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						FF JAMES RUSE, Convict 
						
						‘Scarborough’(1759–1837) 
						
						
						this story is under review by Membership Team 
						
						James Ruse (1759-1837), pioneer and 
						smallholder, was born on 9 August 1759 at Launceston, 
						Cornwall, England. 
						
						  
						
						At the Cornwall Assizes in 1782 he was 
						convicted of burglarious breaking and entering; his 
						capital sentence was changed to transportation to Africa 
						for seven years. During the next five years while the 
						government was searching for ways of solving the convict 
						problem Ruse spent much of his time in the hulk 
						Dunkirk at Plymouth. 
						
						  
						
						When it was decided to establish a penal 
						settlement in New South Wales he was sent out in the 
						First Fleet in 1787 in the Scarborough.   
						
						In July 1789 he claimed that his sentence 
						had expired and soon afterwards he asked for a land 
						grant, inspired by the desire to take up farming, an 
						occupation to which he had been bred. Lacking evidence 
						that Ruse was entitled to his freedom, Governor 
						
						
						
						Arthur Phillip 
						did not at once give him a grant, but in November 
						permitted him to occupy an allotment near Parramatta, 
						withholding the title until his capacity as a farmer and 
						his right to freedom had been proved. The governor made 
						this concession partly because he knew Ruse to be 
						industrious and partly because he was anxious to 
						discover how long it would take an emancipist to become 
						self-sufficient.   
						
						Although not the first person to 
						cultivate land in the colony on his own behalf, Ruse was 
						the first ex-convict to seek a grant, for other 
						emancipists displayed no inclination to take up 
						agriculture. 
						
						  
						
						Undeterred by famine, drought and the 
						depredations of convicts Ruse applied himself diligently 
						to his task, helped by Phillip who provided him with 
						provisions, clothing, seed, implements, livestock, a hut 
						and assistance in clearing a small area of land. He 
						proved not only a hard worker but also, by local 
						standards, an enlightened farmer who made quite 
						effective use of the limited means at his disposal. 
						
						  
						
						By February 1791 he was able to support 
						both himself and his wife, Elizabeth Perry, a convict 
						whom he had married on 5 September 1790. In April 1791 
						he received the title to his land, the first grant 
						issued in New South Wales. 
						
						Besides justifying the faith placed in 
						him Ruse had also scotched the belief held by many 
						contemporaries that a smallholder could never maintain 
						himself in New South Wales. This was not his only 
						contribution to the expansion of private farming. He 
						left Parramatta in despair at the quality of the land 
						and in October 1793 sold his farm to Surgeon 
						
						
						
						John Harris 
						for £40.    
						
						Having spent the proceeds, originally 
						intended to pay his passage to England, he was obliged 
						to seek a fresh grant and in January 1794 he became one 
						of the twenty-two settlers responsible both for opening 
						the Hawkesbury River area and for demonstrating its 
						superiority as an agricultural centre over all other 
						known regions. Why he chose a region hitherto regarded 
						by many as unsuitable for farming is uncertain, but he 
						made it his home for the next few years. At first he 
						appears to have fared quite well and in June 1797 
						received the title to an additional forty-acre grant (16 
						ha); nine months later when poverty was acute among 
						smallholders, he sold his original grant for £300, which 
						suggests that it must have been well developed. Before 
						1800 he had bought an additional twenty acres (8 ha) but 
						he mortgaged them in March 1801.   
						
						In 1797 he had been brought to court on 
						charges of running a gambling school on his premises, 
						but since no details of the trial are available, there 
						can be no certainty that he engaged in a pastime enjoyed 
						by many of his fellow settlers. In the next decade he 
						still owned some land at the Hawkesbury, but his name 
						appears on none of the available lists of settlers. In 
						1806 his wife was recorded as farming fifteen acres (6 
						ha) at the Hawkesbury and she later signed the petitions 
						extolling 
						
						
						William Bligh, 
						but of Ruse himself there was no mention. The only 
						evidence of his presence was an agreement dated May 1801 
						apprenticing his son James as a mariner in the firm of
						
						
						
						Kable 
						& 
						
						
						Underwood. 
						It has been suggested that he found employment on local 
						vessels himself, for on several occasions the Sydney 
						Gazette listed a James Ruse among the crew members 
						of such ships, but these references were probably to his 
						son. 
						
						In 1809 Ruse successfully requested a 
						grant at Bankstown, for the recent Hawkesbury floods had 
						caused him heavy losses. He retained contact with the 
						Hawkesbury throughout the Macquarie period and in 1819 
						received a 100-acre (40 ha) grant at Riverstone. 
						 
						
						  
						
						The muster of that year, however, showed 
						him as owning only 45 acres (18 ha) in the Windsor 
						district of which 20 (8 ha) were cleared and 19½ (7.9 
						ha) under crop. In addition he owned 3 horses, 2 cows 
						and 7 hogs.  
						
						Subsequently his fortunes seem to have 
						declined for in 1825 he was recorded as owning a mere 
						ten acres (4 ha) of land, all in the Windsor district, 
						and twelve hogs. Since this small property could 
						scarcely have sustained him, it comes as no surprise to 
						find that by 1828 he and his wife Elizabeth were working 
						as overseer for Captain Brooks at Lower Minto. 
						
						  
						
						In 1834 he was living at Macquarie 
						Fields. Two years later he was received into the Roman 
						Catholic Church, though there is no evidence that his 
						wife or seven children followed his example. 
						
						  
						
						His death on 5 September 1837 
						brought to a close the career of one whose importance in 
						New South Wales history has been unduly exaggerated and 
						romanticized. Although his early achievements were 
						noteworthy, he soon faded into the background and led an 
						existence that scarcely distinguished him from many of 
						his associates. 
						
						by
						
						
						
						B. 
						H. Fletcher1967. 
						
						  
						
						This article was published in 
						
						
						
						
						Australian Dictionary of Biography, 
						Volume 2, (MUP), 1967 
						
						  
						
						The Fellowship of First Fleeters 
						installed a FFF Plaque on James Ruse’s Grave on 3rd 
						November 1993. 
						
						Re-Installed 10th February 
						2008 
						
						Refer FFF Web Site:http://www.fellowshipfirstfleeters.org.au/graves.html 
						
						Under 
						 FFF 
						Plaque 30 – Installed 3rd November 1983(Re-Installed 
						10th February 2008)forFF JAMES RUSE 
						Convict‘Scarborough’(1759–1837) 
						
						
						Select Bibliography 
							
							
							
							
							Historical Records of New South Wales, 
							vol 1, part 2
							
							
							
							Historical Records of Australia, 
							series 1, vol 1
							
							
							D. Collins, An Account of the 
							English Colony in New South Wales, vols 1-2 (Lond, 
							1798-1802)
							
							
							W. Tench, A Complete Account of 
							the Settlement at Port Jackson in New South Wales 
							(Lond, 1793)
							
							
							C. Tolchard, The Humble 
							Adventurer: The Life and Times of James Ruse (Melb, 
							1965)
							
							
							I. K. Sampson, ‘The First Grain’, 
							Journal and Proceedings (Royal Australian 
							Historical Society), vol 25, part 1, 1939, pp 1-79
							
							
							A. C. MacDougall, Australia's First 
							Independent Farmer (State Library of Victoria).   |