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Item: 170404
Surname: Tindall (Tyndall)
First Name: Daniel
Ship: Duke of Portland 1807.....
Date: 1825
Place: Newcastle
Source: Ancestry.com. New South Wales and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters. Class: HO 10; Piece: 20
Details: Employed as a carpenter at Newcastle


 
Item: 196166
Surname: Tyndall
First Name: Daniel
Ship: Duke of Portland 1807
Date: 1807
Place: -
Source: Convict Indents. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12188; Item: [4/4004]; Microfiche: 632
Details: Daniel Tyndall tried Surrey Special Sessions Gaol Delivery 20 January 1803. Sentenced to transportation for life


 
Item: 196168
Surname: Tyndall
First Name: Daniel
Ship: Duke of Portland 1807
Date: 1 December 1817
Place: -
Source: Colonial Secretary Papers. Petitions to the Governor from Convicts for Mitigations of Sentences
Details: Petitioner Daniel Tyndall a married man and had a family of two children totally dependent on him for support. Since arrival in the colony had conducted himself with the strictest integrity and propriety and was known as an honest, sober and industrious man. Petitioning for emancipation. Character witness John Youll, Assistant Chaplain


 
Item: 196170
Surname: Tyndall
First Name: Daniel
Ship: Duke of Portland 1807
Date: 7 February 1803
Place: -
Source: Internet Archive - The trial of Edward Marcus Despard for high treason
Details: AT THE SESSION HOUSE, NEWINGTON, SURRY, On Monday the Seventh of February, 1803 the Grand Jury returned a true Bill against Edward Marcus Despard, John Wood, Thomas Broughton, John Francis, Thomas Phillips, Thomas Newman, Daniel Tyndall, John Doyle, James Sedgwick Wratten, William Lander, Arthur Graham, Samuel Smith, and John Macnamara, for High Treason.


 
Item: 181918
Surname: Tyndall (Tindall)
First Name: Daniel
Ship: -
Date: 12 June 1826
Place: Newcastle
Source: NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825, 1826-1827 (Ancestry)
Details: John Burns, in government service, charged with entering a hut in the day time intending to commit a robbery. Patrick Hannan, states I a government night watchman. In the day time I stop at a hut belonging to Daniel Tyndal, a free man. His hut has been frequently robbed within these few months of trifling articles. On Friday last, I was lying in the loft on my bed, Tyndal had gone out and had locked the door outside. It was in the afternoon. I heard some person at the door apparently wrenching the lock and after a pause Burns entered and laid the lock on the table. I then asked him what he wanted there - he replied - he had brought a lock which he had found lying at the door. ......The prisoner states - I wanted to see a stockman who usually stops at Tyndalls hut. I went there and found the padlock lying on the ground before the door. I took it into the house and Hannan detained me. John Burns sentenced to six months in the gaol gang (NB. There was no prisoner by the name of John Burns on the Ann and Amelia. There was a Jeremiah Burnes; a Darby Byrnes and a Patrick Byrnes who all arrived on the Ann and Amelia)


 
Item: 181949
Surname: Tyndall (Tindall)
First Name: Daniel
Ship: -
Date: 1 July 1826
Place: Newcastle
Source: NSW Courts Magistrates, Newcastle Police Court: 1823-1825, 1826-1827 (Ancestry)
Details: George McNichol per ship Isabella, in the service of William Bradridge, charged with making away with his masters property under aggravated circumstances. Mr. William Bradridge states - last Friday week I gave my servant McNichol a pair of shoes and blanket in lieu of others lost by him, also some tobacco for his use; I directed him to return to my farm up the river and take charge of an deliver to Mr. Andrew Sparkes, seven sacks of a wool pack which I had borrowed from him; McNichol left my house with these articles in his possession. He returned to my house on Sunday evening stating himself to be unwell. He brought neither blanket or shoes with him; he told me he had delivered the wool pack and bags to Mr. Sparkes ; on Tuesday last I learnt from Mr. Sparkes that McNichol had neither been at the farm, nor had the pack or bags been delivered as stated by McNichol and that he had only arrived at the farm the preceding evening without either bags, blankets or shoes. The day before yesterday a bullock driver came to my house and offered me three bags for sale. I suspected they were Mr. Sparkes bags, I therefore gave the price asked for them and told the chief constable what I had done. Daniel Tyndal states - The prisoner came to me last week offering to sell me some bags; he was drunk. I would not have any dealings with him. Patrick McNamara states - the prisoner came to my quarters last week - he brought with him some bags and a pair of shoes. He gave me a bag for my own use. He gave William Bagshaw another and also some to sell. He asked Bagshaw to sell the shoes for him. Bagshaw went away with three bags and the shoes and soon returned bringing the shoes back but no bags. I understood they were sold. There are now four bags and a pack at my quarters left by the prisoner. He told me Mr. Sparkes was his master. The prisoner states - after receiving the property from my master, I got intoxicated and lost it; I know nothing of McNamara or Bagshaw. George McNicholl sentenced to 75 lashes


 
Item: 196169
Surname: Tyndall (Tindall)
First Name: Daniel
Ship: Duke of Portland 1807
Date: September 1824
Place: Sydney
Source: Colonial Secretary Papers. Memorial
Details: Memorial of Daniel Tyndall for a grant of land as being at the advanced age of 67 was incapable by manual labour of supporting his wife and family. Wife and four children had arrived on the Kangaroo in 1814 and he and his wife had since had two more children



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