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John Casey (Australian convict) : ウィキペディア英語版
John Casey (Australian convict)
John Casey (died 1882) was an Irish rebel, who was caught and tried in 1824 and transported to Australia in 1826. He won his freedom by helping capture the bushranger, John Tennant, in 1828 and became one of the early pioneers of the Gundaroo district.
==Biography==

John Casey came from Loughmoe in County Tipperary.〔L.L. Gillespie, ''A Pictorial History of the Read/Reid Family in Australia, 1849-1979'', Canberra, 1979, pp. 3-4; J. Casey, ''The Caseys of Loughmoe'', Sydney, 2000, pp. 21-26.〕
In 1824 he was convicted at Cashel of insurrection and seems to have been involved in the later disturbances of the ‘Whiteboys’, fighting for the rights of tenant farmers in the rural areas.〔1826 Transportation Records; cf. B. Maher, ''Planting the Celtic Cross: Foundation of the Catholic Archdiocese of Canberra and Goulburn'', Canberra, 1997, pp. 47-50.〕 Casey was transported to Australia and arrived in Sydney in January 1826 aboard the convict transport, ''Sir Godfrey Webster''.〔1828 NSW General Convict Muster.〕 In the colony of New South Wales, he was allocated to a family on the newly opened Goulburn plains and worked as a bullocky. During these early years in Australia, Casey’s wife and infant children died in Ireland.
Eventually, Casey was allocated to Joshua Moore, who had a farm at Liverpool and a new land grant called Canberry Station in the district that was to become Canberra. Moore was the first European landholder in the area. Casey worked as a shepherd and bullocky at both the Moore stations.〔D. Pike (general ed.), ''Australian Dictionary of Biography'', vol. 2 (1788-1850, I-Z), Melbourne, 1968 reprint, pp. 254; D. Meyers (ed. K. Frawley), ''Lairds, Lags and Larrikins: An Early History of the Limestone Plains'', Canberra, 2010, pp. 28-38.〕
In 1828, Canberra’s first bushranger, John Tennant, an escaped convict known as a ‘bolter’, was ravaging the district with his gang. They stole from local travellers, camps and homesteads. Local overseer, James Ainslie, organized a party to capture Tennant. The colonial authorities advertised ‘tickets of leave’ for any convicts willing to assist in Tennant’s capture.〔'Government notice', issued 29 January 1828. Cf. ''The Australian'', 8 February 1828, p. 2.〕 Casey volunteered. He knew Tennant and his knowledge of the region would be critical to the party’s success. After a bloody shoot-out, Tennant and his partner, 'Dublin Jack' Rix, were wounded, captured and transported to Sydney, where they were tried and sent to Norfolk Island.〔''The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser'', 2 June 1828, p. 2; L. Gillespie, ''Canberra: 1820-1913'', Canberra, 1991, pp. 12-15; D. Meyers (ed. K. Frawley), ''Lairds, Lags and Larrikins: An Early History of the Limestone Plains'', Canberra, 2010, pp. 39-47.〕 Casey was granted a ticket of leave.〔His 'Certificate of Freedom' of 6 April 1840, refers to the 'Ticket of Leave' issued 10 June 1829; L. Gillespie, ''Canberra: 1820-1913'', Canberra, 1991, pp. 14-15.〕
John Casey met his second wife, Caroline Purcell, at Moore’s Liverpool station. Purcell was also a convict. She had been working at Moore’s station as a domestic servant.〔Trial records from London’s Old Bailey (11 January 1827 and 19 February 1829); 1826 Transportation Records; L.L. Gillespie, ''A Pictorial History of the Read/Reid Family in Australia, 1849-1979'', Canberra, 1979, pp. 3-4.〕 The couple received permission to marry in 1832 and were allowed to set up an independent life for themselves at Tallagandra, near Gundaroo. They raised a family of eight children and prospered in the district as small farmers. Three of the Casey sons continued with their father’s bullock team and became the main carters of the district.〔E. Lea-Scarlett, ''Gundaroo'', Canberra, 1972, pp. 42-43; ''Queanbeyan Age and General Advertiser'', 31 October 1861, p. 2; 28 November 1861, p. 2. Cf. J. Casey, ''The Caseys of Loughmoe'', Sydney, 2000, p. 24.〕
John Casey died on 22 May 1882 and is buried in the Gundaroo Catholic Cemetery.〔Obituaries in the ''Queanbeyan Age'', 30 May 1882, p. 2; ''Goulburn Evening Penny Post'', 30 May 1882, p. 4.〕

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