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Main References - The Settler Handbook by MD Nash and 1820 Settlers.com
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- Departure Cork, Ireland 12 February 1820
- Arrival Simon's Bay, Cape Town - 1st May 1820
- Final Port - Saldhana Bay - Mid May 1920
(Other parties on this voyage - Butler, Ingram.)
M.D. Nash 1987 - Settler Handbook
"No 56 on the Colonial Department list, led by Captain Walter Synnot of Ballywalter, New town Hamilton, county Armagh in northern Ireland, an officer of the 89th Regiment on half-pay. Synnot was the second son of a baronet, and was described by Sir Rufane Donkin, the Acting Governor of the Cape, as 'one of the most respectable of all the settlers'. He had first enquired about the possibility of emigrating to the Cape in May 1818, and when the emigration scheme was advertised a year later, he applied at once to take out a proprietary party of 10 labouring families from Armagh, 'all members of the Church of Scotland'. By late October, however, half his party had dropped out, and Synnot was given official permission to replace them with others so long as the number remained the same. Synnot's own family group comprised his 12-year-old son by his first marriage, his second wife and their two small sons (a third, Marcus, was born during the voyage), and Frances Houston, aged 15, a sister (or niece) of Mrs Synnot.
Arrangements were made for all four Irish settler parties, under Butler, Ingram, Parker and Synnot, to sail from Passage West, Cork. After travelling almost the length of the country by road, Synnot's party, the only one from Northern Ireland, had to wait for permission from London before boarding the Fanny, because of the late payment of its deposit money.
Deposits were finally paid for 11 men; and the Fanny and her consort, the East Indian, sailed from the Cove of Cork on 12 February 1820, anchoring in Simon's Bay on 1 May. It was official policy that the Irish settlers should be located separately from the main body of emigrants, and in mid-May they sailed on to Saldanha Bay where they were disembarked. Synnot's party was located in the Groot Seekoei Valley in the Clanwilliam district, at the junction of the Jan Dissels and Olifants Rivers. When the Irish settlers were subsequently given the option of relocation in Albany, Synnot chose to remain in Clanwilliam. He was appointed a Special Heemraad (Justice of the Peace) for the district soon after his arrival, and became Deputy Landdrost of the sub-drostdy of Tulbagh in 1821. By 1825, Cowser and Kennedy were the only other men of the party still living in Clanwilliam. In that year Synnot decided to return to Ireland, and some years later he emigrated to Tasmania.
[Bold links are to Geni profiles; other links are to other biographical notes]
Children
- George Spiers 10,
- James Spiers 8,
- Mary Spiers 6,
- Margaret Jane Spiers 4,
- Sarah Spiers 2,
- Elizabeth Spiers.
Children
- Anne Synnot 16,
- Walter Synnot 12,
- Robert Synnot 2,
- George Synnot 1,
- Marcus Synnot (born at sea).
Child
- Samuel Young 8.
'Anne Synnot', aged 16, has been identified by G B Dickason in Irish Settlers to the Cape as a maidservant named Ann Clerk.
Main source for party list
Lists of settlers under the direction of Capt Walter Synnot (Cape Archives CO 6137/2,55 and Public Record Office, London, CO 48/47,185). Although the Agent of Transports' Returns for the other settler parties in the Fanny are available in the Cape Archives, the return for Synnot's party as it arrived at Simon's Bay could not he traced. However, the presence of all 11 men of the party at the Cape has been confirmed from colonial records.
Further reading
G B Dickason, Irish Settlers to the Cape (Cape Town, A A Balkema, 1973); The Reminiscences of John Montgomery, ed A Giffard (Cape Town, A A Balkema, 1981). Montgomery was a member of Butler's party on board the Fanny.