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Andrew Hartigan Tyrie, 18331907 (aged 74 years)

Name
Andrew Hartigan /Tyrie/
Surname
Tyrie
Given names
Andrew Hartigan
Nickname
Red Tim
Family with parents
father
The Morley off the Lizard - National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.
17991850
Birth: 16 February 1799 29 26 Musselburgh, East Lothian, Scotland
Death: 31 October 1850Queanbeyan, New South Wales, Australia
mother
18101873
Birth: 30 June 1810 37 18 Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 13 August 1873New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage23 June 1828St. Peter's Church, Cambelltown, New South Wales, Australia
16 months
elder sister
18291878
Birth: 16 October 1829 30 19
Death: 24 June 1878
2 years
elder sister
3 years
himself
18331907
Birth: 1833 33 22 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 31 March 1907Urialla, New South Wales, Australia
Mother’s family with Joseph Jourdan
stepfather
17991827
Birth: about 1799
Death: about 1827
mother
18101873
Birth: 30 June 1810 37 18 Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 13 August 1873New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage1825Campbelltown, New South Wales, Australia
2 years
half-sister
Mother’s family with John Parker
stepfather
18281873
Birth: 1828 24 23
Death: 1873Cooma, New South Wales, Australia
mother
18101873
Birth: 30 June 1810 37 18 Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 13 August 1873New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage1855Maneroo, New South Wales, Australia
Family with Ann Sarah Parker
himself
18331907
Birth: 1833 33 22 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 31 March 1907Urialla, New South Wales, Australia
wife
18331923
Birth: 1833 29 28 Limerick, County Limerick, Munster, Ireland
Death: 11 June 1923Tinderry, New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage4 May 1854Cooma, New South Wales, Australia
20 months
daughter
1855
Birth: about 1855 22 22 Argyllshire, Scotland
Death:
2 years
son
Andrew Hartigan Tyrie's Headstone.
18571924
Birth: 30 April 1857 24 24 Cooma, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 20 July 1924Jerangle, New South Wales, Australia
9 months
daughter
St. Thomas' Church, Carwoola, New South Wales, Australia.
18581938
Birth: 13 January 1858 25 25 Good Good Station, Cooma, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 3 March 1938Queanbeyan, New South Wales, Australia
2 years
son
18591933
Birth: about 1859 26 26 Cooma, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 28 July 1933Tinderry, New South Wales, Australia
3 years
daughter
18611938
Birth: about 1861 28 28 Cooma, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 24 September 1938Queanbeyan, New South Wales, Australia
3 years
son
18631902
Birth: about 1863 30 30 Cooma, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 26 April 1902Monaro, New South Wales, Australia
3 years
son
18651865
Birth: 1865 32 32 Captains Flat, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 1865Captains Flat, New South Wales, Australia
22 months
daughter
1866
Birth: 26 October 1866 33 33 Captains Flat, New South Wales, Australia
Death:
21 months
son
18681956
Birth: 20 July 1868 35 35 Monaro, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 24 July 1956Anembo, New South Wales, Australia
3 years
daughter
18701953
Birth: 1870 37 37 Queanbeyan, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 1953Essendon, Victoria, Australia
4 years
daughter
1873
Birth: 31 December 1873 40 40 Tinderry Creek, New South Wales, Australia
Death:
1 year
son
1874
Birth: about 1874 41 41 Queanbeyan, New South Wales, Australia
Death:
4 years
daughter
1877
Birth: about 1877 44 44 Cooma, New South Wales, Australia
Death:
Edmund Stevens + Ann Sarah Parker
wife’s husband
wife
18331923
Birth: 1833 29 28 Limerick, County Limerick, Munster, Ireland
Death: 11 June 1923Tinderry, New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage1848
stepdaughter
Birth
Christening
Death of a father
Marriage
Marriage of a parent
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a son
Address: Good Good Station, Cooma, New South Wales, Australia.
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a son
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a son
Address: Good Good Station, Cooma, New South Wales, Australia.
Birth of a son
Address: Norongo, Captains Flat, Monaro, New South Wales, Australia.
Death of a son
Address: Norongo, Captains Flat, Monaro, New South Wales, Australia.
Birth of a daughter
Address: Norongo, Captains Flat, Monaro, New South Wales, Australia.
Birth of a son
Birth of a daughter
Death of a mother
Address: Count-a-Guinea, Big Badger, Monaro, New South Wales, Australia.
Burial of a mother
Marriage of a daughter
Birth of a daughter
Marriage of a daughter
Birth of a son
Birth of a daughter
Death of a sister
Marriage of a daughter
Marriage of a son
Marriage of a son
Marriage of a daughter
Marriage of a daughter
Death of a son
Address: Woodbine, Big Tinderry Sheep Station, Monaro, New South Wales, Australia.
Death
Burial
Cemetery: St. Thomas Cemetery
Unique identifier
CDD604719E05EE419192274F57FBD04BF0B6
Last change
12 March 201315:51:02
Author of last change: Danny
Note

BIRTH: Registration number V18332804 45A/1833 New South Wales, Australia BDM.
Scots Church, Presbyterian.
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, New South Wales, Australia BDM Index, Pioneer Series,1788-1888 (CD-ROM), June 1994, # 17168, 1842. Electronic media. Vol. 45A,No. 2804.

DEATH: Registration number 6329/1907 New South Wales, Australia BDM.
Misnamed in records as Andrew H Tyrle.
Cause of death is officially listed as Chronic Bronchitis.

BIOGRAPHY: Possibly worked as a Shepherd at Big Tinderry.

BIOGRAPHY: A real sneaky bastard of a bushranger; mentioned here as hewas a principal of the later Jingera mob. The Jingera Mountains andcontiguous areas, a wilderness remote from law enforcement, had been thehaunt of bushrangers from the earliest times - "Jingery Jack" is thefirst "leader" identified; Jacky Jacky (WESTWOOD) found a home there -and the close community formed by inter-marriage and cattle raidingparties created a particular problem for the authorities. The Clarke gangis only the most famous example of the area's capacity to create trouble.
Tyrie was arrested on Antill's Primrose Valley station at Christmas 1859,but must have escaped. He was not caught again until 20 October 1862,when superintendent Markham, on his way with Constable Cleary of Cooma tomake an official inspection of the Braidwood subdivision of police,passed Tyrie's station at Jingera:
It has long been known that the vigilance of the Braidwood police wasgenerally evaded by Tyrie always having saddled horses in attendance toexpedite his flight, and that he assumed various disguises to escaperecognition ... Tyrie came out of the hut, and in his hurry to make abolt, attempted to put the bridle on the horse, but could not get itproperly fixed. Determined, however, to give trooper Cleary a run for it,Tyrie clapped spurs to his horse and tried to get off as he was, but theanimal was not tractable, and the constable seized his man and had himsecurely handcuffed ...
Tyrie's notoriety is more owing to the clever manner in which he hasevaded the police than to the number or grave nature of the crimes he isalleged to have committed. To our knowledge he was once in Queanbeyansome months back, and his pretty-looking young wife was sitting on thecourt-house steps, nursing her baby, when she was interrogated by one ofthe police as to the wherabouts of her husband, to which she replied -"He's in Queanbeyan right now, and it is more than the whole lot of youcan do to take him." And they did not take him, for the wife went homethat day, and Tyrie was seen following her the next.
[Sydney Mail, 6 November 1862]
Tried at Queanbeyan police court, November 1862 for cattle stealing. Alot of horse and cattle stealing, all over the colony, then and since,was conducted on behalf of the squatters. In Tyrie's case, it was founddifficult to substantiate most of the charges. He was charged withstealing one bullock the property of Mr. C. York [GH 15 Nov. 1862]. AtQueanbeyan Quarter Sessions, he was convicted of stealing cattle fromJohn Cosgrove and sentenced to 2 years' hard labour in Berrima Gaol [GH29 Nov. 1862].
Another reference occurs in 1866: in May he was committed at the CoomaPolice Court on a charge of stealing a grey horse the property of JohnFeagan of Geegongs, near Queanbeyan [SM 19 May 1866].

BIOGRAPHY: KNOWN BUSHRANGER ASSOCIATES

BIOGRAPHY: ANTILL, Henry Colden 1863
Son of a wealthy squatter, associate of the Jingera Mob and Andrew TYRIE.With Jonathon Bowman, charged with horse stealing, December 1862 [SM, 10Jan. 1863]. With James Brown alias Barber (another member of the JingeraMob), bailed up Sebastien Kaerpenn, a shepherd, on Mr. Hosking's LagoonStation at Burra, 31 January 1863. Both were tried at the GoulburnCircuit Court, 25 March, found guilty and sentenced to 15 years' hardlabour, the first year in irons. Benjamin Jermyn and his wife Ann werecharged with feloniously receiving the stolen property; Mrs. Jermyn wascommitted on this charge [GH, 7.1.63; MM, 14.2.63; SM, 28.3.63, 4.4.63].

BIOGRAPHY: BERRIMAN, Joseph 1869
Brother of Thomas and William, member of the Jingera Mob.
With James Vennell and Thomas KEEVIL, charged with robbery of GoulburnMail, 10 May 1869. "The Crown Prosecutor stated that he did not intend toprosecute at the moment, so he was remanded to the next Quarter Session."Acquitted. [GHC, 19 June 1869].

BIOGRAPHY: JINGERY JACK 1839
Leader of the first "Jingera mob," arrested with Bill West, anaccomplice, in November 1839. A Braidwood correspondent reported:
These fellows, in company with another man called Red Tim (possiblyAndrew Hartigan Tyrie, whom our police are expressly in pursuit of) havecarried on horse-stealing on a most extensive scale for the last fiveyears in this part of the country, selling them at Port Phillip, andelsewhere, to the tune of some thousands of pounds, but I hope theircareer of plunder is at an end ... Last week I had the pleasure of seeingMaster Jingery Jack and one of his associates, named Bill West, lodged inthe Braidwood lock-up.
[Australasian Chronicle, 22 November 1839].
Writing again nine days later (although both letters appeared in the sameissue of the newspaper) this correspondent had to report that Jack didnot remain long in custody:
The famous Jingery Jack is again at large; he was forwarded fromBraidwood to Goulburn, and when forwarded from thence to Berrima, heeffected his escape from the constables. Such constables ought to bebrought to strict account for their conduct, as it is quite certain thatJingery Jack and his associates present ample means of bribing them.
[Aust. Chronicle, ditto].

Note

Registration number V1854425 41B/1854 New South Wales, Australia BDM.