Showing posts with label Legal fraternity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Legal fraternity. Show all posts

Rape, fraud, stabbing, perjury and a smoking jury: the Supreme Court Hobart 10-12 February 1876

Stephen SPURLING, charged with false pretences
Patrick LAMB, charged with wounding
John NOWLAN as Dowling, charged with rape
Eliza Ann McKENZIE and Honora TRACEY, charged with perjury

Supreme Court Hobart Tas 1870s

Supreme Court building extreme foreground with horses and carriages waiting outside in Murray Street
"Murray Street, Hobart, looking towards waterfront and New Wharf; shows Treasury and Supreme Court buildings"
Format: photograph, unattributed, no date [1880s?]
Creating Agency: Bayly Family (NG364); Archives Office Tasmania
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/NS87-1-3/NS87-1-3

Five arraignments
Professional photographer Thomas J. Nevin was more than a little interested in proceedings at the Supreme Court, Hobart on Thursday 10th February and Friday 11th February 1876. As assistant bailiff and government contractor his duties were to provide mugshots of prisoners who faced incarceration at the Hobart Gaol. Of the five who were arraigned, two were women, Honora Tracey alias Borland and Eliza Ann McKenzie. Neither would require a sitting with Nevin since women imprisoned in Tasmania were not formally photographed until the 1890s. Of the three men, Nevin had already photographed the first, John Nowlan alias Dowling on discharge from the Hobart Gaol in December 1874 and reconviction in February 1875, so he would not need another sitting; his existing mugshot would simply need reprinting. The second male, Patrick Lamb was a first offender, so he would be photographed within the next week. The third man in the dock was a fellow photographer, Stephen Spurling senior, the first in a dynasty of photographers named Stephen Spurling (I, II and III - see Burgess, C. 2010 below). His financial difficulties had led him to court.

Two of these five prisoners - Honora Tracey, charged with perjury and Stephen Spurling snr, charged with fraud, were both released on remand and bail respectively. Patrick Lamb received the lightest sentence of three years for stabbing a man over some "peas"; John Nowlan as Dowling was sentenced to death for rape of a 10yr old girl; and Eliza Ann McKenzie was sentenced to seven years for perjury. She claimed she was raped by two men - the Captain and the Chief Officer - on board the Bella May resulting in the birth of her son 9 months later. In court were the reporters for the Hobart Mercury and Tasmanian Tribune; their accounts of proceedings on those two days - 11th and 12th February 1876 - would bring some of their readers to tears, and others to mirth.

POLICE GAZETTE NOTICE, 10-12 Feb 1976



Source: Tasmania Reports of Crime for Police (weekly police gazette) Gov's printer J. Barnard

Arraigned in the Supreme Court, Hobart Town 10-12 February 1876 were the five prisoners with these details:

Patrick Lamb, 35 years old, transported to VDL on the ship Siam, FC = free with conditions, sentenced to 3 years for the offence of wounding with intent.

Eliza Ann McKenzie, 20 years old, native = born in Tasmania (not transported), free, sentenced to 7 years for the offence of perjury.

John Nowlan alias Dowling, 45 years old, arrived at Hobart on the ship Bangalore, FC = free with conditions, sentenced to death for the offence of rape.

Stephen Spurling, 55 years old, ship unknown, i.e. how he arrived at Hobart is not recorded here (see Burgess below), FC = free with conditions, on bail for the offence of obtaining credit by false pretences.

Honora Tracey, transported as Boland, 46 years old, arrived at Hobart on the Midlothian, FS =free in service, remanded for the offence of perjury.

Press Reports, 11-12 February 1876

THE CHARGES

TRANSCRIPT

SUPREME COURT.
Thursday, Feb. 10th.

(His Honor Sir Francis Smith, Chief Justice, presided in the First Court, and Mr Justice Dobson in the Second Court.)

Stephen Spurling was charged with obtaining goods by means of false pretences.

The jury retired, and as they had not agreed on a verdict at 7.15 p.m., the Court was adjourned until 10 o'clock tomorrow morning.

The other cases on the calendar are — John Nowlan, Bellerive, rape. Patrick Lamb, Franklin, wounding. Robert Hopper, Oatlands, robbery and wounding. Patrick Powell, Oatlands, housebreaking. Honora Tracey, Hobart Town, perjury. Eliza Ann McKenzie, Hobart Town, perjury. Patrick Walsh, Oatlands, breaking into a store and larceny. William Sainsbury and Harriet Sainsbury, Oatlands, housebreaking. Ellen Waller, Franklin, perjury.

Source: Cornwall Chronicle (Launceston, Tas. : 1835 - 1880), Friday 11 February 1876, page 2
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article72522140

THE DECISIONS

TRANSCRIPT

Criminal Sessions.-The sessions were continued yesterday. ln the First Court, before the Chief Justice, the jury, in the case of Stephen Spurling, sen., being unable to agree, were discharged. Patrick Lamb was found guilty of wounding with intent one Patrick Roach, at Franklin, and was remanded for sentence. In the case of Honora Tracey, charged with perjury, the jury were unable to agree, and were discharged. The Second court presided over by Mr. Justice Dobson, was occupied during the whole of the day in investigating a charge of perjury preferred against a young woman named Eliza Ann Mackenzie. The case arose out of a police court trial in which the defendant charged the captain and mate of the barque Bella Mary with committing a rape upon her during a voyage to and from Auckland in 1874. Her evidence at the trial was proved to have been entirely false, and Mackenzie was found guilty, and sentenced to seven years' imprisonment. Mr. Moriarty defended the prisoner. One more case remains for trial this morning.

A LIVELY JURY.-It was rumoured on Thursday night that the jury in the case of Stephen Spurling, senr., had been playing up high jinks in the retiring room, and as it was well-known that that was the reason why the Chief Justice ordered them to be locked up for the night, there was considerable speculation as to how the jury had been spending their time during the alleged disturbance. When they were brought up yesterday morning, His Honour, before discharging them, as they had been unable to agree, asked them whether they had any explanation to make of their conduct in the jury room. The foreman, Mr. J. W. Palmer, of Bagdad, said the jury sincerely regretted that any disturbance should have taken place, and tendered an explanation. It was to the effect that the jury were divided on the smoking question. The smokers naturally indulged in their favourite pastime, and the non-smokers, not being at all partial to the weed, suffered severe qualms. The result was that, after submitting to be enveloped in smoke for some time, the non-smokers determined to open the window. They were prevented from doing so, and a little scuffling ensued ; but eventually the window was forced open, and one of the shutters broken. The mysterious part of the affair however is that somebody threw one of the chairs out of the window, a feat respecting which nothing was said by the foreman, and we are left to infer that at one time matters had risen to a high pitch of excitement. At all events, His Honor accepted the apology, and was kind enough to say that, on consideration, no one could be guilty of bringing deliberate discredit upon an institution which was the pride of Englishmen all over the world.

THE DISAGREEMENT of JURIES.-The frequency of juries not being able to agree is becoming a serious matter. Yesterday, the Chief Justice was compelled to discharge two juries who were unable to come to a unanimous decision. In the case of Honora Tracey, tried for perjury, the jury were locked up until 10 o'clock last night, and when brought in were so positive as to there being no chance of any unanimity, that it was evident they were afraid of being confined for the night. His Honor noticed this, and told them that it was his duty to see that the facilities of discharge were not such as to make them an impediment to justice. In olden times, he added, juries were locked up till they did agree, and that without anything to eat and without fire - a piece of information which caused the jury men to look as if they expected to be treated in a similar manner. His Honor, however, was lenient, for, after expressing an opinion that if this difficulty continued, it would be necessary to consider whether juries should be allowed to separate at all before coming to some decision, he discharged the jury.

The Convict Nowlan.-In reporting that the Chief Justice had "passed" sentence of death on Nowlan, for criminal assault on a child, an error was made. It should have been that sentence of death was "recorded," a very different thing, in so far as the convict is concerned.

Prisoners Patrick Lamb and Eliza McKenzie sentenced, Stephen Spurling and Honora Tracey as Borland discharged, John Nowlan as Dowling, sentence of death recorded.
Source: THE MERCURY. (1876, February 12). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8943037

Other key documents
COURT RECORDS with names of jurors
Stephen Spurling, John Nolan, Patrick Lamb, Eliza Ann McKenzie
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/SC32-1-9/SC32-1-9P235
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/SC32-1-9/SC32-1-9P236
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/SC32-1-9/SC32-1-9P237

GAOL RAP sheet
McKenzie gaol record and discharge 1 Feb 1880
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/CON42-1-1/CON42-1-1P146

PRESS account
Honora Tracy - press report of her perjury
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8943031



Source: Henry Dobson (1841–1918) ADB- https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/dobson-henry-5986
In: Members of the Parliaments of Tasmania - no. 236 / photographed by J.W. Beattie.
Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts, State Library of Tasmania.
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/Library/SD_ILS-621674



Stereograph - New Post Office and Supreme Court, Hobart.
Photographer: Samuel Clifford, 1860s
Source: Archives Office Tasmania
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/LPIC147-3-170/LPIC147-3-170


CASE 1: ship's passenger Eliza Ann McKenzie
Eliza Ann McKenzie was born at Hobart (VDL) Tasmania in 1855 to parents Elizabeth Wood (19 yrs) and John McKenzie (23 yrs), general goods dealer, who were married on 29 March 1854 at the Chalmers Free Church, Hobart, witnessed by Elizabeth Wood's sister Eliza Wood (her aunt whose name she was given) and John McKenzie's brother Duncan McKenzie.*
(*Source: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/RGD37-1-13/RGD37-1-13P232).

It was not made clear in both press reports of the hearing and the trial of Eliza Ann McKenzie in 1875 and 1876 why she embarked on a voyage to Auckland, New Zealand on the trader barque Bella Mary from Hobart in 1874. In all likelihood she responded to an advertisement in the Hobart Mercury of 23 June 1874 placed by the ship's captain George McArthur. The advertisement sounded too good to be true: Captain George McArthur was offering three young women a free return passage to Auckland, New Zealand on the Bella Mary; they would have jobs as barmaids; and they would receive good wages. Excited at the prospect of adventure on a working holiday, Eliza would have stepped onto the Bella Mary before noon that Tuesday morning and found herself thoroughly charmed by the captain promising her a wonderful time at his expense. :

TRANSCRIPTS
WANTED THREE RESPECTABLE YOUNG WOMEN as BARMAIDS to proceed, per "Bella Mary" for Auckland. Good wages will be given, and a free return, passage
Apply to CAPTAIN McARTHUR, (between the hours of 11 and 12 o'clock this morning) on board "Bella Mary".

Source: Advertising (1874, June 23). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 1.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8930703

Two weeks' later Eliza Ann McKenzie departed Hobart on the Bella Mary as a cabin passenger in the company of Mr and Mrs Hinton and Jane Hammond who would later contradict Eliza's evidence in court that she too was raped by the Captain on the voyage to Auckland. It may have been evident to Jane Hammond that the captain wanted sexual services in exchange for his promises, but not to Eliza, who was so devastated by the experience she was prepared to make very public the criminal aspect of his sexual behaviour.  

CLEARED OUT.-July 4.
Bella Mary, barque, 270 tons, G. McArthur, for Auckland, N.Z. Passengers - Cabin : Mr Frederick Hinton, Mrs. Hinton, Miss Annie Thera Jane Hammond, Miss Eliza Mckenzie . Agents - Bayley and McGregor.

Source: SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. (1874, July 6).The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8930948

Birth of son 24 May 1875
The Bella Mary departed Hobart for Auckland on 4 July 1874 and returned to Hobart on 21 August 1874. Eliza Ann McKenzie alleged the captain George McArthur raped her on the voyage to Auckland and held her down while the chief officer John Fuge also raped her on the return voyage. She found she was pregnant as a consequence. She gave birth to a son at Hobart whom she named Richard McArthur McKenzie nine months later, on 24 May 1875. The name of child's father was not registered but she made sure he would be remembered forever after by registering his surname "McArthur" as her son's middle name. The birth was registered on 3 July 1875 by (the child's?) grandfather Greg McKenzie, of Bathurst St. Hobart.



McKenzie, Richard McArthur
Record Type: Births
Gender: Male
Father: McKenzie, Name Not Recorded
Mother: McKenzie, Eliza Ann
Date of birth: 24 May 1875
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/976867

McKenzie v. McArthur 21 August 1875
In the Police Court of Hobart Town on 20th August 1875, Eliza Ann McKenzie made three allegations: that George McArthur, the captain of the barque Bella Mary committed a series of rapes on her on the voyages to and from Auckland in July and August 1874; that the captain held her down while chief officer John Fuge also raped her on 21st August: and that the captain had raped another young woman on the voyage to Auckland, Jane Hammond, in July 1874. Her three allegations made in this first hearing, were reported by the press in these terms (21 August 1875): -

TRANSCRIPT

AFFILIATION. McKenzie v. McArthur.— When this case was called on for hearing the complainant handed to the Police Magistrate a written statement as she had directed her counsel to do. A lengthy discussion then ensued between the Police Magistrate and Mr. Moriarty as to the proper course to pursue in laying the information, the Magistrate still contending that the criminal case should take precedence. Mr. Jackson said that his client, Mr. McArthur, was not only willing, but anxious to proceed with the matter in any form. The complainant ultimately intimated her intention on proceeding with the criminal case first, and the affiliation case was accordingly ordered to stand over. FELONY. McKenzie v. McArthur.—The defendant Geo. McArthur, was charged with the commission of a criminal offence on Eliza Ann McKenzie, on the 21st of August of last year [1874]. The defendant pleaded not guilty. Mr. Moriarty appeared for the prosecution, and Mr. Jackson for the defence. The Police Magistrate ordered the Court to be cleared. The complainant, Eliza McKenzie, was then called, and stated the particulars of the alleged offence, but they were of a nature unfit for publication. The cross-examination of this witness was not proceeded with by Mr. Jackson, and the case was adjourned at half-past one till the next morning.

Source: LAW. (1875, August 21). The Tasmanian Tribune (Hobart Town, Tas.), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article201487160

The Port Officer's Log recorded the names of two cabin passengers on the Bella Mary on arrival back at Hobart on 21 August 1874: Miss McKenzie and Mr. Laurence. Whoever Mr Laurence may have been,  he was not called into the court for his opinion.



Cabin passengers on the Bella Mary, Ms McKenzie and Mr Laurence
Reports of ships arrivals with lists of passengers
Archives Office Tasmania
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/MB2-39-1-34/MB2-39-1-34P086

Why was this young woman not believed?
Eliza Ann McKenzie was charged with making false allegations to the Police Court in 1875 of having been raped by both George McArthur and John Fuge on board the Bella Mary at sea on voyages to Auckland from Hobart and from Auckland to Hobart in July and August1874. The jury at the criminal trial in February 1876 took little more than 35 minutes to return a verdict of guilty of perjury. Eliza Ann McKenzie was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment. Her defence attorney Mr Moriarty argued that on the basis of probabilities - without directly referring to the nine-months of her pregnancy from when the series of rapes occurred to  May 1875 when her son was born - her claim was probably truthful. Justice Dobson agreed that "someone had certainly wronged her" but he was not going to send good men to the gallows on the basis of her evidence. Even so, the court was cleared to allow full description of the events by Eliza Ann McKenzie and her counsel, the details of which were so shocking they were deemed unfit for publication. 

The accused rapist Captain George McArthur, married in 1868  to Isabella Emma Lovell* who sometimes accompanied him as a passenger on his Hobart- Auckland voyages (on 6 February 1874, for example), was supported by a crowd of reputable witnesses who testified to his impeccable character. His co-accused chief mate John Fuge deposed that Eliza Ann McKenzie seemed happy when she disembarked at Hobart. The other alleged victim of their assault, Jane Hammond, was brought from Auckland to testify that she was not raped by either of these men.
(*Source: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/RGD37-1-27/RGD37-1-27P167)

TRANSCRIPT

SECOND COURT
Before His Honor Mr Justice Dobson
The Attorney-General prosecuted on behalf of the Crown.

PERJURY
Eliza Ann McKenzie pleaded not guilty to a charge of having committed perjury in the Police Court of Hobart Town on the 20th August last

Mr MORIARTY defended the prisoner,
Jury : Messrs. W. C. Sharland (foreman), R. Winter, A. Flexmore, C. Colvin, R. Goldsmith. N. Ray, T. Gase, H. Gage, T. Stump, G. Watt, H. J. James, and E. Lipscombe.

The Attorney-General, in opening the case, said the defendant was charged with having committed perjury, on an information containing three counts, first, by swearing that George McArthur, captain of the barque Bella Mary, committed a series of rapes upon her on the voyage of that vessel to Auckland in August, 1874, and, also, on the return voyage ; second, by swearing that Captain McArthur forcibly held her down while the chief officer, John Fuge, outraged her ; and third, by swearing that Captain McArthur, during the same voyage, committed rape upon another girl, a fellow passenger, named Jane Hammond. The case, the Attorney-General said, was one of the most remarkable, and, in some respects, one of the most painful that he had ever met with since he had any knowledge of criminal proceedings. He then detailed the circumstances of the case, with the main facts of which the public are already familiar, and dwelt at length on the enormity of the offence of perjury, especially when, as in this case, the life and liberty of two men had been placed in jeopardy.

The evidence was not such as will bear publication. The following witnesses were called for the prosecution :- Capt. McArthur, John Fuge, Samuel Weir, Jane Hammond, and Thomas Large. The depositions of Milford McArthur and Walter Williams, seamen, on board the Bella Mary were put in. The only fresh evidence was that of Jane Hammond, who had been brought from Auckland for the purpose. She denied that any outrage had been committed upon her by Captain McArthur, as stated by the defendant, and stated that during the voyage she never heard or saw anything that would support the allegations of the defendant with respect to the captain and chief officer of the vessel.

Mr. Moriarty addressed the jury for the defence, his main point being that the jury should look not so much to the evidence given as to the probabilities, and the probabilities, he urged, were entirely in favour of the truth of the defendant's story.

For the defence, he called the mother of the defendant, Mr. Superintendent Propsting, Mr. A. McGregor, Dr. E. L. Crowther, Mr. James Robinson, and Mr. George Crisp. The last two were called on witnesses to the character of Captain McArthur and the defendant respectively.

His Honor summed up with great minuteness, and from his remarks it appeared that the tenor of the evidence was decidedly adverse to the defendant's case.

The jury then retired, and after an absence of 35 minutes, returned into Court with a verdict of guilty on all three counts.

The prisoner, in reply to the usual question, said she had nothing to say why sentence should not be passed upon her.

Mr. Sargent (for Mr. Moriarty, who had been called away to Launceston) asked the Judge to pass as light a sentence on the prisoner as possible on account of her youth and inexperience.

His Honor, addressing prisoner, said he was afraid she did not understand the position in which she had placed herself. [Prisoner : I do not.] He thought not. Had she known it, she would have known that had her evidence at the police court been believed, Capt. McArthur and his mate might both (and a few years ago inevitably would) have suffered death upon the gallows. A man who stabbed another, or took his life by violent means, was much more merciful than one who coolly and deliberately swore away his life in a court of justice. The defendant was young, some one had certainly wronged her, and he felt the position in which she was placed. At the same time it was a duty he owed to society, whatever his own feelings might be, to mark an offence of this kind very severely. He had the power to send her to gaol for 21 years, but that would be a barbarous punishment, and he would pass upon her the full sentence of only one of the three counts upon which she had been found guilty. It was a heavy penalty, but it was necessary to inflict a heavy penalty upon a woman who, having arrived at years of discretion, had deliberately, by a wilfully false statement, jeopardised the life of a fellow-creature. The sentence of the Court would, therefore, be that the defendant be imprisoned for seven years.

The prisoner did not seem to feel her position very acutely.

Source: CRIMINAL SESSIONS. (1876, February 12). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas.), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8943031

The only allegation which was upheld and examined after the testimonies by both John Fuge and Jane Hammond were dismissed was Eliza Ann McKenzie's claim of rape by George McArthur, the penalty for which was death by hanging (Act 1863, Section 45, Offences against the Person):

Rape, Abduction, and Defilement of Women.
45 Whosoever shall be convicted of the crime of Rape shall be guilty of Felony, and being convicted thereof shall suffer Death as as Felon.

READ the FULL ACT here {pdf}
An Act To Consolidate And Amend The Legislative Enactments Relating To Offences Against The Person (27 Vic, No 5) Austlii Database


Despite a solid defence and witnesses of premier social status for Eliza Ann McKenzie (apart from her mother) including her legal counsel Sylverius Moriarty; the Superintendent of Police, Richard Propsting; the shipowner Andrew McGregor with Charles Bayley of the Bella Mary; and medical practitioner Dr E. L. Crowther, she was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment at the Supreme Court, Hobart on 10 February 1876 on one count of perjury. Eliza Ann McKenzie's prison records state only that she was well behaved during incarceration at the Cascades Factory. She was discharged after serving 4 years of a 7 year sentence in 1880, her date of death yet to be determined.



Source: Archives Office Tasmania
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/CON42-1-1/CON42-1-1P146


CASE 2: "no peas" Patrick Lamb
Patrick Lamb's Hobart Gaol record shows only that he arrived free to the colony (Tasmania) on the ship Siam (no date given, but possibly as a former soldier of H. M. 70th Regiment of Foot). He married Jane McKinsie on 13 May 1869 at Chalmer's Church, Hobart (see Addenda 2 below) , his occupation listed as "soldier". His occupation was listed as "splitter" (a timber worker) when she gave birth to a son, unnamed at registration, in January 1871 at Franklin, Tasmania. Two years later, she gave birth to a daughter, Susan Lamb, on 9 April 1873 also at Franklin. She died from incessant vomiting after a difficult parturition in September 1876. Exactly nine months earlier, in January 1876, her husband Patrick Lamb confronted Patrick Roach with the accusation that "he had no peas for him" before stabbing him for the fourth time (according to Roach). Patrick Lamb was tried at the Supreme Court Hobart on 10th February 1876 for "wounding with intent to do grievous bodily harm" to Patrick Roach and sentenced to three years' imprisonment at the House of Corrections (Hobart Gaol). He was discharged on 11 May 1878.



Tasmanian prisoner Patrick Lamb per Siam, taken at the Hobart Gaol
Verso inscription: Patrick Lamb "Siam"
Photographer: T. J. Nevin , 1876-1878
Mitchell Library SLNSW (PXB 274) - not online
Link: https://collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/YzOgQ689
Photo copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2009

TRANSCRIPT
WOUNDING
Patrick Lamb was charged with having, on the 15th January, at Franklin, wounded Patrick Roach, with intent to do him grievous bodily harm.
The prisoner pleaded not guilty, and was defended by Mr. BROMBY.
The SOLICITOR-GENERAL prosecuted.
Jury : Geo. Inge (foreman), Jos Pedder, Jas. Johnstone, C.E. Knight, Thos. Jenkins, Jno. Thomas, R.C. Read, S. Large, F.N. Spong, W. Davis, H.P. Bailey, W. Cowburn.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL briefly stated the case, and called -
Patrick Roach a labourer, residing at Franklin, deposed that on the night of the 15th January he was drinking at Brown's public-house. The prisoner came in a little after witness, and without saying a word he kicked witness. They had a few words, and then prisoner was removed. In about a quarter of an hour he returned, and having pulled witness down to a half- stoop, he stabbed him four times in and near the thigh. This was about 9 o'clock. Witness could not have been drunk, because he had not been there long enough. When the prisoner returned he stood at the end of the counter and said to witness that he had no *peas for him. Witness asked him what his peas or himself had to do with him (witness). Thereupon the prisoner without another word, stabbed him. There was a number of persons present and none of them tried to stop the prisoner. Witness saw the prisoner stab him the fourth time.

Ellen Roach the wife of the last witness, corroborated the most of her husband's statement. She added that only herself and Mr Brown went to her husband's assistance when he was being stabbed.

James Daly deposed to being in the public-house on the night in question. Roach and prisoner began to fight, and two quart pots were being used against the prisoner by Mrs. Roach and some one else. After the fight, Roach said to the prisoner, "If you touch me again I will stab you." The prisoner stood quiet for about a minute, and then rushed upon Roach and struck him three or four blows.

Esther Brown, the landlady of the public house; Elijah Brown, the landlord; Acting Chief District Constable Wheeldon, and Dr. W. Smith also gave evidence. A knife, which it was stated the prisoner had acknowledged to be his, was also produced. The medical testimony was conclusive as to the prosecutor having been stabbed.

Mr BROMBY addressed the jury, and called Sergeant Mitchell, who, however, did not appear.

HIS HONOR summed up, and the jury, after a short absence, returned with a verdict of "guilty." The prisoner was remanded for sentence.

Source: CRIMINAL SESSIONS. (1876, February 12). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8943031

*HE HAD NO PEAS FOR HIM: not readily understood nowadays, it could be 19th century British rhyming slang, as in "bees and honey" meaning money, but from which region or register?

Or, taking it literally, he was referring to peas that grow in the garden, as the victim Patrick Roach appears to have taken Lamb's accusation about peas - i.e. as ownership of some garden vegetable variety of pea - in this criminal session, February 10-12, 1876, in reference to the incident of 15th January the previous month when Patrick Lamb stabbed him. The fact that Lamb stabbed him in the thigh (and groin area) might signify cuckoldry involving his wife and Roach, a common type of assault enacted by an aggrieved husband seeking revenge.

Patrick Lamb's wife Jane Lamb had experienced "a difficult parturition" (pregnancy-labor-childbirth) and died of "incessant vomiting" in September 1876, exactly nine months after the date of her husband's stabbing of Patrick Roach in January 1876. As no one appears to have registered the birth, in all likelihood the child was either not born or had not survived past childbirth. Her husband's suspicions about Patrick Roach's role in her pregnancy, his grief at the loss of the child, and her subsequent incessant vomiting leading to an agonising death may well have been linked in his mind. Was he accusing Patrick Roach of poisoning his wife by feeding her with "peas" which had caused his sudden rage? On the other hand, perhaps he was saying "no peace" and his pronunciation was misinterpreted by the Mercury journalist. Probabilities could and should have been raised in this case as well.

TIMELINE

1869: MARRIAGE
On the 13 May 1869, Patrick Lamb married Jane McKinsie in the Manse of Chalmers' Free Church in the District of Hobart according to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Presbyterian Free Church. He was 28, a soldier and she was 21, registered as a "spinster" to indicate she had not previously married. Neither signed with their names; both marked the registration form with an "x".



Name: Lamb, Patrick
Record Type: Marriages
Gender: Male
Age: 28
Spouse: Mckenzie, Jane
Gender: Female
Age: 21
Date of marriage: 13 May 1869
Registered: Hobart
Source: Archives Office Tasmania
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/871393

1876: PARTURITION and DEATH of WIFE
The death of Patrick Lamb's wife Jane Lamb nee McKinsie was registered in the district of Franklin (Tasmania) on the 11 September 1876. She was 27 years old. Cause of death: "Incessant vomiting after difficult parturition".... So, in the months leading up to labor and in the days following, was she poisoned with eating Roach's "peas"? What sort of peas could do that? Possibly one of these varieties:



Lathyrus odoratus ‘Mammoth Navy Blue’
SWEET PEA
Beautifully scented and particularly large Sweet Pea flowers of stunning deep navy blue. Long stems of very large flowers on 1.8m. climber. Tolerates hot weather better than most Sweet Peas. Continues producing over a long period. Great cut flowers. Sear cut end of stem with flame to prolong vase life. Good perfume. Prefers Full Sun. Grow in good, well worked garden soil on a frame, tripod or fence.
CAUTION – NOT EDIBLE – POISONOUS IF EATEN
Source: https://www.seedscape.net.au/product/lathyrus-odoratus-mammoth-navy-blue-sweet-pea/?v=b870c45f9584

TOXIC: Lathyrus sativus - sweet pea; Lathyrus odoratus - ditto; Abrus precatorius - Rosary pea - 3rd most poisonous plant, also called jequirity beans, these seeds contain Abrin, a protein. Rosary peas are native to tropical areas. The poison is stored inside the seeds so they are not poisonous if intact, but can be lethal if they are scratched, broken, or chewed. Like Ricin, Abrin prevents protein synthesis within cells and can cause organ failure within a few days; and Gastrolobium poison pea.



Adults exposed to sweet pea toxins may experience neurological symptoms such as paralysis or convulsions due to the presence of lathyrogens. Breathing difficulties and labored breaths are also telltale signs of poisoning. In severe cases, ingestion can lead to a condition known as lathyrism, characterized by paralysis below the knees.
Source:https://greg.app/sweet-pea-toxic-to-humans/

Toxicity
Unlike the edible pea, there is evidence that seeds of members of the genus Lathyrus are toxic if ingested in quantity. A related species, Lathyrus sativus, is grown for human consumption but when it forms a major part of the diet it causes symptoms of toxicity called lathyrism.[8]
In studies of rats, animals fed a diet of 50% sweet pea seeds developed enlarged adrenals relative to control animals fed on edible peas.[9] The main effect is thought to be on the formation of collagen. Symptoms are similar to those of scurvy and copper deficiency, which share the common feature of inhibiting proper formation of collagen fibrils. Seeds of the sweet pea contain beta-aminopropionitrile that prevents the cross-linking of collagen by inhibiting lysyl oxidase and thus the formation of allysine, leading to loose skin. Recent experiments have attempted to develop this chemical as a treatment to avoid disfiguring skin contractions after skin grafting.[10]

Source: Wikipedia- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweet_pea



Death of Jane Lamb, 27 yrs old, on 11 Sept 1876 from incessant vomiting after difficult parturition
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/RGD35-1-45/RGD35-1-45P77

1876-1878: THE CRIME, IMPRISONMENT and DISCHARGE
Patrick Lamb was 35 years old when he was tried at the Supreme Court Hobart, sentenced to three years at the Hobart Gaol on 10 February 1876 for "Wounding with intent to do grievous bodily harm". Noted in remarks: "per Siam, Free to Colony, Governor in Confidence 4/3/78 ... To be discharged 10 May 1878 - Discharged 11.5.78."



Patrick Lamb per Siam, free to colony.
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/CON37-1-10/CON37-1-10P612

SUPREME COURT HOBART ROUGH CALENDAR



Trial: Lamb, Patrick
Record Type: Court
Status: Free
Trial date: 11 Feb 1876
Place of trial: Hobart
Offense: Feloniously wounding Patrick Roach with intent to do grievous bodily harm.
Verdict: Guilty
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/1521178

POLICE GAZETTE NOTICES



Patrick Lamb, discharged 15 May 1878, F.C. free with conditions, residue of sentence remitted
Source: Tasmania Reports of Crime for Police (Police gazette) J. Barnard Gov. printer

1878: Patrick Lamb remarries
Patrick Lamb was photographed by police photographer Thomas J. Nevin at the Hobart Supreme Court on Lamb's arraignment and sentencing to 3 years' imprisonment, 10th February 1876. Nevin would have been more than a little interested in proceedings since fellow photographer Stephen Spurling I (1821–1892) was also arraigned in the same session, on trial for obtaining credit under false pretences (see Case 4 below). Patrick Lamb was discharged at the Hobart Gaol in the week ending 15 May 1878.

Soon after his release from prison, Patrick Lamb, widower, married 21 year old Mary McGinley* on 31 August 1878 at Hobart. (*Source: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/RGD37-1-37/RGD37-1-37P149).


CASE 3: John Nowlan as Dowling
This prisoner stated that he arrived free to the colony of Tasmania as a sailor on the Bangalore with the name John Dowling, but he might have arrived as a convict with the name John Nowlan on the transport London in March 1851. Shipping documents testifying to his arrival on the Bangalore at any port and under any circumstance unfortunately, if true, are not extant. He was previously sentenced for indecent assault on a girl under 12 years to five years' incarceration in March 1870 as John Dowling.

The Legislation
Under the ACT of 1863 - AN ACT to consolidate and amend the Legislative Enactments relating to Offences against the Person. [31 July, 1863.] - John Nowlan alias Dowling was sentenced to five years in 1870 for the indecent assault of Deloranie Boss, a girl under 12 years of age. The first count - intent to commit a rape - would have incurred a sentence of ten years, but he was sentenced instead on the second count of indecent assault which should have incurred the full sentence of seven years instead of five: see Clauses 48, 49, and 50 of the Act.

Six years later, when found guilty of having committed a rape on Caroline Agnes Welch, 10 years of age in 1876, the full force of the law - Clause 45, the death sentence - was applied, yet a reprieve followed. The sentence of death on John Nowlan alias Dowling was commuted to life in prison. There were increasingly urgent protests from the public and the press to cease sentencing prisoners to death, but that in itself was not the reason for his reprieve, the details of which were kept from the public.



THE CONVICT NOWLAN.- In reporting that the Chief justice had "passed" sentence of death on Nowlan, for criminal assault on a child, an error was made. It should have been that the sentence of death was "recorded", a very different thing, in so far as the convict is concerned.

Source: THE MERCURY. (1876, February 12). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8943037



Prisoner DOWLING, John, also recorded as John NOWLAN
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Collection Ref: Q15586
Photographer: Thomas J. Nevin, December 1874



Verso: Prisoner DOWLING, John, also recorded as John NOWLAN
Not "Taken at Port Arthur"; taken at the Mayor's Court, December 1874
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Collection Ref: Q15586
Photographer: Thomas J. Nevin



Details:
"Supreme Court, Hobart Town. List of prisoners arraigned at the above-named Court on the 10th, 11th and 12th of February, 1876. Names, Nowlan John, as Dowling; Age 45; Ship Bangalore; Conditions F.C.; Offences Rape; How Disposed of; Death recorded."
Source: Tasmanian Reports of Crime for Police (police gazette), J. Barnard, Gov't printer

This prisoner was photographed as John Dowling by T. J. Nevin on release from the House of Corrections, Hobart Town in December 1874. Dowling was convicted again in February 1875 for larceny. A year later, in February 1876 he was convicted at the Supreme Court, Hobart, for rape of a girl between 10-11 yrs old, this time as John Nowlan, alias John Dowling. The sentence for rape was death, commuted to life imprisonment. John Nowlan alias John Dowling was sent to the Port Arthur prison 60 kms south of Hobart on 25th February 1876 and transferred back to the House of Corrections, Hobart Gaol, Campbell St. on 17th April 1877. A prisoner who called himself John Dowling died at the New Town Charitable Institution, Hobart in 1906 of senilis

The Mugshot
Thomas J. Nevin's photograph of John Dowling was taken at the Mayor's Court, December 1874 on Dowling receiving a certificate of freedom. Just one photograph of the prisoner appears to have survived, suggesting Nevin used the 1874 negative to produce reprints for Dowling's sentencing in 1875 and again in 1876. This photograph by Nevin of John Dowling is now held in the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Collection (Ref: Q15586). It was originally acquired by convictarian and landscape photographer John Watt Beattie from government estrays in the early 1900s for display in his "Port Arthur Museum" located in Hobart and for inclusion in travelling exhibitions associated with the fake convict hulk "Success" to Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, and Hobart.

J. W. Beattie's collection of more that 300 Tasmanian prisoner mugshots, taken originally by T. J. Nevin in the 1870s, including this one of John Nowlan as Dowling, was acquired by the Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Launceston, Tasmania (QVMAG) in the 1930s. The capture by Nevin on glass in the one and only sitting with Dowling in 1874 was reprinted as a sepia cdv in a buff mount to be pasted to the prisoner's charge sheet in the first instance, its principal use. When Beattie organised exhibitions of these mugshots in the early 1900s, the versos of at least two hundred mugshots were duly inscribed with this fake information - "Taken at Port Arthur 1874" - purely to whet the appetite of tourists taking penal heritage tours to Port Arthur. As artefacts associated with Marcus Clarke's novel, For The Term of His Natural Life, published in 1874, two silent versions of which were filmed on location at the Port Arthur prison in 1907 and 1927, these mugshots were re-invented with false information to heighten the tourist's experience - a commercial imperative which has certainly waxed rather than waned in recent decades. Read more about John Nowlan alias Dowling here in this post


CASE 4: photographer Stephen Spurling snr
The reporter for the Tasmanian Tribune (12 Feb 1876) quietly stated a disturbance had taken place in the jury room during the trial of photographer Stephen Spurling. It was much more than a disturbance, according to the Mercury's report of 12 February, 1876. It was "high jinks" and scuffles rising "to a high pitch of excitement". It was the non-smokers forcing a window open, of broken shutters and a chair thrown out onto the street in a desperate attempt to escape the stench of the smokers' "weed".

TRANSCRIPT

CRIMINAL SESSIONS.
Friday,11th February, 1876.

FIRST COURT.
Before His Honor, Sir Francis Smith, Chief Justice.

OBTAINING GOODS BY FALSE PRETENCES.
The jury in the case of Stephen Spurling, sen. having been locked up for the night, were brought in, and in reply to the usual question, the foreman (Mr T W Palmer ) stated that they had not agreed, nor was there any prospect of them doing so.

His Honour said he supposed he might take it that the jury had given the case that consultation which the law required. He did not feel justified in discharging them on the previous night in consequence of the reported disturbance in the jury room making it quite clear that some part of the time had not been passed in deliberation,

The jury was then discharged.

In reply His Honor the Attorney-General said he did not propose this session to proceed further with the charge, but he should have time to consider the case.

The defendant was accordingly released on bail, himself in £30, and his two sons in £25 each.

Source: LAW. (1876, February 12). The Tasmanian Tribune (Hobart Town, Tas. : 1872 - 1876), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article200369705

THE MERCURY REPORT
A LIVELY JURY.-It was rumoured on Thursday night that the jury in the case of Stephen Spurling, senr., had been playing up high jinks in the retiring room, and as it was well-known that that was the reason why the Chief Justice ordered them to be locked up for the night, there was considerable speculation as to how the jury had been spending their time during the alleged disturbance. When they were brought up yesterday morning, His Honour, before discharging them, as they had been unable to agree, asked them whether they had any explanation to make of their conduct in the jury room. The foreman, Mr. J. W. Palmer, of Bagdad, said the jury sincerely regretted that any disturbance should have taken place, and tendered an explanation. It was to the effect that the jury were divided on the smoking question. The smokers naturally indulged in their favourite pastime, and the non-smokers, not being at all partial to the weed, suffered severe qualms. The result was that, after submitting to be enveloped in smoke for some time, the non-smokers determined to open the window. They were prevented from doing so, and a little scuffling ensued ; but eventually the window was forced open, and one of the shutters broken. The mysterious part of the affair however is that somebody threw one of the chairs out of the window, a feat respecting which nothing was said by the foreman, and we are left to infer that at one time matters had risen to a high pitch of excitement. At all events, His Honor accepted the apology, and was kind enough to say that, on consideration, no one could be guilty of bringing deliberate discredit upon an institution which was the pride of Englishmen all over the world.

Source: THE MERCURY.(1876, February 12). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas.), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8943037

THE CHARGES
OBTAINING GOODS BY FALSE PRETENCES.—Stephen Spurling, senior, was charged by Thomas Edgar Creswell, solicitor, with having on the 27th February, 1875, unlawfully, and knowingly, falsely pretend that Stephen Spurling, his son, was indebted to him in a large amount, to wit, over £100, by means of which false pretence, he obtained from Messrs. P. O. Fysh and Co. certain goods on credit, whereas, in truth, the said Stephen Spurling, junior, was not in any way indebted to the said Stephen Spurling, senior. The prosecution was under the 13th section of the Debtors Act.
Mr. Crisp appeared for the prosecution, and Mr. Bromby for the defence.
Philip Samuel Seager, clerk to the Registrar of the Supreme Court, produced the order of adjudication of Stephen Spurling the elder, which was taken on the 12th August last. He was adjudicated a bankrupt upon the petition of Stephen Spurling the younger. Witness produced the affidavit of debt of Stephen Spurling, junior, and one of Messrs. P. O. Fysh and Co.
Thomas Edgar Creswell, solicitor of the Supreme Court, deposed that he was trustee in the proceedings against the defendant. He produced the order of adjudication.
By Mr. Bromby: Messrs. Burgess and Fysh were the two creditors who were anxious to prosecute the defendant. The majority of the creditors did not wish to take proceedings.
Robert Walker deposed that he was confidential clerk to Messrs. P. O. Fysh and Co. He was present at several interviews between the defendant and Mr. Fysh, relative to the purchase of goods by defendant. On the 27th February, 1875, the defendant incurred debt for goods to the amount of £90. The defendant was then already indebted to the firm in the amount of £38 10s. When a debtor wanted further accommodation it was usual for him to make a statement as to his position and prospects of payment. Witness heard defendant tell Mr. Fysh that his son in Launceston had to send him a large sum of money, which he received at the rate of £30 per month. Defendant did not say what the amount was which his son owed him. He certainly led witness and Mr. Fysh to believe that his son owed him money. On previous occasions the defendant had stated that his son's removal to Launceston had been a great expense to him. It was on the strength of these statements that the goods were delivered to the defendant.
By Mr. Bromby: I have been in Mr. Fysh's employ for sixteen years, for nine years of which the defendant has had transactions with the firm. The goods in the last order were ordered about nine months before they were delivered. It is generally the custom to forward the invoice of the goods ordered to the customer on its arrived by the mail. On the arrival of the goods a further account, with charges added, is rendered to the purchaser. It is also a custom to send an invoice after the delivery of the goods. Witness could not say whether notice was given to the defendant of the arrival of the goods. The bill for £38 10s. had been several times renewed, and was due on the 4th January, so that the defendant had called between that day and the 27th February about the renewal of this bill. The bill for £38 10s. was renewed for the 4th of April. For the goods arranged for on the 27th February, it was agreed that one-half should be covered by a bill at four months, and the other half at six months.
Re-examined: By the defendant's statements we knew that he was getting money from his son, and up to the 27th February he stated that his son had to send him money.
By the Bench: The bills at four and six months were not signed until the goods had been delivered.
Mr. Spurling became a debtor of the firm from the time of the delivery of the goods and not before.
Stephen Spurling jun., deposed that he was a son of the defendant. Witness removed to Launceston in 1873. At that time, the defendant was responsible for witness's bills which he (the defendant) afterwards paid. During the period witness had been in business in Launceston witness had become the defendant's creditor for cash and goods to the amount of £200. Accounts were never balanced between witness and the defendant when witness left Hobart Town. Defendant was then indebted to witness for wages whilst defendant was responsible for witness's debts. Witness sent his father during two years about £300. The bills which the defendant paid for witness amounted to £50. Witness was not aware that these bills were not mentioned in his father's books. Witness did not owe his father £200 during February, 1875, or for nine months before that time, but he could not say whether he owed the defendant anything then. The defendant had been witness's debtor in some amount for 18 months.
By Mr. Bromby: My father partly set me up in business in Launceston, and has acted well to me. It was always understood that I should assist him in every way. I sent him sums of money from the beginning of 1875 till the time he was bankrupt and would have sent him more had he asked for it, and I had had it.
The case was adjourned until Friday next.
Source: CITY POLICE COURT. (1876, January 13). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas.), p. 3.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8942378

SUPREME COURT RECORD



Source: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/SC32-1-9/SC32-1-9P235 Image 214

TRANSCRIPT

No. 1 Crt
Stephen Spurling = plea not guilty
Jury - [12 names listed]
[Annotation illegible next to] 27 Feb 1875 - unlawfully obtg goods by false pretences from R. V. Fysh (representing his son Stephen Spurling owed him £200) and Ct obtg goods by false pretences
Verdict -[ blank - but  Nolle prosequi recorded]

[No. 1 - commuted to imprsmt for life - John Nolan - sentence death recorded.]

Dept Sheriff reported the misconduct of the jury
At 10 o'clock the jury not being agreed they were ordered to be kept together until 10 o'clock tomorrow morning- they were given in charge of John Lewis Thos Cook Fred Thornhill & Richd Walker
The prisoner was discharged on bail till 10 o'clock tomorrow himself in £50.. .Stephen Spurling & Fred Spurling in £25 each [two sons of Stephen Spurling]

Crt adjourned till 10 o'clock tomorrow morning

Friday 11th February 1876
The Court met this morning at 10 o'clock
No. 1 Crt
Re Spurling The jurors answered to their names & the defendant placed in the dock - The jury not being agreed they were discharged & the prisoner admitted to Bail till next session himself in £50 & his two sons in for £25 each.

Biography: Stephen Spurling 1 (1821–1892)

... By 1875 Stephen 1st was once again facing bankruptcy. During the subsequent sale of his assets, fellow photographer Alfred Winter purchased his negative collection. For the next decade, Winter advertised Spurling portrait and landscape prints and enlargements for sale.

From 1875 onwards, Stephen 1st’s career was in decline. In 1881, he attempted to re-establish his studio, but this venture proved unsuccessful. By 1886, the deterioration in his mental health, combined with his impending paralysis, led to his admission to the asylum at New Norfolk. It is possible he was suffering from the long term effects of chemicals, such as mercury, which he had used during his early photographic experiments. He remained incarcerated until his death, from congestion of the kidneys, at the age of seventy, on 13 April 1892.

Source: Christine Burgess, 'Spurling, Stephen (1821–1892)', Obituaries Australia,
National Centre of Biography, Australian National University,
Link: https://oa.anu.edu.au/obituary/spurling-stephen--1578

Additional Resources

1. C. H. Burgess, The Spurling Legacy and the Emergence of Wilderness Photography in Tasmania, PhD thesis, University of Tasmania, 2010. Link: https://doi.org/10.25959/23211710.v1

2. 'Insolvent Court', Mercury (Hobart), 3 October 1861, p 2

3. 'Supreme Court: Bankruptcy Jurisdiction', Mercury (Hobart), 16 October 1875, p 2.

4. 'City Police Court: Obtaining Goods by False Pretences', Mercury (Hobart), 13 January 1876, p 3




Spurling, Christine (2024) Photographs by Spurling's: A Treasure Trove of Tasmanian Images
(Forty South Publishing Pty Ltd. fortysouth.com)
Page 1: cdv of Stephen Spurling 1
Photo copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2024
(Many thanks for your acknowledgement, Christine).


CASE 4: Honora Tracey alias Borland
The jury was dismissed since no unanimity was reached among them as to Honora Tracey's guilt in the charge of perjury. As noted by the press, they were locked up until 10 o'clock on the night of the case, presumably to retire to their respective homes and when they returned the next day -

- they were so positive as to there being no chance of any unanimity, that it was evident they were afraid of being confined for the night. His Honor noticed this, and told them that it was his duty to see that the facilities of discharge were not such as to make them an impediment to justice. In olden times, he added, juries were locked up till they did agree, and that without anything to eat and without fire - a piece of information which caused the jury men to look as if they expected to be treated in a similar manner. His Honor, however, was lenient, for, after expressing an opinion that if this difficulty continued, it would be necessary to consider whether juries should be allowed to separate at all before coming to some decision, he discharged the jury
Source: THE MERCURY. (1876, February 12). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8943037

Honora Tracey

TRANSCRIPT
PERJURY
Quodling v. Tracey.— This was an information charging Honora Tracey with having committed wilful and corrupt perjury in her evidence in a case heard before the Police Bench on the 11th inst., wherein James Tracey was, charged with having wounded one Emma Bridges on the head by fracturing her skull with a stone. The case was partially heard on the previous day, and Mr Bromby appeared for the accused. After hearing a large amount of evidence, for and against, the Bench committed the woman Tracey to take her trial at the next Criminal Sessions.

Source: LAW. (1875, December 18). The Tasmanian Tribune (Hobart Town, Tas.), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article200367243

Addenda

1. The ship "Bella Mary"



Source: Maritime Museum of Tasmania
Link: https://ehive.com/collections/3906/objects/207119/clock-from-the-bella-mary-captain-copping
Name/Title Clock from the Bella Mary, Captain Copping
Bella Mary was named after Bella Mary Copping, niece of Captain R. Copping.
Measurements 250mm Object number A_1984-377

Bella Mary, a barque built 1862 at Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia, tonnage 266, was registered to Edward Lucas and others, Hobart Town and traded regularly to New Zealand under command of Captain Richard Copping until Captain George McArthur took over in 1871.

In August 1873, a year before skipper George McArthur was tried and acquitted of raping Eliza Ann McKenzie, a shipment of salmon trout ova sent from Tasmania on the Clematis, was accompanied by Stephen Budden on behalf of the Canterbury Acclimatisation Society, departing 29th August, and a second shipment of 500 brown trout ova destined for the Auckland Climatisation Society left on the Bella Mary on the 23rd August 1873. This advertisement from the Auckland Star, September 1874 among many others in the same issue indicates that the usual freight from Tasmania to New Zealand was varieties of apples, tins of jams from Peacock's and Creswell's, hops, almonds, bark, palings etc etc.



On a voyage to Auckland in 1875, the Bella Mary took a Tasmanian devil to show New Zealanders a native animal, but it jumped ship at anchor and disappeared into the bush. The Bella Mary was wrecked at Fiji in 1886: (SMH 18 March 1886; Harry O'May 1978:110-111).

TRANSCRIPT

WRECK OF THE BARQUE BELLA MARY.
By the A. S. N. Company's steamship Gunga, which arrived in port last night from Fiji, news has come to hand of the wreck of the barque Bella Mary, belonging to Mr. G. J. Waterhouse, of this city. The Gunga also brings the commander and crew of the Bella Mary, which, it appears, struck on a reef about 16 miles from Suva, on the 2nd instant, at 8.30 p.m., and became a total wreck. At the time of the accident she was on a voyage from Suva to Levuka, having left the former port at 2 p.m. on the 2nd instant. The Bella Mary was a wooden vessel of 243 tons register, and was built in Nova Scotia in 1862. The wreck of the ship was sold for £7 10s,, and the cargo for £30.

Source: WRECK OF TUE BARQUE BELLA MARY. (1886, March 18). The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW), p. 10.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article13614498



Source: National Gallery of Australia
Title: Samuel Clifford, Tasmanian bush 'devil'
Stereograph, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 1870s acquired by Nigel Lendon by 1983 -
- who sold it to the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1983
Link: https://searchthecollection.nga.gov.au/object/6407

2. Chalmers Free Church, Hobart, Tasmania
Patrick Lamb married Jane McKinsie on 13 May 1869 at Chalmer's Church, Hobart, his occupation listed as "soldier".



Chalmers Free Church, Hobart, ca. 1890 [frame cropped]
Source: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/Archives/NS3503-1-14

A BRIEF HISTORY
A split in the Church of Scotland in 1843, the so-called “Great Disruption”, played out across the Empire. In Tasmania not one of the Church of Scotland ministers supported the Free Church which led to a number of individuals at Hobart applying to the Free Church of Scotland to send a minister to the colony.

Supporters of the Free Church of Scotland erected the Chalmers churches in Hobart and Launceston, named after their Scottish leader, Thomas Chalmers. Chalmers Church at Hobart opened in 1852 followed by Chalmers Launceston in 1860.

In April 1851 Reverend W. Nicolson arrived at Hobart and commenced preaching at the Mechanic’s Institute Hall, where he drew a significant following. This led to an appeal to build Hobart’s first Free Church of Scotland. The foundation stone for a church was laid in October 1851.

The opening of Hobart Chalmers Church was reported by the Hobarton Guardian:
“The work is in the modern Gothic style, and according to a very chaste and tasteful design. The building is most creditable both to the architect and contractor, and will be a great improvement to the city where it stands. It accommodates about 750 persons, and, we understand, a great portion of the sittings were let in the course of a few hours, on the first day appointed for that purpose. The cost will be about £2000, the greater part of which has been already raised—having been entirely accomplished by voluntary subscription. Mr. Nicolson is also supported by the voluntary liberality of his hearers, and receives no pay from the Government. The foundation stone of this handsome church was laid on the 3rd October last, on which occasion Mr. Nicolson gave an exposition of the principles of the Free Church. The Church stands at the corner of Harrington and Bathurst-streets, in an elevated situation, and commanding a view of most beautiful scenery…”

“The interior is fitted up in a style of tasteful elegance—the pulpit is ornamental Gothic, and has a remarkably chaste and beautiful appearance: it, as well as the galleries, was hung with crimson drapery. During the evening service, the church was illuminated by several elegant chandeliers…. The congregations, both in the morning and afternoon, were very numerous, but in the evening, a dense crowd filled the sacred edifice. It was indeed a goodly sight to witness so many congregated together to offer adoration to the Most High—young and old, rich and poor, learned and illiterate, all joining in praising Him to whom all praise alone is due; and what enhanced the pleasure was to know that many were not of the Free Church of Scotland—this is as it ought to be…”

Born out of division, Chalmers' end came out of union. Over the course of the 19th century efforts were made to promote union between the two Presbyteries in Tasmania. This was finally accomplished in 1896, with the Presbyterian Church of Tasmania uniting all congregations of an undivided Church. In 1935 Chalmers’ congregation united with St Andrew’s Church to form Hobart’s Scots Church. Initially services alternated between the two churches but in 1949 services were limited to the Scots (St Andrew's) Church.

With the end of services at Chalmers, the building was put up for sale in 1952 and purchased by the Neptune Oil Company. The church was demolished in 1955 and the site was used to build a service station. Several stained glass windows were taken from the Chalmers church before its demolition and were later installed in the gallery of the Scots Church. The Scots Church pulpit sits on stone taken from Chalmers church while the stone font is also from Chalmers Church.

Source: https://www.churchesoftasmania.com/2019/04/no-399-chalmers-free-church-hobart-born.html

RELATED POSTS main weblog

Charged under the CRIMES ACT: brothers Bill, George and Tom NEVIN, 1909-1911

Brothers George, Tom and Bill NEVIN, sons of Thomas and Elizabeth Rachel (Day) NEVIN
Former A-G, G. Crosby GILMORE, Counsel for Tom Nevin 1911
Interpretation of the CRIMES ACT 1900: "incite" and "resist"

Wm John Nevin 1900

Subject: William John Nevin (1878-1927)
Photographer: unknown, possibly his father Thomas J. Nevin
Location and Date: Hobart, Tasmania, ca. 1897
Provenance: by descent, Thomas J. Nevin and family.
Copyright © KLW NFC Group & KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection

This is one of the saddest stories to emerge from publicly available records relating to the adult lives of the six surviving children born to parents, photographer and civil servant Thomas James Nevin snr (1842-1923) and Elizabeth Rachel (Day) Nevin (1847-1914) at Hobart, Tasmania, between 1872 and 1888.

It involves three of their four adult sons - George Ernest Nevin (known as Georgie) and Thomas J. Nevin jnr (known as Tom) who were arrested on identical charges on two separate occasions of inciting their brother William John Nevin (known as Bill) to resist arrest: the first on 29 June 1909 with George Nevin; and again on May 6, 1911 with Tom Nevin in another incident, this time involving assault by police of both brothers Bill and Tom Nevin. Where Constable Flude had succeeded in penalties for the charge in 1909 against George Nevin during the arrest of his brother Bill Nevin, he was sure he would succeed with the same charge in 1911 against Tom Nevin during another arrest of Bill Nevin but he failed, because this time the former Attorney-General G. Crosby Gilmore stepped in.

Police harassment of their father
This family first became associated with the police and judiciary when their father Thomas J. Nevin snr was contracted on colonial warrant as photographer servicing the courts and legal fraternity from the date of his marriage to Elizabeth Rachel Day at Kangaroo Valley, Hobart, Tasmania in 1871.

The incident which resulted in their son Bill Nevin's arrest on 26th June 1909, and the charge of incitement to resist arrest against his brother Georgie Nevin took place at the Ship Hotel, Collins Street, Hobart, but the incident which resulted in Bill Nevin's arrest on the same charge on May 5th, 1911 and the same related charges brought against his other brother Tom Nevin in June 1911, took place outside their parents' family residence, 82 Warwick Street, Hobart.

The property at Warwick Street was regularly surveilled by constables in the years after their father Thomas J. Nevin's dismissal by the Hobart City Council from the position (and residency) in December 1880 of Hobart Town Hall Keeper for drunkenness while on duty. In addition to full-time civil service as the Hall Keeper, Nevin's fourteen (14) years of government contractual work (1872 to 1886), which required the production of prisoner mugshots for the Municipal Police Office in Hobart's courts and prisons, among other duties as Special Constable during the Chiniquy riots of 1879, ensured his much too much familiarity with police brutality and judicial indifference, as police knew only too well. From 1878, when he was assigned Office Keeper for the HCC at the Town Hall to his dismissal in December 1880, he was privy to council and mayoral committee decisions affecting just about everyone in the greater Hobart region. He was also assigned assistant bailiff duties to senior detectives in the mid 1880s, a job guaranteed to raise hostility from those affected by house evictions etc etc.

Another source of information about police readily came from Thomas J. Nevin's younger brother, Constable John Nevin (William John Nevin, 1852-1891), known as Jack to the family. He had joined the civil service, aged 18 yrs in 1870, and was stationed at the Asylum, Cascades Prison for Males, Hobart by 1875. His service continued at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street, as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered his duties as photographer's assistant to his brother, and as a hospital "Wardsman" until his untimely death from typhoid while still in service, aged 39 yrs old. His nephew Bill or Will (the subject of these arrests in 1909 and 1911) was given the exact same name at birth as his father's brother (William John Nevin), just as his brother Tom Nevin was given the exact same name as their father at birth (Thomas James Nevin).

Thomas J. Nevin snr was constantly harassed by constables, some of whom he recognised as ex-prisoners recruited to the police force in times of social unrest. Others held him responsible for their demotion in the ranks when he reported them for being drunk on security duty for the Town Hall during his time as Keeper. They regularly sought him out in Hobart's streets while meeting with friends, even hanging around outside his house, to lay charges for "obscene language" or school truancy of his children, or even singing ditties offensive to police within the confines of his own house, until he finally complained to the court he was being targeted as a "stereotype" . Tasmanian law allowed for charges to be brought, because even though Nevin was not on public property, he could still be heard by passers-by. He was inside the yard "abutting on Warwick Street" when using "very filthy language" according to the constables who seemed to appear out of nowhere at just the right moment.

TRANSCRIPT
CITY POLICE COURT. - The Police Magistrate (Mr. B. Shaw) and Mr. James Harcourt, J.P., adjudicated yesterday.
Thomas Nevin, labourer, was charged with having used obscene language in a house in Warwick street on the 9th inst.. He pleaded not guilty, but Constables Crane and Clark proved the offence. Defendant remarked that he was always brought up on the same charge. He thought he must be "stereotyped" with the offence. The Police Magistrate : I am afraid you are ; you have been convicted 33 times of the same charge. We order you to pay a fine of £5, in default you will be imprisoned for three months.

Source: THE MERCURY. (1898, September 21). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9431088

When fined 50/s- on Thursday, 14th March 1895 for obscene language which could be heard from the street, the Magistrate also applied for a notice to be issued to publicans prohibiting them from supplying liquor to Thomas Nevin, "operatic for twelve months". He also advised Thomas Nevin to seek medical attention.  The prohibition was impossible to enforce, however. With George Adams' Tasmanian Brewery located across the road on the corner of Elizabeth and Warwick Streets, just metres from the Nevin residence at 82 Warwick Street and in full view from their front door, both Thomas Nevin and son Bill would be tempted with easy access to alcohol the moment they left the house.

As for stereotypes, what were the common targets of social prejudice and opprobium in the 1890s, the decade which saw the rise of the Temperance movement? Was Thomas Nevin snr cast as the hot-tempered red-head, the drunken Irishman, garrulous to the point of madness with "no control over his unbridled tongue" as one Police Magistrate put it (Mercury 26 May 1897)? Or was he less than the masculine ideal - a soft and sensitive" artist-photographer" who hand-coloured his photographs of convicts - .i.e. prisoners? He had found himself the butt of that insult in the meeting of the Police Committee which sacked him from the Hobart Town Hall keeper position in December 1880. Then again, he might have cursed long and too loud the imperialist war-mongers wanting to send his sons off to fight the Boers. Neither Thomas J. Nevin snr nor any of his children volunteered service in the Imperial Forces at the Boer War (1899-1902) or at the First World War (1914-18). Pater familias and Wesleyan John Nevin snr had not brought his family across the world from Ireland to settle in Tasmania to see them sent off to fight another war. His nightmarish experiences fighting the French in waist-deep snow at the Canadian Rebellions in 1839-40 were set as example enough that none of his family should ever go to war again.

Warwick St Hobart 1890

Warwick and Elizabeth Streets, Hobart, Tasmania.
Thomas J. Nevin snr and family resided in this neighbourhood 1880s-1923
Detail of a view of Hobart, Domain and eastern shore taken from West Hobart
Pretyman Family (NG1012) 17 Aug 1892
Archives Office of Tasmania
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/Archives/NS1013-1-729

William John NEVIN, known as Bill or Will Nevin, the second son to survive to adulthood of photographer Thomas James Nevin and Elizabeth (Day) Nevin, was born at the Hobart Town Hall, Macquarie St. where his family resided during his father's incumbency as Town Hall Keeper. He was registered by his father at birth as William John Nevin on 14 March 1878 (see BMD records in Addenda below). The press reports of 6 May, 1911, however, stated he was arrested and booked as William James Nevin by police on two charges. It appears to be an error made twice by the same or different reporters at the Tasmanian News (May 6, 1911) and the Daily Post (August 19, 1911), although he may have changed his middle name "John" to "James" to avoid confusion with his uncle, his father's brother, Constable John Nevin (William John Nevin, 1852-1891). He was certainly not identical with another Tasmanian, unrelated to the Nevin family of Hobart called William John Nevin, born 16 October 1866, at Longford in the north of the island, son of farmer James Nevin and Mary (Hemphill) Nevin.

The Crimes Act 1900
Section 60 of the Crimes Act 1900 was used by police to bring the charge of incitement to resist arrest against brothers George Nevin in 1909 and Tom Nevin in June 1911. They were charged with having incited their brother Bill Nevin to resist Constable Flude in the execution of his duty on two separate occasions and two years apart, involving the same charge and the same constable. So while their brother Bill Nevin was the cause on each occasion of these charges filed against his two brothers during his arrest by police - and for each incident he was fined just a small amount -  it was George and Tom Nevin who were the real targets of a zealous Constable Flude's pursuit of this family, using the same charge of incitement under Section 60. In addition, a charge under Section 32 of the Crimes Act was used by police to accuse Tom Nevin in 1911 of aggravated assault of police. Prior to 1900, charges of obscene language brought against their father Thomas J. Nevin were applied under Amendment 1888 to the Police Act 1865.

"INCITE" and "RESIST"
Source: Crimes Act 1900
https://www8.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/download.cgi/au/legis/nsw/consol_act/ca190082
https://www8.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/download.cgi/cgi-bin/download.cgi/download/au/legis/nsw/consol_act/ca190082.txt



TRANSCRIPT

CRIMES ACT 1900
- SECT 60 Assault and other actions against police officers

60 Assault and other actions against police officers

(1AA) A person who hinders or resists, or incites another person to hinder or resist, a police officer in the execution of the officer's duty commits an offence.
Maximum penalty-- Imprisonment for 12 months or a fine of 20 penalty units or both.
(1) A person who assaults, throws a missile at, stalks, harasses or intimidates a police officer while in the execution of the officer's duty, although no actual bodily harm is occasioned to the officer, is liable to imprisonment for 5 years

(1A) A person who, during a public disorder, assaults, throws a missile at, stalks, harasses or intimidates a police officer while in the execution of the officer's duty, although no actual bodily harm is occasioned to the officer, is liable to imprisonment for 7 years.

(2) A person who assaults a police officer while in the execution of the officer's duty, and by the assault occasions actual bodily harm, is liable to imprisonment for 7 years.

(2A) A person who, during a public disorder, assaults a police officer while in the execution of the officer's duty, and by the assault occasions actual bodily harm, is liable to imprisonment for 9 years.

(3) A person who by any means--

(a)wounds or causes grievous bodily harm to a police officer while in the execution of the officer's duty, and

(b) is reckless as to causing actual bodily harm to that officer or any other person, is liable to imprisonment for 12 years.

(3A) A person who by any means during a public disorder--

(a) wounds or causes grievous bodily harm to a police officer while in the execution of the officer's duty, and

(b) is reckless as to causing actual bodily harm to that officer or any other person, is liable to imprisonment for 14 years.

(4) For the purposes of this section, an action is taken to be carried out in relation to a police officer while in the execution of the officer's duty, even though the police officer is not on duty at the time, if it is carried out--

(a) as a consequence of, or in retaliation for, actions undertaken by that police officer in the execution of the officer's duty, or

(b) because the officer is a police officer.

Source: https://www8.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/download.cgi/au/legis/nsw/consol_act/ca190082

The Case against George Nevin, 1909
Bill's younger brother George Ernest NEVIN (1880-1957) was the fifth child and fourth son born to photographer Thomas J. Nevin and Elizabeth Rachel (Day) Nevin. He was the second surviving son born at the Hobart Town Hall during his father's residency as Town Hall keeper. In adulthood, George Nevin kept vegetable gardens for profit at his Penna estate near Richmond, Tasmania, and shared a carrier business with his older brothers Bill and Tom Nevin. He also kept an extensive collection of family memorabilia, including photographs taken by his father in the 1870s, and records of his younger brother Albert's pacers at the race track. Known as Georgie to his nieces and nephews, he lived with his older sister May Nevin in the big house at 23 Newdegate Street from the time of their father's death in 1923; neither was known to have married.

On 26 June 1909 at the Ship Hotel, Collins Street, Hobart, George Nevin intervened in the arrest of his brother Bill Nevin, who was charged with being drunk and disorderly. He was accused of inciting Bill to resist arrest, of jostling the arresting constables and calling on the crowd to protest. Bill Nevin pleaded guilty, George Nevin pleaded not guilty. Both were found guilty and ordered to pay a fine of 10/- or 7 days' imprisonment.

William and George Nevin, arrests 1909

TRANSCRIPT

CITY POLICE COURT.
MONDAY, JUNE 28. Before Aldermen H. T. Gould and D. Freeman, J's.P.
William Nevin pleaded guilty to a charge of having been drunk and disorderly in Collins street on June 20, and was ordered to pay a fine of 10/ or go to gaol for 7 days.

Inciting to Resist.
George Nevin pleaded not guilty to a charge of inciting one William Nevin a prisoner under arrest, to resist the police in the lawful execution of their duty. Constables Goss and Flude gave evidence to the effect that they had arrested William Nevin on a charge of being drunk and disorderly, and that the defendant tried to pull the prisoner away from them, his action causing the prisoner to resist violently. The defendant also jostled the arresting constables, and attempted to turn the crowd on to them. The Bench found the defendant guilty, and pointed out the seriousness of the offence to him. They ordered him to pay a fine of 10/. with 7 days' imprisonment as an alternative.

Source: CITY POLICE COURT. (1909, June 29). Daily Post (Hobart, Tas. : 1908 - 1918), p. 3.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article187875890



Above: Rabiteers, with George Nevin, extreme right, ca 1890
The verso is signed "George Nevn" [sic].
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2009 ARR.

The Case against Tom Nevin, 1911
Bill's elder brother Thomas James NEVIN (1874-1948) jnr, known as Tom (and Sonny to family), son of photographer Thomas James Nevin and Elizabeth (Day) Nevin, was born at his father's photographic studio, 140 Elizabeth St., Hobart Town, the second child born after elder sister Mary Florence Elizabeth (aka May) Nevin in 1872. He was given the same name as his father but did not follow his father's profession of photographer. Tom established a boot-making business at 236 Elizabeth Street, Hobart, in the early 1900s, near the corner of Warwick Street where his parents and five of his siblings - May (born 1872), Bill (born 1878), George (born 1880), Minnie (born 1884) and Albert (born 1888) - had taken up residence at No. 82 Warwick St., opposite the Domeny coach stables at 69-75 Warwick St.

Tom Nevin married Gertrude Jane Tennyson Bates, daughter of bandmaster Walter Tennyson Bates on 6 Feb. 1907 at the Methodist Parsonage, Melville St. and settled into family life in Lochner Street, West Hobart, where Gertrude gave birth to a son Walter in 1909. The child survived just one year. He died of bronchial pneumonia and was buried - on 16th August 1911 - just three days before Tom was called into court to face the magistrate's decision - on 19th August 1911 - for the charge against him of inciting his brother Bill to resist arrest.

Without doubt, Tom Nevin's emotional suffering that week was immeasurable. He was facing imprisonment for an unfounded and unproven charge. Costs incurred at trial over months by his legal counsel, the well-heeled former Attorney-General G. Crosby Gilmore, had placed considerable financial distress on his wife, and with the sudden death of their baby son Walter just days before the court's decision, they would have questioned whether Bill Nevin, the brother whose scuffles with police had led to their reduced circumstances, was ever going to be safe.



Subject: Tom or "Sonny" Nevin (T. J. Nevin jnr)
Location and date: Peacock's Jam Factory, Salamanca Place, Hobart, 1905
Photographer: unknown
Provenance: Nevin family by descent
Copyright © KLW NFC Group Private Collection


Tom Nevin was defending the charge of inciting his brother Bill Nevin to resist arrest on the evening of 5th May, 1911 outside the Nevin family residence at 82 Warwick Street, Hobart when the police additionally accused him of assaulting them under Section 32 of the Crimes Act 1900. On August 19th, 1911, the Police Magistrate finally gave his reserved decision and dismissed the case.



Source: https://www8.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/download.cgi/au/legis/nsw/consol_act/ca190082

Press reports May to August 1911
In each case leading to the arrests of all three Nevin brothers in 1909 and 1911, Constable Flude consistently lied about the sequence of events and rough handling by police. In the first of these press reports during the case against Tom Nevin in 1911, Constable Flude grossly exaggerated his account of the arrest of Bill Nevin with accusations that he "acted like a madman" and needed "four policemen" to take him to the police station.

1. CITY POLICE COURT (1911, May 6). Tasmanian News (Hobart, Tas), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article187120196

TRANSCRIPT

CITY POLICE COURT
At the City Police Court to-day, before Mr. W. O. Wise, P.M. Inspector Weston prosecuting. William James [sic, John not James] Nevin was charged with having been drunk and disorderly in Elizabeth street on May 5, and with having resisted Constable Flude in the execution of his duty.
Constable Flude stated the defendant was very much under the influence of drink, and using indecent language. When witness attempted to arrest him, he acted like a madman, and it took four policemen to bring him to the station.
The P.M. imposed a fine of 10s, or in default seven days in imprisonment, on the first, and £1, or 14 days, on the other charge.

Source: CITY POLICE COURT (1911, May 6). Tasmanian News (Hobart, Tas. : 1883 - 1911), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article187120196

G. Crosby Gilmore, Counsel for the defence
Tom Nevin's defence, former Attorney-General G. Crosby Gilmore, brought Elizabeth Rachel (Day) Nevin, mother of the two brothers involved in this case, to testify in court that when police were called by onlookers, the cause of blood on her son Tom's face was not from any event that took place inside the house. Her sons had not been fighting with each other. Her son Tom was in his shop when he saw a man in a scuffle with his brother Bill outside on the street. When the police arrived, it was Bill they arrested, accusing Tom who followed them, crying out to police not to kill his brother, that he was inciting Bill to resist arrest. It was then that Tom's lip was cut and bloodied from police assaulting him. Mr Gilmore made it very clear to the court that Tom Nevin was an emotional man who had never before been in court, that he was innocent of the charge of inciting his brother to resist arrest, and that the blood on his face was from police striking him. Inspector Weston, counsel for the plaintiff, counter-attacked by suggesting to Tom Nevin that his brother Bill had kicked a constable so hard in the groin it "nearly ruined him for life".

Defence Counsel G. Crosby Gilmore effectively argued that Bill Nevin was resisting arrest BEFORE Tom Nevin ran to his brother's rescue. This was first inadvertently admitted by Constable Flude himself on June 2, (1911) in court. When questioned by Inspector Weston, he agreed that Bill had resisted "before his brother interfered? Oh, yes". The second argument centred on the vagaries around legal definitions of INTENT: it was not Tom Nevin's intention to incite his brother nor to obstruct police, he was simply begging the police not to be too rough with his brother, G. Crosby Gilmore argued, and there was nothing illegal in that. The case was dismissed, the charge dropped against Tom Nevin.



Defending Tom Nevin was former Attorney-General, G. C. Gilmore
Photographic portrait of the Hon. G. C. GILMORE Attorney-General of Tasmania 1904-06
Archives Office Tasmania. Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/PH30-1-9972/PH30-1-9972

2. INCITING TO RESIST. (1911, June 2). Tasmanian News (Hobart, Tas.), p. 4 (5.30 EDITION).
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article187122698

TRANSCRIPT

INCITING TO RESIST

THE CONSTABLE'S EVIDENCE

A WARM JOB

Thomas Nevin was charged at the City Police Court today with having incited Wm. Nevin to resist Constables Flude and Jackson at Hobart on May 5.

He pleaded not guilty, and was defended by Mr G. C. Gilmore. Inspector Weston prosecuted.
Constable Flude said that on the night of the 5th May he had occasion to arrest the defendant's brother, Wm. Nevin. The defendant came from out of their house. He was in a very excited state, and was calling out "Don't murder him, " and also "Give him a chance". At the time they had William Nevin on the ground, where he was struggling and kicking violently. Defendant kept coming towards them and inciting him to resist. When they got Wm. Nevin on his feet he began to kick, and they - Constable Jackson and himself - found it necessary to call help. Defendant followed them down to the station, continually singing out. Going down he kept repeating , "Don't kill the man. If he's dead in the morning there will be plenty of witnesses." They gave the arrested man a chance to walk, but he refused. Defendant, Thomas Nevin, accused the police of having assaulted him, He (witness) then told him that only for him being a decent fellow he would have put him where his brother was.
Mr Weston: - Did the interference of Thomas Nevin cause William Nevin to resist? Oh, yes, I should say so.
But did he resist before his brother interfered? Oh, yes.
What did Thomas Nevin do to make William Nevin to resist? His brother calling out caused Wm Nevin to resist.
Mr Gilmore: - Did Wm Nevin's kicking and all that cause you to use him rather roughly - No, I don't believe to being rough.
Constable Wm. Jackson gave corroborative evidence. The defendant rushed up when they were arresting his brother, and said, " Oh, my poor brother, you are killing him."
To Mr. Wise: - There was a disturbance in the defendant's house, and he heard a voice calling out, "Oh, Bill", "Oh Bill," and when the defendant came to the door there was blood all over him.
Constable Clements gave evidence that he had been called to the assistance of Constables Flude and Jackson, who were taking the present defendant's brother to the police station, He corroborated the evidence of the other witnesses.
Mr. Gilmore said that defendant, Nevin, has never been in a police court before, He was a man of intensely emotional character and had a wholesome fear of the law. In a case like this the Bench should look at intent. The intention of defendant all the time was to ask the police not to hurt his brother, and he had no intention whatever of inciting him to resist.
The defendant, Thomas Nevin, said that he was working at his shop on the night of the 5th inst., when he heard a tussle near his door. He went to the window and a saw a man with his brother, who was in a state of intoxication. His brother was then brought in, but he went out again by the back way. There was some trouble in the street after that and his brother was arrested by a policeman. The constables were very rough, and he said "Give him a chance, let him up." At that time they had his brother on the ground across the gutterway. He went towards his brother, and one of the policemen swung back and hit him (witness) in the face. He went back to his shop, and then came out and followed the police. They were carrying his brother, but would insist on carrying him with his head lower than his feet, and witness asked them several times to carry him properly. He did not at any time incite his brother to resist.
Mr Gilmore: - What was your condition - your feeling - at the time? I was very much broken up at the time, and was crying part of the way.
To Mr. Weston: - There was no disturbance in the house, only that caused by his brother.
Mr. Weston: - Did you see your brother kick the police? No, I did not.
Elizabeth Nevin, mother of the defendant, corroborated the statement of her son.
Henry John Mills also gave evidence.
Mr. Gilmore: - Did you see the defendant inciting Wm Nevin to resist? - No, I did not: but I heard him screaming and crying, and saying something about killing.
It was decided at this stage to adjourn the case till Friday next.

Source: INCITING TO RESIST. (1911, June 2). Tasmanian News (Hobart, Tas.), p. 4 (5.30 EDITION)
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article187122698

Elizabeth Rachel (Day) Nevin testified in court that neither of her sons Tom or Bill had been fighting inside her house, nor had Tom any blood on his face until he was struck by police.

Elizabeth Rachel Nevin 1900

Detail of larger portrait of Elizabeth Rachel Nevin nee Day (1847-1914) taken ca. 1900
Wife of by photographer Thomas J. Nevin (1842-1923
Mother of the three sons Tom, George and Bill Nevin arrested in 1909 and 1911
Copyright © KLW NFC Group & KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection

3. POLICE COURTS. (1911, June 3). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas.), p. 8.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article10103238

TRANSCRIPT

INCITING TO RESIST THE POLICE
Thomas J. Nevin was charged with having incited his brother Wm. Nevin to resist the police whilst the latter was under arrest for being drunk and disturbing the peace. He denied the charge and was defended by Mr. Crosby Gilmore. Inspector Weston conducted the case.
Constable Flude said that about 9.15 pm on the 5th ult. he was called to a disturbance at defendant's house in Warwick street near Elizabeth street where they had occasion to arrest Wm. Nevin who was drunk and disturbing the peace. Defendant interfered, was very excited and kept calling out not to kill his brother not to murder him but to give him a chance. At the time witness had Wm. Nevin on the ground where he was struggling and kicking violently. Witness told the defendant to desist his interference or he would get into trouble. Constable Jackson blew his whistle and as they got Wm. Nevin to his feet the prisoner commenced kicking. Constables Clements and Hudson came up and the four of them had to carry Nevin to the police station. Defendant followed and interfered on the way and accused the police of having assaulted him and cut his lip. His conduct caused the prisoner to further resist and became more violent.
In reply to Mr Gilmore: We were not rough with the prisoner at all. We were not so severe on him as we should have been as my leg was painful the next day from his kicking. Hitherto I regarded the defendant as a decent man; he might be very emotional. I will swear that one of the other constables did not hit him but he asserted that he had had been struck by the police.
Constable Wm Jackson gave corroborative evidence and swore positively that neither he nor the other constables struck the defendant; when he came out of the house there was blood on defendant's face and he was very excited. There was a crowd outside urging the constables to interfere as they were "killing one another in the house".
Constable Clements gave similar evidence.
Mr Gilmore said the defendant had never been in a court of any sort before and had no intention of breaking the law; he was excited over his brother being taken to the lock-up.
The defendant gave evidence denying the charge. He got excited over the police dragging his brother along the ground and pleaded for him being given a chance when one of the constables swung his arm backwards and struck him as he (witness) stood behind. He only spoke to the police because he considered the police were treating his brother too roughly.
Inspector Weston: Do you know that your brother kicked one of the constables and nearly ruined him for life? - No I do not.
Inspector Weston: And after you interfered he became more violent.
Elizabeth Nevin, defendant's mother, swore that defendant did not leave the house with his mouth bleeding and that there was no disturbance inside.
Henry T Mills, called for the defence, said that W. Nevin was drunk and very violent and the defendant was screaming crying and shouting, "They'll kill him."
The further hearing of the case was adjourned till Friday next for the consideration of the legal point of whether what the defendant did amounted to an intention to incite the prisoner to resist.

Source: POLICE COURTS. (1911, June 3). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 8.
Link:https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article10103238

4. WHAT IS INCITING? (1911, June 30). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 3.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article10106117.

TRANSCRIPT
WHAT IS INCITING?

A LEGAL TECHNICALITY.

The adjourned hearing of the case in which Thomas Nevin was charged with inciting a prisoner to resist came on again yesterday at the Hobart Police Court, before Mr. W. O. Wise, P.M., when Mr. Gilmore, counsel for the defendant, addressed the Bench at length on the law regarding such an offence.
Mr. Gilmore said defendant's intention was to get the police to be less rough with his brother, who at the time was under arrest. He had absolutely no intention to incite his brother to resist. If a man was doing something perfectly legal in itself, and something followed from it which he did not intend and of which he had no conception, he was not responsible. There was nothing illegal in Nevin's begging the police not to be too rough with his brother, and there was no proof that he intended to incite his brother to resist. He submitted as a general principle that under any penal statute intent is a necessary ingredient, and must be proved unless the statute in express words negatives [legal use of word as verb] the need of proving such intent, or there was a necessary inference to be drawn from the wording of the statute that intent need not be proved. According to the law, as he read it, there was certainly nothing which directly negatived the need for proving intent, nor could any inference be drawn in that respect. He further submitted that Nevin, who was admittedly a decent fellow, and had never been in court before, was not guilty of inciting his brother to resist the police. He had no intention of inciting, nor did he believe that he was inciting.
The P.M. said he did not believe that Nevin said the words with the idea of inciting his brother to resist. The fact, however, remained that he did use them. He would go into the law on the point, and give a decision later.

Source: WHAT'IS INCITING? (1911, June 30). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 3.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article10106117

5. CHARGE OF INCITING TO RESIST. (1911, August 19). Daily Post (Hobart, Tas.), p. 5.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article178350509

TRANSCRIPT

CHARGE OF INCITING TO RESIST.
INTERESTING JUDGMENT.

The Police Magistrate (Mr. W. O. Wise) gave his reserved decision on August 30 in the case in which Thomas Nevin was charged with having incited a prisoner, his brother William James [sic - John, not James] Nevin, to resist Constables Flude and Jackson in the execution of their duty at Hobart on May 5.
Mr. Wise stated: "The defendant in this information, Thomas Nevin, was charged with having incited a person to resist. The defendant pleaded not guilty, and was defended by Mr. G. Grosby Gilmore. The evidence of the constables who had the said William James [sic] Nevin under lawful arrest was that the defendant Thomas Nevin was calling out 'Don’t kill him,' meaning the prisoner, and 'Give him a chance,' and such like expressions. The prisoner resisted violently, and had to be practically carried to the station. The defendant gave evidence on his own behalf, and stated that he did not attempt or intend to incite his brother to resist, but that his object in speaking to the police was to protect his brother, as he thought he was being roughly handled. The counsel quoted a number of authorities as to the meaning of the word ‘incite,’ and contended that there was no intention on the part of the defendant to incite his brother to resist.
“As far as I have been able to ascertain there is no direct decision upon what amounts to inciting a prisoner to resist, and I have come to the conclusion that each case must be decided upon its own merits. Mr. Gilmore contended that there must be some act or words of the defendant which showed that he intended to incite the prisoner to resist, although I can conceive such a case where a person, without addressing a prisoner directly, but by remarks to the arresting constable, would incite a prisoner to resist. In this case the strongest factor in the defendant's favor was that before he came upon the scene of the arrest his brother was violently resisting the constables.
"Upon perusing the evidence I have endeavored to ascertain whether the conduct of the defendant incited the prisoner, and I have come to the decision that although the conduct of the defendant, and also his remarks were most indiscreet yet they were not the cause of the prisoner resisting the police. The information will therefore be dismissed."

Source: Daily Post (Hobart, Tas. : 1908 - 1918), Saturday 19 August 1911, page 5
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article178350509



Thomas James Nevin jnr, known as Tom Nevin (1874-1948)
Also known as Sonny to family, taken by a family member ca. 1947
Photo copyright © KLW NFC 2020 Private Collection

Tom Nevin with wife Gertrude Tennyson Bates, (1883-1958) and their second son Athol Clarence Nevin (born  Launceston, 26 October 1915), travelled to California in 1920 to reside for a time with his wife's family who had migrated there in the early 1900s. They returned to Hobart in 1922. Tom Nevin joined the Salvation Army soon after. He was farewelled as Sergeant Tom Nevin on his death in 1948, his address given as 23 Newdegate St. North Hobart, where three of his siblings - May, George, and Albert and family - still resided. By 1949, Tom and Gertrude's son Athol, who had served in WW2 and changed his middle name to "Tennyson", was resident in Melbourne, working as a storeman.

Some Quiet Observations
Bill Nevin's personal reasons for finding himself in the midst of altercations in public and the calls for his arrest might never be known. He may have inherited his father's alleged alcoholism more as a genetic disorder than a behavioural issue when arrested for being drunk and disorderly in 1909, and drunk and disturbing the peace in 1911. Temperance was certainly a factor in the lives of his nieces and nephews, remembered and noted even today for abstinence. Noted too were the family's objections to war. Not since the emigration of their grandfather John Nevin to Tasmania in 1852 would a single direct descendant ever serve in a war, which was not the case for the other (unrelated) Nevin family who had settled at Hadspen in the north of the island. James and Mary (Hemphill) Nevin 's grandson Archibald Reinmuth Nevin was 24 yrs old when he was killed in action in Belgium on 23 September 1916.

Just possibly, Bill Nevin in his twenties was simply an exuberant, happy fellow, given to drinking and dancing and singing too loudly in public. But to authority he was hostile, which might explain his furious response to provocations resulting in scuffles and arrests with the ensuing brutal treatment by police, and the anxiety of both his brothers to protect him. Tom had shouted at Constables Flude and Jackson not to murder his brother Bill during the incident outside the house in Warwick St. on the evening of May 6, 1911, fearing they might actually kill him.

Whatever the incident, the police saw Bill Nevin as fair game, a target for their social prejudices and physical abuse for several reasons, and not all to do with the law. They would likely interpret his attention-seeking behaviour and snappy dress-sense as signs he might not be a cis-gender male. Since Bill Nevin was working as a shop assistant during these years (Denison electoral rolls 1905 ...), he would dress like all front-of-store men who were employed at large shops such as Fitzgerald's and Moran & Cato's or at the fancy shoe-shop called Ray's (photo below). He would suit-up in a three-piece, button-hole a gold chain for his fobwatch, wax his moustache, curl his forelock, and pin a pansy to his lapel, as in this photograph ca. 1897:

Wm John Nevin 1900

Sporting a fancy fedora with a teardrop crease and front pinch in finest wool (as in the signed negative photo below ca. 1908), his grooming fit the stereotype of the gay bachelor shop assistant for whom Constable Flude would undoubtedly pursue to find a law with a view to arrest.



Ray's shoe store, Hobart, Tasmania (c1900s)
Photographer; C. P. Ray, Tasmanian Archive and Heritage Office: album at Flickr

Bill's single marital status too was another unknown aspect of his family life. His three siblings - brothers Tom and Albert and younger sister Minnie were either married by 1909 or would eventually marry and have children, but William seemed to have stayed single. But so too it seems, had George and his eldest sister May (Mary Florence Elizabeth Nevin) who was rumoured to cross-dress and follow her brother George around at night - she never married and even devoted her life to her father, caring for him until his death in 1923. Bill Nevin wore the stereotypic signs which police perceived to contradict the conventional masculine norms of the day as indices of deviance. Tasmania decriminalised homosexuality in 1997, the last Australian state or territory to do so, and was the only state to criminalise "cross-dressing", which was decriminalised in 2001 [!!!]. Perhaps Bill Nevin was gay, perhaps not. The lack of  historical marriage records in his name means little but he certainly went a-wooing with prints such as this one signed "Yours Truly, Will". If the intended recipients of this print were strictly female, no evidence has yet emerged that he actually married one. That he signed himself "Will" here when immaculately dressed to the nines while his siblings called him by the more vernacular  "Bill" was another sure sign he saw himself well above the status of the grubby policemen who stalked him.



Negative inscribed by Bill Nevin, signing himself as "Will"
"Yours Truly, Will": William John Nevin ca. 1905-1910
Print from a glass negative of Thomas J. Nevin's third son William John Nevin (1878-1927)
Copyright © KLW NFC Group and KLW NFC Imprint, Shelverton Private Collection ARR

Wm John NEVIN, prison record 1920
Soon after the death of their father Thomas J. Nevin in 1923, his four adult children - Bill (William), George,  Albert and May (Mary Florence) Nevin - moved to the large property at 23 Newdegate St. North Hobart. Albert had married in Launceston in 1917 and brought his wife Emily Maud Davis with him. They occupied the small cottage on the property.  Bill, George and May were single and lived in the big house fronting Newdegate Street. Bill was working as "cook" in 1920 when lost his temper, unleashing a series of expletives. He was photographed at the Police Office Hobart on 8th December, 1920, charged with using obscene language. The charge "obscene language", of course, might have denoted any mild curse or epithet. These sorts of menial and trivial charges were a source of revenue for the Tasmanian Government in an era when personal income tax was yet to be formally legislated.





Name: Nevin, William
Record Type: Prisoners
Year:1920
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1483648
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/GD63-1-5P726

William Nevin, charged with obscene language on 8th December 1920, was sentenced to three days at the Police Office, Hobart. These police records in Book 7 were damaged by fire at the Hobart Gaol, but some detail is visible: William's occupation was "cook" in 1920, for example. His moustache had become a shaggy half-horseshoe once again.

Wm John NEVIN, accidental death 1927
William (Bill or Will) Nevin established a carrier and furniture removal business in the early 1920s which he partnered with his elder brother Tom, younger brother Albert and brother-in-law James Drew who had married their younger sister Minnie Nevin in 1907. They had vans as well as carts and horses, operating from Morrison St. Hobart Wharf and nearby Market Place. When siblings May, Albert, George and Bill Nevin moved to the property at 23-29 Newdegate St. in 1923 on the death of their father Thomas J. Nevin (registered as "photographer" on his burial certificate), Bill maintained the carrier business there until his untimely death in a horse and cart accident in 1927.

William John (Bill) Nevin was 49 years old when he died in a horse-and-cart accident on the 28th October 1927. The accident and coroner's inquest were reported in the press, 31st October 1927. The death of Bill Nevin, victim of drink, was served up as a moral about alcohol for Mercury readers.



William John Nevin (1878-1927)
Verso inscription "William J. Nevin, Furniture Removalist"
Unattributed, no date, ca. 1926? Died in a cart accident, 1927.
From the estate of William John Nevin (1878-1927)
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection

TRANSCRIPT
FALL FROM A CART
DEATH Of WILLIAM JOHN NEVIN.
VICTIM OF DRINK.
The Coroner (Mr. E. TV. Turner) found, on Saturday, that William John Nevin, aged 49 years, who died in the Hobart Public Hospital on Wednesday last, succumbed to wounds accidentally received as the result of having fallen from a cart in Elizabeth Street the previous day. At the inquest, the police were represented by Inspector A. Bush.
The story of the accident was told by Percy Johnson, a carter, living in Murray Street. On Tuesday night, about 8.20, he said, Nevin and a man named Leslie Smith came to his house under the influence of drink. Nevin's cart was standing outside the Waratah Hotel. Witness joined the two men, and had a drink with them In the hotel. Smith was not served with intoxicants, as "he had had too many." The three then got into the cart, and witness intended to drive the other two home. However, Nevin Insisted on driving, and they went along Warwick Street and down Elizabeth Street at full gallop. They "pulled up" outside McLaren's Hotel, in Collins Street, and when they got out of the cart a man said to witness, "There are two sergeants on the corner watching you." Witness got the two men into the cart again, and took charge. Nevin and Smith sat down. Witness drove up Elizabeth Street until just before Warwick Street. Smith's legs were hanging over the back, and he said, "Pull up. I am going to get out." Witness "pulled up " and Smith and Nevin got out. A few minutes later they got Into the cart again. Nevin stood up and made a dash forward. He snatched the reins from witness, and fell over the side. Witness felt a bump, and when he got out he saw Nevin on the ground, with the reins round his foot and his leg through the wheel. He drove Nevin and Smith to the Public Hospital.

Charles Harold Dowsing, an eye-witness of the events which occurred when the cart returned up Elizabeth Street, near Warwick Street, corroborated the evidence given by Johnson. Smith was not called.

Dr. B. M. Carruthers, House Surgeon at the Public Hospital, said there were hardly any signs of external injury on the deceased when he was admitted to hospital. He was injured severely internally. His collar-bone was broken, a broken rib had pierced a lung, and another had pierced his heart. Death was due, in the first place, to shock, and, secondly, to collapse caused by haemorrhage.

The Coroner said that deceased was another victim of drink. His finding would be that death was due to injuries accidentally received as a result of a fall from a cart in Elizabeth Street, Hobart. The moral was obvious.

Source: FALL FROM A CART (1927, October 31). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas), p. 9.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article24206465

In Memoriam notice from Bill Nevin's siblings, 1928

In Memoriam 1828 Nevin family Hobart

Family Notices (1928, October 26). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 186 - 1954), p. 1.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article24236425

Addenda

1. GAY YOUNG THINGS
These photographs were passed down by descent from the estate of William (Bill) Nevin. They were taken in the Edwardian period, the years 1900s-1920s named for fashions set by the Prince of Wales [King Edward VIII] when young working class men who liked to dress for occasions favoured a three piece suit, rounded shirt collars, cuffs, a Prince Albert fob chain and and a wide-brimmed fedora, the sort worn by Prince Edward when he visited Tasmania in 1920.



One of Thomas and Elizabeth's four adult sons -
Possibly George or Tom (Thomas J. jnr) or Bill (William John) Nevin ca. 1901
Posed in best suit - full length portrait with wicker whatnot.
Family photograph taken at home by his father Thomas Nevin snr
From the estate of William John Nevin (1878-1927)
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2020 ARR.



Subject: two well-dressed young men, unidentified, seated on a studio railing
Photographer: Burrows & Co. Studio, Launceston
Location and date: Launceston Tasmania ca. 1910
Details: Cabinet photograph printed as a postcard
From the estate of William John Nevin (1878-1927)
Copyright © KLW NFC Group & KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection



Subject: two well-dressed young men, unidentified, one seated one standing
Photographer: unknown
Location and date: possibly Melbourne or Sydney ca. 1923
Details: Cabinet photograph printed as a postcard
Verso inscribed with mostly illegible information about dancing to "The Blue Lagoon"
From the estate of William John Nevin (1878-1927)
Copyright © KLW NFC Group & KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection

POSTCARD verso: "... they have a lot of different dances over here but they have grand hall's & always a orchestra playing they play the Blue Lagoon for a Barn Dance and it goes all right ..."

This recording made for the 1923 film "The Blue Lagoon" is most likely the music mentioned by the writer of this postcard.



"The Blue Lagoon" is a lost 1923 British-South African silent film adaptation of Henry De Vere Stacpoole's 1908 novel of the same name about children who come of age while stranded on a tropical island ....
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blue_Lagoon_(1923_film)#Development
https://youtu.be/iTlbuA20ThI?feature=shared

2. BDM RECORDS: William John (Bill) NEVIN (1878-1927)

1878: Birth registration



Name: Nevin, William John
Record Type: Births
Gender: Male
Father: Nevin, Thomas
Mother: Day, Elizabeth Rachel
Date of birth: 14 Mar 1878
Registered: Hobart 1878
Record ID:NAME_INDEXES: 1093874
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/1093874

1927: Burial registration
Source: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/1560157,Church of England EE - Page 24, Plot 277





Nevin, William John
Record Type: Deaths
Age: 49
Description: Last known residence: 23 Newdegate St
Property: Cornelian Bay Cemetery
Date of burial: 28 Oct 1927
File number: BU 26646
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1560157
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/1560157


3. BDM RECORDS: Thomas James "Tom" NEVIN (1874-1948)
https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/976011

1874: Birth registration



Nevin, Thomas James
Record Type: Births
Gender: Male
Father: Nevin, Thomas James
Mother: Day, Elizabeth Rachel
Date of birth: 16 Apr 1874
Registered: Hobart
Registration year: 1874
Record ID:NAME_INDEXES: 976011
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/976011


1907: Marriage to Gertrude Jane Tennyson BATES

Nevin, Thomas James
Record Type: Marriages
Spouse: Bates, Gertrude Jane Tennyson
Date of marriage: 06 Feb 1907
Where married: Melville Street, Hobart
Registration year:1907
File number: 465
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1940114
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/1940114


1909-1911: Birth and death of son Walter Sydney Tennison NEVIN



Name: Nevin, Walter Sydney Tennyson
Record Type: Births
Gender: Male
Father: Nevin, Thomas James
Mother: Tennyson Bates, Gertrude Jane
Parent occupation: Storeman
Date of birth: 09 Dec 1909
Registered: Hobart
Registration year: 1910
Central registration number: 711
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:2209131
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/2091128




DEATH from bronchial pneumonia: Nevin, Walter Sydney Tennison
Record Type: Deaths
Gender: Male
Date of death: 14 Aug 1911
Where died: Paternoster Row, Hobart
Registration year: 1911
File number: 1141
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1998961
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/1998961


Wallet 1900s

Leather wallet with initials "W. J. Nevin" 1880s-1927
From the estate of William John Nevin (1878-1927)
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection

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