Difference between revisions of "Edward Viret"
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+ | [[File:I05527-p0000-000001-0080-010-004.jpg|800px|thumb|right|"Official form on blue paper - evidence - [Edward Viret], sergeant of police, 26 October 1854, p.1, PROV, VPRS5527/P0 Unit 1, Item 80 | ||
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+ | Be it remembered, that on twenty sixth day of October in the year of our Lord One thousand eight hundred and fifty four [[Edward Viret]] of Ballarat in the Colony of Victoria Sergeant of Police personally came before me one of Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace for the said Colony, and acknowledged himself to owe to our Sovereign Lady the Queen the sum of one hundred pounds, of good lawful money of Great Britain, to be made and levied of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements, in the use of our said Lady the Queen, her Heirs and Successors, if the said [[Edward Viret]] shall fail in the condition indorsed.<br/> | ||
+ | Taken and acknowledged the day and year of your first above mentioned at Ballarat in the said Colony before me<br/> | ||
+ | William Morrissy ]] | ||
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+ | [[File:I05527-p0000-000001-0080-010-004v.jpg|800px|thumb|right|"Official form on blue paper - evidence - [[Edward Viret]], sergeant of police, 26 October 1854, p.2, PROV, VPRS5527/P0 Unit 1, Item 80 | ||
+ | <br/> | ||
+ | The condition of the within written Recognance is such, That Whereas [[Andrew McIntyre]] was the seventeenth day of October 1854 at Ballarat in the Colony aforesaid, together with certain ther persons did tumultuously and riotously assemble and did then and there feloniously and unlawfully burn, pull down and destroy the hotel of one James Francis Bentley it therefore be the said [[Edward Viret]] shall appear at the Criminal Sessions to be holden at Melbourne in and for the Colony of Victoria, on the fifteenth day of November next, and there give such evidence as he knoweth upon an information to be then and there preferred against the said [[Andrew McIntyre]] for the offence aforesaid, as the Jurors who shall pass upon the trial of the said [[Andrew McIntyre]] then the said Recognizance to be void or else stand in full force and virtue.]] | ||
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
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+ | [[Andrew McIntyre]] | ||
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+ | [[William Morrissy]] | ||
[[Police]] | [[Police]] | ||
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==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== | ||
− | Blake, Gregory, ''To Pierce the Tyrant's Heart'',Australian Military History Publications, 2009. | + | Blake, Gregory, ''To Pierce the Tyrant's Heart'', Australian Military History Publications, 2009. |
==References== | ==References== | ||
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Revision as of 18:05, 5 August 2017
Contents
Background
Goldfields Involvement, 1854
Post 1854 Experiences
Edward Viret was a sergeant of police at Ballarat in 1854.
See also
Further Reading
Blake, Gregory, To Pierce the Tyrant's Heart, Australian Military History Publications, 2009.
References