George Mealmaker, the son of a weaver, was born in Dundee
on 10th February, 1768. George followed his father's trade and became
a successful handloom weaver. During the 1780s Mealmaker became interested
in politics and with Thomas Fyshe Palmer
helped to form the Dundee Friends of Liberty group.
In 1793 Mealmaker wrote a pamphlet Dundee Address to the Friends
of Liberty that criticised the "despotism and tyranny"
of the British government and opposed the war with France. On 12th
September 1793 Thomas Fyshe Palmer was
arrested and charged with writing Dundee Address to the Friends
of Liberty. The authorities claimed that the pamphlet was "calculated
to produce a spirit of discontent in the minds of the people against
the present happy constitution and government of this country, and
to rouse them up to acts of outrage and violence". At the trial,
George Mealmaker, gave evidence that he, and not Palmer, had written
this pamphlet. Despite this evidence Palmer was found guilty and sentenced
to be transported to Australia for seven years.
The British
government hoped that the transporting of Palmer and the other leaders
of the Scottish Radicals, Thomas Muir and
William Skirving, would bring an end
to the demands for parliamentary reform. However, George Mealmaker
refused to be silenced and continued to campaign for universal suffrage.
Mealmaker explained his ideas on democracy in his pamphlet The
Moral and Political Catechism of Man (1797). As a result of the
publication of this pamphlet, Mealmaker was arrested and charged with
sedition. In January 1798 he was found guilty and sentenced to 14
years transportation.
Mealmaker arrived at Port Jackson aboard the Royal Admiral
on 21st November 1800. He was no doubt looking forward to being with
the other members of the Friends of Liberty who had been transported
earlier. However, only Maurice Margarot
of the original five Scottish Martyrs was still in captivity. William
Skirving, Joseph Gerrald and Thomas
Muir were dead and Thomas Fyshe Palmer
had finished his sentence and was just about to travel back to Britain.
Governor Philip King was pleased to have a skilled worker in the colony
and put Mealmaker in charge of a weaving factory in Parramatta. George
Mealmaker died on 30th March, 1808. In a letter written to
his wife, Marjory Mealmaker, Lord Liverpool,
Secretary of State for the Colonies, claimed that her husband had
"suffocated by drinking spirits".
(1)
George Mealmaker, Dundee Address to the Friends of Liberty,
a pamphlet that Thomas Fyshe Palmer was accused of writing.
Is not every day adding a new link in our chains?
Is not the executive branch seizing new and warrantable powers? Has
not the House of Commons (your only security from the evils of tyranny
and aristocracy) joined the coalition against you? Is the election
of its members either fair, free or frequent? Is not its independence
gone, while it is made up of pensions and placemen?
You are plunged into a war, by a wicked ministry and a compliant parliament,
who seem careless and unconcerned for your interest, the end and design
of which is almost too horrid to relate, the destruction of a people,
merely because they will be free. By your commerce is sore cramped
and almost ruined. Thousands of your fellow citizens, from being in
a state of prosperity, are reduced to a state of poverty and misery.
(2)
George Mealmaker was arrested and charged with sedition in January
1798.
George Mealmaker is a leading member of the Society of the United
Scotsmen. In the years 1796 and 1797 did administer oaths at Dundee
and did wickedly, and feloniously circulate various seditious and
inflammatory papers the general tendency of which was to excite a
spirit of disloyalty to the King: in particular a pamphlet entitled
The Moral and Political Catechism of Man.
(3)
Lord Liverpool, Secretary of State for
the Colonies, wrote to Marjory Mealmaker about her husband on 1st
January, 1811.
I beg leave to inform you as far as comes within my knowledge respecting
how and what time George Mealmaker a native of Scotland who was transported
some years since came by his death. George Mealmaker died at Parramatta
in March 1808. Supposed to have been suffocated by drinking spirits;
at the time of his death he possessed no property not even as much
as defayed his funeral expenses.

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