Bridget (Biddy) Ryan who gave her address on arrival in Sydney as ‘Bruff’ is one of the intriguing stories of the Earl Grey Orphans and one we have not solved entirely.
When Bridget was originally ‘selected’ by Lieutenant Henry in Listowel Workhouse, her address on the Board of Guardian Minutes on 11 September 1849 was ‘Listowel’. However, when she arrived in Sydney on the Thomas Arbuthnot on 3 February 185o, she declared her Native Place as Bruff, Limerick, age as 16, her parents as Anthony and Johanna, and that her father (a Soldier) was living in Sydney. She was able to read and write. It was noted under ‘State of Health, strength and probable usefulness: Poor’.
Bridget’s Great Great Granddaughters – Julie Evans and Jeanette Greenway have done extensive work to uncover Bridget’s family and also have provided us with a record of her life in Australia.
Julie Evans takes up her story:-
‘Bridget’s employer was a Captain Mac Kellar who was a Master Mariner and originally from Elgin in Scotland. It is not clear how Bridget met her husband James Murray and it may have been through this employer.
James Murray had arrived from Scotland in 1848. Bridget and James were married in Sydney in December 1850 and in December 1851 they had the first of their thirteen children (one did not survive infancy).
The children were brought up strictly in the Presbyterian faith. Four of James and Bridget’s children married their cousins, as was common at the time. All their children remained in New South Wales. Descendants of these children have now scattered widely across Australia and overseas’.
While Bridget’s life in Australia is well documented, it is her history in Ireland that that is most intriguing.
Thanks to Julie and Jeanette, who conducted painstaking research in both countries and through contacts they made in Listowel, we get a partial and tantalising glimpse to Bridget in Ireland. This background is the subject of a TG4 Documentary which was shown in October 2013.
From the initial snippets on record that Bridget’s father was in Sydney and was a soldier and from her Australian family folklore that she herself had been educated in Ireland by ‘French Nuns’, we pieced together her background as it was in 1849 when she left Listowel Workhouse.
Bridget’s parents were indeed Johanna Hynes and Lanty Ryan (not Anthony). Johanna and Lancelot, as he was called on the marriage certificate were married in Bruff Parish Church on 2 July 1831. Written in Latin, his occupation was given as ‘lately a Soldier’.
Searches for Lanty’s career as a Soldier in Australia, didn’t realise any results and it transpired that the reality was somewhat different. He had in fact got married again bigamously, six years after his marriage to Johanna Hynes, he married again a Jane Huddy in 1837 in Abbeyfeale, Co. Limerick and as a result he had been transported as a convict to Australia. The following is an extract from the New South Wales State Records:
Convict List for the Ship Neptune 1837-1838:
The vessel departed Dublin 27 August 1837 for the 128 day voyage to Sydney. The prisoner list includes:
Ryan Launcelot, age 35, tried 1837, Limerick 7 yrs, b. 1803 Tipperary, bigamy, married, 1m 1f children, soldier labourer, blind of left eye, CF 44/1140
From the Limerick Chronicle June 1837 we get the information of the trial held there the previous day, both ‘wives’ gave evidence:
Lanty tried to make a deal just before the Neptune sailed out from Kingstown Harbour in Dublin. He had some involvement or knowledge of an incident in 1831 during the Tithe War in Doon, Co. Limerick, where a number of men had attacked the Rev Charles Coote who was endeavouring to collect the hated Tithes, then due to the Established Church of Ireland by all landholders, most of whom would have been Catholics . A reward was offered for information on the culprits and while Lanty had not made any claim to the money for the previous six years, he now tried to use his information in a last ditch effort to escape transportation. It was too late however, and the ship sailed.
On arrival in Australia, he was noted as having a number of facial injuries, scars, one eye and one arm and as such was of no use as a convict worker in the bush. He seems to have remained in the special compound in Port Maquarie for old, infirm or disabled convicts and it is most unlikely that Brigid ever met him.
Even after extensive research, we have no idea what happened to Bridget’s mother, Johanna or her family in Ireland. Johanna, on the conviction of her husband, would have had only two options open to her – to return to her own family home in Bruff or to seek shelter in one of the Workhouses, then in Kilmallock and Limerick. We have to presume that she went back to her family near Lough Gur, and it would appear from Bridget’s own story to her children that she herself, spent some time as a pupil in Laurel Hill Convent in Limerick, then the only convent with ‘French Nuns’. This is quite possible as the famous Dean Cussen was then the Parish Priest of Bruff, he was one of the principal supporters of the Sisters in Laurel Hill, who had just opened their school (in 1845) and he may have arranged through the Hynes family(Bridget’s grandparents) that Bridget be taken in there.
Dean Cussen, who was educated in Paris is still remembered in Bruff and surrounding parishes for his charitable works, his ability to deal with both his flock and their overlords on their behalf. We are told from contemporary newspaper accounts that when he died in London, in 1865, upwards of fifteen thousand persons came from all around to walk the fifteen miles from Bruff to meet the train in Kilmallock and accompany the coffin back to the FCJ Convent in Bruff, which he had founded in 1856.
Again despite extensive searches, we have no record of her mother’s death but this would not be unusual during the Famine period, when people died in such great numbers, it was not always possible to keep a record of their passing. Bridget’s children and grandchildren always said that she was well educated and had a particular ability for sewing, embroidery etc., one of the subjects that the Laurel Hill nuns regarded as very important.
So how did Bridget, a native of Bruff, Co. Limerick end up in the Workhouse in Listowel? This is another mystery that probably will not be solved now, one hundred and sixty years later. According the rules governing the Earl Grey Scheme, ‘orphans’ to be selected should have been resident in the Workhouse for at least one year, this was to prevent girls coming in with the sole objective of being selected. My own sense is that a benefactor on her behalf, used his influence with the Board of Guardians to get her away from the wretched circumstances, the poverty and despair that would have been her fate in Ireland. This benefactor may have been Dean Cussen once again.
Fascinating. Thank you to all involved in gathering all this information, especially Bridget’s Great Great Granddaughters, Julie Evans and Jeanette Greenway. Thank you Kate for communicating the information.
I’d like to know the title of the TG4 Documentary from October 2013 so that I might search for it.
Mary, my apologies. I have only found your comment now – I had better wake up! It was a TG4 documentary called Tar Abháile. I have searched on You Tube but can’t find it.I don’t think it is available anywhere now. I will keep a look out for it.
Fascinating story and even better detective work. This would be a wonderful movie or play.
Facinating story Kay…very interesting
Thank you for this story of Bridget Ryan. Congratulations on the amazing research to all involved.
I loved reading Bridget’s story. Life could not have been easy in the early days of the colony, but it gave at least a chance for those who came, an opportunity to survive the horrors of the Irish famine. Sadly Bridget’s name does not appear on the memorial in Sydney see Irishfaminememorial.org Most Australians born before the end of WWll and even into the 1950s, had some Irish Ancestry, (myself included). Thank you for the insights into the lives they left behind and guidance in tracking their histories.