Saturday, July 15, 2017

 
Aylesbury Prison where William Nibbs was held during his trial. I visited Aylesbury on my last trip to England. This building hasn't changed much.
 

 
Hulk Ship - the prisoners were kept on these until their transport ships were available.  They were generally old ships not suitable for going to sea.

 
This is a photo of Westbury taken about 1895. The main building that you can see is the Church of England.

Friday, July 14, 2017


William Nibbs Part 4 -A New Life.

What happened to William from his release in 1836 until his marriage in 1845.   I can only assume he remained in the Westbury district being there at the end of his sentence.

William purchased an acre of land at Westbury in 1842 and probably continued to work as a farm labourer in that District. He possibly found employment with Rev. John Bishton. When Rev. Bishton came to Westbury in 1841, William was amongst the first 12 members of his Church. Rev. Bishton and his family went on to purchase land at Pardoe, near Torquay Reserve and Latrobe Reserve. It is recorded that William was his overseer here in the mid 1840’s.

Marriage:

On 22nd September 1845 William married Mary Ann Timoney at the Westbury Church of England. Rev. Bishton, being the officiating Clergy.

The Hobart Gazette on the 1st September 1845 records an approval of a marriage application for William and Mary Ann.   That day the Convict Department issued nine approvals of marriage, one being:   "William KNIBBS, free, and Mary Ann TUMENY, ‘East London’, in private service, both parties residing at Westbury"  


Pioneers of the North Coast.

William purchased an acre of land in Westbury, in 1842 and worked as an agricultural labourer  before and after his marriage to Mary Ann.

By 1856 the NIBBS family, now blessed with five children, had relocated to the newly established district of Port Sorell in Northern Tasmania.   I have conflicting information as to when the relocation actually took place, as the following points illustrate:

a)            Mary Ann was the informant for birth records of their children born in 1846, 1849, 1850 and 1852 and stated her residence as Westbury, indicating she was still living at Westbury until at least 1852.

b)            The Devonport Historical Society noted that William was the overseer of a large primitive property at Torquay (now East Devonport) owned by a Rev. John BISHTON in the mid 1840's and the 1850's.

c)            Local history book "With the Pioneers" by Charles RAMSEY states that a Frank NIBBS was the overseer of Rev. John BISHTON's property at Pardoe (which would be classed as part of Torquay) during the 1840's and 1850's.   The Corrigenda at the front of this book corrects the above Christian name to William.

I now know the reason Mary Ann remained in Westbury whilst William established himself at Pardoe.   She did not receive her Certificate of Freedom until 29th January 1850, and therefore was forced to remain there until that time.   Mary Ann and her young family were to join William, between 1850 and 1856

Their sixth child, born in 1856, was registered in the Port Sorell District, William being the informant and stating his occupation now as farming and residing at Folly Farm. Records of 1857 and onwards show William as a farmer (probably a tenant farmer) living at Pardoe. 

1867 MacPhails Directory of Tasmania, Port Sorrell District Directory.
Nibbs, William, farmer, Pardoe

William and Mary Nibbs continued to live in the Pardoe District [near Devonport, Tasmania]. They had 12 children and were involved in the local community. William was one of the 11 members of a committee setup in 1865 to develop the land and erect a bush chapel at Wesley Vale in Tasmania. Later he became one of 13 members who were the original trustees of the Wesley Vale Methodist Church.

In a quote from the Centenary Booklet for the Wesley Vale Church “When Mr Andrew offered the land for the building of the Church between Northdown and Wesley Vale, a committee was formed for the purpose, comprising Messrs Isaaac Scott, James Scott, Joseph Scott, William Clarke, William Banfield, John Piper, Eli Clark, Robert Lock, William Nibbs, Alexander Findley and James Spurr. This committee with the help of others cleared the land on Christmas Day in 1865 and the little bush chapel was opened in May 1866 by the Rev G. T. Heyward.”

Encounter with Bushrangers

Historian Charles RAMSEY, in his book "With the Pioneers", retells an account of four bush rangers who made an uninvited stop at Pardoe in 1848.   It gives a wonderful glimpse into William as an individual:

In January 1848, four bush rangers named John RILEY, Micheal ROGERS, Peter REYNOLDS and Patrick LYNCH, who were supposed to have absconded from the Fingal Depot, made their appearance in the neighbourhood of Port Sorell, their intention no doubt being to seize some vessel and effect their escape from the colony.

Four police constables who were in pursuit of them incautiously entered a hut occupied by a man named STARKEY on the 20th, and were immediately fired upon by the bush rangers, who shot one of the constable’s dead and wounded another.   The other two constables, after a vain endeavor to discharge their pieces, which were wet, escaped in the bush, and with the wounded man reached Port Sorell.

On the 21st at about 3am these outlaws entered the "Plough Inn" at Moorlands (near Pardoe) which was owned by John MOORE, and they stated that they were constables from George Town.   Upon gaining admittance, three of them presented their guns at Mr MOORE, and ordered him in his bedroom, where they tied him up, and they also rounded up both house and farm servants, and had them tied up as well.   They ransacked the house, but only got about 3 pounds in money, and after carousing a considerable time, they seized two horses and carried off a quantity of clothing, one gun, two watches, wine, spirits, etc.

They then went to Rev John BISHTON's farm.   His men were in the fields and were chased by the bush rangers.   NIBBS, the overseer, sent a man off to MOORE's and then went towards the house with a fork in his hand.   He was met by a man who told him to lay down the fork, which he did, but went up to the man and seized his gun and tried to take it from him.   He had nearly succeeded when the bush ranger pulled out a pistol and told him to let go.   A man named HART, coming to NIBBS' assistance, was snapped at four times, so he took to his heels and escaped.   The bush rangers entered the house and had tea, and when six men came up from MOORE's, they were seized, tied up, and the outlaws swore they would go back and shoot MOORE.   After brutally abusing NIBBS and others, they returned to MOORE's but not finding him there they proceeded to SMITH's.

The bush rangers moved on along the North-West Coast causing more havoc and late March made their escape to Kangaroo Island, South Australia, aboard an American Whaling ship.

The Rev. John BISHTON purchased his Pardoe property of 500 acres in 1843.   In 1850 records show that he also leased large areas of land in the vicinity of, and including "The Torquay Reserve", and in the vicinity of Latrobe Reserve.   It appears that William Nibbs was involved in the management of these additional areas also.   John BISHTON died in 1856 and that would probably have been about the time William took up tenant farming.   Many farmers had to lease land in the hope of one day being in a good enough financial position to purchase their own land.   William leased 100 acres at Pardoe from approximately 1862 to 1878.   The owner of this property was an H. REED of England.   Harold THOMAS' publication on "Northdown" shows this property to be situated on the coastline, opposite Moorlands Beach.   I have not yet delved into land records to see if William was ever able to purchase his own land.

Advertisement - IN: The North-West Post (Formby) Monday 31 May 1915
Tender to lease for 7 years - The Pardoe Estate
Under Instruction from Mr Hart, Messrs Alfred Harrap and Son Launceston, invite tenders returned by Wednesday June 9, for lease of the well-known Pardoe Estate for seven years. The property has been divided into three lots and tenders can offer for the whole estate or for a separate block. The total 800? Acres, subdivided as – 1.  Homestead block, 500 acres 2. Nibbs block, 265 acres 3.  Frontage to Northdown Road, 13

Death:

William died13 August 1884 in Launceston and was buried in the Charles Street Cemetery.

In: Daily Telegraph (Launceston) Thursday 14 August 1884, p.2.
NIBBS: On the 13th inst. At his son’s residence, Lawrence Street, after a long and painful illness, Mr William Nibbs, late of Pardoe, in his 76th year. His end was peace.


'Torquay Tasmania Pardoe June the 11th 1879 - I am this day 70 years old having been born June the 11th 1809 at Flackwell Heath Little Marlow Bucks England.  Mine has been a chequered life, but it has been one of much Mercy from a Merciful god and to him more than all his due'.

               
CREDITS
Much of the background research into William NIBBS and the Machine Breakers was done by others, namely Jill CHAMBERS, British Historian, Geoff SHARMAN, Tasmanian Historian and Bruce BROWN, Australian Historian.   Fortunately, over recent years the Machine Breakers of the 1830's and their part in British and Australian History has been recognized and much research undertaken by historians as to the causes of the riots, their lives before and after, etc.  
Geoff SHARMAN's website is well worth a visit for anyone interested in the Swing Rioters.



Record of William NIBBS' Conduct

 
Date
Assigned to:
Charge - punishment
28 Nov 1832
J Hone Esq
Absent without leave and going to Bodeans Public House on Sunday - admonished.
23 Sep 1834
J Hone Esq
Gross immoral conduct in the service of his master - Westbury Road Party 12 months recommended.
12 Nov 1834
Road Party
Absconding - 6 months hard labour in addition to his former sentence in chains recommended.
20 Dec 1834
Road Party
Absconding - 50 lashes.
16 Jan 1835
Road Party
Idleness - to sleep in the cell 7 days and to work 4 Saturday afternoons.
 

William Nibbs - Part 3
Transportation to Van Diemen’s Land

For most of the Swing prisoners sentenced to transportation, their first port of call was one of the Prison Hulks on permanent moorings at the port of departure.   Here they were held for days to months awaiting allocation to a ship.   William was received from Aylesbury prison aboard the Hulk "York" at the port of Portsmouth on the 9th March 1831.

The Swing Rioters or Machine Breakers came out to Australia aboard three vessels; 136 rioters on the "Eleanor" to New South Wales, 224 on the "Eliza" and 98 aboard the "Proteus", both to Van Diemen's Land    William KNIBBS arrived in Hobart Town, VDL in 1831 on the third and smallest contingent, the "Proteus".

Information of interest - The Machine Breakers were viewed differently from that of common criminals, in that the authorities and the public thought they were generally decent men, skilled and hardworking, whose crime was to only try to get better working conditions.   During the voyage, they were not required to wear the normal convict garb and were not under lock and key at all times, being given free access of the ship frequently.  

By 1831 the Assignment System for handling the arrival of convicts was in place.   This system involved the convicts, upon their arrival, being assigned to landowners, farmers and businessmen, who undertook to clothe and feed their assignee to a regulated standard.   Government's Public Works Department always took first pick of any new convicts, and the VDL (Van Diemen's Land) Company received second choice.   The remainder were then allocated out to the public.

The Governor of VDL at this time was Governor George ARTHUR, a staunch supporter of convict transportation.   In England, there was mounting concern and criticism of transportation system as an unjust and overly cruel form of punishment.   Governor ARTHUR took a keen interest in the Machine Breakers, unfairly using them as examples to vindicate his views.   The Machine Breakers were not your average convicts, they were protestors not criminals and were less likely to re-offend.   Skilled and experience convicts would offer a far greater contribution to society than the common criminal and were therefore more likely to do well in the future.   His use of these convicts to promote the success of the transportation system was misleading giving false results as to the effects of transportation.

Arrival in Van Diemen’s Land

Upon each convict's arrival in Australia their description was recorded, being the only form of identification, the authorities had.   Photographs did not come into the system until the 1860's.   A conduct record was kept for each convict documenting any misdemeanours, assignments and relevant details during their term of imprisonment.

Unfortunately, William resented being held prisoner as all his escape attempts would indicate.   Harsh penalties were imposed on him - chains, solitary confinement and the lash.    The final two punishments had the desired effect on William, i.e.  a clean slate for the final fourteen months of his sentence.

William Received His Free Pardon (No. 159) 5th April 1836.
Note: Between 1835 and 1837, free pardons were granted to many of the transported Swing Rioters.  More tolerant views in England prevailed, linked in part to the enactment of The Reform Act of 1832

Convict William NIBBS' details
 
Description
-
Age - 22 years
Trade
-
Labourer
Native place
:
Little Marlow
Height
-
5' 6 1/2"
Complexion
-
swarthy
Hair
-
light brown
Whiskers
-
none
Forehead
-
projecting high

William Nibbs - Part 2. The Trial for Machine Breaking
In 1830 William was 21 years old and being a farm labourer by trade his own anger and frustrations drew him to become involved in a riot in the village of Loudwater in the Parish of Chepping Wycombe. Also known as High Wycombe or Chipping Wycombe. Chepping Wycombe was a large parish incorporating the villages of Wooburn, Heath End, Flackwell Heath, Northern Wood and Little Marlow.

The charge against him was documented as follows:

"Charged on the oaths of William Lacey and others, with having on the 29th November last (1830), unlawfully, riotously, and tumultuously assembled together, to the disturbance of the public peace, at the mill and in the premises of Mr William Robert DAVIS, of the Parish of Chepping Wycombe, in the said county, and feloniously was present aiding, abetting, and assisting divers persons to us yet unknown, with the feloniously and unlawfully destroying certain machinery used in the manufacture of paper in the said mill and on the premises of the said William Robert DAVIS, at the Parish of Chepping Wycombe, in the County of Buckinghamshire aforesaid, against the form of the statute in that case made."

Reports of the Trial proceedings show the riot did get a little out of hand with many threats of violence being flung around, along with rocks and other missiles.   Special constables had also arrived at the scene resulting in many physical altercations as they tried to make arrests.

William receives special mention for his part in the riot.   James GEORGE, a special constable, who was at Mr DAVIS' on the day of the riot, described the proceedings of the mob and identified William KNIBBS as having been at the front of them when there was a cry of "break the machinery".   He continued,

"KNIBBS was pressing on towards the mill and resisting the special constables who opposed the entrance of the mob.   Afterwards, seeing KNIBBS struggling with one of the special constables, I took him into custody.   'It would have been better for me if I had been at my work', KNIBBS said to me as I was conveying him to Beaconsfield".

Mr George MORTON said

"I know the prisoner KNIBBS by sight, and I saw him with the mob at Loudwater, before it proceeded to Mr DAVIS'.   The prisoner threw a stone that hit the sheriff on the chin".

One of the party who had an axe in his hand at the time, threatened to split the head open of one of the special constables.  Another threatened a constable that he, having a long memory would blow the constable's brains out the next time he sighted him.

More background
The first of the rioters arrested received lenient sentences.   Some were released due to the ordinary evidence posed against them, many received one to two months imprisonment or a very young offender may have received just a warning, but as the riots escalated the British Authorities took a harsher stance.

From November 1830 to early January 1831 some 2000 rioters were arrested.   In December and the following January punishments handed down had changed dramatically, to that of transportation for life, fourteen or seven years, or the ultimate penalty, the death sentence.   Appalling as it may seem, one theory posed by historians is the Government may have seen it as an opportunity to get skilled persons over to the newly established colony, Australia, as their emigration incentive schemes were failing.   By late January 1831 the riots had subsided and so did the deliberations handed down to the accused.   Most of the rioters sentenced to death, upon petitioning by their families and village folk, had their sentence reprieved to transportation.

It was evident that the Machine Breakers were devastated by the severe penalties they received.   It was relatively a non-violent form of protest and they may have anticipated only a token punishment for their involvement

After all the evidence had been given, William and eighteen other fellow rioters were placed in the dock to receive sentence.   Mr Justice PARK, overseer of the trial addressed them;

"It is with a most painful consideration to 19 of my own species placed at the bar of a court of justice, in all of whom the law itself has pronounced the sentence of death.   In selecting you 19 out for those capital convictions on whom we do not mean to pronounce that sentence, it has been a matter of most deep and anxious consideration to us to see whether we could distinguish between your cases and that of the others; at the same time, it was most dreadful to contemplate such an effusion of human blood and sacrifice of life taking place.   We therefore determined to recommend you to His Majesty's royal consideration and mercy.  [King William IV]   The sentence of death will be recorded against you, instead of being formerly passed, the meaning of which is, that your lives will certainly be spared, but on what terms, it is for His Majesty to determine, and not for us; yet, undoubtedly, severe punishments will be carried into execution against several of you.   Public Justice would not be satisfied without that being done, and the peace of the country, and the protection of the property of peaceable individuals require it.   I therefore hope and trust that you will be grateful for your lives being spared, and that in whatever situation you may hereafter be placed, whether part of the whole of your lives shall be spent in another country, you will conduct yourselves as honest industrious persons, and endeavour to secure you own peace of mind and the mercy of God, which will render you worthy of his acceptance whenever it may please him to call you from this world".

Minor participants in the riot received sentences from 18 months imprisonment to transportation of 7 years depending on the evidence against them and their character references.   Two main offenders in the riot received the death sentence with no reprieve.

Fortunately for William (and his descendants!!!) the final punishment handed down to him was transportation to Australia for 7 Years.

William NIBBS  (1809 –- 1884) – Part 1
William NIBBS was born in Little Marlow, Buckinghamshire to Job and Mary NIBBS nee Linton.  He was baptised on 9 July 1809.   William had a brother John and a sister, Elizabeth. William and his siblings received some form of schooling as William could read and write. Father Job was a woodman, John was a papermaker and William was a labourer.
In 1831, living conditions in rural England were grim, and William took part in a protest movement called the Swing Riots which spread across the South of England.

Background:
"A look into the 1830 riots, gives an insight into what life would have resembled for a labourer such as William and his family in a small farming village in England during the early 1800's.

1830 saw a three-tiered pyramid permanently in place within the social and economic life of a typical village of the southern English counties.   At the top sat the landowners who directly and indirectly shaped the way of life for those beneath them.   Second were the tenant farmers and on the bottom rung came the labourers.  

Labourers rarely had steady employment, relying on ploughing and crop gathering seasons, being paid on a daily or weekly basis by the farmers.   In between the seasons they were left to fend for themselves, many forced to rely on Parish Relief during the long periods of unemployment.

Crop prices had been steadily falling in the years up to 1830 thus putting enormous pressure on the farmers and more so, the labourers.   Many farmers turned to agricultural machinery to cut operating costs.   Three bad harvests in a row by 1830 and the winter of 1830 being abnormally severe, heightened the labourers' anger and frustration.   Doomed to poverty, starvation being imminent for many labourers and their families, it is accepted that this triggered the 1830's riots.

They occurred over many southern counties of the UK and widely varied in the action taken.  The most common form of protest or outrage was, a large number, sometimes hundreds, of labourers would gather together in a village and head off to a pre-targeted farm.   Usually, an appointed spokesman for the group would demand some amount of monetary compensation.   Refusal to pay led to threats of violence and invariably the money was paid.   If the farm possessed a threshing machine, chaff cutter, or other labour-saving device, it was unduly destroyed.

The least common, but best known, form of outrage was the "Swing Letter" a message threatening severe violence unless money was paid, or wages were raised or machines dismantled.   The letters were signed "Captain Swing hence the name the "Swing Rioters".  He was a mythical figure, and it is said that the name also related to the 'swing' (a moving part) of the flail used to thresh harvested grain.

In general, the riots were non-violent though clearly threatening, however low-level violence did occur when the farmers or their men tried to prevent machinery or property from being destroyed."

Prior to his conviction for Machine Breaking, William had been prosecuted for stealing turnip greens spending one month in prison.   This throws a dim light on his living standards at the time, having to resort to turnip greens for sustenance.  

In 1830 William was 21 years old and being a farm labourer by trade his own anger and frustrations drew him to become involved in a riot in the village of Loudwater in the Parish of Chepping Wycombe. Also known as High Wycombe or Chipping Wycombe. Chepping Wycombe was a large parish incorporating the villages of Wooburn, Heath End, Flackwell Heath, Northern Wood and Little Marlow.

William Nibbs and Mary Ann Timoney - a never ending tale

There have been several attempts in the family to document the story of our Nibbs ancestors. This is the record of my effort to discover their stories and the stories of their descendants in Australia and ultimately to find the stories of the families they left behind in England and Ireland.

As contact is made with our relatives, both known and long lost, this should become a collaborative effort, with contributions of photos, memoirs, family stories, etc. provided by all.
As William and Mary had twelve children, there are many branches in the Australian family. If you make a response, could you please acknowledge which branch you belong to and tag it accordingly. As a starting point, here is a list of their children.
Future posts will contain more information on each of them. I've done my best to get it right, but if you see an error, please let me know.
Regards, Denece


Children of Mary Ann Timoney and William Nibbs:
  • Mary Ann Nibbs - 21 June 1846 (Westbury, Tas.) -2 March 1925 (Lilydale, Tas.)
  • Elizabeth Nibbs - 23 Nov 1847(Westbury, Tas.) - 24 Jan 1883 (Pardoe, Pt Sorrell, Tas.)
  • John Nibbs 23 March 1849 (Westbury, Tas.) – 9 Sept 1894 (Duck River, Tas.)
  • Sarah Nibbs - 15 Sept 1850 (Westbury, Tas.) – 7 June 1932 (Hobart, Tas.)
  • William Nibbs - 22 July 1852 (Westbury,Tas.) -14 January 1918 (Launceston, Tas.)
  • Susannah Nibbs - 28 Dec 1854 (Wesley Vale, Tas.) - 4 Oct 1938 (Devonport, Tas.)
  • Francis Nibbs - 5 July 1856 (Port Sorrell, Tas.) – 28 Jan 1916 (Latrobe, Tas.)
  • Job Linton Nibbs - 13 Oct 1857 (Port Sorrell, Tas.) – 29 Nov 1941 (Devonport, Tas.)
  • Thomas Henry Nibbs - 16 Aug 1859 (Port Sorrell, Tas.) -31 August 1947 (Enfield, NSW)
  • James Nibbs- 5 March 1861 (Port Sorrell, Tas.) – 11 Oct 1899 (Kindred, Tas.)
  • Catherine Laura Nibbs -18 July 1863 (Port Sorrell, Tas.) – 30 March 1891 (Evandale, Tas.)
  • Alice Nibbs 22 Feb 1867 - (Port Sorrell, Tas.) – 25 June 1867 (Port Sorrell, Tas.)