Court and date of trial: Kent Quarter Sessions, Canterbury, April 1834.
Crime: Stealing beans, being a bushel of corn from the premises of Stephen Standford of [Lyminge, Kent].
Initial sentence: Seven years transportation.
Gaoler's report: 'Before convicted of stealing corn (supposed to have been taken for his master's horses)'.
Annotated: Nil; 'Ordered to Fortitude'.
Petitioner(s): Sarah Tumber (the convict's mother), a widow, of Lyminge, Kent. Stephen Standford (prosecutor) and the Reverend Ralph Price (Minister of Lyminge and convict's local priest) undersigned by Thomas Tumber [relation] and 14 inhabitants and parish officers of Lyminge.
Grounds for clemency: He has a dislocated and inflamed knee.
Other papers: Surgeon's certificate from Charles Fagg Junior regarding the convict's lameness.