Facts from the records in the Archives Office of the Library
of New South Wales
and the Mitchell Library
concerning JOHN SMALL and MARY PARKER who arrived on the First
Fleet.
Records show that only one person named John Small arrived in
the Colony in 1788.
Submitted
by Sybil Small
JOHN SMALL
Ship Charlotte was sentenced at Exeter on 14th
March 1786 for 7 years transportation.
Tried at Devon Lent Assizes, held at Exeter Castle on
Monday 14th March 1785.
For feloniously assaulting James Burt in the Kings Highway,
feloniously putting him in corpora fear and danger of his life. And
feloniously and violently taking from his person and against his will in the said Highway one metal Watch and Tortoiseshell
Case value 30s.one pruning knife value 6d and five shillings his goods.
MARY PARKER
Ship Lady Penrhyn convicted at London 26th
April, 1786 for 7 years transportation.
She had been in service and was convicted for privately
stealing. She was 28 years of age in 1787. Tried at the Old Bailey at Session beginning 26th April, 1786.
Indicted for burglariously and feloniously breaking and
entering the dwelling house of John Hickman about the hour of eleven in the night, on the 19th day of April last,
and burglariously stealing therein, two muslin gowns and coats value 40s., a cotton gown value 10s., three cotton frocks value
4s., a calico bed-gown value 2s., four pair of cotton pockets value 4s., eleven shirts value 3d., one shift value 2s., and
one diaper clout? value 6d. his property.
Guilty of stealing, but not of the Burglary.
A Muster taken in 1822 shows: John SMALL F.S. Charlotte 7yrs Constable
F.S. stands for Freed by Servitude and not Free
Settler as some people are apt to think.
The abbreviations for a Free Settler would be C.F. Came
Free.
In 1828 a census was taken of all the people in the Colony
and for John Small the following information was given.
John Small 60 years, Freed by Servitude, arrived on the
Charlotte, was sentenced in 1786 for a term of 7 years. He was a protestant. John had 30 acres of land, all cleared, 20 acres of which was cultivated.
John Small and Mary Parker were married on Sunday 12th
October 1788 by the Rev. Richard Johnson with Samuel Barnes and Thomas Akers as witnesses.
St. Phillips Register showed that there were more than fifty marriages recorded before that of John & Mary.