Captain Cook discovered Australia in 1770
George Coxon was transported in 1791
THE FIRST COXON IN AUSTRALIA
Durham Assizes, Summer 1788
George Coxon was sentenced to transportation to Australia and 7 years detention on the 8th October 1788. There is no record of his age or the offence.
He and 350 other convicts sentenced to transportation to Australia were moved from various gaols to the Fortunée hulk at Langston Harbour (Hampshire) between 30th November 1790 and 1st January 1791. The convicts were aged between 12 years and 67 years with sentences from 5, 7, 14 years or a life term.
Fort Cumberland, Hard Labour 1788-1791
According to records in the National Archives, following conviction George Coxon was employed in either digging and making moats, delivering vessels loaded with stones, 'in hewing the same', making bricks and raising 'glacis' (the bank sloping down from a fort) in connection with the fortifications at Fort Cumberland in Portsmouth. The Fort was built to protect the Portsmouth Naval Dockyard.
Transportation, 1791
He was transported on the 'Matilda', a prison ship built in 1789. The 'Matilda' was one of eleven vessels famously known as The Third Fleet that began the transportation of convicts to Australia.
From 1787 to 1867, 162,000 convicts were transported from Britain to Australia in this way.
The Third Fleet 1791
The Third Fleet consisted of 11 ships which sailed from England in February, March and April 1791 bound for the Sydney penal settlement, carrying over 2,000 convicts.
The passengers consisted of convicts, military personnel and notable people sent to fill high positions in the colony. More important for the fledgling colony was that the ships also carried provisions.
The first ship to arrive in Sydney was the Mary Ann with its cargo of female convicts and provisions on the 9 July 1791. The Mary Ann could only state that more ships were expected to be sent. The Mary Ann had sailed on her own to Sydney Cove, and there is some argument about whether she was the last ship of the Second Fleet, or the first ship of the Third Fleet. The ships that make up each fleet, however, are decided from the viewpoint of the settlers in Sydney Cove. For them the second set of ships arrived in 1790 (June), and the third set of ships arrived in 1791 (July-October). The Mary Ann was a 1791 arrival.
The next ship to arrive just over 3 weeks later on 1 August 1791 was the Matilda. With the Matilda came news that there were another nine ships making their way for Sydney, and which were expected to arrive shortly. The final vessel, the Admiral Barrington, did not arrive until the 16 October nearly 11 weeks after the Matilda, and 14 weeks after the Mary Ann.
Log of Convicts on Third Fleet showing George Coxon
Onward to Norfolk Island
Norfolk Island
15th May 1788. Instructions from Governor of New South Wales to Lieutenant Philip Lidley King.
Other Coxon Convicts Transported to Australia
Henry Coxon was sentenced to life at Derby Quarter Sessions and then transported on the convict ship ‘Camden’ to New South Wales, Australia on 21st March 1831. His crime was to ‘send a threatening letter’. The convict colony in New South Wales was the first established in Australia and life was very harsh. However, in 1831 when Henry Coxon arrived an Act was enforced in the colony that limited the number of lashes that a convict could receive to fifty. The transportation of convicts to New South Wales was suspended in 1840 and abolished in 1850.
James Coxon was sentenced to 12 years at Staffordshire Assizes for ‘robbery and previous conviction of felony’ and transported on the convict ship ‘Clara’ to Western Australia on 28th January 1864. A total of 9,668 convicts were sent to Western Australia and James Coxon was one of the last convicts to be transported. In 1865 the British policy changed and the last convict ship arrived in Western Australia in 1868.