Catherine Joyce

Irish immigrant

Arrived 1850 on Panama

One of the names etched into the Australian Monument to the Great Irish Famine at the Hyde Park Barracks is that of Catherine Joyce.

Born in County Mayo, Ireland, Catherine was 19 years old when she arrived in Sydney in 1850 on the Panama. She was a house servant, one of several on the ship. Her fellow passengers, 156 young Irish women, were nursemaids, needlewomen, dairymaids, housemaids, laundresses, kitchen maids and farm servants. All travelled to Sydney as assisted migrants in the wake of the famine and were accommodated at the newly established immigration depot at the Hyde Park Barracks, where they awaited employment.

Catherine was soon employed by the Reverend Joseph Oram and his wife of York Street, and two years later she married and started a family in South Australia. She and her husband, Dr R J Stuart-Robertson, had 10 children (four of them stillborn), but around 1873 he deserted her. She then lived with her children in Bourke, NSW, where she died in 1893. Catherine kept this small cross as a reminder of her homeland. It and her wedding ring passed to her descendants, who later donated them to the Hyde Park Barracks Museum collection.

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Irish female immigration

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A reflection of the Hyde Park Barracks on the glass as part of 'An Gorta Mor', The Australian Monument to the Great Irish Famine

Remembering the Great Irish Famine

The memorial was officially unveiled on 28 August 1999 by Governor-General Sir William Deane

Irish orphan girls at Hyde Park Barracks

This is a story of over 4000 Irish orphans driven from their homeland by the Great Famine

Enough rope

More than a kilometre of rope suspended the hammocks required to sleep 600 or more convicts in the Hyde Park Barracks dormitories between 1819 and 1848

Black and white etching of ship deck with women on board.

‘Perfect liberty and uproar’

A letter from a schoolmaster on the orphan ship John Knox offers a fascinating insight into life at sea for teenage girls emigrating to Sydney in 1850