kendall_family_nsw - Person Sheet
kendall_family_nsw - Person Sheet
NameJames Ruse
Birth9 Aug 1760, Launceston, Cornwall, England602
Death5 Sep 1837, Campbelltown, New South Wales, Australia602
Spouses
Marriage5 Sep 1790, St John’s Church of England , Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia1402,1403,602
ChildrenRebecca (1791-1792)
 James (1793-)
 Elizabeth (1794-)
 Susannah (1796-1872)
 Mary (1798-)
 Ann
Notes for James Ruse
First Fleet

WIKIPEDIA - James Ruse - Article

James Ruse (9 August [1]/1760[2] – 5 September 1837) was a Cornish farmer who, at the age of 23, was convicted of breaking and entering and was sentenced to seven years' transportation to Australia. He arrived at Sydney Cove on the First Fleet with 18 months of his sentence remaining. Ruse applied to Governor Arthur Phillip (of the colony) for a land grant, stating that he had been bred to farming. Governor Phillip, desperate to make the colony self-sufficient, allocated Ruse an allotment at Ruse Hill (now Rose Hill near Parramatta), where he proved himself industrious and showed that it was possible for a family to survive through farming. Ruse received a land grant, from which he grew and sold 600 bushels of corn 30 acres (120,000 m2).[1] Ruse was the recipient of the first land grant in New South Wales. Ruse would later exchange the Ruse Hill grant for more fertile land on the Hawkesbury River.[3] later in his life, after almost losing his farm and thus going bankrupt because of flooding, Ruse found work as a seaman, and later, a farm overseer.

Early life
James Ruse was born at Launceston,[2] Cornwall, England on 9 August 1760.[3][4] In 1782, he was tried at Bodmin Assizes and sentenced to death for "burglariously breaking and entering the dwelling house of Thomas Olive and stealing thereout 2 silver watches and other goods". He was reprieved and sentenced to transportation for seven years. He was sent on the Scarborough, one of the First Fleet, and arrived in Australia on 19 January 1788.
As a pioneering farmer
In 1789 Ruse produced the first successful corn harvest in New South Wales. Whilst this harvest didn't yield sufficient corn to make flour for the colony, Ruse did produce enough seeds for the next year's crop, which was successful. Such was the colony's need for a food supply, that Governor Phillip rewarded Ruse for his success with the first land grant made in New South Wales, along with a gift of pigs and chickens.[5] In February 1791, Ruse declared to the authorities that he was self-sufficient, and two months later, in March, he was granted a further 30 acres.[1] Ruse expected to reap about eight bushels (290 litres) to the acre. After Ruse's sentence expired in 1792, the title of his land was deeded to him, the first land grant in the colony. In 1793, he sold his land to Dr. John Harris of the New South Wales Corps for 40 pounds. The property is now the Experiment Farm Cottage Museum of the National Trust of Australia.
In 1794, Ruse moved further out, to the junction of the Hawkesbury River with South Creek, and became a fairly successful farmer. He and Elizabeth raised seven children, two of whom were thought to have been adopted.
[1] Later, however, his livelihood was wiped out by flooding, which was always the risk of farming in the Hawkesbury, and had to find work as a seaman. He was heavily in debt and only the hard work of his wife saved him from bankruptcy. From 1828, he was employed as an overseer by a landowner at Minto, south of Sydney. He died at Campbelltown on 5 September 1837.
Ruse's gravestone, parts of which he carved himself, reads:
"Gloria in Axcelsis
SACRED TO THE MEMEREY OF JAMES RUSE WHO DEPARTED THIS LIFE SEPT. 5TH IN THE YEAR OF 1837 NATIVE OF CORNWELL AND ARRIVED IN THIS COLONY BY THE FIRST FLEET AGED 77
MY MOTHER REREAD ME TENDERLY WITH ME SHE TOOK MUCH PAINS AND WHEN I ARRIVED IN THIS COLONEY I SOWED THE FIRST GRAIN AND NOW WITH MY HEAVENLY FATHER I HOPE
FOR EVER TO REMAIN"
Family life
Ruse married fellow convict Elizabeth Parry (1769 – 27 May 1836)[6] on 5 September 1790.[1][2] They had six children together – Rebecca (1791 – 9 November 1792), James (b. 1793), Elizabeth (b. 1794), Susannah (1796–1872), Mary (b. 1798) and Ann.[6]
Legacy
The memory of James Ruse is perpetuated in the naming of key locations in Sydney, including James Ruse Agricultural High School in CarlingfordJames Ruse Drive, running from Silverwater to Northmead, near Parramatta; and Ruse, a suburb in southwest Sydney.
A replica of his tombstone stands in the front garden of Barrengarry House, the administration block at James Ruse Agricultural High School. The original headstone, carved by Ruse himself, was moved by his descendants to a secure location after vandals damaged some headstones in the Old St Johns cemetery at 
Campbelltown. The headstone is now in the care of the Campbelltown and Airds Historical Society at Glenalvon House in Lithgow Street, Campbelltown.[7]
In 1980, the noted Cornish folk singer 
Brenda Wootton wrote and recorded the song "James Ruse" which uses as a chorus the last four lines of the headstone's inscription.
References
1.a b c d "The Thief, The Farmer & The Surgeon (PDF)" (PDF). National Trust of Australia (NSW). Archived from the original(PDF) on 22 March 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
2.
a b c Fletcher, B.H. "Ruse, James (1760–1837)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
3.
a b "Background Sheet 1 – Brief Profiles of Significant People (PDF)" (PDF). K-6 Educational Resources – Board of Studies, NSW, Australia. Board of Studies. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
4.  Serle, Percival. "Dictionary of Australian Biography R". Dictionary of Australian Biography (1949 Edition). Angus and Robertson, 1949. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
5. "First Farms". Discover Collections. State Library of NSW. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
6.
a b Partridge, Amanda. "James Ruse and Elizabeth Parry PDF)" (PDF). Turnbull Clan Genealogy Collection. compiled by Brian P Turnbull. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
7. Grist Mills Vol. 15 No. 3 CAHS Journal 2002
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