Background
There appears to be some separation of Elizabeth’s father from her grandparents and suggestions that her father was a very unhappy manitoba
There appears to be some separation of Elizabeth’s father from her grandparents and suggestions that her father was a very unhappy manitoba
She travelled with 103 other convicts on 6 June 1921 and arrived in Hobart on 7 January 1822. The town of Mount Eliza near Melbourne is named after her. Callaghan had roots in Ennis, County Clare, Ireland.
She worked as a servant.
Her mother was an elegant, learned and strong lady of exceptional character. The family struggled, and Callaghan was sent on her way at just seventeen.
Beautiful, elegant, fiery and learned – her mother was confident that she would easily find her place in the world. On 13 September 1820 Callaghan was tried for "felonious disposal of and putting away a forged and counterfeit bank note for £1 with intent to defraud the Bank of England" at the Middlesex Gaol Delivery (Old Bailey), London, England.
She was sentenced to 14 years (death commuted) and was transported to New South Wales, arriving on 18 December 1821.
On 27 March 1822, she committed an offence of being drunk and disorderly and was in Her Majesty Gaol for one week. She had to wear an iron collar for the period and to sit in stocks twice, two hours at each time. She committed another offence on June 25 when she was caught sneaking out of her master’s premises on the 24th and remained absent all night.
She was sentenced to sit in stocks for three hours that day.
In 1823, Callaghan committed an offence when she was absent from her master’s premises one day and night. She was punished for a week, with bread and water rations and had to sit in the stocks for two hours each day.
Callaghan married John Batman on 29 March 1828 in Street John"s, Launceston, Tasmania. After Batman died on 6 May 1839, Callaghan married William Willoughby, her former husband"s clerk in 1841.
Callaghan was murdered in 1852 in Geelong, being beaten and kicked to death in a bar-room brawl.
Mount Eliza on the Mornington Peninsula in Victoria was named after Callaghan in 1836 by Captain William Hobson.