early 1870s. William married Philadelphia Henson on 15th October 1873. Both bride and groom were 20 yrs old at the time of their marriage at the Congregational Church, Hobart.



William Curtis, born 1853: parents, siblings and children





Name: Henson, Philadelphia
Record Type: Marriages
Gender: Female
Age: 20
Spouse: Curtis, William
Gender: Male
Age: 20
Date of marriage: 15 Oct 1873
Registered: Hobart
Registration year:1873
Document ID:
NAME_INDEXES:878138
Resource RGD37/1/32 no 309

1885 at New Town
In 1885 William Curtis was 32 yrs old, born 1853 and Thomas Nevin was 43 yrs old, born 1842 respectively. Thomas Nevin's photographic studio in the years 1880-1888 was located in New Town where he resumed commercial photography after his departure from the Hobart Town Hall residence in early 1881 and continued working for the New Town Territorial and Hobart Municipal Police. He listed his occupation as "photographer, New Town" on the birth registration of his sixth child,  second daughter Minnie (Mary Ann) in December 1884

One year later, on or about Christmas Eve, December 24th 1885, William Curtis, Thomas Nevin and and an unnamed "first offender" were celebrating the Season of Cheer with a few drinks when they were each fined 5 shillings for "drunk and disorderly conduct at New Town".



TRANSCRIPT
...Three cases of drunk and disorderly conduct at New Town, viz., Thomas Nevin, Wm.Curtis, and another, a first offender, were each fined 5s., or seven days.
Source: THE MERCURY. (1885, December 24). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2. 
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9115280

What was the trouble? And why was the third person not named? It seems that the marriage between William Curtis and Philadelphia Henson was not a happy one. In October 1877, a warrant was issued for his arrest because he had failed to join the whaling vessel Maria Laurie. By late October 1877, the police had arrested him, but within months - in February 1878 - a summons was issued for his arrest, this time for failing to appear in the Police Court Hobart in answer to a complaint of non-maintenance of his wife. The police arrested him in March 1878, and sentenced him to three months at the Hobart Gaol for non-maintenance of wife and family. He was discharged on 26 June 1878. Just weeks later, he was reported as a "missing friend" in August 1878. Who was the friend who reported him missing?



William Curtis, 24 years old, warrant for arrest, 12 October 1877



William Curtis arrested, reported 26 October 1877




William Curtis, maintenance of his wife, warrant for failing to comply,  15 February 1878



William Curtis arrested 22 March 1878




William Curtis, aged 25 yrs, sentenced on 21 March 1878, and discharged from the Hobart Gaol on 26 June 1878, having served a sentence of three months for non-maintenance.



William Curtis, shoemaker of New Town, was reported as a missing friend on 23 August 1878, having left his wife and family without means of support. This notice appeared in the police gazette.

So, by 1885, William Curtis was known to the police, to the police photographer Thomas J. Nevin, and to Thomas' brother Constable John Nevin. His marriage to Philadelphia Henson in 1873 had failed. By 1883, she had given birth to a child, Thomas Charles Flynn (NAME_INDEXES:1097991, RGD33/1/13/ no 891), whose father Thomas Flynn was a fisherman. And in August 1885, she gave birth to another son, William Flynn (NAME_INDEXES:979111, RGD33/1/14/ no 183). She signed both birth registrations as P. Flynn formerly Henson, Hunter St. Hobart, presumably having divorced William Curtis and remarried, to Thomas Flynn (or not). There may have been a confrontation between Thomas Flynn and William Curtis on the night of 23rd December 1885 which implicated Thomas Nevin as an innocent third party, or even between William Curtis and his ex-wife Philadelphia Flynn nee Henson, which might account for the third party reported as an unnamed "first offender", involving Thomas Nevin as a friend of both.

New Town Road Hotels
Where had they been drinking? The closest hotel at the village called Augusta and nearest to the Nevin family's home and orchards at Ancanthe, Kangaroo Valley, apart from the Kangaroo Valley Inn, was the Harvest Home Hotel, whose famously large proprietor T. D. Jennings was photographed by several Tasmanian photographers over a decade, including Thomas Nevin. The Harvest Home Hotel's exact location, according to Wise's Post Office Directory of 1891 was on the left hand side of New Town Road looking north from the city boundary at Augusta Rd, and one property short of the corner of Pedder and Seymour Streets, New Town. The Post Office at New Town, a little further north and closer to the Maypole hotel, was advertised by Thomas Nevin in the Tasmanian Times during the 1860s as a spot where tourists visiting the area could view and purchase his stereographs taken of Kangaroo Valley landmarks such as Sir John Franklin's tree and Jane Franklin's Museum at Ancanthe.



Title: Exterior view of the Harvest Home Hotel, at Newtown, with the proprietor JENNINGS, Thomas D., standing outside
Source: Archives Office of Tasmania Ref: ADRI: PH30-1-2613



Title: [Thomas Dewhurst] Jennings - 32 stone
In: Allport album IV No. 45
Publisher: Hobart : s.n., [Between 1880 and 1889]
ADRI: AUTAS001126184324
Source: Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts

LICENSED HOTELS in NEW TOWN 1887
The main road leading north out of Hobart was always called Elizabeth Street. At the juncture of Warwick and Elizabeth Streets, it was called New Town Road, but by 1907, according to the Metropolitan Drainage Board plans of that year, New Town Road reverted to its original name, Elizabeth Street, North Hobart, up to the juncture of Pedder Streets and Risdon Road when it became locally known as the Main Road, New Town.
Licensing to retail Liquor
Tuesday, January 18, 1887
TREASURY
Inland Revenue Branch
13th January, 1887
A LICENCE in the form prescribed by "The Licensing Act" to retail Liquor for the period ending 31st day of December, 1887, (provided it be not forfeited before such date), has been granted to each of the under-mentioned individuals:-
ALCOCK, Christopher Talbot Inn New Town
HILL, Thomas Sir William Don New Town-road Hobart
JENNINGS, Thomas D. Harvest Home New Town Road Hobart
MARRIOTT, Henry Maypole Inn New Town Road Hobart
NICHOLAS, Richard Eaglehawk Hotel Colville & New Town-road Hobart
RING, Thomas Queen's Head Inn New Town Road Hobart
SMITH, John Caledonian Inn New Town Road Hobart
TURNER, Joshua Rainbow Inn New Town Road Hobart
Source: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~austas/liquor1887.htm
Taken from the Hobart Town Gazette 
Indexed by David J Bryce
Author of "Pubs in Hobart from 1807",
published date 1997, ISBN 0 646 301470.

Disambiguation: William Curtis
William Curtis, aged 20 yrs old in 1873 was NOT the prisoner William Curtis aka John Curtis who was transported from Plymouth on the Anson in 1843, and who was re-convicted as John Curtis for manslaughter in 1856, sentenced to penal servitude for life.



TRANSCRIPT
John Curtis, manslaughter
His Honor impressed on the prisoner the position in which he had stood. He ought to be thankful indeed to a jury of his country that they had not found him guilty of murder. If they had done so no earthly power could have saved his life. His Honor would not do his duty, were he not to pass the severest sentence it was in his power to do. In every case . in which cases of this description came before him, His Honor would mark with the severest punish- ment. Sentenced to penal servitude for the term of his natural life.
Source: SUPREME COURT.—CRIMINAL SITTINGS. (1856, June 9). Colonial Times (Hobart, Tas. : 1828 - 1857), p. 2. Retrieved October 23, 2014, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8781229

Thomas Nevin photographed John Curtis aka William Curtis, 62 years old, on discharge from the Hobart Gaol (and Police Office) in the week ending 10th February 1875. The inscription of the date "1874" and the name "William Curtis" on the verso of his photograph are both incorrect: Curtis was neither sent to Port Arthur nor returned to the Hobart Gaol from Port Arthur in the years 1873-4.

POLICE RECORDS



Thomas Nevin photographed John Curtis aka William Curtis, 62 years old, on discharge from the Hobart Gaol (and Police Office) in the week ending 10th February 1875.





Prisoner William CURTIS per Anson
Photographer: T. J. Nevin, taken in January 1875
QVMAG Ref: 1985_p_0100
Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Tasmania



Caption:
William Curtis, convict transported per Anson. Photograph taken at Port Arthur by Thomas Nevin
Description: 1 photographic print
ADRI: PH30-1-3232

Source: Archives Office of Tasmania

TRANSPORTATION RECORD



TAHO Tasmanian Names Index
Name: Curtis, William
Record Type: Convicts
Arrival date: 4 Feb 1844
Departure date: 1 Oct 1843
Departure port: Plymouth
Ship: Anson
Voyage number: 227
Remarks: Reconvicted as John Curtis
Index number: 16721
Document ID: NAME_INDEXES:1385212
Appropriation List CON27/1/10
Conduct Record CON33/1/49 
CON37/1/ Page 2860
Description List CON18/1/41
IndentCON14/1/25

Nevin Street and the Cascades Prison for Males 1870s-1880s

CONSTABLE JOHN NEVIN civil service 1870-1891
CASCADES GAOL for MALES 1870s
KANGAROO VALLEY to CASCADES walking tracks
NEVIN Street, South Hobart



Constable W.John Nevin (1852-1891), younger brother of photographer Thomas J. Nevin (known as Jack to the family), entered the civil service from his eighteenth birthday in 1870 in the capacity of warder at the "Cascade Asylum" according to his obituary. It was formerly known as the Cascades Female Factory, South Hobart, but by 1869 the site housed the Invalid Depot, the Boys Reformatory Training School and the Cascades Gaol for Males. Jack Nevin continued service there until he was transferred to the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street in 1877. He remained in service on salary in administration as gaol messenger, wardsman and photographer until his death from typhoid fever in 1891, aged 39 yrs, while resident at the gaol. His length of service with H. M. Prisons was twenty-one years. According to his obituary published in the Mercury on 18th June 1891, he was a well-respected civil servant who left no family but a large circle of friends.

Jack Nevin was sixteen years old in January 1868 when he posed for this photograph taken by his brother Thomas in the studio at the City Photographic Establishment, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart Town. It was one of several photographs of children and young adults taken by Thomas J. Nevin in partnership with Robert Smith during the Royal visit to Hobart of Queen Victoria's second son, Prince Alfred, on board HMS Galatea.



Subject: William John Nevin (1852-1891), known as Jack to the family;
also known as Constable John Nevin from 1870-1891
Photographers: Thomas J. Nevin (older brother) and Robert Smith
Location and Date: 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart, Tasmania, January 1868.
Details: verso stamped with Royal insignia of three feathers, coronet and Ich Dien;"From Nevin & Smith late Bock's, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart Town"
Source: Private Collection, Sydney Rare Books Auction, June 2019

In the constabulary



Signature of W. J. Nevin on document below:
Previous employment with police: nine months at Gaol Males Cascades from Aug 1875 to April 1876



W.J. Nevin - renewed applications to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1877 and 1881
Records Courtesy State Library of Tasmania

While a constable at the Cascade Gaol for Males, John Nevin was involved in an incident reported in the Mercury, 27 October 1875:



Constable John Nevin, Mercury, 27 October 1875.

TRANSCRIPT
CITY POLICE COURT
Tuesday 26th October, 1875
Before Mr. Tarleton, Police Magistrate
PEACE DISTURBERS. - Robert Evans and William Inman were charged by Constable Pearce, of the Cascades, with having disturbed the peace in Upper Macquarie-street on the 24th inst. The defendants pleaded "not guilty". Constables Pearce and Nevin, of the Cascades, proved that the defendants were throwing stones and making a disturbance. The Police Magistrate said that in Upper Macquarie-street there existed the roughest of lads in Hobart Town. He would sentence both defendants to 14 days' imprisonment, and warn them that on proof of a second they would probably be birched.

This photograph of Jack (William John) Nevin taken in his mature years, ca. mid 1880s, by his brother Thomas J. Nevin, appears to be only one to have surfaced, at least in family collections to date. He is not to be confused with Thomas and Elizabeth Rachel Nevin's son by the same name, William John Nevin (1878-1927) who died prematurely in a cart accident.



Constable John (W. J.) Nevin ca. mid 1880s.
Photo taken by his brother Thomas Nevin
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint & Private Collection 2009 ARR. Watermarked.

Adjacent to the Cascades Gaol for Males in the 1870s and leading directly up the hill behind it was a wide track, now a "No Through Road" named "Nevin Street". On the left, ascending the hill going northwest, and located at an address now called No. 2 Nevin Street, was a cemetery associated with the prison from its days as a Female Factory - a prison for females (1850s) - to its last uses as an invalid depot, orphanage, prison and reformatory (1870s onwards). Thereafter, the deceased were moved to the Cornelian Bay Cemetery. Surrounding parcels of land were sold to a milkman by the government in 1908. Constable John Nevin was on duty at the Cascades on 11th May 1876 when the Government buried Trucanini there, considered in her time as one of the last Tasmanian Aborigines.

The cemetery site itself at No. 2 Nevin St is vacant, however, marked as heritage interest. This report was compiled by the Tasmanian Heritage Council on 27 November 2007:

The location of the graveyard is shown on two historical plans. A c.1859 plan of the Female Factory Reserve shows the graveyard to the northwest of Yard 5 as a roughly triangular shaped parcel of ground (AOT, PWD 266/382). An 1884 survey locates a morgue building on what was later to become Syme Street. It also locates nine graves orientated east-west, along the eastern boundary of the graveyard (LO, Hobart 65, 90469). Private residential development from the mid- to-late twentieth century occupies most of the place today. The housing is not considered to be of State heritage significance. Described in The Mercury in 1873 as ‘a pretty little green patch of three-quarters of an acres ... and has no denominational subdivision. Prisoners, paupers and juvenile offenders, of all creeds, find a resting place in the same spot, and a few graves are marked with neat little crosses erected by the friends or relations of those buried there’.

From Kangaroo Valley to the Cascades Gaol, 1870s
The track or road was formally named Nevin Street at a date yet to be confirmed (at Lands and Titles Office?). The track leading to it was used by walking clubs extensively. In 1935, this map was issued by the Hobart Walkers' Club, which shows a road in heavy outline leading up from the prison, leading northwest up McRobies Gully.



Title: Mt. Wellington Park map of roads, tracks, etc. / [compiled by] V. W. Hodgman
Creator: Hobart Walking Club (Tas.)
Map data: Scale unknown
Publisher: 1935
Description: 1 map ; 17 1/2 inches in diameter (part col.), rolled
Format: Map
ADRI: AUTAS001131821340
Source: Tasmaniana Library



Detail of Hobart Walkers Map 1935 showing relative positions of the Nevin farm next to the Lady Franklin Museum and the two possible routes taken across country by Constable Nevin to the Cascades Gaol for Males in 1875.

The 1935 Hobart Walkers Club map (detail above) shows two very distinct routes to the southeast which John Nevin might have chosen in the 1870s on his journey from the family farm at Kangaroo Valley, situated next to the Lady Franklin Museum where Thomas and John's father John Nevin snr had built their cottage. Whether on foot or horseback, the first and longer route he could have taken was along Kangaroo Valley road, alternatively titled Lenah Valley Road by 1922, to the waterhole and the cabin named by the Old Hobartians (alumni of Hobart High School) as their own by 1935. He would then veer south on the path to the New Town Falls, crossing Brushy Creek until arriving at the edge of a very steep ravine . Once there, he would join the McRobies track until arriving at the Hobart Rivulet, passing below the Cascades Brewery. The track, much wider at that point, passed by the cemetery, and ended directly opposite the Cascades Prison.



McRobies Gully Postcard ca. 1900s
TAHO Ref: NS8691373

Alternatively, he could have proceeded from the Museum along Brushy creek road a short way, then crossed onto a track which joined Pottery Road running bedside the creek, and joining another track until he reached the Slides. Descending a steep hill side on another short track adjacent to another creek led him onto the McRobies gully track which widened into a roadway, ending adjacent to the wall of the Cascades Gaol. It therefore seems likely that the present Nevin Street was originally the track leading up McRobies Gully and the path Constable John Nevin used when coming and going to and from work at the Cascades Prison for Males from 1870 to 1877.

When Constable John Nevin renewed his contract and term of service in 1881 with H. M. Prisons Department, he was still living at home with his parents in the house built by his father on the property at Kangaroo Valley, which was situated on land adjacent to the Lady Franklin Museum and the Wesleyan Chapel and school house where his father John Nevin taught children by day and adult males by night. He would have travelled via the city streets to the Hobart Gaol in Campbell St. by 1881, eventually taking up residence there. He was active in assisting his brother in photographic sessions both at the Hobart Gaol and adjoining Supreme Court. His employment was listed as salaried in administration and resident at the Campbell St Gaol on the electoral roll of 1884, and listed again as "gaol messenger" in residence when he died suddenly of typhoid fever in 1891.



Signature of Wm. John Nevin, Kangaroo Valley, 24th November 1881.



Surveyor's Map showing Hobart Gaol 1887 (TAHO)

As government contractor to the Lands and Survey Dept. from 1868, Thomas J. Nevin snr, took many photographs on the tracks leading from Kangaroo Valley across to the waterfall, Brushy Creek, the reservoir waterworks, and Hobart rivulet, mostly produced with the dual purpose of providing documentation of works and weather damage in local landscapes as well as supplying local and intercolonial visitors with commercial stereographs. These photographs (below) were taken around the same years as Constable John Nevin's second attestation, 1881, to service at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street. They are from the State Library of Tasmania's Pretyman Collection.



Title: Photograph - Group on walking track in bush setting
Description: 1 photographic print
Format: Photograph
ADRI: NS1013-1-808
Source: Archives Office of Tasmania
Series: Photographs and Glass Plate Negatives Collected by E R Pretyman, 1870 - 1930 (NS1013)



Cascades Prison for Males
TAHO Ref: NS1013145 (n.s. n.d.) This photo shows the track that is Nevin St rising up to the right



Cascades Prison for Males
TAHO Ref: NS1013146 . This photo was taken from Nevin St. Beattie print, no date.



Cascades Prison for Males
TAHO Ref: NS1013148 (n.s. n.d.)

The naming of Nevin Street may well have been a decision taken by surveyor John Hurst arising from the historical ties of his father, James Hurst, also a surveyor, and John Nevin snr's family in Ireland, reflected in their respective family friendships in Tasmania. For example, Thomas J. Nevin acted as informant on the birth registration of surveyor John Hurst's son, William Nevin Tatlow Hurst in 1868 while John Hurst was working elsewhere in the state. This was the first use of the name "Nevin" by the Hurst family in Tasmania. On another family occasion, John Hurst's mother Eliza Hurst was a signatory witness to the marriage registration of Thomas and Jack Nevin's sister Mary Ann Nevin to John Carr at the Wesleyan Chapel, Kangaroo Valley in 1877. The naming of Nevin Street by a family of surveyors connected to the family of brothers Thomas and Jack Nevin, is therefore a likely outcome of a shared family history.




No Through Road. Looking up Nevin St.
The vacant block in bottom left of this photo is the site of the cemetery at 2 Nevin St.
Photos copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2011 ARR




Top: Looking northwest towards Nevin St from the prison wall
Bottom: Looking southeast in the opposite direction towards Cascades Road
Photos copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2011 ARR

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