- Ticket of leave
A ticket of leave was a document of
parole issued to convicts, since 1853, transported from theUnited Kingdom who had served a period ofprobation , and had shown by their good behaviour that they could be allowed certain freedoms. Once granted a ticket of leave, a convict was permitted to seekemployment within a specified district but could not leave the district without the permission of the government or the district'sresident magistrate . Each change of employer or district was recorded on the ticket. [cite web
url=http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=info:nSoxUNfT2J0J:scholar.google.com/&output=viewport
title=Bottomley: Parole in Transition: A Comparative Study of Origins, Developments, and Prospects for the 1990s
publisher=scholar.google.com
accessdate=2008-05-11
last=
first=]Ticket-of-leave men were permitted to
marry or to bring their families from Britain, and to acquire property, but they were not permitted to carryfirearm s or board aship . They were often required to repay the cost of their passage to thecolony .A convict who observed the conditions of his ticket-of-leave until the completion of one half of his sentence was entitled to a conditional
pardon , which removed all restrictions except the right to leave the colony. Convicts who did not observe the conditions of their ticket could bearrest ed without warrant, tried without recourse to the Supreme Court, and would forfeit their property.The ticket-of-leave had to be renewed annually, and those with one had to attend muster and church services.
The ticket itself was a highly detailed document listing the place and year the convict was tried, the name of the ship in which he or she was transported, and the length of the sentence. There was also a detailed physical description of the convict, along with year of birth, former occupation and “native place.”
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.