Middlesex Sessions:
General Orders of the Court
SM | GO

28th October 1789 - 5th December 1795

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Currently Held: London Metropolitan Archives

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Image 224 of 49629th March 1792


March 1792

£5..0s..5d

Expences incurred as above in the Removal and Conveyance of
Offenders for hard labour on the River Thames

1791. 29th. August, 2 Convicts delivered at Woolwich

Small Open Lighter£0.. 2s..7d
Maintenance of Convicts & Men to attend them£0..2s..2d£0..4s..9d

£5..5s..2d

Middlesex , An Account of the Names of the Offenders
Convicted at the Sessions of the Delivery of the Gaol of Newgate
holden for the County of Middlesex of certain Misdemeanors and
Ordered by the Court at the said Sessions holden for the said County
at Justice Hall in the Old Bailey within the Suburbs of the City of
London in the Months of December 1790 and April 1791 to be kept to
hard labour on the River Thames or in other public Works by
virtue of an Act of Parliament made in the Nineteenth Year of His
present Majestys Reign intituled" An Act to explain and amend
"the Laws relating to the Transportation Imprisonment and other
"Punishment of certain Offenders" and delivered by Richard Akerman< no role > This name instance is in set 4413.
Keeper of the said Gaol of Newgate for the said County to Duncan
Campbell
< no role > the Superintendent appointed in pursuance of the said Act on
the 29th. day of August 1791 as appears by a certain Receipt in Writing
under the Hand of the said Duncan Campbell< no role > Vizt. James Cull< no role >
and Henry Salisbury< no role > being two Offenders so delivered for hard
labour for each of whom the said Richard Akerman< no role > as Keeper of the
said Gaol of Newgate for the said County of Middlesex by virtue of the
said Act of Parliament claims to be paid by the said County the Sum
of Fourteen shillings and ten pence being the like Fee which hath
usually been paid and would have been due to the said Richard
Akerman if such Offender had been sentenced to Transportation
amounting together to the Sum of One Pound Nine shillings and
eight pence And the said Richard Akerman< no role > craves that the said
Sum of One Pound nine shillings and eight pence and also the
Sum of Four Shillings and nine pence for the Expence which he




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