Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mary_BryantMary Bryant - Wikipedia

    Mary Bryant (c. 1765 – after 1794) was a Cornish convict sent to Australia. She became one of the first successful escapees from the fledgling Australian penal colony. Early life.

  2. Mary Bryant (b.1765), convict, was baptized on 1 May 1765 at Fowey, Cornwall, England, the daughter of a mariner named Broad, whose family was 'eminent for sheep stealing'. On 20 May 1786 at the Exeter Assizes she, referred to as Mary Braund, was charged with assault and robbery, convicted and sentenced to death.

  3. Mary Bryant was a Cornish-born daughter of a fisherman who became involved in petty theft after moving to Plymouth. In 1787 she was convicted for stealing a silk bonnet, jewellery, and a few coins and sentenced to seven years transportation to Australia.

  4. Jun 23, 2015 · This is the story of Mary Bryant, the convict woman with two babies who in 1791 helped steal a naval cutter in Sydney and sail it to Timor in an open boat voyage.

  5. Oct 28, 2017 · Mary Bryant was the only female convict to escape Australia. A FEMALE prisoner who was starved of food made one of the most daring and tumultuous escapes in history. It all started here.

  6. Bryant, Mary (1765–?) English highway robber and one of only a handful of convicts to escape from the notorious penal colony at Botany Bay. Name variations: Mary Bryant of Fowey; Mary Braund or Broad.

  7. Mary Bryant was born in Cornwall in 1765. She was convicted of theft in March 1786 and sentenced to transportation for seven years. She arrived in Australia aboard the Charlotte, one of the ships in the First Fleet, on January 20, 1788.

  8. In 1791, after being transported to Australia in the first shipment of convicts, Mary Bryant, her husband, two children, and seven other convicts, unable to endure the terrible conditions of the penal colony, organize a daring escape in an open boat.

  9. Mar 29, 2014 · The tale of William and Mary Bryant's escape from the first penal settlement in NSW on March 28, 1791, their extraordinary voyage and their ultimate recapture is well-known.

  10. At 20 years old, Mary Bryant was sentenced to death for highway robbery, and left to rot in prison. Eventually she was transported to the wilderness of New South Wales. 'When the First Fleet arrived at Sydney Cove in 1788, a life of misery and servitude awaited her.