The five men commemorated—two from Scotland and three from England—were imprisoned for campaigning for
parliamentary reform under the influence of the ideals of the
French Revolution. Specifically, their support of Palmer's 1793 address that advocated for universal suffrage and annual parliaments was considered incendiary. The five were accused of
sedition in a series of trials in 1793 and 1794, and sentenced to terms of
penal transportation in the British
colony of New South Wales. All but Gerrald travelled together on the
convict transport
Surprize; Gerrald left later on the transport
Sovereign. Only Palmer and Margarot served their full 14-year sentences and were released. Palmer remained in New South Wales and established a thriving beer-brewing operation near Sydney Cove; he died of a fever on a trading voyage back to England. Margarot departed the colony when his sentence expired, and was the only one of the five to return to the British Isles. Muir escaped in early 1796, stowing away aboard an American ship and ultimately making his way to revolutionary France where he died on 26 January 1799. On 16 March 1796 Gerrald died in
Port Jackson, from tuberculosis exacerbated by a weakness brought on by excessive drinking. Skirving died three days later from either dysentery or an overdose of laudanum. ==References==