Quantcast
Channel: convicts – The National Archives blog
Browsing latest articles
Browse All 7 View Live

Volunteers and villains: the HO 17 cataloguing project

It is Volunteers’ Week, an annual celebration of the wonderful contribution made by millions of volunteers across the UK. The National Archives has worked with volunteers for over 20 years...

View Article



Pentrich: from seditions to petitions

Today (and tomorrow morning) mark the 198th anniversary of the Pentrich Rising in 1817. Sometimes referred to as ‘England’s last revolution’, the rising took place on the evening of 9...

View Article

James Hawkins’ daring escapes – a convict who refused to accept his sentence

Last month I wrote a blog introducing the work being done by a team of volunteers who are cataloguing record series HO 17, criminal petitions for mercy. These records date...

View Article

George Sanglier’s petitions: two sides to every petition

My last blog focused on James Hawkins, a thief so determined not to be separated from his wife and family that he twice returned from the other side of the...

View Article

‘A floating Hell’: life on early 19th century convict hulks

Over the last few months I have introduced some of the convicts we have uncovered in our cataloguing of record series HO 17 (criminal petitions for mercy 1819-1839). The detailed...

View Article


‘To share in his fate’: petitioning to join those transported overseas

We explore petitions from women who wanted to join their husbands in exile…

View Article

‘Not a fair trial’: Edward Ashford’s petitions for mercy

Exploring the story of Edward Ashford, who appears to have been in the wrong place at the wrong time…

View Article
Browsing latest articles
Browse All 7 View Live




Latest Images