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Surry* (later referred to as the Surrey)
Transport: 443 tons. Square rigged ship with an overall length of 117 ft. 6 ins., a breadth above the gunwales of 29 ft. 6 ins, and a draught, when loaded, of 18ft. The vessel was copper-sheathed, and had quarter galleries, with a Minerva bust for a figurehead. She carried a crew of thirty and was armed with fourteen cannons.
When the Surry was originally built at Harwich in 1811 she had two decks with a height between decks of 5ft. 8 ins. However, about 1818, she must have received a major refit - the Shipping Registers after 1819 record the vessel as having three decks.
The Surry had one of the longest careers as a convict transport and she was the only transport to make 11 passages to Australia. She completed her last voyage on reaching Hobart on 11 August 1842.
The Surry landed 2,177 male and female convicts in Australia and lost 51 men and one woman during her various passages, 36 of the men dying during her first and most notorious voyage in 1814 under the command of James Patterson.
Thomas Raine commanded her for the next three voyages (1816, 1819, 1823); he was succeeded by Charles Kemp for four voyages (1829, 1831, 1833, 1834); he was succeeded by George Sinclair as her Master on the ninth and tenth voyages (1836, 1840) and on the last voyage (1842) she was commanded by Henry Innott.
Surry (later referred to as the Surrey) - Transport
Square rigged ship. Dimensions: length, 117 ft. 6"; breadth, 29 ft. 6"; Tons: 443; Guns: 14; Crew: 30.
The vessel was copper-sheathed and had quarter galleries, with a Minerva bust for a figurehead. When the Surry was originally built at Harwich in 1811 she had two decks with a height between decks of 5ft. 8"; however, about 1818, she must have received a major refit - the Shipping Registers after 1819 record the vessel as having three decks.
The Surry had one of the longest careers as a convict transport and she was the only transport to make 11 passages to Australia. She completed her last voyage on reaching Hobart on 11 August 1842.
The Surry landed 2,177 male and female convicts in Australia and lost 51 men and one woman during her various passages, 36 of the men dying during her first and most notorious voyage in 1814 under the command of James Patterson. Thomas Raine commanded her for the next three voyages (1816, 1819, 1823); he was succeeded by Charles Kemp for four voyages (1829, 1831, 1833, 1834); he was succeeded by George Sinclair as her Master on the ninth and tenth voyages (1836, 1840) and on the last voyage (1842) she was commanded by Henry Innott.
The Macquaries sailed to Britain on board the Surry in February 1822.
Now, the McNally name appears in different forms for this family among the Scots records (census, birth, marriage, etc.), including: McAnnally, MacInalley, McInally , and McNally. In the case of Owen's birth record, both McNally and McAnnally appear.
IRISH MARRIAGES
McNALLY
McNally, Leonard, attorney-at-law=Fetherston, Anna, Maria, 2nd d. of late John, in Harcourt St. Nov 1803 p. 703
McNally, Rhd.=Warren, Miss, Jervis St. Sep 1807 p. 575