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1108438
  • Title
    Documents of appointment, grants and purchases signed by Governors Darling and Bourke, with the New South Wales Great Seal attached, 1827-1832
  • Creator
  • Call number
    B 1551/1
    B 1551/2
    B 1551/3
  • Level of description
    fonds
  • Date

    1827-1832
  • Type of material
  • Reference code
    1108438
  • Physical Description
    0.05 metres of textual material (1 box)
  • ADMINISTRATIVE/ BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY

    The Great Seal was one of a number of legal 'instruments' created to extend Royal authority to the Pacific and permit the operation of British law in the Colony of N.S.W. As the King's representative in the region, was required to affix the Great Seal of N.S.W. to any official documents he signed, such as Commissions, Pardons and Deeds of Land Grant, in order to legitimise them. The design and motto used (in various configurations) on the first five Great Seals of N.S.W. makes reference to the hopes of its designers that N.S.W would flourish, and it is particularly apt that the design sealed documents which would help secure the colony's future.

    The seal shows on its obverse (front) a design that alludes to the intended redemptive qualities of the convict settlement, and was described in a Royal Warrant for the seal as follows:

    Convicts landed at Botany Bay; their fetters taken off and received by Industry, sitting on a bale of goods with her attributes, the distaff [a spindle for spinning wool or flax], bee-hive, pick axe, and spade, pointing to an oxen ploughing, the rising habitations, and a church on a hill at a distance, with a fort for their defence. Motto: Sic fortis etruria crevit [Thus gallant Etruria grew]; with this inscription round the circumference, Sigillum Nov. Camb. Aust. [Seal New South Wales]. While the reverse contained the Royal Arms and the style and titles of the Sovereign, George IV.

    (Sources: http://www.nma.gov.au/collections-search/results?search=adv&ref=coll&collname=Third+Great+Seal+of+New+South+Wales+collection; and
    1932 'GREAT SEAL OF N.S.W.', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 13 August, p. 9, viewed 6 March, 2014, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article16889439)
  • Scope and Content
    Includes 3 documents of cream-coloured parchment with hand writing or print in black ink. Attached to the bottom edge of the documents, with a loop of pale pink or green ribbon is a large, round, wax seal, the Great Seal New South Wales of George IV. The wax seals are brittle, have cracks or broken with small losses to the surface.

    B 1551/1
    George the Fourth to John Oxley is appointed to Chief Commissioner with William Cordeaux and John Stephen Junior to be the colleagues of John Oxley and joint Commissioners with him by Governor Ralph Darling, 21 December 1827. Signed R. Darling.

    B 1551/2
    Town grant in favor of Daniel Egan, County Cumberland, Town Sydney, dated 5 March 1831 for fifteen perches. Signed by the Governor Ralph Darling.

    B 1551/3
    By His Excellency Governor in Chief Richard Bourke grant at public sale to Patrick MacMahon the purchaser of 100 acres of land in the County of Cook, 9 April 1832. Signed Richard Bourke. Even though this was in the reign of William IV, the seal is still of George IV.
  • Access Conditions

    Access via appointment
  • Copying Conditions
    Out of copyright:
    Approval for reproduction required:
    Please acknowledge:: Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales
  • Description source

    Information transferred from Manuscripts Index Catalogue as part of the eRecords Project, 2013-2014
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