This information is from the Biography: Bushranger Frederick Wordsworth Ward
alias Captain Thunderbolt by courtesy of the author Carol Baxter
Mary Ann Bugg was the eldest child of assigned
convict James Bugg and his Aboriginal "wife"
Charlotte and was born at the Australian Agricultural
Company's Berrico outstation on 7 May 1834. A
further seven children were born in the aftermath, with
her parents marrying in 1848.
Late in 1837, James Bugg expressed concern that
his two children should receive an education "so as to
ensure the abandonment of their savage life". The
Company's Commissioner, Colonel Henry Dumaresq,
approached the authorities and eventually received
the Governor's approval to send them to the Orphan
School "until the Native Institution at Port Phillip
[Melbourne] is in a state to receive them". Plans were
put on hold when Dumaresq died suddenly. A year
later, on 24 February 1839, Mary Ann and her brother
John were baptised in a Church of England ceremony
on the Company's estate. The following day
Dumaresq's temporary replacement wrote to the
Governor advising that the children had been
baptised and that James Bugg was proceeding with
them to Sydney "for the purpose of disposing of them as you may be pleased to direct".
As it turned out, Mary Ann and her brother were not admitted to the Orphan Schools, perhaps
because Governor George Gipps had replaced Governor Richard Bourke in the interim and policy had
changed. A magistrate who knew the Bugg family later reported that Mary Ann had been "sent to a
school in Sydney where she remained about five years", so she perhaps attended a day school and
boarded nearby, or boarded with the family of a cleric who tutored on the side.
Mary Ann returned to her family at Berrico in the mid-1840s where she was "brought up in settled
habits like other children on a station". On 1 June 1848 she married ex-convict Edmund Baker at the
Anglican church at Stroud. They seem to have had a daughter Helena born around 1849, although
this cannot be stated with certainty. For some unknown reason, they separated in 1849 or 1850,
possibly because Baker died although no trace has been found of his death.
In July 1851, Mary Ann and her new partner, shepherd John Burrows, had a son James born at the
Turon River. Her obituary reported that she "was at the Turon diggings and saw the first gold got
there", although Burrows apparently continued to work as a shepherd in the Turon district rather than
digging for gold. By February 1854 when their second son, John, was baptised, Burrows was
shepherding at Louee station near Mudgee. The couple separated in 1854 or 1855, again for
unknown reasons.
By mid-1855, Mary Ann was living with ex-convict James McNally. A daughter Mary Jane was born
early in 1856, a son Patrick William late in 1857, and another daughter Ellen in March 1860. McNally
was recorded as a farmer at Cooyal later that year and continued to live in the Mudgee district until his
death in 1875.
Early in 1861, Mary Ann fell pregnant to ticket-of-leave convict Frederick Wordsworth Ward who
had been granted permission to reside in the Mudgee district until his period of servitude expired in
1866. In mid-1861, Fred took Mary Ann back to her father's farm at Monkerai where their daughter
Marina Emily was born in October 1861. However Fred was not around to greet the new arrival.
Ticket-of-leave regulations decreed that he remain in his muster district and attend a three-monthly
muster, so he broke one rule when he left the district, and broke another when he failed to return in
time for the muster. Accordingly, his ticket-of-leave was revoked. He compounded the problem by
riding in on a stolen horse and was sentenced to another three years servitude. He returned to the
Cockatoo Island penal settlement soon afterwards.
Claims have been made that Mary Ann helped Fred Ward escape from Cockatoo Island two years
later in September 1863, but the evidence proves otherwise. "When Ward came to grief," wrote the
above-mentioned magistrate in 1866, Mary Ann "returned to her father's home and remained there till
she obtained employment as a domestic in a family near Dungog, and she remained so employed in
the same locality till Ward joined her after his escape from Cockatoo Island."
Fred and Mary Ann fled to the Culgoa River, north-west of Walgett, where they camped until early
1865 when Fred joined forces with another three villains and began robbing in the district. Mary Ann
was apprehended by the police in March 1865 after they found stolen goods in her camp but she
feigned labour and the police were forced to leave her at Wilby Wilby station. Fred and his gang
rescued her early in April and took her down to the Tamworth district where Fred engaged another
part-Aboriginal woman to assist with her delivery. He and his gang then returned to bushranging. Their
daughter Eliza was born in mid-1865.
In March 1866, the police encountered the Wards again at their Pigna Barney Creek camp in the
Barrington Tops. Mary Ann was taken into custody for vagrancy. After her conviction, a Parliamentary
outcry led the Attorney General to recommend her release on the grounds that the charge was not
properly prepared.
Early in 1867, Mary Ann was apprehended by the police for being in possession of stolen goods.
Although she claimed to have purchased them, she was unable to produce receipts so she was again
sent to gaol. A concerned magistrate looked into her case and found that a shopman could attest to
her purchases. Again she was released from gaol.
Mary Ann fell pregnant again late in 1867 and their son Frederick Wordsworth Ward junior was born
in August 1868. By that time, Fred and Mary Ann had separated, and she was working at Griffin's Inn
at Carroll.
In 1869 Mary Ann encountered John Burrows again and they settled together in the Mudgee
district, spending the rest of their lives together. The last of Mary Ann's fifteen known children were
born in the 1870s. In her final years - presumably after Burrows death - she worked as a nurse to
support herself. She died at Mudgee on 22 April 1905 at her home in Gladstone Street, Mudgee, her
cause of death listed as "senile decay".
Early in 1861, Mary Ann fell
pregnant to ticket-of-leave
convict Frederick
Wordsworth Ward aka
Captain Thunderbolt who
had been granted permission
to reside in the Mudgee
district until his period of
servitude expired in 1866 . . .
© Copyright Mike Fernandes 2013