William Field (Australian pastoralist)

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William Field (Snr.) (c. 1774 – 1837) was a convict turned pastoralist, meat contractor, and publican in Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania, Australia).

Born in Enfield, near London in about 1774, Field began his working life as a farmer and butcher.[1] In 1800, at the age of 26, he was convicted of receiving nine stolen sheep from his brother, Richard[2] and in 1806 was transported to the then newly established colony of Van Diemen’s Land, now Tasmania. Leaving behind a wife, Sarah, and an infant daughter, Ann (whom he would never see again)[1] Field travelled en route to Launceston on the Fortune to Sydney and then the Sophia to Port Dalrymple.[3] After Field's sentence ended in 1814 he went on to lease land, purchase cattle and supply meat to the colony.

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