State Library and Tasmanian Archives Blog

Tasmania Reads: An Application to the Orphan School (Part One: The Challenge)

A row of old Ledger books on a shelf
Image credit: Tasmanian Archives.

The State Library is issuing a challenge to Tasmanians to read five different examples of nineteenth century handwriting from our Heritage Collections, each featuring a different set of records held in the State Archives.

The scripts are selected to give you insights into some of the key strengths of our collection and we hope they will pique your interest to explore further.

Your Transcription Challenge

This final challenge is, for me, the most difficult to read both for its content and style. It is an application to the Colonial Secretary for the immediate admission of John Garrity to the newly opened orphanage at New Town.  The orphan school catered for the children of convicts under sentence, as well as the children of the free when the parents were unable or unwilling to care for them.

A letter: A General Correspondence, Colonial Secretary’s Office. the text reads: Be so good as to direct that John Garritty 7 years of age, son of Charles Garritty formerly a soldier in the Staff Corps- be received into the Orphan School this day. – the Child is perfectly destitute, his cruel and unnatural Parent having total abandoned him.
Tasmanian Archives:   General Correspondence, Colonial Secretary’s Office CSO5/1/86 File 1885 page 154.

The Answer…

will be published in our blog this afternoon. Stay tuned!

Author

  • Elizabeth Brown is a Librarian with the State Library of Tasmania and Tasmanian Archives

1 thought on “Tasmania Reads: An Application to the Orphan School (Part One: The Challenge)”

  1. Julie Kapeller says:

    Memorandum
    28th Sep
    Be so good as to direct that John Garritty 7 years of age, son of Charles Garritty formerly a soldier in the Staff Corps be received into the Orphan School this day. The child is presently destitute, his cruel & unnatural parents having totally abandoned him.

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