Ornithologist, Optometrist, Obstetrician, Oncologist, Orderly, Orchardist, Ostler, Overseer, Outworker, Outlaw, Owler
A tricky letter, but now that I have been thinking, one that actually has quite number of occupations to choose from...just nobody in my tree that fits the bill. When I frst saw Owler in a list I thought BINGO that's the one, possibly something to do with Owls and perhaps the collection of. But no, foiled again. Owlers were sheep smugglers, not admirers of those night time feathered friends.
Some of my Somerset ancestors had orchards of apples, but I don't know enough to be able to say they were Orchardists. They described themselves as Farmers and the apples I suspect became cider and most likely for their own use.
Perhaps Outlaw is the one to follow, not that Mary Brown was truly an outlaw in the sense of Robin Hood or Ned Kelly.
Mary Ann Brown was born
in London about 1811. It
has been suggested by other researchers of this family that she was baptised at
St Giles, Cripplegate; the daughter of Thomas Brown and Emma nee Newman.
However, this is unconfirmed. Mary was 5’ 2” tall with brown hair, light hazel
eyes and a freckled, pockmarked complexion in the earliest record found describing her physical features.
On
17th December 1828, at about 4pm she visited the house of Edward
Scott on Holborn Hill, where he also ran his shoemaking business. She
was with Mary Cannon a kitchen maid, who at nineteen was two years older than her. While
left briefly unattended in the parlour of Scott’s house they each secreted a
parcel containing two pairs of shoes beneath their arms. They
would have likely been wearing cloaks which will have aided their cause, as it
was noted that weather was wet. One
of Mr Scott’s servants noticed something amiss and alerted him.
They
were apprehended outside the house next door by Mr Scott and other witnesses
who came to his aid.
Mary Cannon fought and tried to make her escape, but Mary Brown remained calm
and protested her innocence.
They were taken to the watch house, and then to Newgate Prison. It
is not clear where the watch house was, but Newgate was a relatively short walk
from the scene of the crime.
Figure 1. Map of London
1851 – Cross’s London Guide. Source: Map and Plan Collection Online,
London1851. Accessed 27 May 2018. http://london1851.com/cross13b.htm
They
were tried at the Old Bailey on 15th January 1829 for simple
larceny; stealing four pairs of shoes. Mary Brown’s statement of defence was
again that she was innocent, while Mary Cannon begged for the mercy of the court.
Neither of the Marys had a previous sentence recorded on their Convict Indent
but both were found guilty and sentenced to seven years transportation. They
spent three months in Newgate and were transferred to the Sovereign before 27th March 1829. It sailed
on 15th April with a cargo of 119 female convicts, 22 children and
10 passengers.
On
arrival in Sydney on 3rd August, Mary was assigned to Mrs Milson of North
Shore. Her
husband James had been in Sydney since 1806 and in the early 1820s was granted a
lease of 50 acres at North Shore. In
1826 a bush fire destroyed many buildings and rebuilding was still underway
when Mary arrived.
The
Milson’s new home Brisbane House, a grand home which looked over Lavender Bay,
was not completed until 1831. Their
other home, Grantham, a sandstone bungalow stood on the site where Greenway
Apartments and the James Milson retirement village now stand.
Both houses were demolished in 1925-26 during the construction of the harbour bridge. On
her Convict Indent, Mary’s trade was described as “Allwork”, she may have
worked in the kitchen, or as a general maid.
Figure 2.‘BRISBANE
HOUSE’ ABOVE LAVENDER BAY, NORTH OF CLARK PARK (DEMOLISHED MID-1920S) ‘Brisbane House’ was possibly the first substantial
stone house built in North Sydney. Source: At Home in North Sydney, ‘Brisbane
House’, Accessed 27 May 2018. http://www.athomeinnorthsydney.com.au/brisbane-house.html.On
10th January 1831 Mary appears in the Gaol Entrance Books, admitted
for making a false charge about her mistress. She
was sentenced to ten days in a cell and returned to service. A
few months later, she appears again. This time, 23rd August 1831,
for being frequently drunk. Her punishment was 3rd class for 6 weeks
and returned to Government due to abuse of her master.
In
April 1832 Mary was reassigned to Mary Dell of George Street. This
assignment was not published until October 1832 by which time she may or may
not have still been in service with Mary Dell. She next appears in a list of
absconded convicts in December 1832, described as having absconded from the
Factory under a Colonial Sentence.
After
this, her trail goes cold for a few years. The lack of surviving records from
the Parramatta Female Factory leads to conjecture as to her whereabouts. Again,
similar to the speculation regarding her birth and parents, it has been
suggested by fellow researchers that she may have been assigned to the man who
became her husband from the Factory, or selected by him to marry. However,
there is no record of a marriage in the Applications to Marry records, nor at
New South Wales Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages.
Mary
must have met Mowbray Bessell in 1834, or early 1835 as their first child was born
in October 1835. A
second child was born in June 1837 and both were baptised in Sydney on December
25th. Baptism
records for their third, fourth and eighth children record them as married but
for Caroline and Emma born in 1849, Mary appears as Mary Brown. Perhaps
though, the minister recorded her maiden name in this instance.
Mowbray
was born in Mitcham, Surrey in 1803.[34] His
background was vastly different to Mary’s. His father had been a Captain in the
Horse Guard and was the first Secretary of the General Steam Navigation
Company. His
grandfather had been a translator at the Old Bailey and his brothers were
established in business in London and in China. He
arrived in Sydney on the Countess of
Harcourt in September 1828 with a detachment of the 63rd Regiment. In
1834, when a newly arrived passenger on the British
Sovereign advertised in the newspaper enquiring as to his whereabouts, he
had left the regiment and found employment as an upholsterer.
They
relocated to Wollongong between 1838-1839, where Mowbray found employment as a
brickmaker and where they remained for the rest of their lives. It is
noted as Mary’s place of residence on her Certificate of Freedom in 1840, so
there must have been some formal record that has not survived, which allowed
her to reside there.
Their third child was born and baptised in Wollongong in 1839 and they can be
found on the 1841 census at Garden Hill. On
the census Mary is recorded as “Arriving Free in the Colony”.
Whether this was an error or an attempt to bury her past is unknown.
Figure
3. Robert Marsh Westmacott, ‘Wollongong from the stockade, April 20th,
1840’. Watercolour on paper, National Library of Australia. Source: University
of Wollongong, ‘The Story of the Illawarra Stockade’, Michael Organ, Accessed 28
May 2018. https://www.uow.edu.au/~morgan/stockade.htm. There
had been a stockade in Wollongong since 1829 and the settlement was officially
gazetted in 1834. Dairying
dominated the economy and mining began in 1849. The
family lived in Garden Hill, Church Street and Crown Street and for a time
farmed near Dapto.
Married
life, companionship and motherhood must have agreed with Mary. She only appeared
once more in court, in January 1865, as the plaintiff though rather than the
defendant. Together
they raised a family of five daughters and one son (two other daughters died in
infancy); when she died in 1873 she had seventeen grandchildren. She
and Mowbray are buried, with no surviving markers, in the Wollongong Cemetery. Bessell
Avenue, North Wollongong is named in honour of her son’s family. His
home stood on the corner of Bessell Avenue and Bourke Street, now the site of
the Normandie Motel and Function Centre.
Old Bailey Online, 'Mary Cannon, Mary Ann Brown.',
https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?id=t18290115-50-off234&div=t18290115-50#highlight,
Accessed 27 May 2018.
Dictionary of Sydney, 'Milsons Point'.
Karen
Hill to Claire Becker, letter, 28 May 1990, original in author's possession.; Bryan to Becker, email, 14 January 2003.; Claire Becker to Terri Bryan,
email, 15 January 2003, original in author's possession.; Anne Ingram to Claire
Becker, email, 23 February 2003, original in author's possession.