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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mary_PutlandMary Putland - Wikipedia

    Mary Bligh, Lady O'Connell (later Putland and later O'Connell) (1783–1864) was the Lady of Government House, New South Wales, Australia during the period her father William Bligh was the Governor of New South Wales. [1] [2] Early life.

  2. There, in May 1810, O'Connell hastily married widow Mary Putland, the daughter of the deposed former governor William Bligh, shortly before Bligh's return to England. O'Connell also had a commission as Lieutenant-Governor, and so acted when Macquarie was absent in Tasmania in the latter part of 1812. O'Connell was then on good terms ...

  3. Bligh verließ England Richtung Sydney mit seiner Tochter, Mary Putland, und ihrem Ehemann, der im Januar 1808 plötzlich im Vorfeld der Rum Rebellion starb. Blighs Ehefrau war in England geblieben. Noch vor seiner Ankunft führte sein Führungsstil zu Problemen mit Untergebenen.

  4. Biography (222 words) sketcher, was the eldest daughter of William Bligh and Elizabeth, née Betham. In February 1806 she accompanied her father to Sydney on board the Lady Sinclair ; her husband, Lieutenant John Putland, was on board the Porpoise in the same convoy.

  5. Mary Bligh, Lady O'Connell (later Putland and later O'Connell) (1783–1864) was the Lady of Government House, New South Wales, Australia during the period her father William Bligh was the Governor of New South Wales. [1] [2] Contents. Early life. Lady of Government House. Rum Rebellion. Return to New South Wales. Later life. Legacy. References.

  6. Mary Putland, daughter of William Bligh accompanied her father to New South Wales on his appointment as Governor. Putland was married to John Putnam, aide-de-camp to Governor Bligh, but her husband died in 1808. She subsequently married Maurice Charles Philip O'Connell, a solder and later landowner.

  7. Mary Putland. b. c.1783. Also known as Mary Bligh, Lady Mary O'Connell. Artist (Draughtsman) Putland's father Governor William Bligh described her work as 'some little fancy drawings.'. He was not so condensing when, barely a fortnight after her husband's death, the widowed Mary Putland attempted to bar the entry of Major Johnston and his ...