Constable William John Nevin (1851-1891), younger brother of professional photographer Thomas J. Nevin, died suddenly of typhoid fever on 17th June, 1891. The earliest date on record of his service with the police is 1875 when he was stationed at the Cascades Prison for Males, Hobart. His service continued at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street, as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered his duties as photographer, until his untimely death while still in service, aged 39 yrs old. The registrar of his death gave his age as 43 yrs old; however, his burial records at Cornelian Bay Cemetery on 19th June 1891 listed his death at 39 yrs, i.e. born 1851, and this date is consistent with the Fairlie sick lists shipping records which recorded that he was a babe in arms, less than 9 months old, when he arrived in Hobart on 3rd July 1852 with his settler parents, John and Mary Nevin, and his three older siblings Thomas, Rebecca Jane, and Mary Ann.
Constable John (W. J.) Nevin ca. 1880.
Photo taken by his brother Thomas Nevin
Copyright © KLW NFC & The Nevin Family Collections 2009 ARR. Watermarked.
The Electoral Roll of the Electoral District of North Hobart, year commencing 11th April, 1884:
NEVIN, William John
Place of Abode: H.M. Gaol
Nature of qualification: Salary
Particulars of Qualification: H.M. Government
Archives Office Tasmania
RGD 35/13
Death of John Nevin, Goal Messenger, of Typhoid Fever
17th June 1891
PRISONER IDENTIFICATION PHOTOGRAPHS from 1876-1891
Older brother, commercial photographer Thomas J. Nevin was commissioned by the family solicitor W.R. Giblin, later Attorney-General and Premier from 1872 to 1876 to provide the colonial government of Tasmania with photographs of prisoners while he was still operating from his commercial studios in Elizabeth St and New Town, Hobart. And from 1876 to 1880, when employed in full-time civil service as Office and Hall keeper of the Hobart Town Hall, his photographic services for police continued at the Hobart Gaol with the Municipal Police Office and at the Mayor's Court, housed within the Town Hall. Thomas Nevin was assisted by his younger brother Constable John Nevin at the Hobart Gaol in producing photographic records of prisoners until ca. 1886, his last record (to date) of service to police as assistant bailiff.
During the early to mid-1870s, Thomas Nevin deployed the conventional techniques of 19th century commercial studio portraiture in matters of posing, photographing and printing the final official prisoner identification photograph (mugshot) as mounted carte-de-visite portraits. The prisoner was usually posed with his upper torso turned 45 degrees from the photographer, with sightlines deflected to the edge of the oval mount, and backgrounded by a plain backcloth. The majority of Nevin’s prisoner photographs taken between 1872-75 evince his use of this commercial technique, for example:
State Library of NSW
James Ogden, photographed by T.J. Nevin 23 September 1875
Call Number DL PX 158
National Library of Australia
John F. Morris, photographed by T.J. Nevin 25th April 1875
nla.pic-an24612762 PIC P1029/36 LOC Album 935
THE FULL FRONTAL GAZE
Most prisoner photographs taken in the 1880s in Tasmania required the subject to face the camera, and in some instances, show the backs of the hands clearly. The full frontal gaze marked the transitional phase between Thomas Nevin's early to mid-1870s commercial mounted carte-de-visite portraits and the 1880s prisoner photographs, taken more often than not at the Hobart Gaol by his brother John Nevin. No full profile photographs, in addition to the single full frontal shot, were taken until the late 1890s when the methods of Bertillon took hold.
Roland Hill, 23 yrs old, 20th February 1890.
Ref: TAHO GD 6719, p. 148. Gaol Register from the Sheriff's Office Hobart.
Remarkably, this prisoner identification photograph dated 1890 was printed in the commercial oval mount format, its sole difference from the earlier prisoner portraits taken by Thomas Nevin being the full frontal gaze of the prisoner. This photograph is not an old one, reprinted from an earlier photograph of the 1870s. It was taken of Roland Hill, 23 years old, a clerk and a first offender, sentenced to two years for larceny, and taken on incarceration at the Hobart Gaol by Constable John Nevin when Roland was transferred from Launceston.
Roland Hill, 23 yrs old, 20th February 1890.
Ref: TAHO GD 6719, detail mugshot from criminal sheet p. 148
OVERLAY PRINTS
Many of the photographs in this register GD 6719 dating to 1890 were reprinted from an earlier photograph of the prisoner, some quite visibly showing the original oval mount under the second printing within an oblong mount with rounded corners.
This photograph of Charles Dawson was taken by Constable John Nevin on 11 December 1888 at the Hobart Gaol adjacent to the Supreme Court where Dawson was sentenced to 4 years for uttering a forged cheque. The print from the negative was framed initially in an oval mount , and reprinted within an oblong mount, as an overlay, for reasons best known to the printers, whether at the gaol itself in Campbell Street or at the Municipal Police Office, Town Hall in Macquarie Street, or even at the government printing office and registrar in Davey Street. The duties of Constable John Nevin by 1888 was both photographer and gaol messenger. He would have conveyed copies of these prisoner photographs and criminal record sheets back and forth to any of these three authorities.
Charles Dawson, 33 yrs old, 11 December 1888.
Ref: TAHO GD 6719, detail mugshot printed with oblong overlay p. 101
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Showing posts with label Thomas Nevin's Family Portraits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Nevin's Family Portraits. Show all posts
Constable W. J. NEVIN at inquest for Frank GREEN 1882
NEVIN BROTHERS Thomas J. and Wm John (aka Jack)
HER MAJESTY'S GAOL HOBART
INQUEST for Constable Frank GREEN May 1882
The Nevin Brothers, photographer Thomas James Nevin (1842-1923) and Constable John (William John aka Jack, 1852-1891) served the Police and Prisons Departments of the Tasmanian government from the late 1860s to the late 1880s. Thomas was contracted as prisons and police photographer by the family solicitor, Attorney-General and later Premier, W. R. Giblin, from 1868, serving the New Town Territorial Police, the Hobart Municipal Police (1870s-1880s), and the Hobart City Council as special constable (1879) during the Chiniquy riots at the Hobart Town Hall where he was Keeper. He was also assistant bailiff in the City Police Court and Supreme Court (1880s).
Map of the old Hobart Gaol
Photo copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2008 ARR
William John Nevin's civil service
This photograph of Jack Nevin was taken by his brother Thomas J. Nevin ca. 1880. Gazing directly at the camera, he appeared relaxed and very savvy about the process of being photographed. The clothes he wore were suitable for everyday work in a foul place such as a prison. His salaried positions were primarily in administration, with a career path and ranking similar to the Gaol Keeper's until his untimely death during the typhoid epidemic of 1891.
Constable John Nevin (William John aka Jack Nevin), ca. 1880
Photographed by his brother Thomas J. Nevin.
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2009
Constable John (William John) Nevin (1852-1891), known to the family as Jack, was the younger brother of Tasmanian photographer Thomas J. Nevin. He was also his brother's assistant at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street during his brother’s commission as police photographer in prisons during the 1870s. They jointly maintained Thomas' old studio in New Town until the mid late 1880s when Thomas apparently ceased professional photography, although family BDM records show his occupation as "photographer" in 1907 (on the marriage certificate of daughter Minnie), in 1917 (on the marriage certificate of son Albert) and on his cemetery burial record of 1923.
The earliest date on record of Constable John Nevin's service with the police is 1870 when he joined the civil service, aged 18 yrs, and was stationed at the Asylum, Cascades Prison for Males, Hobart. His service continued at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street, as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered his duties as photographer, and as a hospital "Wardsman" until his untimely death while still in service, aged 39 yrs old. The registrar of his death gave his age as 43 yrs old; however, his burial records at Cornelian Bay Cemetery on 19th June 1891 listed his death at 39 yrs, i.e. born 1851, and this date is consistent with the sick lists of the Fairlie shipping records stating that he was a babe in arms, less than 9 months old, when he arrived in Hobart on 3rd July 1852 with his settler parents, John and Mary Anne Nevin nee Dickson, and his three older siblings Thomas James, Rebecca Jane, and Mary Ann. The Fairlie sick list recorded:
NEVIN, William John
Place of Abode: H.M. Gaol
Nature of qualification: Salary
Particulars of Qualification: H.M. Government
Nevin, William John: Electoral Roll for North Hobart 1884.
Source: Archives Office Tasmania
Applications to the constabulary 1870s-1880s
This record of Jack Nevin's application to the Constabulary Tasmania, signed by the Sheriff on 28th February 1877, not only gives details of Jack's former employment at the Cascades Goal for Males between August 1875 and April 1876, it details his physical characteristics: aged 25, single, height nearly 5ft 6", educated but not too well, a labourer by trade, a Wesleyan by religion and Belfast born, arriving free on the Fairlie (1852). He was of course no more than a babe in arms in 1852, noted on the ship's sick lists, but this record shows no physical deformity or disease as an adult.
These records are crudely categorical, as we know that Jack Nevin was highly literate, the son of a journalist and poet, brother of spelling-bee whizz, his sister Mary Ann, and brother too of Thomas, a police photographer with powerful political mentors. Because he was an amateur rather than professional photographer, his trade is listed as "labourer", i.e. no specialist apprenticeship or profession.
W. J. Nevin Applications to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1877 and 1881
Records courtesy State Library of Tasmania
While a constable at the Cascade Gaol for Males, Constable Nevin was involved in an incident which was reported in the Mercury, 27 October, 1875:
Constable Nevin, Mercury, 27 October 1875.
TRANSCRIPT
On 24th November 1881, Jack Nevin's second application - a renewal of the 1877 application - to the Constabulary Tasmania was again signed by the Sheriff. Aged 27, his details are more general on this form: religion is listed simply as "Protestant" and birthplace simply "Ireland" but he is still single - living with his parents at Kangaroo Valley - and still free of disease or deformity. His service at Cascades and the Hobart Gaol is listed, as is the lack of a trade. On his death certificate, his employment was registered as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered photographic duties and office administration.
Signed 24th November 1881, Constable (Wm) John Nevin's second application - a renewal of the 1877 application - to the Constabulary Tasmania.Records courtesy State Library of Tasmania.
Frank Green's death by gunshot wound 1882
View from the hill above Quarry to the Hobart Gaol
Courtesy Archives Office of Tasmania
Ref: 30-5718c. Unattributed, ca. 1885.
On the 14 May 1882, Constable W. J. Nevin was on duty at 11.45am when the guard in the sentry box on the hill at the Quarry behind the stone-shed near the Hobart Gaol failed to return. Constable Nevin was dispatched to investigate and found the guard, Frank Green, dying of a gunshot wound. "I am shot, John" were Green's dying words as Nevin lifted his head.
Constable Nevin and Constable Green
Death by Gunshot Wound
Mercury, 15 May 1882
TRANSCRIPT extract
Frank Green application to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1878
Courtesy State Library of Tasmania
Hobart Hospital record
Green, Frank
Record Type: Deaths
Property: General Hospital Hobart
Admission dates: 16 May 1882
Place of origin: Tasmania
Date of death: 16 May 1882
Source: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/1502065
At the inquest held at the Bird-in-Hand Hotel five days later, Constable John (W. J. ) Nevin was a key witness. The jury of seven reached a verdict of accidental death. Coroner Tarleton found the guard Frank Green had slipped when about to descend the hill and his double-barrelled breech-loading gun had caught in a string on his coat, discharging a bullet through his abdomen and lung. The press reported the incident and inquest in some detail from May 17 -May 20, 1882:
May 17: TRANSCRIPT
Source: THE MERCURY. (1882, May 17). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9009574
Exterior front view of ten men standing outside the "Bird-In-Hand" Hotel in Argyle Street, Hobart, ca. 1900
Source: Archives Office Tasmania [unattributed]
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/Archives/PH30-1-1944
May 19: TRANSCRIPT
Source: THE MERCURY. (1882, May 19). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas), p. 2
. Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9009658
Further report of the Coroner's findings on the death of Constable Green
The Tasmanian (Launceston, Tas. : 1881 - 1895) Sat 20 May 1882 Page 547 TASMANIA.
Source: TASMANIA. (1882, May 20). The Tasmanian (Launceston, Tas. ), p.548.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article201188202
City Police in Uniform, Hobart, late 1880s
City Police, Hobart
Images courtesy Archives Office of Tasmania
Unattributed, ca. 1885
Refs: (top) NS1013-1-19 (below) NS1013-1c
RELATED POSTS main weblog
HER MAJESTY'S GAOL HOBART
INQUEST for Constable Frank GREEN May 1882
The Nevin Brothers, photographer Thomas James Nevin (1842-1923) and Constable John (William John aka Jack, 1852-1891) served the Police and Prisons Departments of the Tasmanian government from the late 1860s to the late 1880s. Thomas was contracted as prisons and police photographer by the family solicitor, Attorney-General and later Premier, W. R. Giblin, from 1868, serving the New Town Territorial Police, the Hobart Municipal Police (1870s-1880s), and the Hobart City Council as special constable (1879) during the Chiniquy riots at the Hobart Town Hall where he was Keeper. He was also assistant bailiff in the City Police Court and Supreme Court (1880s).
Map of the old Hobart Gaol
Photo copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2008 ARR
William John Nevin's civil service
This photograph of Jack Nevin was taken by his brother Thomas J. Nevin ca. 1880. Gazing directly at the camera, he appeared relaxed and very savvy about the process of being photographed. The clothes he wore were suitable for everyday work in a foul place such as a prison. His salaried positions were primarily in administration, with a career path and ranking similar to the Gaol Keeper's until his untimely death during the typhoid epidemic of 1891.
Constable John Nevin (William John aka Jack Nevin), ca. 1880
Photographed by his brother Thomas J. Nevin.
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2009
Constable John (William John) Nevin (1852-1891), known to the family as Jack, was the younger brother of Tasmanian photographer Thomas J. Nevin. He was also his brother's assistant at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street during his brother’s commission as police photographer in prisons during the 1870s. They jointly maintained Thomas' old studio in New Town until the mid late 1880s when Thomas apparently ceased professional photography, although family BDM records show his occupation as "photographer" in 1907 (on the marriage certificate of daughter Minnie), in 1917 (on the marriage certificate of son Albert) and on his cemetery burial record of 1923.
The earliest date on record of Constable John Nevin's service with the police is 1870 when he joined the civil service, aged 18 yrs, and was stationed at the Asylum, Cascades Prison for Males, Hobart. His service continued at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street, as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered his duties as photographer, and as a hospital "Wardsman" until his untimely death while still in service, aged 39 yrs old. The registrar of his death gave his age as 43 yrs old; however, his burial records at Cornelian Bay Cemetery on 19th June 1891 listed his death at 39 yrs, i.e. born 1851, and this date is consistent with the sick lists of the Fairlie shipping records stating that he was a babe in arms, less than 9 months old, when he arrived in Hobart on 3rd July 1852 with his settler parents, John and Mary Anne Nevin nee Dickson, and his three older siblings Thomas James, Rebecca Jane, and Mary Ann. The Fairlie sick list recorded:
Folio 5: William Nevin, aged 6 months, Child of Guard; sick or hurt, convulsio; put on sick list 2 June 1852, discharged 9 June 1852 to duty.Constable John Nevin was a resident on salary to H. M. Government at the Hobart Gaol by 1884 when he registered on the Electoral Roll for the district of North Hobart. The Electoral Roll of the Electoral District of North Hobart, year commencing 11th April, 1884, showed this entry:
NEVIN, William John
Place of Abode: H.M. Gaol
Nature of qualification: Salary
Particulars of Qualification: H.M. Government
Nevin, William John: Electoral Roll for North Hobart 1884.
Source: Archives Office Tasmania
Applications to the constabulary 1870s-1880s
This record of Jack Nevin's application to the Constabulary Tasmania, signed by the Sheriff on 28th February 1877, not only gives details of Jack's former employment at the Cascades Goal for Males between August 1875 and April 1876, it details his physical characteristics: aged 25, single, height nearly 5ft 6", educated but not too well, a labourer by trade, a Wesleyan by religion and Belfast born, arriving free on the Fairlie (1852). He was of course no more than a babe in arms in 1852, noted on the ship's sick lists, but this record shows no physical deformity or disease as an adult.
These records are crudely categorical, as we know that Jack Nevin was highly literate, the son of a journalist and poet, brother of spelling-bee whizz, his sister Mary Ann, and brother too of Thomas, a police photographer with powerful political mentors. Because he was an amateur rather than professional photographer, his trade is listed as "labourer", i.e. no specialist apprenticeship or profession.
W. J. Nevin Applications to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1877 and 1881
Records courtesy State Library of Tasmania
While a constable at the Cascade Gaol for Males, Constable Nevin was involved in an incident which was reported in the Mercury, 27 October, 1875:
Constable Nevin, Mercury, 27 October 1875.
TRANSCRIPT
CITY POLICE COURT
Tuesday 26th October, 1875
Before Mr. Tarleton, Police Magistrate
PEACE DISTURBERS. - Robert Evans and William Inman were charged by Constable Pearce, of the Cascades, with having disturbed the peace in Upper Macquarie-street on the 24th inst. The defendants pleaded "not guilty". Constables Pearce and Nevin, of the Cascades, proved that the defendants were throwing stones and making a disturbance. The Police Magistrate said that in Upper Macquarie-street there existed the roughest of lads in Hobart Town. He would sentence both defendants to 14 days' imprisonment, and warn them that on proof of a second they would probably be birched.
On 24th November 1881, Jack Nevin's second application - a renewal of the 1877 application - to the Constabulary Tasmania was again signed by the Sheriff. Aged 27, his details are more general on this form: religion is listed simply as "Protestant" and birthplace simply "Ireland" but he is still single - living with his parents at Kangaroo Valley - and still free of disease or deformity. His service at Cascades and the Hobart Gaol is listed, as is the lack of a trade. On his death certificate, his employment was registered as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered photographic duties and office administration.
Signed 24th November 1881, Constable (Wm) John Nevin's second application - a renewal of the 1877 application - to the Constabulary Tasmania.Records courtesy State Library of Tasmania.
Frank Green's death by gunshot wound 1882
View from the hill above Quarry to the Hobart Gaol
Courtesy Archives Office of Tasmania
Ref: 30-5718c. Unattributed, ca. 1885.
On the 14 May 1882, Constable W. J. Nevin was on duty at 11.45am when the guard in the sentry box on the hill at the Quarry behind the stone-shed near the Hobart Gaol failed to return. Constable Nevin was dispatched to investigate and found the guard, Frank Green, dying of a gunshot wound. "I am shot, John" were Green's dying words as Nevin lifted his head.
Constable Nevin and Constable Green
Death by Gunshot Wound
Mercury, 15 May 1882
TRANSCRIPT extract
... At a quarter to 12, by which time it was usual for the guard to be at his post, Green was not present there, and the officer in charge, Mr. White, despatched Constable Nevin to see what detained him. Constable Nevin ascended the hill, and at the sentry-box situated at the corner of the workings, a little more than midway up the incline, found Green lying on the ground with his feet on the threshold of the box, and his rifle about a yard distant from him. The constable knelt down to lift up the head of the prostrate man, who said , "I am shot; let me alone. " Nevin then ran down and acquainted those in the yard with the accident, and Green was then conveyed to the hospital, where he lingered for half an hour, and then expired. It was found that he had been shot through the abdomen and lungs ...Frank Green was 21 yrs old, rather tall, a Catholic, single, born in Hobart and a former sailor when he joined the Constabulary for the first time, signed in by the Sheriff on October 1st, 1878.
Frank Green application to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1878
Courtesy State Library of Tasmania
Hobart Hospital record
Green, Frank
Record Type: Deaths
Property: General Hospital Hobart
Admission dates: 16 May 1882
Place of origin: Tasmania
Date of death: 16 May 1882
Source: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/NamesIndex/1502065
At the inquest held at the Bird-in-Hand Hotel five days later, Constable John (W. J. ) Nevin was a key witness. The jury of seven reached a verdict of accidental death. Coroner Tarleton found the guard Frank Green had slipped when about to descend the hill and his double-barrelled breech-loading gun had caught in a string on his coat, discharging a bullet through his abdomen and lung. The press reported the incident and inquest in some detail from May 17 -May 20, 1882:
May 17: TRANSCRIPT
DEATH by GUNSHOT WOUND.-A death under peculiar circumstances occurred yesterday, at the Government quarry, Park-street. Frank Green, aged about 25 years, an armed guard at the quarry, was upon duty in the forenoon on the crest of the hill above the workings. At 20 minutes to 12 the whistle to knock off work for dinner was sounded, and Green was then seen at his post. It was his duty, at this sounding of the whistle, to descend the hill into Park-street, there to remain on guard till the prisoners had filed out, At a quarter to 12, by which time it was usual for the guard to be at his post, Green was net present there, and the officer in charge, Mr. White, despatched Constable Nevin to see what detained him. Constable Nevin ascended the hill, and at the sentry-box situated at the corner of the workings, a little more than midway up the incline, found Green lying on the ground with his feet on the threshold of the box, and his rifle about a yard distant from him. The constable knelt down to lift up the head of the prostrate man, who said, " I am shot; let me alone." Nevin then ran down and acquainted those in the yard with the accident, and Green was then conveyed to the hospital, where he lingered for half an hour, and then expired. It was found that he had been shot through the abdomen and lungs. A strange fact in connection with this sad affair is that not one man in the quarry heard the report of the gun. Constable Higgins, of the Territorial Police, arrived at the sentry box before Green was removed, and to him the unfortunate man made a statement which leaves no doubt that the occurrence was purely accidental. It seems that Green was about to descend the hill, when he slipped, and his rifle caught either in a string which was attached to his hat or his overcoat. No doubt when he slipped the man threw up his arms to save himself, and so brought the muzzle to bear on his body, and the lock being entangled in the string or coat, the piece was discharged at that instant. The charge passed right through his body, and the marks of some of the slugs were subsequently found in an adjacent rock. The high wind which was blowing at the time accounts for the noise of the discharge not being heard by those who were in the neighbourhood. An inquest will be held upon the body. The deceased man was unmarried.
Source: THE MERCURY. (1882, May 17). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9009574
Exterior front view of ten men standing outside the "Bird-In-Hand" Hotel in Argyle Street, Hobart, ca. 1900
Source: Archives Office Tasmania [unattributed]
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Record/Archives/PH30-1-1944
May 19: TRANSCRIPT
INQUEST.- An inquest was yesterday held before Mr. Coroner Tarleton, and a jury of seven, Mr. Geo. Kerr being the foreman, at the Bird-in-Hand Hotel, Argyle-street, into the cause of the death of Francis Daniel Green, late armed guard at the Government quarry, Park-street. The jury having viewed the body, the evidence of W. J. Nevin, a constable at the gaol, who was on duty at the quarry on Tuesday last, was taken. He deposed that the deceased was on guard on the day in question, armed with a double-barrelled breech-loading gun. He was posted on the top of the quarry. At about 20 minutes to 12 o'clock that day the signal was given to cease work for the prisoners to go to the gaol for dinner. It was the duty at deceased to come down into Park-street when the prisoners were passing through the gates. Not seeing the deceased at his post when the prisoners had been mustered in the stoneshed, witness was sent to see what detained him. The wind was blowing strongly, and no report of firearms had been heard. Witness went to where Green was posted, and found him at the sentry-box, lying on the ground, turned partly on his right side but with his feet in the box. His gun was lying about a yard from him, its muzzle pointing not at him but up the hill. There was an odour of freshly-discharged powder. Witness said to him, "Frank, what is the matter?' He replied, "I am shot, John." Witness asked how it had happened, but the deceased appeared to be in too great pain to answer. Witness went to raise the deceased's head, but he said, " For God's sake, go away and leave me alone." Witness signalled to the station officer at the stoneshed that something was the matter, and taking up the gun, witness went down to him. On reaching the stoneshed, some of the police from the Supreme Court were sent up to the deceased, and the station officer, on looking at the gun, found that the right-hand barrel had been discharged. There was no one near the deceased when witness saw him lying on the ground. There were none of the prisoners missing, and the deceased in no way led him to believe that he had been shot by any one. Constable Matthew Higgins deposed that on the 16th inst, at a little before noon, he was standing at the door of the Supreme Court, when he was informed that a man had been shot at the quarry. Going to the sentry box on the hill he saw the deceased. Kneeling down he undid his waistcoat, and saw a large wound on the left side, just below the heart, from which blood was flowing. Witness asked deceased how it had happened. He answered that he was arranging his garments, when the gun exploded and shot him. The deceased was taken to the hospital. On examining the ground where the deceased had fallen, witness found the mark of a footslip, and of slugs having struck the rock. Dr. Holden deposed that he remembered the deceased being brought to the hospital. Witness had examined his wounds, and found a gunshot wound on the front of the body and several holes in the back, where the charge had passed through. He had also found some slugs in his clothing, and others under the skin. He was bleeding internally, but not externally. The wound in the front of the body showed that the weapon must have been close to the man when discharged. The wound was, from its character, almost necessarily fatal. The deceased died from internal haemorrhage, caused through the wound. A verdict of death by the accidental discharge of a gun was returned.
Source: THE MERCURY. (1882, May 19). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas), p. 2
. Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9009658
Further report of the Coroner's findings on the death of Constable Green
The Tasmanian (Launceston, Tas. : 1881 - 1895) Sat 20 May 1882 Page 547 TASMANIA.
Mr. Tarleton, the Coroner, held an inquiry on the body of the man Frank Green, who was accidentally shot on Tuesday while on guard over the prisoners working at the quarry. From the evidence taken, it appeared that the wind was blowing very hard at the time and no one heard any report of a gun, but a constable named W. J. Nevin, finding that Green did not come forward to do his accustomed duty at twenty minutes to twelve, when the men were marched to dinner, called out, and receiving no reply, went in search of him. He found Green on his side, with a discharged gun on the ground near him. In reply to Nevin's question, he said "Oh Jack I am shot" and when Nevin attempted to lift him up he said "For God's sake, let be." He spoke with great difficulty, but never said anything to lead Nevin to suppose it was anything but an accident. Dr. Holden said the muzzle of the gun must have been close to the man's body when it went off. The jury returned a verdict of death from accident.
Source: TASMANIA. (1882, May 20). The Tasmanian (Launceston, Tas. ), p.548.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article201188202
City Police in Uniform, Hobart, late 1880s
City Police, Hobart
Images courtesy Archives Office of Tasmania
Unattributed, ca. 1885
Refs: (top) NS1013-1-19 (below) NS1013-1c
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Younger brother Constable John (Jack) NEVIN (1852-1891)
NEVIN BROTHERS Thomas J. and John ( Wm John aka Jack)
HER MAJESTY'S GAOL HOBART
The Nevin Brothers, Thomas (T. J. Nevin, 1842-1923) and John (W. J. Nevin, 1852-1891) served the colonial government of Tasmania from the late 1860s to the late 1880s. Thomas was contracted with the Lands and Survey Dept from 1868 and as prisons and police photographer by Attorney-General W.R. Giblin, from 1872. He was the photographer on government contract serving the New Town Territorial Police from his New Town studio in the 1880s and the Hobart Municipal Police at the Hobart Town Hall during the 1870s. He was also a special constable during the Chiniquy riots at the Town Hall (1879) and assistant bailiff in the City Police Court and Supreme Court (1880s). Thomas's younger brother William John Nevin (1852-1891), known as Jack to the family, entered the Civil Service in 1871 at 18 yrs old in the capacity of warder at the Cascade Asylum. Known officially as Constable John Nevin, he was appointed messenger at the Hobart Gaol five years later,which position he held up to the time of his death during the typhoid epidemic of 1891.
The boy in this stereograph (figure on viewer's left) is Jack Nevin, later Constable John Nevin (William John), younger brother of commercial and police photographer Thomas J. Nevin. Jack is pictured standing next to a prison official who was probably Mr T. P. Ball, Superintendent of the Prisoners Barracks in 1857 at the Campbell Street Gaol.
Hobart Gaol, Campbell St.
Location: W.L. Crowther Library
State Library of Tasmania ADRI: AUTAS001125299420
Family Photographs
Younger brother Jack Nevin's signature pose in this photograph - left hand on hip - also appears in a family group photograph taken a decade later:
Caption:
This is a very young Jack Nevin ca. 1865, later Constable John Nevin in his favorite pose - left hand on hip - at the Hobart Gaol. Detail of stereo by his older brother Thomas J. Nevin (State Library of Tasmania)
The Nevin Group Portrait ca. 1870s (detail):
Jack Nevin, top right, Thomas Nevin seated
Copyright © KLW NFC & The Nevin Family Collections 2009 ARR
This is a detail of a group photo, taken in the early 1870s, around the time of Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin's wedding, July 1871, printed on thin paper and unmounted. Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin are both seated, with younger brother Jack Nevin standing in his signature pose, hands on hips again, on viewer's extreme right. The other members of this group may have included Mary Sophia Day, Elizabeth's younger sister, and photographers Alfred Bock and Samuel Clifford.
Constable John (Jack) Nevin was his elder brother's assistant at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street during Thomas Nevin's commissions as police photographer in prisons and police courts from 1876 when Thomas Nevin leased his commercial studio and set up studios at the Hobart Gaol and Municipal Police Office, Town Hall. He helped maintain one of their photographic studios in New Town, assisting in the production of stereographs and studio portraits intermittently from the 1860s to the late 1880s. He was employed at the Hobart Gaol under the supervision of the keeper Ringrose Atkins from 1874, and became a Constable on salary at the male prison at Cascades and then at H.M. Prison, Campbell St. Hobart in 1875, serving until his untimely death from typhoid fever at age 39 in 1891.
Constable John (Jack) Nevin ca 1874-6
Photographed by his brother Thomas Nevin
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Shelverton Private Collection 2006-2009 ARR.
In this image on thin paper and unmounted, Jack Nevin's brother Thomas captured him in a relaxed standing pose leaning on a book, the usual signifier of literacy in 19th century portraits, wearing a shirt, tie, fob watch, and three piece suit with velvet collars. In the later photograph (below) taken ca. 1880, Jack Nevin looks very relaxed and very savvy about the process of being photographed. His gaze is direct and very keen, his clothes suitable for everyday work in a foul place such as a prison. His salaried positions were primarily in administration, with a career path and ranking similar to the Keeper's. Older brother Thomas Nevin had been a Keeper too of a public institution, at the Hobart Town Hall between 1876-1880; a special constable during the Chiniquy Riots of 1879; Office Keeper for the Hobart City Corporation; and assistant bailiff in the courts during the 1880s. Constable John Nevin's presence at the Hobart Gaol points to a close family involvement by both Nevin brothers with prisoner documentation - visual and written.
Constable W. J. (Jack) Nevin ca. 1880.
Photo taken by his brother Thomas Nevin
Copyright © KLW NFC Private Collections 2009 ARR
In the Constabulary
This record of Jack Nevin's application to the Constabulary Tasmania, signed by the Sheriff on 28th February 1877, not only gives details of Jack's former employment at the Cascades Goal for Males between August 1875 and April 1876, it details his physical characteristics: aged 25, single, height nearly 5ft 6", educated but not too well, a labourer by trade, a Wesleyan by religion and Belfast born, arriving free on the Fairlie (1852). He was of course no more than a babe in arms in 1852, noted on the ship's sick lists, but this record shows no physical deformity or disease as an adult. These records are crudely categorical, as we know that Jack Nevin was highly literate, the son of a journalist and poet, and brother of spelling-bee whizz, his sister Mary Ann, and brother too of Thomas, a police photographer with powerful political mentors. Because he was an amateur rather than professional photographer, his trade is listed as "labourer", i.e. no specialist apprenticeship or profession.
W.J. Nevin Applications to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1877 and 1881
Records courtesy State Library of Tasmania
While a constable at the Cascade Gaol for Males, Constable Nevin was involved in an incident which was reported in the Mercury, 27 October, 1875:
Constable Nevin, Mercury, 27 October 1875.
TRANSCRIPT
Signed 24th November 1881, Constable (Wm) John Nevin's second application - a renewal of the 1877 application - to the Constabulary Tasmania. Records courtesy State Library of Tasmania.
Death by Gunshot Wound at the Quarry 1882
View from the hill above Quarry to the Hobart Gaol
Courtesy Archives Office of Tasmania
Ref: 30-5718c. Unattributed, ca. 1885.
On the 14 May 1882, Constable W. J. Nevin was on duty at 11.45am when the guard in the sentry box on the hill at the Quarry behind the stone-shed near the Hobart Gaol failed to return. Constable Nevin was dispatched to investigate and found the guard, Frank Green, dying of a gunshot wound. "I am shot, John" were Green's dying words as Nevin lifted his head.
Constable Nevin and Constable Green
Death by Gunshot Wound
Mercury, 15 May 1882
TRANSCRIPT extract
Frank Green application to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1878
Courtesy State Library of Tasmania
At the inquest held at the Bird-in-Hand Hotel five days later, Constable John Nevin was a key witness. The jury of seven reached a verdict of accidental death. Coroner Tarleton found the guard Frank Green had slipped when about to descend the hill and his double-barrelled breech-loading gun had caught in a string on his coat, discharging a bullet through his abdomen and lung.
Inquest at the Bird-in-Hand, Const. W. J. Nevin's deposition
The Mercury 19 May 1882
Further report of the Coroner's findings on the death of Constable Green
The Tasmanian (Launceston, Tas. : 1881 - 1895) Sat 20 May 1882 Page 547 TASMANIA.
Electoral Roll 1884
The Electoral Roll of the Electoral District of North Hobart, year commencing 11th April, 1884, showed this entry:
NEVIN, William John
Place of Abode: H.M. Gaol
Nature of qualification: Salary
Particulars of Qualification: H.M. Government
Nevin, William John: Electoral Roll for North Hobart 1884.
Source: Archives Office Tasmania
mfmN206 Tasmania Electoral Roll
SLTX/AO/EP/425 (NLA)
Vols: 1884-85;1886;1886-88
The Royal Arms insignia on this document and which appeared on all government documents in 19th century Tasmania also appeared on Thomas Nevin's government contractor studio stamp when printed on the verso of convict identification photos taken at the Port Arthur prison and Hobart Town Gaol for the Municipal Police Office, Hobart Town Hall, and on several of his portraits of officials and their families in the employ of the Hobart City Corporation (Mayor's Office, Hobart Town Hall).
Recto and verso of photograph of prisoner Wm Smith per Gilmore (3)
Verso with T. J. Nevin's government contractor stamp printed with the Royal Arms insignia.
Carte numbered "199" on recto
QVMAG Ref: 1985.p.131
The Keeper of H. M. Gaol, Hobart, from the 1st January 1874 was Ringrose Austin Atkins (see record above). He was listed on the Electoral Roll for North Hobart for the year commencing April 11th, 1884 on "salary", and resident at the Gaol in Campbell Street. The gaol was conventionally known as the Campbell Street Gaol [CSG]. In the same year, 1884, William John Nevin was also listed on "salary" at H. M. Gaol, Hobart, and also resident there. His position is not listed, but it is clear that he was in training as Keeper under Ringrose Atkins' supervision. The term "Keeper" denotes a manager of an archive: it is still used as a position title at the Public Records Office of Victoria.
Hon. W. R. Giblin ca. 1874
Photo by T.J. Nevin (verso stamped)
Archives Office of Tasmania Ref: NS1013-1-1971
Family solicitor and mentor to the Nevin brothers, Attorney-General W. R. Giblin (1840-1887)
Map of the old Hobart Gaol
Photo copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2008 ARR
Click on thumbnail for large view
City Police in Uniform, Hobart, late 1880s
City Police, Hobart
Images courtesy Archives Office of Tasmania
Unattributed, ca. 1885
Refs: (top) NS1013-1-19 (below) NS1013-1c.
RELATED POSTS main weblog
HER MAJESTY'S GAOL HOBART
The Nevin Brothers, Thomas (T. J. Nevin, 1842-1923) and John (W. J. Nevin, 1852-1891) served the colonial government of Tasmania from the late 1860s to the late 1880s. Thomas was contracted with the Lands and Survey Dept from 1868 and as prisons and police photographer by Attorney-General W.R. Giblin, from 1872. He was the photographer on government contract serving the New Town Territorial Police from his New Town studio in the 1880s and the Hobart Municipal Police at the Hobart Town Hall during the 1870s. He was also a special constable during the Chiniquy riots at the Town Hall (1879) and assistant bailiff in the City Police Court and Supreme Court (1880s). Thomas's younger brother William John Nevin (1852-1891), known as Jack to the family, entered the Civil Service in 1871 at 18 yrs old in the capacity of warder at the Cascade Asylum. Known officially as Constable John Nevin, he was appointed messenger at the Hobart Gaol five years later,which position he held up to the time of his death during the typhoid epidemic of 1891.
The boy in this stereograph (figure on viewer's left) is Jack Nevin, later Constable John Nevin (William John), younger brother of commercial and police photographer Thomas J. Nevin. Jack is pictured standing next to a prison official who was probably Mr T. P. Ball, Superintendent of the Prisoners Barracks in 1857 at the Campbell Street Gaol.
Hobart Gaol, Campbell St.
Location: W.L. Crowther Library
State Library of Tasmania ADRI: AUTAS001125299420
Family Photographs
Younger brother Jack Nevin's signature pose in this photograph - left hand on hip - also appears in a family group photograph taken a decade later:
Caption:
This is a very young Jack Nevin ca. 1865, later Constable John Nevin in his favorite pose - left hand on hip - at the Hobart Gaol. Detail of stereo by his older brother Thomas J. Nevin (State Library of Tasmania)
The Nevin Group Portrait ca. 1870s (detail):
Jack Nevin, top right, Thomas Nevin seated
Copyright © KLW NFC & The Nevin Family Collections 2009 ARR
This is a detail of a group photo, taken in the early 1870s, around the time of Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin's wedding, July 1871, printed on thin paper and unmounted. Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin are both seated, with younger brother Jack Nevin standing in his signature pose, hands on hips again, on viewer's extreme right. The other members of this group may have included Mary Sophia Day, Elizabeth's younger sister, and photographers Alfred Bock and Samuel Clifford.
Constable John (Jack) Nevin was his elder brother's assistant at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street during Thomas Nevin's commissions as police photographer in prisons and police courts from 1876 when Thomas Nevin leased his commercial studio and set up studios at the Hobart Gaol and Municipal Police Office, Town Hall. He helped maintain one of their photographic studios in New Town, assisting in the production of stereographs and studio portraits intermittently from the 1860s to the late 1880s. He was employed at the Hobart Gaol under the supervision of the keeper Ringrose Atkins from 1874, and became a Constable on salary at the male prison at Cascades and then at H.M. Prison, Campbell St. Hobart in 1875, serving until his untimely death from typhoid fever at age 39 in 1891.
Constable John (Jack) Nevin ca 1874-6
Photographed by his brother Thomas Nevin
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Shelverton Private Collection 2006-2009 ARR.
In this image on thin paper and unmounted, Jack Nevin's brother Thomas captured him in a relaxed standing pose leaning on a book, the usual signifier of literacy in 19th century portraits, wearing a shirt, tie, fob watch, and three piece suit with velvet collars. In the later photograph (below) taken ca. 1880, Jack Nevin looks very relaxed and very savvy about the process of being photographed. His gaze is direct and very keen, his clothes suitable for everyday work in a foul place such as a prison. His salaried positions were primarily in administration, with a career path and ranking similar to the Keeper's. Older brother Thomas Nevin had been a Keeper too of a public institution, at the Hobart Town Hall between 1876-1880; a special constable during the Chiniquy Riots of 1879; Office Keeper for the Hobart City Corporation; and assistant bailiff in the courts during the 1880s. Constable John Nevin's presence at the Hobart Gaol points to a close family involvement by both Nevin brothers with prisoner documentation - visual and written.
Constable W. J. (Jack) Nevin ca. 1880.
Photo taken by his brother Thomas Nevin
Copyright © KLW NFC Private Collections 2009 ARR
In the Constabulary
This record of Jack Nevin's application to the Constabulary Tasmania, signed by the Sheriff on 28th February 1877, not only gives details of Jack's former employment at the Cascades Goal for Males between August 1875 and April 1876, it details his physical characteristics: aged 25, single, height nearly 5ft 6", educated but not too well, a labourer by trade, a Wesleyan by religion and Belfast born, arriving free on the Fairlie (1852). He was of course no more than a babe in arms in 1852, noted on the ship's sick lists, but this record shows no physical deformity or disease as an adult. These records are crudely categorical, as we know that Jack Nevin was highly literate, the son of a journalist and poet, and brother of spelling-bee whizz, his sister Mary Ann, and brother too of Thomas, a police photographer with powerful political mentors. Because he was an amateur rather than professional photographer, his trade is listed as "labourer", i.e. no specialist apprenticeship or profession.
W.J. Nevin Applications to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1877 and 1881
Records courtesy State Library of Tasmania
While a constable at the Cascade Gaol for Males, Constable Nevin was involved in an incident which was reported in the Mercury, 27 October, 1875:
Constable Nevin, Mercury, 27 October 1875.
TRANSCRIPT
CITY POLICE COURTOn 24th November 1881, Jack Nevin's second application - a renewal of the 1877 application - to the Constabulary Tasmania was again signed by the Sheriff. Aged 27, his details are more general on this form: religion is listed simply as "Protestant" and birthplace simply "Ireland" but he is still single - living with his parents at Kangaroo Valley - and still free of disease or deformity. His service at Cascades and the Hobart Gaol is listed, as is the lack of a trade. On his death certificate, his employment was registered as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered photographic duties and office administration.
Tuesday 26th October, 1875
Before Mr. Tarleton, Police Magistrate
PEACE DISTURBERS. - Robert Evans and William Inman were charged by Constable Pearce, of the Cascades, with having disturbed the peace in Upper Macquarie-street on the 24th inst. The defendants pleaded "not guilty". Constables Pearce and Nevin, of the Cascades, proved that the defendants were throwing stones and making a disturbance. The Police Magistrate said that in Upper Macquarie-street there existed the roughest of lads in Hobart Town. He would sentence both defendants to 14 days' imprisonment, and warn them that on proof of a second they would probably be birched.
Signed 24th November 1881, Constable (Wm) John Nevin's second application - a renewal of the 1877 application - to the Constabulary Tasmania. Records courtesy State Library of Tasmania.
Death by Gunshot Wound at the Quarry 1882
View from the hill above Quarry to the Hobart Gaol
Courtesy Archives Office of Tasmania
Ref: 30-5718c. Unattributed, ca. 1885.
On the 14 May 1882, Constable W. J. Nevin was on duty at 11.45am when the guard in the sentry box on the hill at the Quarry behind the stone-shed near the Hobart Gaol failed to return. Constable Nevin was dispatched to investigate and found the guard, Frank Green, dying of a gunshot wound. "I am shot, John" were Green's dying words as Nevin lifted his head.
Constable Nevin and Constable Green
Death by Gunshot Wound
Mercury, 15 May 1882
TRANSCRIPT extract
... At a quarter to 12, by which time it was usual for the guard to be at his post, Green was not present there, and the officer in charge, Mr. White, despatched Constable Nevin to see what detained him. Constable Nevin ascended the hill, and at the sentry-box situated at the corner of the workings, a little more than midway up the incline, found Green lying on the ground with his feet on the threshold of the box, and his rifle about a yard distant from him. The constable knelt down to lift up the head of the prostrate man, who said , "I am shot; let me alone. " Nevin then ran down and acquainted those in the yard with the accident, and Green was then conveyed to the hospital, where he lingered for half an hour, and then expired. It was found that he had been shot through the abdomen and lungs ...Frank Green was 21 yrs old, rather tall, a Catholic, single, born in Hobart and a former sailor when he joined the Constabulary for the first time, signed in by the Sheriff on October 1st, 1878.
Frank Green application to join the Constabulary Tasmania 1878
Courtesy State Library of Tasmania
At the inquest held at the Bird-in-Hand Hotel five days later, Constable John Nevin was a key witness. The jury of seven reached a verdict of accidental death. Coroner Tarleton found the guard Frank Green had slipped when about to descend the hill and his double-barrelled breech-loading gun had caught in a string on his coat, discharging a bullet through his abdomen and lung.
Inquest at the Bird-in-Hand, Const. W. J. Nevin's deposition
The Mercury 19 May 1882
Further report of the Coroner's findings on the death of Constable Green
The Tasmanian (Launceston, Tas. : 1881 - 1895) Sat 20 May 1882 Page 547 TASMANIA.
Electoral Roll 1884
The Electoral Roll of the Electoral District of North Hobart, year commencing 11th April, 1884, showed this entry:
NEVIN, William John
Place of Abode: H.M. Gaol
Nature of qualification: Salary
Particulars of Qualification: H.M. Government
Nevin, William John: Electoral Roll for North Hobart 1884.
Source: Archives Office Tasmania
mfmN206 Tasmania Electoral Roll
SLTX/AO/EP/425 (NLA)
Vols: 1884-85;1886;1886-88
The Royal Arms insignia on this document and which appeared on all government documents in 19th century Tasmania also appeared on Thomas Nevin's government contractor studio stamp when printed on the verso of convict identification photos taken at the Port Arthur prison and Hobart Town Gaol for the Municipal Police Office, Hobart Town Hall, and on several of his portraits of officials and their families in the employ of the Hobart City Corporation (Mayor's Office, Hobart Town Hall).
Recto and verso of photograph of prisoner Wm Smith per Gilmore (3)
Verso with T. J. Nevin's government contractor stamp printed with the Royal Arms insignia.
Carte numbered "199" on recto
QVMAG Ref: 1985.p.131
The Keeper of H. M. Gaol, Hobart, from the 1st January 1874 was Ringrose Austin Atkins (see record above). He was listed on the Electoral Roll for North Hobart for the year commencing April 11th, 1884 on "salary", and resident at the Gaol in Campbell Street. The gaol was conventionally known as the Campbell Street Gaol [CSG]. In the same year, 1884, William John Nevin was also listed on "salary" at H. M. Gaol, Hobart, and also resident there. His position is not listed, but it is clear that he was in training as Keeper under Ringrose Atkins' supervision. The term "Keeper" denotes a manager of an archive: it is still used as a position title at the Public Records Office of Victoria.
Hon. W. R. Giblin ca. 1874
Photo by T.J. Nevin (verso stamped)
Archives Office of Tasmania Ref: NS1013-1-1971
Family solicitor and mentor to the Nevin brothers, Attorney-General W. R. Giblin (1840-1887)
Map of the old Hobart Gaol
Photo copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2008 ARR
Click on thumbnail for large view
City Police in Uniform, Hobart, late 1880s
City Police, Hobart
Images courtesy Archives Office of Tasmania
Unattributed, ca. 1885
Refs: (top) NS1013-1-19 (below) NS1013-1c.
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- Nepotism, corruption and Port Arthur 1873
- W.R. Giblin, Judge, Attorney-General and Premier
Jack Nevin at the Hobart Gaol 1860s
Constable John (W. J. aka Jack) NEVIN 1860s-1800s
Prisoners' barracks, Hobart Gaol, Campbell St.
Stereographs, colour and frame, 1860s
Map of the old Hobart Gaol
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2009
Three early stereographs of the Hobart Gaol
These three stereographs (below) of the H. M. Gaol, known as the Campbell Street Gaol, Hobart Town, taken in the mid 1860s are held in the State Library of Tasmania. Colour auto-adjustment of the first one in particular - depicting Jack Nevin as a boy and a top-hatted man, possibly the Superintendent J.P. Ball in the courtyard of the gaol - has revealed the yellow mount and arch framing used by Tasmanian photographer Alfred Bock, and his junior partner Thomas J. Nevin in his stereograph series from the 1860s located at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery.
Prolific stereographer Samuel Clifford (1827-1890), Thomas J. Nevin’s long time friend and partner, used the same paper and framing for an exhibition of 100 stereoscopic views at Melbourne’s 1866 Intercolonial Exhibition. Clifford’s association with the Gaol was long-standing: between 1851 and 1856 he was the storekeeper at the Hobart Town Prisoners’ Barracks (Kerr, 1992:164), the subject of these three views below. Clifford reprinted many of Thomas J. Nevin's commercial negatives for his former private clientele after 1876 on Nevin joining the civil service as full-time Keeper of the Hobart Town Hall.
An unusual monogram appears on the verso of the last in this series - “J. P. Ball” . This monogram appears on the verso of another stereo at the State Library of Trinity Church with this note in the catalogue:
Source: University of Tasmania ePrints
Lilac fixer was used extensively to cater to contemporary taste in the printing of photographs during the 1860s. These two versions of each of the three early stereographs taken at the Hobart Gaol, also known as the Prisoners' Barracks, Campbell St., show the print (a) scanned for digital display by the State Library of Tasmania, and (b) auto colour-corrected to reveal the colour of the mount.
Above: scan at AOT
Below: colour auto-adjusted
Title: View of the prisoners' barracks, Campbell Street
Creator(s):Unknown
Date: ca. 1860
Description: 1 stereoscopic pair of photographs : sepia toned ; 9 x 18 cm. (mount)
Notes: Descriptive inscription in ink on verso., Image size 71 x 69 mm. each.
Subjects: Prisoners' Barracks (Hobart, Tas.) - History - 1851-1901
Location: W.L. Crowther Library
https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/AUTAS001125299420/AUTAS001125299420
Above: scan at AOT
Below: colour auto-adjusted
Title: Prisoners Barracks i.e. Gaol, Hobart Town
Creator(s):Unknown
Date: ca. 1865
Description: 1 stereoscopic pair of photographs : sepia toned ; 7 x 7 cm. each, on mount 9 x 18 cm.
Notes: Title inscribed in ink in centre of verso, in Sir William Crowther's hand., Date and accession number in pencil upper right corner of verso., Exact size 69 x 66 mm. each, on mount 86 x 171 mm.
Location: W.L. Crowther Library
https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/AUTAS001124851619/AUTAS001124851619
Above: scan at AOT
Below: colour auto-adjusted
Title: Interior, Hobart Gaol
Creator(s):Unknown
Date: ca. 1865
Description: 1 stereoscopic pair of photographs : sepia toned ; 8 x 7 cm. each, on mount 9 x 18 cm.
Notes: On verso: title inscribed in ink in upper left, in Sir William Crowther's hand ; the no. 63, circled, in pencil in centre in unknown hand ; monogram in ink on right side, consistent with one identified as J.P. Ball in stereoscope 8/14., Date and accession number in pencil upper right corner of verso., Exact size 72 x 68 mm. each, on mount 86 x 171 mm.
Format: photograph
Location: W.L. Crowther Library
https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/AUTAS001124851627/AUTAS001124851627
Jack Nevin at the Prisoners' Barracks
The boy in this stereograph (figure on viewer's left) is Jack Nevin, the younger brother of commercial and police photographer Thomas J. Nevin. He was photographed standing in conversation with an older man in top hat, perhaps prison official Mr J. P. Ball, Superintendent of the Prisoners Barracks, Campbell Street, Hobart, Tasmania.
Source: "View of the prisoners' barracks, Campbell Street", 1860s
W.L. Crowther Library State Library of Tasmania
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/AUTAS001125299420/AUTAS001125299420
Detail of stereo right image above: A very young Jack Nevin ca. 1865, later Constable W. John Nevin in his favourite pose - left hand on hip - at the Hobart Gaol.
William John Nevin (1851-1891), known as Jack to the family, and as Constable John Nevin on joining the civil service at age 18 yrs in 1870, was stationed at the Asylum, Cascades Prison for Males, Hobart until 1876. His service continued at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street, as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered his duties as photographer, and as a hospital "Wardsman" until his untimely death in the typhoid epidemic of 1891 while still in service, aged 39 yrs old. The registrar of his death gave his age as 43 yrs old; however, his burial records at Cornelian Bay Cemetery on 19th June 1891 listed his death at 39 yrs, i.e. born 1851, and this date is consistent with the sick lists of the Fairlie shipping records stating that he was a babe in arms, less than 9 months old, when he arrived in Hobart on 3rd July 1852 with his settler parents, his father John Nevin snr, his mother Mary Anne (Dickson) Nevin, and his three older siblings: Thomas James Nevin, Rebecca Jane Nevin, and Mary Ann Nevin. The Fairlie sick list recorded:
A full-length portrait of William John Nevin, 16 years old, taken by his brother Thomas J. Nevin in early 1868 during the visit to Hobart Tasmania of Alfred Ernest Albert, the Duke of Edinburgh, second son of Queen Victoria on board the Royal yacht HMS Galatea, shows even more clearly the typical pose and dress of young William John aka Jack Nevin, choices made whenever he was photographed while still a youth, left arm bent, hand on hip, clean shaven (until his twenties when he favoured a moustache), a three piece suit with fob chain, and jacket with velvet revers (lapels).
Subject: William John Nevin (1852-1891), known as Jack to the family;
also known as Constable John Nevin from 1870-1891
Photographers: Thomas J. Nevin (older brother) and Robert Smith, as the firm NEVIN & SMITH
Location and Date: 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart, Tasmania, January 1868.
Details: verso stamped with Prince of Wales blazon of three feathers, coronet and Ich Dien;
"From Nevin & Smith late Bock's, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart Town"
Source: Private Collection, Sydney Rare Books Auction, June 2019
Jack Nevin's signature pose in this photograph - left hand on hip - also appears in a family group photograph taken in 1871:
Detail of group photo: Nevin Group Portrait taken at the wedding of Thomas J. Nevin and Elizabeth Rachel Day, July 1871:
Jack Nevin, top right, Thomas James Nevin snr and Elizabeth Rachel (Day) Nevin seated
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2003
This detail of a group photo taken (by whom?) at the time of Thomas James Nevin and Elizabeth Rachel Day's marriage, 12 July 1871 at the Wesleyan Chapel, Kangaroo Valley, together with wedding guests, shows the bridal couple Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin seated and younger brother Jack Nevin standing with hands on hips, on viewer's extreme right.
A younger Jack Nevin standing on viewer's extreme right
Nevin Group Portrait taken at the wedding of Thomas J. Nevin and Elizabeth Rachel Day, July 1871
Jack Nevin, top right, Thomas James Nevin snr and Elizabeth Rachel (Day) Nevin seated
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2003
Constable John (William John aka Jack) Nevin ca 1874-6
Photographed by his brother Thomas J. Nevin
City Photograph Establishment, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart, Tasmania
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint & Private Collection of Denis Shelverton 2006
This image was scanned from a photograph taken ca. 1874-6 which had been printed on thin paper and left unmounted. It was pasted into the scrapbook of George Nevin (1880-1957), the fourth son of Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin, born at the Hobart Town Hall during Nevin's incumbency as Hall Keeper.
The original photograph by Thomas J. Nevin was taken at his studio the City Photographic Establishment, 140 Elizabeth Street, Hobart Town. Even such a poor image gives details of the studio decor which featured a diamond-patterned carpet, and a table with griffin-shaped legs. Thomas J. Nevin captured his younger brother Jack in a relaxed standing pose leaning on a book (one of those key Victorian signifiers of literacy), wearing a shirt, tie, fob watch, and three piece suit with velvet collars.
In this later photograph (below) taken ca. 1880, Jack Nevin looks very relaxed and very savvy about the process of being photographed. His gaze is direct and very keen, his clothes suitable for everyday work in a foul place such as a prison. His salaried positions were primarily in administration, with a career path and ranking similar to the Gaol Keeper's until his untimely death during the typhoid epidemic of 1891. Older brother Thomas Nevin had been a Keeper too of a public institution, at the Hobart Town Hall between 1876-1880; a special constable during the Chiniquy Riots of 1879, and assistant bailiff in the courts during the 1880s.
Constable John Nevin (William John aka Jack Nevin), ca. 1880
Photographed by his brother Thomas J. Nevin.
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2009
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Prisoners' barracks, Hobart Gaol, Campbell St.
Stereographs, colour and frame, 1860s
Map of the old Hobart Gaol
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2009
Three early stereographs of the Hobart Gaol
These three stereographs (below) of the H. M. Gaol, known as the Campbell Street Gaol, Hobart Town, taken in the mid 1860s are held in the State Library of Tasmania. Colour auto-adjustment of the first one in particular - depicting Jack Nevin as a boy and a top-hatted man, possibly the Superintendent J.P. Ball in the courtyard of the gaol - has revealed the yellow mount and arch framing used by Tasmanian photographer Alfred Bock, and his junior partner Thomas J. Nevin in his stereograph series from the 1860s located at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery.
Prolific stereographer Samuel Clifford (1827-1890), Thomas J. Nevin’s long time friend and partner, used the same paper and framing for an exhibition of 100 stereoscopic views at Melbourne’s 1866 Intercolonial Exhibition. Clifford’s association with the Gaol was long-standing: between 1851 and 1856 he was the storekeeper at the Hobart Town Prisoners’ Barracks (Kerr, 1992:164), the subject of these three views below. Clifford reprinted many of Thomas J. Nevin's commercial negatives for his former private clientele after 1876 on Nevin joining the civil service as full-time Keeper of the Hobart Town Hall.
An unusual monogram appears on the verso of the last in this series - “J. P. Ball” . This monogram appears on the verso of another stereo at the State Library of Trinity Church with this note in the catalogue:
“Monogram in ink on left side of verso, with [J.P. Ball] in pencil, probably printed by G.T. Stilwell”The late G. T. Stilwell was the curator of the ALMFA and Special Collections Librarian but who was J.P. Ball? He may have been one of more than twenty people named Ball living in Hobart at the time. There was an established firm of solicitors called Gill & Ball in the 1870s, whose company name can be seen on the office windows - building on left - in the photograph below (not dated):
Source: University of Tasmania ePrints
Lilac fixer was used extensively to cater to contemporary taste in the printing of photographs during the 1860s. These two versions of each of the three early stereographs taken at the Hobart Gaol, also known as the Prisoners' Barracks, Campbell St., show the print (a) scanned for digital display by the State Library of Tasmania, and (b) auto colour-corrected to reveal the colour of the mount.
Above: scan at AOT
Below: colour auto-adjusted
Title: View of the prisoners' barracks, Campbell Street
Creator(s):Unknown
Date: ca. 1860
Description: 1 stereoscopic pair of photographs : sepia toned ; 9 x 18 cm. (mount)
Notes: Descriptive inscription in ink on verso., Image size 71 x 69 mm. each.
Subjects: Prisoners' Barracks (Hobart, Tas.) - History - 1851-1901
Location: W.L. Crowther Library
https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/AUTAS001125299420/AUTAS001125299420
Above: scan at AOT
Below: colour auto-adjusted
Title: Prisoners Barracks i.e. Gaol, Hobart Town
Creator(s):Unknown
Date: ca. 1865
Description: 1 stereoscopic pair of photographs : sepia toned ; 7 x 7 cm. each, on mount 9 x 18 cm.
Notes: Title inscribed in ink in centre of verso, in Sir William Crowther's hand., Date and accession number in pencil upper right corner of verso., Exact size 69 x 66 mm. each, on mount 86 x 171 mm.
Location: W.L. Crowther Library
https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/AUTAS001124851619/AUTAS001124851619
Above: scan at AOT
Below: colour auto-adjusted
Title: Interior, Hobart Gaol
Creator(s):Unknown
Date: ca. 1865
Description: 1 stereoscopic pair of photographs : sepia toned ; 8 x 7 cm. each, on mount 9 x 18 cm.
Notes: On verso: title inscribed in ink in upper left, in Sir William Crowther's hand ; the no. 63, circled, in pencil in centre in unknown hand ; monogram in ink on right side, consistent with one identified as J.P. Ball in stereoscope 8/14., Date and accession number in pencil upper right corner of verso., Exact size 72 x 68 mm. each, on mount 86 x 171 mm.
Format: photograph
Location: W.L. Crowther Library
https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/AUTAS001124851627/AUTAS001124851627
Jack Nevin at the Prisoners' Barracks
The boy in this stereograph (figure on viewer's left) is Jack Nevin, the younger brother of commercial and police photographer Thomas J. Nevin. He was photographed standing in conversation with an older man in top hat, perhaps prison official Mr J. P. Ball, Superintendent of the Prisoners Barracks, Campbell Street, Hobart, Tasmania.
Source: "View of the prisoners' barracks, Campbell Street", 1860s
W.L. Crowther Library State Library of Tasmania
Link: https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/AUTAS001125299420/AUTAS001125299420
Detail of stereo right image above: A very young Jack Nevin ca. 1865, later Constable W. John Nevin in his favourite pose - left hand on hip - at the Hobart Gaol.
William John Nevin (1851-1891), known as Jack to the family, and as Constable John Nevin on joining the civil service at age 18 yrs in 1870, was stationed at the Asylum, Cascades Prison for Males, Hobart until 1876. His service continued at the Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street, as "Gaol Messenger", a rank which covered his duties as photographer, and as a hospital "Wardsman" until his untimely death in the typhoid epidemic of 1891 while still in service, aged 39 yrs old. The registrar of his death gave his age as 43 yrs old; however, his burial records at Cornelian Bay Cemetery on 19th June 1891 listed his death at 39 yrs, i.e. born 1851, and this date is consistent with the sick lists of the Fairlie shipping records stating that he was a babe in arms, less than 9 months old, when he arrived in Hobart on 3rd July 1852 with his settler parents, his father John Nevin snr, his mother Mary Anne (Dickson) Nevin, and his three older siblings: Thomas James Nevin, Rebecca Jane Nevin, and Mary Ann Nevin. The Fairlie sick list recorded:
Folio 5: William Nevin, aged 6 months, Child of Guard; sick or hurt, convulsio; put on sick list 2 June 1852, discharged 9 June 1852 to duty.Their father John Nevin snr, former soldier of the Royal Scots First Regiment with service in the West Indies and Canada, worked the family's passage on the Fairlie as guard of the 292 adult male convicts and warden of 32 boys exiled from Parkhurst prison.
A full-length portrait of William John Nevin, 16 years old, taken by his brother Thomas J. Nevin in early 1868 during the visit to Hobart Tasmania of Alfred Ernest Albert, the Duke of Edinburgh, second son of Queen Victoria on board the Royal yacht HMS Galatea, shows even more clearly the typical pose and dress of young William John aka Jack Nevin, choices made whenever he was photographed while still a youth, left arm bent, hand on hip, clean shaven (until his twenties when he favoured a moustache), a three piece suit with fob chain, and jacket with velvet revers (lapels).
Subject: William John Nevin (1852-1891), known as Jack to the family;
also known as Constable John Nevin from 1870-1891
Photographers: Thomas J. Nevin (older brother) and Robert Smith, as the firm NEVIN & SMITH
Location and Date: 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart, Tasmania, January 1868.
Details: verso stamped with Prince of Wales blazon of three feathers, coronet and Ich Dien;
"From Nevin & Smith late Bock's, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart Town"
Source: Private Collection, Sydney Rare Books Auction, June 2019
Jack Nevin's signature pose in this photograph - left hand on hip - also appears in a family group photograph taken in 1871:
Detail of group photo: Nevin Group Portrait taken at the wedding of Thomas J. Nevin and Elizabeth Rachel Day, July 1871:
Jack Nevin, top right, Thomas James Nevin snr and Elizabeth Rachel (Day) Nevin seated
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2003
This detail of a group photo taken (by whom?) at the time of Thomas James Nevin and Elizabeth Rachel Day's marriage, 12 July 1871 at the Wesleyan Chapel, Kangaroo Valley, together with wedding guests, shows the bridal couple Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin seated and younger brother Jack Nevin standing with hands on hips, on viewer's extreme right.
A younger Jack Nevin standing on viewer's extreme right
Nevin Group Portrait taken at the wedding of Thomas J. Nevin and Elizabeth Rachel Day, July 1871
Jack Nevin, top right, Thomas James Nevin snr and Elizabeth Rachel (Day) Nevin seated
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2003
Constable John (William John aka Jack) Nevin ca 1874-6
Photographed by his brother Thomas J. Nevin
City Photograph Establishment, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart, Tasmania
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint & Private Collection of Denis Shelverton 2006
This image was scanned from a photograph taken ca. 1874-6 which had been printed on thin paper and left unmounted. It was pasted into the scrapbook of George Nevin (1880-1957), the fourth son of Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin, born at the Hobart Town Hall during Nevin's incumbency as Hall Keeper.
The original photograph by Thomas J. Nevin was taken at his studio the City Photographic Establishment, 140 Elizabeth Street, Hobart Town. Even such a poor image gives details of the studio decor which featured a diamond-patterned carpet, and a table with griffin-shaped legs. Thomas J. Nevin captured his younger brother Jack in a relaxed standing pose leaning on a book (one of those key Victorian signifiers of literacy), wearing a shirt, tie, fob watch, and three piece suit with velvet collars.
In this later photograph (below) taken ca. 1880, Jack Nevin looks very relaxed and very savvy about the process of being photographed. His gaze is direct and very keen, his clothes suitable for everyday work in a foul place such as a prison. His salaried positions were primarily in administration, with a career path and ranking similar to the Gaol Keeper's until his untimely death during the typhoid epidemic of 1891. Older brother Thomas Nevin had been a Keeper too of a public institution, at the Hobart Town Hall between 1876-1880; a special constable during the Chiniquy Riots of 1879, and assistant bailiff in the courts during the 1880s.
Constable John Nevin (William John aka Jack Nevin), ca. 1880
Photographed by his brother Thomas J. Nevin.
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint Private Collection 2009
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Categories & Tags:
19th century prison photography,
Hobart Gaol,
Private Collections,
Stereographs,
Thomas Nevin's Family Portraits,
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