On 27 March 1802, Potaski was arraigned before the Sussex Spring
Assizes at
Horsham, Sussex. Along with a John O'Brien, he faced charges of stealing a woman's hair shawl from Mrs. Pollard's shop in
Newhaven, Sussex. Potaski was sentenced to several years'
transportation to
Australia. He was transported on the ship . His wife, Catherine and infant son, Joseph, also accompanied Potaski, as free
settlers. Under the command of Lieutenant Colonel
David Collins, the Calcutta left
Portsmouth, and arrived at
Port Phillip Bay on 9 October 1803. Collins was charged with establishing a new settlement, at present-day
Sorrento, Victoria. However, he found the area to be unsuitable for settlement and departed on 20 January 1804 for
Hobart. This time the Potaskis travelled on
Ocean, which anchored at
Risdon Cove on 17 February 1804. It was at this time that Catherine Potaski gave birth to a daughter, Catherine Jnr., the first person of European descent to be born and baptised in Tasmania. Potaski's wife, Catherine, was granted land at Clarence Plains, and Potaski himself received his freedom in 1810. By 1816 the Potaski family was supplying the colony with more corn than was needed for a whole year. The Potaskis also supplied the whole commissariat with wheat. ==Family==