Joseph Hickey Grose, 17891849 (aged 60 years)

Name
Joseph Hickey /Grose/
Given names
Joseph Hickey
Surname
Grose
Birth
about 1789
Text:

age given as 24 in 1813

Immigration
Citation details: Australian Joint Copying Project. Microfilm Roll 87, Class and Piece Number HO11/2, Page Number 200
Text:

Joseph Hickey Grose, one of 300 convicts transported on the ship Baring, April 1815.
Sentence details: Convicted at London Gaol Delivery for a term of 7 years on 15 September 1813.
Vessel: Baring.
Date of Departure: April 1815.
Place of Arrival: New South Wales.

Citation details: Old Bailey Proceedings Online (www.oldbaileyonline.org, version 7.2, 27 June 2016), September 1813, trial of JOSEPH HICKEY GROSE (t18130915-52).
Text:

JOSEPH HICKEY GROSE, Theft > grand larceny, 15th September 1813.
877. JOSEPH HICKEY GROSE was indicted for feloniously stealing, on the 8th of July , twelve bank notes, for the payment of five pound each, value 60 l. and eleven shillings in monies numbered , the property of Thomas Thornton , Senior, George Mantell Hoare , David Walter , Thomas Wildman Goodwin, Thomas Thornton, Junior, and William Everett .
SECOND COUNT, for stealing like bank notes, the property of John Pooley Kensington , Edward Kensington , and Daniel Adams .
WILLIAM TAYLOR . Q. Were you clerk to the late firm of Kensington and Company, bankers - A. Yes; the names of the partner s were John Pooley Kensington , Henry Kensington, and Daniel Adams.
Q. On the 8th of July, last year, did you pay a check for Messrs. Goodwin and Company, for sixty pounds eleven shillings - A. I did, that is the check.
(The check read.)
"London, July, 8th, 1812.
Pay to Messrs. Boller and Co. or bearer, sixty pounds eleven shillings, for Goodwyn and Company.
60 l. 11 s. 0 d. THOMAS THORNTON , JUN."
Q. to Mr. Taylor. I take it for granted that you have no recollection of the person to whom you paid it - A. No; that is impossible. I paid it in twelve five-pound notes, from 5,189, to 5,200, both inclusive, dated 4th of June, 1812, all of them; they were successive numbers; I had received them all at the Bank that day, and eleven shillings in change.
MR. THOMAS THORNTON, JUN. Q. Are you a partner in the house of Messrs. Goodwin and Company, brewer s - A. Yes. The names of the partners are Thomas Thornton , senior, George Mantell Hoare, David Walter , Thomas Wildman Goodwin , Thomas Thornton, junior, and William Everett ; we are brewers, in Lower East Smithfield .
Q. Was the prisoner at the bar in your service as clerk - A. Yes; he quitted the service about a twelvemonth ago; he had been in our service about a year.
Q. Did you serve a public-house in Grub-street with beer - A. Yes; the Weavers Arms.
Q. Was it the custom for the benefit society that was held at that house to deposit money in your hands - A. Yes, it was.
Q. At that time who were the trustees of that benefit, society - A. John Rickards , and Thomas Boller .
Q. At that time had they money in your hands - A. They had considerably above sixty pounds.
Q. Is that check your signature - A. Yes, it is.
Q. Whose hand writing is the body of that check - A. Mr. Grose's, the prisoner; the filling up is in the hand writing of the prisoner.
Q. Do you hold in your hand the check-book, with the counterpart of the check - A. Yes.
Q. Read the counterpart - A. 8th of July, Rickards and Boller, sixty pounds, interest eleven shillings, and by the side of it is casting up the interest, which is usual sixty-six days interest, from May the 3rd; that is the prisoner's hand writing. I rather think I was engaged at the time that I signed it. The accompting house that I sit in is remote from the accompting-house to which persons come.
Q. By the number of the checks signed that day, does it appear to be late or early in that day - A. There are but three checks signed that day. I cannot exactly tell by that.
Q. Now, sir, refer to your books for the entry I have already alluded to; how lately before had you made your annual rest - A. I cannot exactly say; the time we finish is the nearest Saturday to Michaelmas day. June the 27th was he rest day in this instance.
Q. Do you find any entry in the prisoner's hand writing which applies to this transaction - A. Yes; there is one through three of the books of his hand writing; this is the Trade Ledger; the entry that I fix upon there is Bollam and Company, on the debtor side, to cash sixty pound eleven shillings; that is the hand writing of the prisoner; on the credit side, 27th June, by stock sixty pound, and July 10th, profit and loss, interest, sixty pounds eleven shillings; these entries are in the prisoner's hand writing. The next book in which you find it is the Trade Journal; on the 10th of July, Bollen and Company, to cash paid them, sixty pounds eleven shillings. The Cash Journal, 10th July, Boller and Company, notes and interest, sixty pounds eleven shillings; I believe it is note and interest.
Q. Had you any concern with any such person as Bollam and Company - A. No, sir; nor Ballon.
Q. Had you any concern with Boller, excepting Rickards and Boller - A. No.
Q. Are these entries ticked off, as if they had been examined - A. Yes, in the New Ledger; I cannot say by whom the ticking is, the writing; except in the Cash Journal, the note and interest, one part is Mr. Howson's, and other part Mr. Thorton senior; that is a superscription from the back of the counter check.
Q. Do these entries in the book, copied as they are from the counter part of the check, did they serve to prevent any detection until they made their next annual rest - A. They did.
Q. That next next annual rest you made last Midsummer - A. As near to it as we could, and when we came to that we found a deficiency of sixty pounds eleven shillings; that caused a great deal of examination, and ended in this discovery.
COURT. Then you had no connection with Bollam and Company, or Bollen and Company - A. No, our only connection was with Rickards and Boller.
JOHN RICKARDS . Q. Are you and Mr. Boller stewards of the benefit society, which lodge their money in Messrs. Goodwin and Thorntons hands - A We did; I am a steward with Thomas Boller ; he and I had money in Messrs Goodwin and Company's hands; we received their note for the money; the promissory note paid is May 5th, 1812.
"I promise to pay on demand to John Rickards and Thomas Boller , the sum of eighty-five pounds, valued received." Our society held that note for the money, signed Goodwin and Co. Weavers Arms.
Q. Now, on the 8th of July last, or at any time, had you applied to the prisoner, as a clerk of Goodwin and Company, for sixty pounds eleven shillings - A. I did not; nor did I receive any check for it; I had no power to receive the money.
THOMAS BOLLER . Q. You are the other steward with Mr. Rickards - A. Yes.
Q. On the 8th of July, had you made any application to the prisoner - A. No, I had not; nor did I receive any money of him.
CHARLES DARWIN . Q. Are you clerk to this benefit society - A. Yes.
Q. In July last, and before that, was this note in your hands, as the clerk of that society - A. Yes, in my hand, and then I deposit it in the box.
Q. Had you or any of the members made any application to Messrs. Goodwin and Co. for sixty pounds eleven shillings - A. No, nobody can go without my going with them, and I never went.
WILLIAM JETTS . I am a clerk in the Bank of England; I bring from the office twelve bank notes for five-pound each, they have come from the Bank, and have been cancelled; they are 5,189, to 5,200, inclusive, all dated 4th June, 1812.
Q. to Mr. Thornton. Take these notes into your hand, and tell me whether you find the prisoner's hand writing upon any of them; look at the 5,200 - A. I. H. Grose, the prisoner's name, and East Smithfield, and Goodwin and Company.
Q. Who kept the Ledger - A. The prisoner.
Q. to Mr. Howson. Look at these notes, do you find any entry upon the back of them - A. Yes, I do; 5,193, and 93, here is Mr. Grose's name, written by himself; I suppose I received them of the prisoner. I know no other person of that name.
Prisoner. Q. I wish to ask the present witness whether he was in the habit of paying money for Messrs. Goodwin and Co. - A. I was; the prisoner and other clerks likewise did, I believe.
Q. Whose business was it to make the entries in the Cash Journal - A. I have generally done it; it appears I was absent that day, and I suppose the prisoner put it in; there are three or four entries of mine before that, and I believe the prisoner asked me to put it in.
Q. Can you swear that I asked you to put it in - A. No. I cannot; I suppose so. I should have entered it without. There was a counter part in the Check book.
Q. There is no money paid but what goes through your hands - A. Yes, there is; I have been in the habit of paying cash, but not checks.
Q. Have you put any date to the note that you received of me, or had it been endorsed before - A. That I cannot say; if it had I should have put the name of the person upon it that I received it of.
Q. You received it as a private note, and not in the way of business - A. I can say I received it of you.
Prisoner's Defence. I am not prepared to make any defence for myself; the gentlemen of the jury as well as your lordship, have heard the crime that I am charged with; the last witness has summed up the whole of it; he does not know when he received it of me, or whether it was in his possession before, and to the last question I put to him he gave a very evasive answer. I am perfectly innocent of it. I trust you have seen enough of the case.
GUILTY, aged 24.
Transported for Seven Years .
London jury, before Mr. Recorder.

Citation details: p. 340
Text:

The ship Baring (1) arrived in NSW 7 Sep 1815

Religious marriage
Text:

Name: Joseph H Grose
Spouse Name: Mary A Deaton
Marriage Date: 1822
Marriage Place: New South Wales
Registration Place: Liverpool, New South Wales
Registration Year: 1822
Volume Number: V B

Citation details: Liverpool St Luke Composite 19 May 1811 - 07 July 1823
Text:

Joseph Hickey Grose and Mary Ann Deaton were married by banns at Liverpool this 13th day of May 1822 by Robert Cartwright
Joseph signed the register and Mary Ann made her X mark
in the presence of Sophia Burgin, Chas. Meurant

Census
Citation details: 1825 muster (1823-1825)
Text:

Grose, Joseph, free by servitude, Baring, 1815, 7 years, shopkeeper, Sydney
Grose, Irene, 11, born in the colony, daughter of Joseph Grose

Census
Citation details: (NRS 1273) 1828 Censu; no. 396: Householders´ Returns Parramatt
Text:

Householder's name: J.H. Grose, residence Parramatta
Joseph Hickey Grose, 35, free by servitude, merchant, Protestant
Irene Grose, 18, born in the colony, wife of above
9 government servants

Marriage
Text:

Name: Joseph H Grose
Spouse Name: Irene Deaton
Marriage Date: 1829
Marriage Place: New South Wales
Registration Place: Sydney, New South Wales
Registration Year: 1829
Volume Number: V B

Separation
Citation details: Sydney Herald Fri 12 Jul 1839 p. 2
Text:

LAW INTELLIGENCE.
SUPREME COURT - Civil Side.
Wednesday.- Before the Chief Justice and a
Special Jury.
Grose v. Curtis. - This was an action to recover
compensation from the defendant for having had
criminal conversation with the plaintiff's wife.
The defendant had entered a plea of not guilty,
but no one appeared.
The case was very clearly proved. It appeared
that in 1829, the plaintiff, then nearly fifty years
of age, was married to his present wife, Irene
Deaton, then about eighteen. Mr. Grose was
described as being very kind to and fond of his
wife, allowing her a carriage, &c, but from the
ill temper of Mrs. Grose, they lived very uncom-
fortably together. About three years since, Mr.
Grose made a settlement upon his wife, and
allowed her to go to England. After remaining
there, a short time, Mrs. Grose took her passage on
board of the ship Duchess of Kent, on board of
which the defendant was also a passenger. Early
in the voyage the defendant paid great attention
to Mrs. Grose, and several circumstances were
detailed by the Captain which put the guilt of the
parties beyond a doubt. Upon the arrival of the
ship in this Colony, the parties went to the Pul-
teny Hotel, where they represented themselves as
man and wife, and slept together for one night.
His Honor said that, in awarding the damages, it
was material for the Jury to take into their consi-
deration the state of domestic agreement existing
between the parties, in fact, to ascertain whether,
as alleged in the declaration, she was a source of
comfort to her husband. The plaintiff and his
wife, it appeared, did not live happily together,
and in fact, he allowed her to go to England, and
deprive herself of his protection and society, and
he must expect the consequences. This was not
the case where a man lives happily with his wife,
and a person wantonly seduces her. The Jury
found a verdict for the plaintiff - damages £50.
Counsel for the plaintiff, Messrs. Stephen and
a'Beckett.

Marriage
Citation details: The Australian (Sydney) Tue 2 Jun 1840 p. 3
Text:

MARRIED.
By Special License, on the 30th May, at St.
James's Church, Sydney, by the Rev. R.
Allwood, Joseph Hickey Grose, Esq., to Miss
Elizabeth Slater, of Elizabeth-street, Sydney.

Death
Citation details: Sydney Morning Herald Sat 21 Apr 1849 p. 4
Text:

DIED.
At Picton, on the 18th instant, Joseph
Hickey Grose, Esq., an old and much re-
spected merchant of Sydney.

Text:

1080/1849 V18491080 34B GROSE JOSEPH H AGE 65

Burial
Citation details: p. 54 Section 1 Row G No. 1
Text:

JOSEPH HICKEY GROSE
obit April 15th 1849
aged 72 years
Burial register:
J.H. Grose. Late Bathurst Argyle. 18-4-1849. 24-4-1849. 65 yrs

Family with Maria Hopkins
himself
17891849
Birth: about 1789
Death: April 18, 1849Picton, Southern Tablelands, New South Wales, Australia
wife
17941824
Birth: about 1794
Death: 1824New South Wales, Australia
Religious marriage Religious marriageMay 13, 1822Liverpool, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Family with Irene Deaton
himself
17891849
Birth: about 1789
Death: April 18, 1849Picton, Southern Tablelands, New South Wales, Australia
wife
18121840
Birth: November 26, 1812 27 18 Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: January 17, 1840Tasmania, Australia
Marriage Marriage1829Sydney City, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Separation Separationabout 1836Sydney City, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
1 year
son
18301864
Birth: January 8, 1830 41 17 Parramatta, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 1864Glebe, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
22 months
son
18311831
Birth: October 17, 1831 42 18 Parramatta, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 1831New South Wales, Australia
Family with Elizabeth Slater
himself
17891849
Birth: about 1789
Death: April 18, 1849Picton, Southern Tablelands, New South Wales, Australia
wife
18121893
Birth: about 1812 35
Death: August 18, 1893Sydney City, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Marriage MarriageMay 30, 1840Sydney City, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
4 years
daughter
18431865
Birth: 1843 54 31 New South Wales, Australia
Death: December 18, 1865Sydney City, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
2 years
daughter
18441863
Birth: 1844 55 32 New South Wales, Australia
Death: 1863Sydney City, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
1 year
son
18441879
Birth: 1844 55 32 New South Wales, Australia
Death: 1879Sydney City, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
John Deaton + Maria Hopkins
wife’s husband
17851818
Birth: about 1785
Death: 1818Parramatta, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
wife
17941824
Birth: about 1794
Death: 1824New South Wales, Australia
Religious marriage Religious marriageFebruary 15, 1813Parramatta, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
-3 years
stepdaughter
18101816
Birth: June 3, 1810 25 16 Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 1816Parramatta, Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
3 years
wife
18121840
Birth: November 26, 1812 27 18 Greater Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: January 17, 1840Tasmania, Australia
Birth
Text:

age given as 24 in 1813

Immigration
Citation details: Australian Joint Copying Project. Microfilm Roll 87, Class and Piece Number HO11/2, Page Number 200
Text:

Joseph Hickey Grose, one of 300 convicts transported on the ship Baring, April 1815.
Sentence details: Convicted at London Gaol Delivery for a term of 7 years on 15 September 1813.
Vessel: Baring.
Date of Departure: April 1815.
Place of Arrival: New South Wales.

Citation details: Old Bailey Proceedings Online (www.oldbaileyonline.org, version 7.2, 27 June 2016), September 1813, trial of JOSEPH HICKEY GROSE (t18130915-52).
Text:

JOSEPH HICKEY GROSE, Theft > grand larceny, 15th September 1813.
877. JOSEPH HICKEY GROSE was indicted for feloniously stealing, on the 8th of July , twelve bank notes, for the payment of five pound each, value 60 l. and eleven shillings in monies numbered , the property of Thomas Thornton , Senior, George Mantell Hoare , David Walter , Thomas Wildman Goodwin, Thomas Thornton, Junior, and William Everett .
SECOND COUNT, for stealing like bank notes, the property of John Pooley Kensington , Edward Kensington , and Daniel Adams .
WILLIAM TAYLOR . Q. Were you clerk to the late firm of Kensington and Company, bankers - A. Yes; the names of the partner s were John Pooley Kensington , Henry Kensington, and Daniel Adams.
Q. On the 8th of July, last year, did you pay a check for Messrs. Goodwin and Company, for sixty pounds eleven shillings - A. I did, that is the check.
(The check read.)
"London, July, 8th, 1812.
Pay to Messrs. Boller and Co. or bearer, sixty pounds eleven shillings, for Goodwyn and Company.
60 l. 11 s. 0 d. THOMAS THORNTON , JUN."
Q. to Mr. Taylor. I take it for granted that you have no recollection of the person to whom you paid it - A. No; that is impossible. I paid it in twelve five-pound notes, from 5,189, to 5,200, both inclusive, dated 4th of June, 1812, all of them; they were successive numbers; I had received them all at the Bank that day, and eleven shillings in change.
MR. THOMAS THORNTON, JUN. Q. Are you a partner in the house of Messrs. Goodwin and Company, brewer s - A. Yes. The names of the partners are Thomas Thornton , senior, George Mantell Hoare, David Walter , Thomas Wildman Goodwin , Thomas Thornton, junior, and William Everett ; we are brewers, in Lower East Smithfield .
Q. Was the prisoner at the bar in your service as clerk - A. Yes; he quitted the service about a twelvemonth ago; he had been in our service about a year.
Q. Did you serve a public-house in Grub-street with beer - A. Yes; the Weavers Arms.
Q. Was it the custom for the benefit society that was held at that house to deposit money in your hands - A. Yes, it was.
Q. At that time who were the trustees of that benefit, society - A. John Rickards , and Thomas Boller .
Q. At that time had they money in your hands - A. They had considerably above sixty pounds.
Q. Is that check your signature - A. Yes, it is.
Q. Whose hand writing is the body of that check - A. Mr. Grose's, the prisoner; the filling up is in the hand writing of the prisoner.
Q. Do you hold in your hand the check-book, with the counterpart of the check - A. Yes.
Q. Read the counterpart - A. 8th of July, Rickards and Boller, sixty pounds, interest eleven shillings, and by the side of it is casting up the interest, which is usual sixty-six days interest, from May the 3rd; that is the prisoner's hand writing. I rather think I was engaged at the time that I signed it. The accompting house that I sit in is remote from the accompting-house to which persons come.
Q. By the number of the checks signed that day, does it appear to be late or early in that day - A. There are but three checks signed that day. I cannot exactly tell by that.
Q. Now, sir, refer to your books for the entry I have already alluded to; how lately before had you made your annual rest - A. I cannot exactly say; the time we finish is the nearest Saturday to Michaelmas day. June the 27th was he rest day in this instance.
Q. Do you find any entry in the prisoner's hand writing which applies to this transaction - A. Yes; there is one through three of the books of his hand writing; this is the Trade Ledger; the entry that I fix upon there is Bollam and Company, on the debtor side, to cash sixty pound eleven shillings; that is the hand writing of the prisoner; on the credit side, 27th June, by stock sixty pound, and July 10th, profit and loss, interest, sixty pounds eleven shillings; these entries are in the prisoner's hand writing. The next book in which you find it is the Trade Journal; on the 10th of July, Bollen and Company, to cash paid them, sixty pounds eleven shillings. The Cash Journal, 10th July, Boller and Company, notes and interest, sixty pounds eleven shillings; I believe it is note and interest.
Q. Had you any concern with any such person as Bollam and Company - A. No, sir; nor Ballon.
Q. Had you any concern with Boller, excepting Rickards and Boller - A. No.
Q. Are these entries ticked off, as if they had been examined - A. Yes, in the New Ledger; I cannot say by whom the ticking is, the writing; except in the Cash Journal, the note and interest, one part is Mr. Howson's, and other part Mr. Thorton senior; that is a superscription from the back of the counter check.
Q. Do these entries in the book, copied as they are from the counter part of the check, did they serve to prevent any detection until they made their next annual rest - A. They did.
Q. That next next annual rest you made last Midsummer - A. As near to it as we could, and when we came to that we found a deficiency of sixty pounds eleven shillings; that caused a great deal of examination, and ended in this discovery.
COURT. Then you had no connection with Bollam and Company, or Bollen and Company - A. No, our only connection was with Rickards and Boller.
JOHN RICKARDS . Q. Are you and Mr. Boller stewards of the benefit society, which lodge their money in Messrs. Goodwin and Thorntons hands - A We did; I am a steward with Thomas Boller ; he and I had money in Messrs Goodwin and Company's hands; we received their note for the money; the promissory note paid is May 5th, 1812.
"I promise to pay on demand to John Rickards and Thomas Boller , the sum of eighty-five pounds, valued received." Our society held that note for the money, signed Goodwin and Co. Weavers Arms.
Q. Now, on the 8th of July last, or at any time, had you applied to the prisoner, as a clerk of Goodwin and Company, for sixty pounds eleven shillings - A. I did not; nor did I receive any check for it; I had no power to receive the money.
THOMAS BOLLER . Q. You are the other steward with Mr. Rickards - A. Yes.
Q. On the 8th of July, had you made any application to the prisoner - A. No, I had not; nor did I receive any money of him.
CHARLES DARWIN . Q. Are you clerk to this benefit society - A. Yes.
Q. In July last, and before that, was this note in your hands, as the clerk of that society - A. Yes, in my hand, and then I deposit it in the box.
Q. Had you or any of the members made any application to Messrs. Goodwin and Co. for sixty pounds eleven shillings - A. No, nobody can go without my going with them, and I never went.
WILLIAM JETTS . I am a clerk in the Bank of England; I bring from the office twelve bank notes for five-pound each, they have come from the Bank, and have been cancelled; they are 5,189, to 5,200, inclusive, all dated 4th June, 1812.
Q. to Mr. Thornton. Take these notes into your hand, and tell me whether you find the prisoner's hand writing upon any of them; look at the 5,200 - A. I. H. Grose, the prisoner's name, and East Smithfield, and Goodwin and Company.
Q. Who kept the Ledger - A. The prisoner.
Q. to Mr. Howson. Look at these notes, do you find any entry upon the back of them - A. Yes, I do; 5,193, and 93, here is Mr. Grose's name, written by himself; I suppose I received them of the prisoner. I know no other person of that name.
Prisoner. Q. I wish to ask the present witness whether he was in the habit of paying money for Messrs. Goodwin and Co. - A. I was; the prisoner and other clerks likewise did, I believe.
Q. Whose business was it to make the entries in the Cash Journal - A. I have generally done it; it appears I was absent that day, and I suppose the prisoner put it in; there are three or four entries of mine before that, and I believe the prisoner asked me to put it in.
Q. Can you swear that I asked you to put it in - A. No. I cannot; I suppose so. I should have entered it without. There was a counter part in the Check book.
Q. There is no money paid but what goes through your hands - A. Yes, there is; I have been in the habit of paying cash, but not checks.
Q. Have you put any date to the note that you received of me, or had it been endorsed before - A. That I cannot say; if it had I should have put the name of the person upon it that I received it of.
Q. You received it as a private note, and not in the way of business - A. I can say I received it of you.
Prisoner's Defence. I am not prepared to make any defence for myself; the gentlemen of the jury as well as your lordship, have heard the crime that I am charged with; the last witness has summed up the whole of it; he does not know when he received it of me, or whether it was in his possession before, and to the last question I put to him he gave a very evasive answer. I am perfectly innocent of it. I trust you have seen enough of the case.
GUILTY, aged 24.
Transported for Seven Years .
London jury, before Mr. Recorder.

Citation details: p. 340
Text:

The ship Baring (1) arrived in NSW 7 Sep 1815

Religious marriage
Text:

Name: Joseph H Grose
Spouse Name: Mary A Deaton
Marriage Date: 1822
Marriage Place: New South Wales
Registration Place: Liverpool, New South Wales
Registration Year: 1822
Volume Number: V B

Citation details: Liverpool St Luke Composite 19 May 1811 - 07 July 1823
Text:

Joseph Hickey Grose and Mary Ann Deaton were married by banns at Liverpool this 13th day of May 1822 by Robert Cartwright
Joseph signed the register and Mary Ann made her X mark
in the presence of Sophia Burgin, Chas. Meurant

Census
Citation details: 1825 muster (1823-1825)
Text:

Grose, Joseph, free by servitude, Baring, 1815, 7 years, shopkeeper, Sydney
Grose, Irene, 11, born in the colony, daughter of Joseph Grose

Census
Citation details: (NRS 1273) 1828 Censu; no. 396: Householders´ Returns Parramatt
Text:

Householder's name: J.H. Grose, residence Parramatta
Joseph Hickey Grose, 35, free by servitude, merchant, Protestant
Irene Grose, 18, born in the colony, wife of above
9 government servants

Marriage
Text:

Name: Joseph H Grose
Spouse Name: Irene Deaton
Marriage Date: 1829
Marriage Place: New South Wales
Registration Place: Sydney, New South Wales
Registration Year: 1829
Volume Number: V B

Separation
Citation details: Sydney Herald Fri 12 Jul 1839 p. 2
Text:

LAW INTELLIGENCE.
SUPREME COURT - Civil Side.
Wednesday.- Before the Chief Justice and a
Special Jury.
Grose v. Curtis. - This was an action to recover
compensation from the defendant for having had
criminal conversation with the plaintiff's wife.
The defendant had entered a plea of not guilty,
but no one appeared.
The case was very clearly proved. It appeared
that in 1829, the plaintiff, then nearly fifty years
of age, was married to his present wife, Irene
Deaton, then about eighteen. Mr. Grose was
described as being very kind to and fond of his
wife, allowing her a carriage, &c, but from the
ill temper of Mrs. Grose, they lived very uncom-
fortably together. About three years since, Mr.
Grose made a settlement upon his wife, and
allowed her to go to England. After remaining
there, a short time, Mrs. Grose took her passage on
board of the ship Duchess of Kent, on board of
which the defendant was also a passenger. Early
in the voyage the defendant paid great attention
to Mrs. Grose, and several circumstances were
detailed by the Captain which put the guilt of the
parties beyond a doubt. Upon the arrival of the
ship in this Colony, the parties went to the Pul-
teny Hotel, where they represented themselves as
man and wife, and slept together for one night.
His Honor said that, in awarding the damages, it
was material for the Jury to take into their consi-
deration the state of domestic agreement existing
between the parties, in fact, to ascertain whether,
as alleged in the declaration, she was a source of
comfort to her husband. The plaintiff and his
wife, it appeared, did not live happily together,
and in fact, he allowed her to go to England, and
deprive herself of his protection and society, and
he must expect the consequences. This was not
the case where a man lives happily with his wife,
and a person wantonly seduces her. The Jury
found a verdict for the plaintiff - damages £50.
Counsel for the plaintiff, Messrs. Stephen and
a'Beckett.

Marriage
Citation details: The Australian (Sydney) Tue 2 Jun 1840 p. 3
Text:

MARRIED.
By Special License, on the 30th May, at St.
James's Church, Sydney, by the Rev. R.
Allwood, Joseph Hickey Grose, Esq., to Miss
Elizabeth Slater, of Elizabeth-street, Sydney.

Death
Citation details: Sydney Morning Herald Sat 21 Apr 1849 p. 4
Text:

DIED.
At Picton, on the 18th instant, Joseph
Hickey Grose, Esq., an old and much re-
spected merchant of Sydney.

Text:

1080/1849 V18491080 34B GROSE JOSEPH H AGE 65

Burial
Citation details: p. 54 Section 1 Row G No. 1
Text:

JOSEPH HICKEY GROSE
obit April 15th 1849
aged 72 years
Burial register:
J.H. Grose. Late Bathurst Argyle. 18-4-1849. 24-4-1849. 65 yrs