From the helpful will of Jane Elizabeth Jones, I could piece together that her sister, Charlotte Jones had sailed for Adelaide in the 1860s and had married at the Mount Barker Inn (or very near) to Mr Tydeman, the innkeeper. Great! That certainly beat trying to second guess where Charlotte might have gone, and to then find her in that mystery location.
That meant I'd ticked off the following Jones children: Jane, Charlotte, Mary (a spinster), Amelia (in an asylum), Elizabeth (a grocer's wife), William (went to Tasmania), Edward (deceased). Hold on, this was not a complete list.
There was still REBECCA Jones unaccounted for. Uh oh - she could have gone anywhere in the whole world, or stayed behind in St Peter Port.
Actually she couldn't have stayed behind in St Peter Port as I had combed through all the BMDs for that town and for Guernsey as a whole and there are no spare Joneses hanging around AT ALL.
What if Rebecca had made a similar journey out to Australia that her sister Charlotte had? Time for another speculative search.
Rebecca Jones marrying South Australia some time around 1865 (give or take)
With this thought, all the hard work had been done. As Iris Murdoch would say, the story has already been written - now it just needs to arrive on paper.
Her full name was given as Rebecca Rosa Jones, not her birth name, but indicating she preferred to be known as Rosa. In fact it is as 'Rebecca Jones' that she crossed the oceans but as 'Rosa' that she appears in her last British census entry, at Redhill Surrey.
This might not seem much to go on, but the revelations didn't end there. Her first son was given the middle name of 'Welford', which when I found this (at around 1am) meant that the chances of sleep were going out-of-the-window.
Welford was the cousin who took on the remote west Queensland valley lands and gave his name to Welford Downs out there, around the time Rosa was reaching Adelaide. Unfortunately he'd been a little bit too trusting or lacking an understanding of the indigenous migration patterns and been killed. The book Early Days in North Queensland gives a bit more background to the time.
We also learnt that Rosa's passage had been paid because she was from a family with lots of women in, and (this may be a non sequitur) Adelaide needed an awful lot of women to dilute the flagrant amount of testosterone out there in 1860. The Archbishop of Adelaide was losing his hair over the problems with his wild flock and wrote asking for 'shiploads of women' to come out 'as soon as possible'.
She arrived on the Emigrant in Spring 1854 with 42 others from her native land (Guernsey) including a multitude of the promised single women of good character. The Archbishop was delighted.
More about the period with some actual quotes are here:
http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/manning/sa/immigra/misc.htm
http://www.theshipslist.com/ships/australia/SAassistedindex.shtml
Rosa has plenty of descendants from her marriage to a Devon shoemaker and unlike Charlotte's, a chunk of these are still in Adelaide.
Showing posts with label emigration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emigration. Show all posts
30 Aug 2016
1 May 2016
1881 census to Facebook: Smiths are easy you know
Prologue
On the run from demon headmistress, I slunk onto the 2pm coach to Wales, July 2011.
A few days later I was in Merthyr Tydfil and this time I was the hunter. Margaret Jenkins last seen alive with grandma, 1861. Jennie Newman's wonderful BMD index for Merthyr sitting pretty in the library. I snatched the data and ran off to the record office, hoping to learn her fate and still stalk the halls of the iron (Crawshay) kings before sunset.
I hopped from one leg to the other playing a verbal dance with the registrar's clerk, elsewhere reported. Suffice to say I walked away with the name of her husband, Job Smith, and still had time to admire Merthyr's old buildings, pass Trevithick's statue and see Cyfarthfa's mountainous halls. After a burger in the Wetherspoons of course.
Like the dead swan in the Taff's salmon-run, poor Margaret only flapped her wings once before death beckoned. And she produced just this:
1881 census to Facebook
My initial vigour waned, as I noted not a single British trace of James Smith after 1881.
His half-brother is on an Ancestry tree as having died in Queensland, and I decided (in 2016) to investigate the siblings by the simple measure of clicking on their names in the census. It showed at least two of them died in Melbourne. Time to see if the whole family emigrated.
Yes - they arrived 2 April 1883, in, surprising place alert - Townsville, Queensland. The older boys are listed separately on the same page. All except James, that is. But he didn't die in Wales 1881-3, so where did he go?
Turns out he did come out to Oz as well. The death record of James Jenkin Smith (1931) with father Job and mother Margaret Jenkin leads inexorably to this, and other, electoral rolls, revealing two findings:
1) the house name, Hirwain, after his place of birth, and
2) he had a wife Margaret (which research shows was from the marriage of James Smith in 1893)
3) he worked on the railways, befitting his training working with iron
Later electoral rolls show his son (source BMD indexes) living in the area, as a manufacturing chemist and a granddaughter, who is shown as dying in 2000, according to The Age newspaper.
Great nephews and nieces are listed in the newspaper, but with no surnames how was I to find them on Facebook? I had a street address but was keen to get an electronic connection - quicker and easier. By re-googling the names of the great-nevry, 'Sonia, Michaela and Alister' I spy a further reference yielding their paternal grandfather's last name which they, naturally, share.
By plying this new information into Facebook up comes the whole family network, revealing the Smiths had become Hackett-Smiths, no wonder I'd found them hard to find.
Gratifyingly, the upward trajectory had continued. The chemist had given way to the architect, whose sons are in design, and plastic surgery.
So Margaret, Swan of Aberdare, who flapped so briefly, and whose story we nearly lost, has helped build the City of Lights 10.6 thousand miles away.
Creative Commons - flickr.com
On the run from demon headmistress, I slunk onto the 2pm coach to Wales, July 2011.
A few days later I was in Merthyr Tydfil and this time I was the hunter. Margaret Jenkins last seen alive with grandma, 1861. Jennie Newman's wonderful BMD index for Merthyr sitting pretty in the library. I snatched the data and ran off to the record office, hoping to learn her fate and still stalk the halls of the iron (Crawshay) kings before sunset.
I hopped from one leg to the other playing a verbal dance with the registrar's clerk, elsewhere reported. Suffice to say I walked away with the name of her husband, Job Smith, and still had time to admire Merthyr's old buildings, pass Trevithick's statue and see Cyfarthfa's mountainous halls. After a burger in the Wetherspoons of course.
Like the dead swan in the Taff's salmon-run, poor Margaret only flapped her wings once before death beckoned. And she produced just this:
1881 census to Facebook
My initial vigour waned, as I noted not a single British trace of James Smith after 1881.
His half-brother is on an Ancestry tree as having died in Queensland, and I decided (in 2016) to investigate the siblings by the simple measure of clicking on their names in the census. It showed at least two of them died in Melbourne. Time to see if the whole family emigrated.
Yes - they arrived 2 April 1883, in, surprising place alert - Townsville, Queensland. The older boys are listed separately on the same page. All except James, that is. But he didn't die in Wales 1881-3, so where did he go?
1) the house name, Hirwain, after his place of birth, and
2) he had a wife Margaret (which research shows was from the marriage of James Smith in 1893)
3) he worked on the railways, befitting his training working with iron
Later electoral rolls show his son (source BMD indexes) living in the area, as a manufacturing chemist and a granddaughter, who is shown as dying in 2000, according to The Age newspaper.
Great nephews and nieces are listed in the newspaper, but with no surnames how was I to find them on Facebook? I had a street address but was keen to get an electronic connection - quicker and easier. By re-googling the names of the great-nevry, 'Sonia, Michaela and Alister' I spy a further reference yielding their paternal grandfather's last name which they, naturally, share.
By plying this new information into Facebook up comes the whole family network, revealing the Smiths had become Hackett-Smiths, no wonder I'd found them hard to find.
Gratifyingly, the upward trajectory had continued. The chemist had given way to the architect, whose sons are in design, and plastic surgery.
So Margaret, Swan of Aberdare, who flapped so briefly, and whose story we nearly lost, has helped build the City of Lights 10.6 thousand miles away.
Creative Commons - flickr.com
2 Apr 2016
Riddle of the timeshare: it was the sun wot won it
"Perkins Cove in Ogunquit, Maine" by Dennis Weeks, CC BY 4.0. This image has been modified including color-amendments and cloud/snow removal from the original by DM_Walsh on 4 May 2026.
Prologue: Emigrayshun
One grey June morning as the sun rose over
the steelworks, a group of my family left their home in Redhall Avenue,
Connah's Quay on a journey aimed at leaving the UK and its new queen behind forever.
Our story: Vokayshun
Grandpa claimed to know nothing about his family. He did remember meeting many of his second cousins. It would have been too much to expect Tom Jones to be one of these. Tom Jones was listed in his grandpa's will proved 1922 (by Grandpa's father) but with the distance in time, and lack of biographical detail, I didn't think I'd be able to trace him. Looking back, if I'd bought lots of birth certificates I might eventually arrive at these second-class cabins of 1952, but.... I'd still be left hanging. It wouldn't be enough. And I didn't take that approach in any event, oh no.
Dedicayshun
I picked up the blower to cousin Joyce
eighteen years ago, thinking I was at journey's end. Finally some news on this difficult branch of the family. Mini-me had found her mugshot among old family papers
and gone through tonnes of microfiche to locate her. Joyce was off to Italy and was putting info
about her mother's family in the post, she said. She said.
Actually she died before any of that and my main chance submerged again,
leaving just one nice clue, the name Rhona. It took me
ten years to remember it though.
Big Break #1.
On the phone, Joyce had told me there was a
cousin in North Wales, called Rhona. I
dreamt I was in a cafe in Rhyl, and everyone in tight white curls was called
Rhona. Hello Rhona, have you seen
Rhona. No, Rhona, have you?
Time passes, I grow up. I realise there aren't that many Rhonas in
Rhyl. In fact, there aren't any! I get busy.
I trawl all Rhonas born in Flintshire with a mother's name of Taylor and
moments later zing up her address thanks to 192.com.
Ten years of inactivity followed by a moment of success. That describes my entire work on this branch. But Rhona doesn't 'get' my letter. This whole line of enquiry is on the verge of evaporating.
Ten years of inactivity followed by a moment of success. That describes my entire work on this branch. But Rhona doesn't 'get' my letter. This whole line of enquiry is on the verge of evaporating.
I place an ad. An absolute beauty comes on the market and is
duly picked up from Highbury Corner in 2011.
If the letter can't go to the lady, I will, er go to mountainous lengths
to...
Big Break #2
If you need to get away from it all may I
recommend Gweryd Fishing Lakes high on the hill off Offa's Dyke. They gave this weary traveller his last night
of freedom before September's chastening embrace. Down the Clwydian Mountains I sped, to the
town of Mold, and Rhona's quaint close.
Not expecting much of a particular, I crossed
the threshold of number 6, Mold, glad-handing the aged occupier. Rhona was niece of a farmer from my Grandpa's
childhood and a good ten years older than the deceased Joyce. Even if this venerable lady could barely
whisper a 'hullo', I would be extrapolating from this for years to come, so
powerful were her genealogical connections.
I tested the waters with the living
legend. I knew I had a lady whose brain
was hard-wired to recall facts from the 1930s, her era. I pressed my first genealogical button. 'Chilton', I said. 'Oh, you mean Hughie.' Good so far.
'Cousin Margaret?' 'In a bad way,
but alive.' Ok. Now for the key moment, the testing of the
skeleton key, the run past the warder, the ransom-swop, the border-dash, the
inhuman leap..... 'Tom Jones?' I lightly enquired? The 1930s brain whirred and checked its
hard-drive and back they came, words of gold.
'Oh, Tom Jones! Well his kids Peggy and Dougie went out to Canada.' And
there it was: my cup overraneth. Not
only had this lady skewered her way through a slew of Joneses to find my Tom,
she neatly sewed his story up so tight I wasn't going to lose him now. And all in five seconds. I drank the proferred tea, thanked the good
lady, slumped on a train at Chester, sold the bike - saying 'hello' to September
and a new year.
Big Break #3
Veterinary advice: First catch and restrain your animal
Our Tom Jones was born in Morriston, Swansea,
about 1894. Him and his common name
moved to North Wales around 1905, ahead of a big steelworkers' strike. This whole area around John Summers
steelworks is massively under threat, April 2016, a century or more of
steelmaking in jeopardy. According to
Rhona, Tom's kids left yonks ago for a new life of similar industry, in
Canada. So what bits of feather was I
left gripping on to in the UK?
Tom gets a mention age 24 in his grandpa's
will, where I first heard of him 70 years later in 1992. A third of that time again has had to elapse
before I could catch him once more.
We're all in the same boat
Big break number 3 was swiftly catching up
with Dougie his son on the boat out to Canada (1952) but *not only that*,
finding dad Tom on the same boat, and... *not only that*, after my own internal
hard-drive warmed up, a thought burst out?
What about the sister Peggy? Maybe
she was on the same boat too?
| Margaret on the same boat as her father and brother, 1952 |
And so it proved to be. The Empress of Canada gave me emigration
notes of imperial quality: my struggling hunt for further records failed to
keep pace. The same address is shown, Redhall
Avenue, Connah's Quay.
Tom had married a Cohen in Eccles, which I'd earlier
thought impossible, Margaret (Peggy) being born there in 1919. Figuring out exactly what happened to
Margaret Jones was proving a mite tricky 'til I pored over the Empress-ive
records and spotted her as Mrs Robson.
There was date-of-birth, names of kids and all with a matching address
in Connah's Quay... It was 2012, sixty
years post emigration. Little did I know
that Peggy, even older than Rhona and 20 years ahead of Joyce, was still living,
a quiet retiree in Canada.
Big Break #4
I stewed on the Robson info a little while, 4
years to be precise, as it remained on the back-burner. I had brazenly told the cousins in Wales it
was game set and match, an email having plonked through for Dougie's son
Col. That branch weren't playing ball
however, and the contact details fizzled away.
I needed another route in.
Sometime in 2014 I tried again, this time
focussing on Peggy (by now, deceased).
It was time to get heavy. I dredged the internet, ripped apart the
phonebook and pressed search a bunch of times on Facebook, spraying all my
clues in neon to get new life out of them, like tired old curtains.
Obvious clue: the name
Several years of obvious clues and several
years of missing the obvious: Peggy's boy's name. According to the NorthWalesBMD project, he
was born Thomas Peter Robson in Flint, a really good name to search. When I pressed the keys for 'T_P_R' Canada,
Google warned me to stand back. Information
of an explosive nature was about to be revealed.
Hmmmm.
Margaret J Robson of Calgary?
probated in Maine. I didn't think so. This was too confusing. I had fished out gold, but put it back in the
watery internet for another two years.
Glug glug.
Big Break #5
Pushy salesman: "In the absence of a new lead, go back to your old ones."
It was March 2016 and time to find the
Canadian cousins: this was getting embarrassing. Harder problems had been solved and although
this was impossible, with the right alchemy and a splash of oxygen, this can be
done. With my new hard-nosed attitude I
brought up the Google search from 2 years before.
The 'J' I now dismissed like a nearly-dead
fly. It could clearly be Jones, Peg's maiden name. No problem.
Exactly how many ladies called Margaret had sons of the right name and
age in Canada? I now suspected not
many. Just the thorny issue of 'Why
Maine?' to put right.
So I took a longer look at the Maine Probates, nosing around the pages of York county, Maine. I spied a typical set-up for legal docs: the attorney's office and their long phone number. A lemon-eating clerk in a will-free office, and the general message of 'we are closed - to you anyways'. I idly combed each of those nondescript blue pages, jonesing for a lead.
Ten white pages
Like Hansel stumbling on a witch-free
gingerbread trail, there I beheld ten texty scanned-in pages, white in hue, of
the estate of Mrs M Robson. From the
bare bones
to considerably more detail at maineprobate.net:
I had gone behind the surface net into the
'deep web' where data lies waiting to be awoken. Whilst the full addresses were nice to see,
they are impossible to capture without the correct file id, so I think are
pretty safe. The cover page was lovely
but wasn't clinching it for me. I
continued through.
And there beheld this battery of clinchers:
- Bang - the name of Jones given as likely maiden name
- Bang - the confirmed, matching, date of birth
for Margaret

It turns out the connection with Maine was
that affordable way for hardworking folk to get a week of sun: timeshares. A timeshare in Maine, of lobsters and
fishing, was what got us done.
Thank you to Ogunquit, Maine for taking me
from this
Footnote:
Never forget your Welsh. The new cousins in Canada are in fact in
touch with their Dad's family, back in Connah's Quay. Hopefully they'll soon be reaching out to us,
too.
Update:
Tom Jones's great-grandchildren responded to my Facebook messages! Tom actually returned to England, to Wallasey, where he married a widow, and lived, not far from his sister. I also discovered that Tom's parents had returned to Morriston from North Wales and that Peggy herself had convalesced in Morriston as a young girl. [Amusing as her father's cousin, from Morriston had improbably been sent to her home town of Queensferry to 'get better' about ten years earlier.] I'm sure my great-grandfather knew all this, but Timeshare, you helped clear up a big old puzzle.
Update:
Tom Jones's great-grandchildren responded to my Facebook messages! Tom actually returned to England, to Wallasey, where he married a widow, and lived, not far from his sister. I also discovered that Tom's parents had returned to Morriston from North Wales and that Peggy herself had convalesced in Morriston as a young girl. [Amusing as her father's cousin, from Morriston had improbably been sent to her home town of Queensferry to 'get better' about ten years earlier.] I'm sure my great-grandfather knew all this, but Timeshare, you helped clear up a big old puzzle.
15 Nov 2014
South Sea Island cousins
I vaguely knew the 3 Beck boys, or some of them, had left England and gone to Australia, but hadn't followed up, and brief searches in Ancestry.com's database hadn't been productive.
I had been reading about a German family settling in the Galapagos islands, and badly wanted some island connection myself!
I turned over the metaphorical page in Google and there was the entry about Charles Percy Beck, from Burton on Trent, below. It told of his evacuation from the Japanese offensive and arrival in Brisbane Australia, 1942. Intriguingly, the article reveals he had left a brother back in the South Sea Islands, specifically the Solomon Islands.
A clue emerges, this time in the British newspapers of 1931, where details are given of Burton boy Harold Beck, revealed as a copra plantation farmer in an island within the Solomons. The paper gives the place as Ganouga, and it takes some gazetteering to reveal the correct name as Ranongga, indeed pronounced with an initial 'g'.
We can now find there were two Beck boys in the late thirties, Bobby and Pete, on this island, at school with Gideon Zoleveke, whose account of wartime Solomons is well worth reading. Peter did well, and one wonders if he is the father of Collin Beck, the islands' ambassador to the US, these last ten years.
Burton Museum may have been split between the brewing experience venue and the county museum at Shugborough. Staffordshire archives confirm that one deposit from Harold survives. Not his 1931 mementoes, whose fate is unknown, but a tortoiseshell comb, apparently made for a lady back home.when he was the only white man on 'his' island.
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19 Feb 2014
Ann, 18, not in South Africa (1858)
Excuse me google, have you seen my relative. She's about 18, she used to live in England, and I think she went to live in South Africa? It's just gone 1861 and I haven't seen her anywhere in the census so I think she must have left home. Can you help me?
Google couldn't help me. But FamilySearch did.
The story starts with William Frampton Cotty who disappears with his wife and children somewhere between 1851 - when he's at South Street, South Petherton, Somerset - and 1861, when he's not in the country at all. No website had any records on him, but by googling I found references to the family in South Africa, and by checking their National Archives 'NAAIRS' catalogue, I slightly bulked out what I knew on him and his boys. The youngest girl by a fluke marries in Bristol, has a baby in Lancashire and returns to South Africa (odd). But of the oldest girl Ann, there was nothing.
A new site, South African Settlers, popped up in my internet browser with extra info on W. F. Cotty. His entry had been indexed from the Cape Death Notices and was modestly informative. By this time, I already knew or had surmised that his cousin the housekeeper had become his partner and later his wife, but I didn't know this:
Google couldn't help me. But FamilySearch did.
The story starts with William Frampton Cotty who disappears with his wife and children somewhere between 1851 - when he's at South Street, South Petherton, Somerset - and 1861, when he's not in the country at all. No website had any records on him, but by googling I found references to the family in South Africa, and by checking their National Archives 'NAAIRS' catalogue, I slightly bulked out what I knew on him and his boys. The youngest girl by a fluke marries in Bristol, has a baby in Lancashire and returns to South Africa (odd). But of the oldest girl Ann, there was nothing.
A new site, South African Settlers, popped up in my internet browser with extra info on W. F. Cotty. His entry had been indexed from the Cape Death Notices and was modestly informative. By this time, I already knew or had surmised that his cousin the housekeeper had become his partner and later his wife, but I didn't know this:
That Ann had a middle name of Martha. In 1851 she's down as Ann M, but her birth shows her as Anne. I'd even signed up to the Crewkerne Yahoo Groups which has since deluged my mailbox in the hopes of getting the baptism at Hinton St George and finding that possibly useful middle name.
A few days after finding this, having fruitlessly combed South Africa for Annie Marthas who had children in the 1860s, I thought of putting her name into FamilySearch. It's worked before. I now have a claim to the firstborn male of Mount Vernon, NY, as a relative because I put a married couple's name into FamilySearch.
So off do I try it again. And, no! Can this be?
Not expecting to find anything, I pick up Ann as mother of a girl born around 1865 in Springfield Illinois. Well for a girl born 1840, that's about right. It's more than about right, it's spot on - Ann's aunt and uncle lived in Springfield, and of all the places in the US, this is one it makes all the sense in the world for her to have gone to.
She lies buried at Boone, Des Moines, where she'd gone to live with her husband Gus. She had 5 children, not the 2 stated in 1910, and 4 were living in 1900 (as correctly stated there) - Anna, Mae, Lotta and Earle but only the eldest has family - children Genevieve Eichenberger and Ashley Bowers. Ashley's grandson is in England not far from his roots; while Genevieve's are still in Glen Ellyn or retired elsewhere in the States.
Ann is not the first relative I've come across who's balked at the chance to go overseas with her widowed father or mother. Elizabeth Swanton and her cousin Sarah Mullins both said 'no thank you' to the chance to go to Australia (in 1852) and Ohio (in 1836). Sarah was already married, so the decision wasn't hers.
Ann was only 17 and had the perfect opportunity to emigrate while single, just as her aunt Hannah had 17 years earlier:
It's no coincidence that Anna was the name of her first child. Had she waited any longer she would have been rushed off to Cape Province, before you can say 'gold'.
Ironically, maybe her life was harder in America than it would have been in Africa. The Cottys did well and money was flowing in. Whereas Ann had to return to Chicago after years out in Des Moines - was she happy about that I wonder. Her aunt and cousins were around, and hopefully stayed in touch: newspaper articles would confirm.
No feet in Africa
.. but it's still possible to unravel the family's story. My relative Rob Haine left England around 1900 for a new life in South Africa with his brothers. They ended up in Jo'burg, but he found a farm on the east coast. He was leaving a land with plenty of fairly accessible records, for a land that until recently, had none.
We saw glimpses of him again - in 1960 his cousin died intestate in Somerset and in the ensuing document, 6 of his 7 kids were named. In 2009 his wife's niece died in Somerset and her family gave me an old address in Durban, but that didn't lead me anywhere.
I published a book on the family in 2000 and we still didn't know their whereabouts, then.
Last year FamilySearch released some protestant church records for Natal, and I eagerly set to combing through for Haine's. It wasn't hard to find the family, as the records were mostly indexed. Although it said marriages for the town weren't listed after 1955, I found the index went up to 1970. I combed through this looking for the bride, as the dot-matrix index from 1992 listed the marriage in groom order. Bingo - I found of Rob's granddaughters marrying in 1958 and the other in 1966.
But it was the youngest granddaughter, Mandy, born 1959 I was due to find next. And it wasn't through googling, through the phone book, but through another resource that I found her.
Thank you FamilySearch for great Natal records and unblocking a 15-year puzzle; without, sadly, me having to set a foot on the continent.
We saw glimpses of him again - in 1960 his cousin died intestate in Somerset and in the ensuing document, 6 of his 7 kids were named. In 2009 his wife's niece died in Somerset and her family gave me an old address in Durban, but that didn't lead me anywhere.
I published a book on the family in 2000 and we still didn't know their whereabouts, then.
Last year FamilySearch released some protestant church records for Natal, and I eagerly set to combing through for Haine's. It wasn't hard to find the family, as the records were mostly indexed. Although it said marriages for the town weren't listed after 1955, I found the index went up to 1970. I combed through this looking for the bride, as the dot-matrix index from 1992 listed the marriage in groom order. Bingo - I found of Rob's granddaughters marrying in 1958 and the other in 1966.
But it was the youngest granddaughter, Mandy, born 1959 I was due to find next. And it wasn't through googling, through the phone book, but through another resource that I found her.
Thank you FamilySearch for great Natal records and unblocking a 15-year puzzle; without, sadly, me having to set a foot on the continent.
8 Feb 2014
The exclusion of the sisterhood
When Ellen Smith married at the pretty, remote, church of St Lawrence in 1874, it was pretty final. She kept in touch with her sisters, who fled the area around the same time, and whose holiday snap at Clacton ten years earlier tells of the closeness between them.
But the address book slammed shut on the others. The death of Mrs Smith in 1867 had been followed by an unpopular marriage of the father. One-by-one the three girls left their former home and for them it never became their home again. The eldest girl made rapid vows at 18 as did the boy a year later, who not only married an older lady but apparently emigrated too. There remains a shadow over the character of the father, Henry, and his role within the family.
The dust had long settled by the 1920s when Ellen was living in some comfort in North London and penning a letter to her very pregnant daughter and musing on old times. From now on, all that mattered were her husband children and family plus of course those dear sisters. The editing pen had been viciously active over the Smith family and we didn't get the full picture for many years.
*
1986 and I get a Smith family tree through the post - well it was for Ellen's family by marriage but the Smiths got a mention. I can't figure out the hand - my uncle, his mother? On it the sisters feature of course but not so much the brothers. One version has an enigmatic '?' while another puts the boy's name down, William.
This family were great at deleting people they didn't want to remember, or claimed not to remember. Yes let's remember the happy 1920s Christmases at the house in Muswell Hill with nice tidy children and Edwardian elegance. But what about a few miles down the road?
Arthur Smith, the brother-who-never-was, had produced 12 children and now grandchildren who weren't bank managers and couldn't always find work and were not so well-off but did alright - in Bermondsey.
Did Ellen fear a door-knock and her ancient Suffolk past catching up with her. Not one brother, but TWO elided from the tree. And then her nephew's children going into care as well. No wonder she repressed a gasp in 1921 when she opened the door and out stood her niece, Miss Daisy Skinner looking quite confident in the autumn cool. For a moment Ellen wondered what the lady wanted. She was ready to close the door. But Miss Daisy had done alright. She was getting herself together. While Daisy may genuinely have been fond of this uptight old aunt, there was a business perspective to her visit. Who knows how she'd spent her twenties - dancing, clerical work, or dressmaking - but she was now about to buy a little hotel by the sea, and family members would be useful income for her.
Whew. Ellen allowed her grip to unravel from the newel post of the staircase at the house in Hornsey. It hadn't been her brothers' family. It was only Sophy's girl. She'd been married over 40 years and still the inconvenience of her brothers and father bothered her. What had William been doing in America, was he going to come back? Arthur had broken a gasworks strike and subsequently done a runner. He wouldn't be back, but his family - could find her at any time.
~
Suspicion clouded her mind but not a whisper of this reached her daughter. The ability to compartmentalise the story is extraordinary. Ellen remained fond of her sisters, and even went down to Bexhill to see them at Daisy's hotel, exactly as Miss Skinner had forecast. She loved the place of her birth - the Old Hall at Mulbarton and several times she would speak of it, in the happy years before she lost her mother. Even my own grandfather knew the family only as 'blue-blooded' and 'from the Hall'.
This is a peculiarly Victorian story. The rise from solid working-class to middle-class was a precarious one for the rider. Whilst the wife of a Methodist minister's position was fairly secure, she had duties to educate her children and ensure they made the right choices in life. Knowledge of close family members who were not known to have made this rise would have been most alarming to her. The advent of opportunities for wide travel - leaving not only the county (Norfolk) but the country (England) could split up even the closest of familial bonds. Add into the mix, a disrupted childhood (death of mother, move to another isolated rural community, growing deafness of father and finally his remarriage), the importance of status or money over family and increasing mobility and the ground was set for divorce.
Ellen protected herself and her family and ironically was similar to her runaway brother in prizing everything more highly than her family of origin. I feel she could have been closer as a mature married woman, to her brother in America, but the opportunity wouldn't have arisen.
The father Henry's paralysing deafness was the lynchpin that failed to link the family together. His siblings were close - Richard, Harriet and the children of Sarah were still in touch into the twentieth century and did what they could for Henry. Can anything sinister be read into his daughters' turning their back on him? The uncle at Mulbarton had been quite specific that his wealth should go to Henry's *wife* and not to him, but this was standard practice for clued-up testators.
Another mystery is the photograph of Clacton-on-sea from, I thought, 1860, when the town wasn't founded till 1871 and railway line didn't get there till late 1860s.
© John Salmon (cc-by-sa/2.0)
geograph.org.uk/p/4508318 St Lawrence, Ilketshall, taken Thursday, 30 April, 2015
But the address book slammed shut on the others. The death of Mrs Smith in 1867 had been followed by an unpopular marriage of the father. One-by-one the three girls left their former home and for them it never became their home again. The eldest girl made rapid vows at 18 as did the boy a year later, who not only married an older lady but apparently emigrated too. There remains a shadow over the character of the father, Henry, and his role within the family.
The dust had long settled by the 1920s when Ellen was living in some comfort in North London and penning a letter to her very pregnant daughter and musing on old times. From now on, all that mattered were her husband children and family plus of course those dear sisters. The editing pen had been viciously active over the Smith family and we didn't get the full picture for many years.
*
1986 and I get a Smith family tree through the post - well it was for Ellen's family by marriage but the Smiths got a mention. I can't figure out the hand - my uncle, his mother? On it the sisters feature of course but not so much the brothers. One version has an enigmatic '?' while another puts the boy's name down, William.
This family were great at deleting people they didn't want to remember, or claimed not to remember. Yes let's remember the happy 1920s Christmases at the house in Muswell Hill with nice tidy children and Edwardian elegance. But what about a few miles down the road?
Arthur Smith, the brother-who-never-was, had produced 12 children and now grandchildren who weren't bank managers and couldn't always find work and were not so well-off but did alright - in Bermondsey.
Did Ellen fear a door-knock and her ancient Suffolk past catching up with her. Not one brother, but TWO elided from the tree. And then her nephew's children going into care as well. No wonder she repressed a gasp in 1921 when she opened the door and out stood her niece, Miss Daisy Skinner looking quite confident in the autumn cool. For a moment Ellen wondered what the lady wanted. She was ready to close the door. But Miss Daisy had done alright. She was getting herself together. While Daisy may genuinely have been fond of this uptight old aunt, there was a business perspective to her visit. Who knows how she'd spent her twenties - dancing, clerical work, or dressmaking - but she was now about to buy a little hotel by the sea, and family members would be useful income for her.
Whew. Ellen allowed her grip to unravel from the newel post of the staircase at the house in Hornsey. It hadn't been her brothers' family. It was only Sophy's girl. She'd been married over 40 years and still the inconvenience of her brothers and father bothered her. What had William been doing in America, was he going to come back? Arthur had broken a gasworks strike and subsequently done a runner. He wouldn't be back, but his family - could find her at any time.
~
Suspicion clouded her mind but not a whisper of this reached her daughter. The ability to compartmentalise the story is extraordinary. Ellen remained fond of her sisters, and even went down to Bexhill to see them at Daisy's hotel, exactly as Miss Skinner had forecast. She loved the place of her birth - the Old Hall at Mulbarton and several times she would speak of it, in the happy years before she lost her mother. Even my own grandfather knew the family only as 'blue-blooded' and 'from the Hall'.
This is a peculiarly Victorian story. The rise from solid working-class to middle-class was a precarious one for the rider. Whilst the wife of a Methodist minister's position was fairly secure, she had duties to educate her children and ensure they made the right choices in life. Knowledge of close family members who were not known to have made this rise would have been most alarming to her. The advent of opportunities for wide travel - leaving not only the county (Norfolk) but the country (England) could split up even the closest of familial bonds. Add into the mix, a disrupted childhood (death of mother, move to another isolated rural community, growing deafness of father and finally his remarriage), the importance of status or money over family and increasing mobility and the ground was set for divorce.
Ellen protected herself and her family and ironically was similar to her runaway brother in prizing everything more highly than her family of origin. I feel she could have been closer as a mature married woman, to her brother in America, but the opportunity wouldn't have arisen.
The father Henry's paralysing deafness was the lynchpin that failed to link the family together. His siblings were close - Richard, Harriet and the children of Sarah were still in touch into the twentieth century and did what they could for Henry. Can anything sinister be read into his daughters' turning their back on him? The uncle at Mulbarton had been quite specific that his wealth should go to Henry's *wife* and not to him, but this was standard practice for clued-up testators.
Another mystery is the photograph of Clacton-on-sea from, I thought, 1860, when the town wasn't founded till 1871 and railway line didn't get there till late 1860s.
Britons in Africa
Africa United was a great movie. I seem to remember getting pressurised to watch it while somewhere really unexpected like the University of London students' union or a socialist demonstration, or possibly strolling through Mayfair. We need to be united in our search for records in Africa.
Britons in Africa is now online. It is a showcase database, enabling people to be surprised at finding one of their folks on the great unexplored continent. The Stirling Castle, Dublin Castle, Walmer Castle and a dozen other Union-Castle ships could get you to a new life in as little as 23 days.
However, until recently, those 23 days could see your descendants in England closing the door completely on your life, as no genealogical information was obtainable from South Africa, which became a Republic (after Afrikaaner-dominated voting) in 1961.
Now, on FamilySearch, Natal marriage records are online (to 1955) and Zimbabwe deaths, in a somewhat crude index up to the last days of Ian Smith. It looks like the card indexes were hurled out on the table and rapidly photographed before possible destruction by the incoming government. Who knows. It's great to have them.
These new databases that allow us to follow our relatives around the world, should be applauded.
Britons in Africa is now online. It is a showcase database, enabling people to be surprised at finding one of their folks on the great unexplored continent. The Stirling Castle, Dublin Castle, Walmer Castle and a dozen other Union-Castle ships could get you to a new life in as little as 23 days.
However, until recently, those 23 days could see your descendants in England closing the door completely on your life, as no genealogical information was obtainable from South Africa, which became a Republic (after Afrikaaner-dominated voting) in 1961.
Now, on FamilySearch, Natal marriage records are online (to 1955) and Zimbabwe deaths, in a somewhat crude index up to the last days of Ian Smith. It looks like the card indexes were hurled out on the table and rapidly photographed before possible destruction by the incoming government. Who knows. It's great to have them.
These new databases that allow us to follow our relatives around the world, should be applauded.
8 Feb 2012
Not so fertile
Thomas Henry Craig Stevenson in 1909 postulated that working-class women would have large families than those higher up the income chart. In 1911, he and Sir Bernard Mallett, the Registrar-General, included the famous fertility question in the census, which now makes us consider the number of Victorian infant deaths (10 or more years earlier) rather than there being 'too many living children' from the poor.
However, as someone for whom those details have been most revealing in conducting my research, I was of course surprised to find Stevenson among my cousins. Or rather, I wasn't.
As soon as I found my relative had married Miss Catherine De Boudry in Bristol, I was pretty sure we'd be surfing a genteel wave for at least a couple of generations, Stevenson in fact was going to marry Miss De Boudry's grandddaughter.
Just a week ago I despaired of finding out the stories of the 6 Scott children baptised at Ditcheat and environs in the 1780s. Their cousins set off for Monmouthshire and all sent for each other: though as butchers and factory workers, Chepstow was an odd choice to say the least. But the 6 Scotts in question didn't go to Chepstow, they went to Britain's second city around the corner, Bristol. I have no idea why Bristol got routinely ignored by my Somerset farming families. They were happy to retire to regency, tasteful, Bath; but for a farmer, the true county town of Bristol seemed to offer nothing.
To inhabit Bristol with the same style as a yeoman farmer you needed a much higher income. When I examined the PCC wills more closely I saw that Benjamin and William Scott were corn factors (as was an unmarried sister), while youngest sister Susanna had married an accountant, Henry Northcote. William's father-in-law had kept a school at Kingsdown, personally approved by John Wesley.
Northcote stole £10,000 in 1839 and was transported on the Barossa, begging to be given Sunday school duties as he commenced his long sentence. I haven't checked to see if he survived, but his wife died of shame. There's a clue in her will 'wife of Henry, LATE of the City of Bristol': she having been given a house in Sidney Place through a marriage settlement, which did not form part of her husband's debts.
Benjamin Scott sailed for America after his mother-in-law had died, leaving his eldest child behind with brother William, presumably to claim her inheritance; and also as his poor wife still had no children. Matilda rejoined the others 18 years later and was still alive age 90, unmarried, according to my reading of US tax records. (And in 1880 living with E D Scott, Minneapolis.)
That just leaves William and Miss De Boudry to continue the line in England, and as Stevenson might have guessed (with 3 children and no heirs himself) we are shortly and swiftly led to the single descendant - a fundraising expert in Cheshire.
Small wonder I've not been besieged by enquiries about these Bristolians. It's yet possible that the oldest sister, Grace Scott, had surviving children by her husband James Hill, but I'm not hopeful! They just had too much money to be fertile.
The Stapleford dilemma
We've proved it. Now I need to wonder whether I like it. John Barton from Matlock moved to Stapleford aged 22 or thereabouts in 1792. Considering that he was a farmer's son, most probably a carpenter, it's pretty neat to pin him down so firmly. The evidence is fairly easily acquired: his father's will of 1822 shows he was living then at Stapleford, being the executor. Further, a John Barton of Matlock marries in 1792 in Kirk Ireton, and that couple's children are certainly born, and stayed, in Stapleford. Pretty compelling.
Stapleford must have been an attractive village recalled as being in the Broxtowe hundred, with country roads reminiscent of A R Quinton. The lace industry operated there, and it seems a river ran through it. My modern AA map makes it impossible to imagine the area before roads, and it's far too dang close to Nottingham. Mr Woodward kindly tells us two hundred people were thrown out of work 1881 when a large lace factory in the village was burnt to the ground.
Folk of Matlock had several options when the industrial era came, and for unskilled workers, the cotton mills to the west exerted a big pull. Carpenters could work anywhere, and shopkeepers or publicans could also take advantage of the larger towns to settle there.
In a world where all our big towns look the same (not the smaller Cheadles, Petsworths), and former industrial communities look greenest of them all, I offer three cheers for the Matlock folk who moved to beautiful Bollington; and two cheers for those who went to Gotham, still a small village. But only one cheer for the Stapleford move.
I am glad to see a picture of the Warren Arms, the Barton home, with the sheep being driven to market. 1792 may seem early enough to be part of rural Broxtowe goings-on, but all too soon it's 1881 and the grandchildren are heading to labouring jobs in Nottingham and Manchester, leaving their heritage behind. In addition, they'd already lost the extended family back in Matlock by moving twice.
One brave family, the Stapleford Greasleys, rejected the big Midlands towns on offer and went straight to Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, in 1850.
Jumping the gap
To me, one of the excitements about family history is finding a person in one record and then spotting that person in another record. This may seem pretty prosaic! For a long time I believed I needed to find that person in another country, but actually, that proved to be excitement mixed with disappointment. I can never do as much justice to a family tree overseas as when the family ends up in England: should the line go off to America or Australia it gets a little dull after a couple of generations, being further removed from 'the jump-off'.
Probably the exceptions to 'boring Aust-america' are when we are following the female line, following a story, where there is a strong family connection or where they lived in an evocative place, such as early 1870s Utah or the Wisconsin big woods. Should the family come BACK to England that can make for a good tale, particularly as British records may be even better than corresponding ones overseas. (For example Mullins Symes and siblings were born in Ohio according to the British censuses, but there isn't a single American record confirming this.)
In contrast, if someone migrates to Lincolnshire or Brecknockshire I'm transported with delight: a whole new county and area to explore; new settlements to see through the eyes of my relatives.
I particularly find it wonderful where an ancestor has you weaving through a sea of records like a Turkish bazaar chase , only to have them quietly sipping tea at home by the time you do finally catch up with them. A case in point is Ann Hooper who marries twice in quick succession, on one occasion in Bristol, and then is away abroad in the next census, before finally, in 1881 letting us in to her Wiltshire farmhouse, twenty years after we'd last seen her with her parents. Unfortunately she leaves no family now, but it was still important to resolve her, and to have the enjoyable hunt.
23 Jan 2012
Somerset to New York: and did it rain
This posts follows on from Great Scott!
Jimmy also wanted to know if our forebears Thomas and Martha Creed (nee Scott) had gone out to the States in 1822 as per the vicar's note of that effect. Well, thanks to the Butleigh website, FamilySearch, and our Scott tree, it is now a simple matter to see that the following neighbours and relatives DID go out to the States at about the time we mention:
Benjamin Clarke (married to Martha's cousin), his sister Priscilla Lamport, James Scott and his nephews the Downs, plus the Swantons, all went out about 1823 to Delaware County, New York. This was it seems the place to go for our Somerset farming community; just a generation later, the woods of Ohio were next for our Somerset man's plough. The Ohio option created immense ripples in the Somerset community, and perhaps the New York passages caused similar hubbub.
This small discovery rehabilitates Thomas Creed, who we had thought was given to whimsy, with talk of going to America. But of this trip his wife would certainly have approved, and perhaps joined him. We have only very odd testimonies to examine. Miriam, their daughter, was forever terrified of thunderstorms. Had she witnessed a great one in the US or on board ship? It is pretty marvellous to hypothesise about a storm in the Atlantic 1823, just from a few parish register and census entries. Again, it is just possible that incoming shipping records may provide an answer.
The last grandchild, James Creed (1809) is widely thought by me to have died as a boy in the States, with his father.
Twenty-three days
The Windsor Castle in 1873 sailed from London to Cape Town in a miraculous 23 days, the subject of this post. Sarah Carr turned 18 in 1876 and the following January had herself baptised at Eyam parish church, her ancestral home. I was suspicious of this event: there being too much significance for this to be a casual adult baptism, ‘oops I forgot’. All the more so as she thereafter disappears entirely from English records! So I decided to see the Eyam parish record at Kew, to learn where she was then living. What I saw there excited me, opening as it does so many possibilities and hard questions:
Sarah Carr was indeed baptised at Eyam in January 1877, her address given as Glossop. The priest notes that she left Eyam the following day, 22 January, for Griqualand West, South Africa!
This was not what I had expected. It's a very helpful entry for which I am so grateful. But what next? And indeed what before: with whom had Sarah been engaged since her birthday which led to this turn of events? Unfortunately it's not yet possible to interrogate FamilySearch and find out who else was baptised as Sarah was, on 21 January 1877.
Griqualand West is a diamond-shaped territory, later to be subsumed in with the Cape Colony, and diamonds were the main reason this territory drew such interest. It was also the Griqua people's homeland, with Griqualand East across the Drakensburg mountains. 1877 was a very significant year in the region, only six years into the ‘New Rush’ of miners. The Tantallon Castle carried the first group of Scottish farm workers to Cape Town in the very month that Sarah set sail. A census was held revealing there were 12,374 people of European descent resident, just over a quarter of the whole, a mixture of chancers, farmers, miners, preachers, shopkeepers, and the Griqua people, all competing with each to reside in this rainless place. The Annexation Act was passed in July, the ninth frontier war took place and stamps were first issued in this year. Ships of the Union-Castle line were investing in getting people here quickly. So we imagine Sarah made the trip to Cape Town, and then on by cart on muddy poor roads, to Kimberley, Griqualand West's largest settlement, not yet a town, and surely, her destination, if she made it. – Although it seems the region had more than mines: ‘most Griqua [1870s] were forced to sell their farms to whites’, records Encyclopaedia Britannica.
After those 23 days, or more, Sarah enters a land of few records, where disease, the fast transient nature of the place and the passage of time could wipe out all memory of a person. To me this is deeply ironic. She was a young lady, with a considerable amount of fire to execute such a brave plan, of which we do not yet know the details.
Yet a niece came to my grandparents' wedding in 1930. And another niece lived in old age with our cousin Edna in Southampton. I was too busy to contact Edna before she died in 2005, but she would certainly have said if there’d been talk of an aunt in South Africa, had I known to ask. Two of Sarah's siblings have grandchildren who are alive, but if we expect a story to somehow make up for 130 years of lost history, we are perhaps clutching at straws.
I have though, some hope. I have tried some clever searches of the South African records, to see which infants were given the name 'Carr', 'Hannah' 'Millicent, in Kimberley or environs, names significant to Sarah, though I lack the dates. Right now Dermot Carr McClure interests me, I have ruled out the Carr Furnesses. There are also 50 pages of Methodist baptisms live at familysearch, which one can browse. In a very real way one can feel the bravery of those mission folk, of whom William Woodman Treleaven and Samuel Morambo: had Sarah married one of them? Nolene Lossau's terrific transcripts of Kimberley Methodist baptisms supplement this resource, and I am interested in Robert Brooker and others who are listed with a partner named Sarah.
I found reference to several families from Derbyshire settling in the Cape, if not in Kimberley, the Fletchers and Bundys. I also browsed those listed as born in Cape Colony or Kimberley who appear in British censuses back home.
Let’s face it the shipping lists are unlikely to survive. However we have the Eyam vicar telling us she left almost immediately. There was no time for a marriage in England or Scotland (but Belfast has one), so she boarded the vessel a single woman. I have followed the ships as best I can through the British Newspapers: we read of the Walmer Castle allowing its passengers to disembark at distant St Helena. Did Sarah leave the vessel at St Helena one wonders? She would have had two weeks on board to change her mind about where she was going, but we imagine she had connections in the Cape waiting for her.
At 18, she could not have been a nurse, nor did the Cape yet require trained nurses in large numbers. Could she have been a missionary, and who in Derbyshire had been stirring up such foment that Sarah chose to leave? She was, surprisingly, Anglican, and hers is the only entry where the Eyam vicar records such an impulsive decision. Was she engaged to a Derbyshire man, already abroad, who’d written for her to come? This is a plain explanation with just two people in the picture rather than a host of missionaries or preachers. Was she going to travel with a family as housekeeper or maidservant, and, if so, we wonder who!
None of her immediate family were abroad, though there remain her father's family yet to be fully searched. Hugh Carr had a report in the paper at his death in Cheshire 1880. It would be nice to see that record, though I am afraid should South Africa not be mentioned, I might infer that Sarah had died there. This absence of information would be a pretty mournful way of learning of the failure of Sarah's plan, which we trust, succeeded, whatever it was.
28 Nov 2011
The Tuckingmill Hotel and the Return of Eliza
The Tucking Mill Hotel, March 1851
A new arrivalAt the hotel in 1851, someone is about to arrive, my great-great-grandfather, who will be a bouncing baby boy, the only one to survive the depressing wet, cold and stony damp. Cursed from birth with the Hunter need to travel, and travel far, it's fitting that in these waiting months, a visitor should emerge bedraggled at the young publicans' door.
Enter Eliza
Eliza Hunter, the publican's sister. She is one of the great unsolved threads in our tapestry. Even here she is casually tripped over, listed most unhelpfully as Elizabeth Richards, widow, age 25, but seemingly on hard times, and not expected to survive, I would imagine.
A dangerous hotel
We see her here as a widow, stopping over with her brother who had the Tuckingmill Hotel, presumably not long for this world. She coughed and sneezed, it was a lot colder than she had been used to. This same hotel would I'm afraid kill the next 2 Hunter children, and the family would quit its ornery ways by the end of the decade for Bogota, Columbia, to let their travel genes run free. Maybe Lady Luck will be kinder there (ha ha ha). Eliza we must leave with her widowed weed's tramping her way to the workhouse. Perhaps.
Many years later, in a mining town far away
Twenty years later one of the family was finding his feet in the gold mining boom-town of Bendigo. A young lad called John Hunter. Having lost his father in Columbia (a trip that hadn't worked out so good), John was now doing quite well thank you very much, being on his way to management in a factory. The factory made fuses to help blast rock away in the mines. A young girl caught his eye, Miss P, a Cornishwoman. Wise move, as it was the mysterious Mrs P who got John up the ladder in the factory. It is now 1870, twenty years after the stranger arrives in the Hotel.
What's the story?
Wanting to lay Eliza to rest, I rummaged around to find how Eliza had became a widow in the first place. She had gone out to Adelaide at 22 and returned two years later. She had lost both husband and son out there in Oz. This was not fair. Her cousins Amelia and Cecilia, born the same year, had followed Eliza out to the the great continent under the sea. These girls had over 95 grandchildren between them, scattered around the gold fields. Eliza did not. She was sent home early. Back to the Hotel. Rain had stopped play.
The End of Eliza?
Was Eliza really ready for the long walk to the workhouse age 25? Was life finished with her? Tin and copper were at rock-bottom prices. But even Thomas Hardy wouldn't send her to the chop. I'm not so sure she dies, does she?
Eliza's Decision
We look back at that census from 1851 with the dingy old hotel holding the family together. The brother was ready for Colombia. Eliza could watch her brother sail and then offer to house-keep for their grumpy father. She did not. She did not sit on her laurels and mope! She married again.
The moment the 1851 enumerator left the Hotel with a 'kerchief over his nose, Eliza made her approaches to the tin miner Perry. She needs to marry him immediately. Timing is very tight. Two girls are born here, Eliza (now Mrs Perry) gets back on the boat for Australia and is out of the country leaving no ripples by the time the 1861 census rolls around. Vanished! No trace!
Clues lying dormant for decades
I say no trace... but I was missing a clue. Someone had been watching me. It was in fact Eliza who turns out to be the mysterious Mrs P, John Hunter's benefactor in Bendigo. As Mrs Perry, she had produced Catherine Perry barely a year after the census. They sailed together to Australia in Eliza's second trip out there. When her nephew John Hunter came out, it was ELIZA who proved his fairy godmother. She knew he would be gladly gifted the factory to own and run, provided he had a wife, Kate Perry say?, a niece of the currently elderly owner.
Grrrr
Because Kate Perry had been born in England but after the census years, rather than in Victoria itself (where parents names are publically online), I had no idea she was the child of a Hunter.
What we missed
The Return of Eliza, a woman not to be written-off, was there in the records all along. But so hard to piece together, it took myself and great-great-grandson Brett Pierce to put our two halves of the story together. We worked out this incredible woman emigrated TWICE, to different states/territories of Australia to become one of its matriarches: like her two cousins Amelia and Cecilia, fellow women of 1825.
By match-making her daughter to a trusted individual, the in-law's factory would come to him (her own sons being too darn young to succeed), thus looking after her own old age. She was not getting dumped in Australia twice!
Just one example of a hardworking Cornish woman destined for Australia who would not give up until she had got the better life, and would not settle until her future and her family's, was provided for.
THE END
====
Further notes: Eliza's later children were born in Australia, with her maiden name of Hunter clearly announced. But what Brett in Australia didn't know, was where Eliza came from, as of course details of her first marriage never reared their head second time around. He definitely didn't know she'd come out before.And what I didn't know in England, was that Eliza had had this second marriage at all, as guessing the name of a new man, and then further guessing that they had gone BACK to Australia, were all beyond my powers of imagination. I was just sure she'd passed away, in England, leaving no trace, and no family. Eliza had eleven children all told and many descendants who are just learning of her double emigration. Her fertility is not quite in the same league as her fellow 1825 cousins, whose descendants recently tipped the 1000 mark; but still quite respectable and matriarchal. She was now based in Victoria and it was through her brother-in-law Charles Perry that our young orphan hero got the work in Perry's Fuse Factory, Bendigo. The main mystery left is where her mother, Mary Richards of Wendron came from and grandfather Hunter. Perhaps we can solve it someday. You can read more about the Fuse Factory here. I have downloaded a copy in case the link disappears over time, like a lot of mining ghost towns.
====
This article appeared in November 2011. The following month, a few weeks before his passing, my grandfather remembered something of the Tuckingmill Hotel from his own grandfather, born there in 1852 just a beat too late to know Eliza. I found myself travelling back 160 years to the clattering streets of Tuckingmill, and my grandfather and I across the table from each other as he described the room. At least I think he did, but tea was served and we moved on.
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