THOMAS

1.3 Joseph William THOMAS 1879 – 1955

 

 

Joseph William THOMAS was born in 1879 at Wainui on the Bank’s Peninsula, New Zealand.
His parents were John Woodill THOMAS and Elizabeth Ann BATES.  Both of his parents were children of first generation settlers to New Zealand.
John Woodill THOMAS (Joe’s father) was born around 1857 at North Dalton, Yorkshire, England.  He was baptised there on 2 May 1857.  It was noted that he was unwell in the church register.  His brother, also named John THOMAS who was the first born had died.  John Woodill THOMAS who was known as Jack or Jock is said to have had a sickly childhood in Yorkshire, England.
The THOMAS family left England on 17 May 1863 and arrived in New Zealand on 5 September 1863 on ‘The Captain Cook’.  The ship was built in Quebec in 1854.  It was 195 feet long, 37 feet wide and 22.5 feet deep.  Three infants on ‘The Captain Cook’ arrived with both parents dead, five whose mothers were dead and two instances where fathers were considered too young and unfit to take charge of babies.  There were 11 deaths on the voyage and the ship was placed in quarantine on arrival in New Zealand as many of the people were sick with Typhoid symptoms.  An improvement of the onboard female hospital was noted but it was still not big enough to accomodate those who were sick.  The upper deck had leaked through leaving nowhere dry.
The ship had been caught by heavy gales, one which developed into a hurricane leaving the ship quite damaged.  Icebergs were also encountered.  The passengers spoke highly of the kindness of Captain Cleaver and his Chief Officer.
Joseph’s father, John Woodill THOMAS was only a small boy when the family arrived in New Zealand.  They moved into a house at Grehan Road, Haylock’s Valley, Akaroa.  The house was provided by John WOODILL THOMASs brother-in-law John WOODILL who was his mother’s brother who was Joseph’s uncle.
Joseph’s mother Elizabeth Ann BATES was born on 11 November 1856 at St Helen’s, Lancashire, England.  Her large family spent some time there after leaving Donegal in Ireland.  Her family had emigrated to New Zealand on the ship ‘Indiana’ which had left London 2 August 1858.  Her family were helped out a lot by her Uncle who was a mining engineer at St Helen’s, Lancashire.  This uncle had no children.
Joseph’s parents, John Woodill THOMAS and Elizabeth Ann BATES met in New Zealand, at Akaroa on the Bank’s Peninsula.  They were married on 12 November 1877 at Akaroa.  Elizabeth was listed as a Millina on the marriage certificate.
Joseph William THOMAS was the eldest child of John Woodill THOMAS and Elizabeth Ann BATES followed by John Harrold THOMAS on 3 August 1880.  Only a year later, Joseph’s father, John Woodill THOMAS died on 16 August 1881 at Akaroa, New Zealand.  There are two different stories about how Joe’s father died.  One was that he fell out of a boat in the Akaroa Harbour.  The other is that he fell off a horse and lay in the snow all night.  Either way, he got pneumonia badly.  this flared up rheumatic fever which he may have had as a child and he died four weeks later.
John Woodill THOMAS was buried on 19 August 1881 in the Church of England Cemetery at Akaroa, Bank’s Peninsula, New Zealand.  He is buried with his mother who had died six years earlier.  John’s father, William THOMAS who was Joseph William THOMAS’s grandfather was still alive.
So Joseph William THOMAS as a small boy grew up in the picturesque town of Akaroa fatherless.  His brother John Harold THOMAS was only a baby and another baby was on the way.  Annette Mary Eleanor Jane THOMAS was born on 5 November 1881 at Akaroa in New Zealand.  So Joe had one brother and one sister.
A few years later, Joe’s mother, Elizabeth or Eliza as she was known married John HEWETT on 1 April 1884 at St Peter’s Anglican Church at Akaroa, New Zealand.  On 28 November 1884, Joe had a half brother.  Elizabeth and John had a child, John Edward HEWITT followed by James Gordon HEWETT in 1885 both born at Akaroa, New Zealand
Joe’s Aunt Marian Jane THOMAS married William James MISSEN at this time in Akaroa.  It was a small place so it’s likely that Joe was at this wedding.
Another Aunt, Betsy Ann THOMAS married Andreas Emmanuel ERIKSEN in 1888.  Both of these Aunts lived close by and Joe may have even been raised in the same home with them after his father had died.
In 1884, Joe’s mother, Elizabeth ran a drapery business from a shop owned by her father, Joseph BATES at Akaroa.  The drapery business failed forcing John HEWITT to file for bankruptcy.  In his sworn statement to the Official Assignee in Bankruptcy, on 4 June 1885, he stated that the business had been carried on by his wife for about three years. He said:
“She has left the business and the place and I do not know where she is at present.  I have filed my petition in consequence as I know there are large liabilities but I do not know to whom”.  
Two weeks later Eliza had been located and swore a statement which revealed some fairly loose business arrangements, not common today, but probably typical of the time.  By 1887 John was out of bankruptcy and he published a notice in the local newspaper stating he was no longer responsible for his wife’s debts.
Eliza and John HEWITT had another child:  Stanley John Livingstone HEWETT was born 13 June 1889 at Akaroa, New Zealand.
Eliza and John separated about 1890.  John was charged with assaulting Eliza on 21 December 1889.  The report on the court case said:  “the evidence disclosed a meleancholy state of affairs”.  John was fined one shilling.  It was very unusual in those times for a man to be charged for assaulting his wife so there is reason to believe that it may have been a little more serious.  After John and Eliza had separated, custody was awarded of the two children, Gordon and Stanley to Eliza, and John was ordered to pay maintenance.  Eldest son John Edward THOMAS was not included in the custody and maintenance orders as he was being brought up by his aunt and uncle.  John failed to keep up the maintenance payments so the matter was back in court in July 1891.  By this time John was working in Pahiatua in the North Island of New Zealand bush felling.
It’s not clear as to who brought up Joseph William THOMAS but there were lots of THOMAS, BATES and WOODILL Aunts, Uncles and cousins close by.  Joe as he was known was keen on boats as a child and spent most of his time boating or rowing on the Akaroa harbour.
When Joe was a boy, a tidal wave swept into the harbour and flooded the lower shops.  Joe found a butcher’s brine tub floating.  He hopped into this and had his small half brother holding the tub with a piece of flax.  However when the wave receded, half brother, Gordon let go and Joe floated out into the harbour!  Eventually someone saw him and rowed out to rescue him.
Joe left school at age 12 and went away for several days on a fishing boat.  Nobody knew where he was until his mother found him on the Akaroa wharf smoking a pipe.  Some time after this, Joe travelled up to Hawkes Bay in the North Island of New Zealand where he got work bush-felling, shearing and cutting grass.
Joe decided to go back to his home, and only got as far as Wellington where he got a job on a sailing ship.  After a couple of years he had made voyages to several parts of the world and had gained an A.B. certificate.  He was unable however, to get a berth back to New Zealand without signing on for the return trip.  At the time of the outbreak of the Boer War, he was a deck-hand on a small steamer trading around the coast of England.
Volunteers were urgently called for, and Joe at once offered his services in the Mounteds, having no desire to be a footslogger.  His choice was the Imperial Yoemanry.  He passed all preliminary tests and was accepted subject to a satisfactory riding test.  When this took place, Joe came along dressed in a Jack Tar rig plus a leather belt from which hung an ugly looking sheath knife.  The volunteers to go through the riding test with the exception of Joe, were all English lads.  Most of them were from town jobs and hadn’t done much riding.  Joe was allotted a mount that had thrown the other boys one after the other.  Joe however stuck to his mount and rode to a standstill.  Having passed the final test, he then went into camp to undergo his training.  During the first night his ugly looking sheath knife, which none of the other boys liked the look of, mysteriously disappeared and he never saw it again.
Joe arrived in Africa just before orders had been received granting him a transfer from the Imperial Yeomanry.  When reporting to the Captain, Joe was asked if he had a horse.  He replied ‘No’ but intimated that if necessary he could get one.  That night he stole along quietly to the Yeomanry Horse Lines and helped himself to three horses and tied them up in different places on the New Zealand lines.  He thought that at least one of them might not be recognised.  It transpired that none of them were, and until all the horses were handed over to the other units he had the three horses to attend to!
The tale is also told that some considerable time before going to Africa, Joe was desperately ill with enteric fever, so ill that his doctor thought he could not possibly survive.   Other doctors were called in for consultation.  One of the newcomers, after examining Joe thoroughly, remarked, ‘Poor boy, I’m afraid he is going.”  Joe had been unconscious and had not spoken for some considerable time and obviously had regained consciousness and had understood what the doctor was referring to.  He slowly opened his eyes and drawlingly said, “Going eh, I’m damn sure I’m not.”
Joe lived to return to New Zealand in the troop ship ‘Tagus’.  On the ship he had a fierce encounter with another chap in the mess room.  The sea was rough and pitching quite a bit, but Joe had better sea legs than the other, so was the victor.
Joe’s Aunt Marian Jane THOMAS had died at Masterton in 1900 while he was travelling.
After he came back to New Zealand, Joe began courting Helena Caroline KEEGAN at Akaroa on the wharf, but younger half brother Gordon insisted on hanging around so Joe picked him up by the scruff of his neck and the seat of his pants and dropped him in the harbour.  He later had to jump in and save Gordon from drowning.  Gordon later said that all he could remember of the incident was Joe wiping the water out of his eyes with a dirty sock.
Joe married Helena Caroline KEEGAN on 27 September 1903 at the home of Helena’s sister Ellen or Nell as she was known at Tennyson Street, Dannevirke, New Zealand.
Helena Caroline KEEGAN was born 26 August 1879 at The Kiak, Bank’s Peninsula, New Zealand.  In 1902, like many of the Akaroa residents, she had moved to the area of Hawkes Bay in the North Island as farm land had come available.  She lived with two of her sisters Agnes Gertrude KEEGAN and Ellen KEEGAN.  She taught music and was a well known singer who raised a lot of money for various war causes.  Helena or Lena as she was known was from a very large family.  Her parents had come from Ireland.
On 29 January 1906 there first and only child was born – Jack Heaton THOMAS.
The same year on 10 December, Mary Ellen THOMAS previously Mary Ellen SMITH died.  She was the wife of Joe’s Uncle William who he probably moved to Pahiatua with in his younger days.  William THOMAS and Mary Ellen SMITH had married in 1893.
On 1 January 1907 Joe’s brother, John Harold THOMAS married Margaret Eleanor ROSS at Dannievirke, New Zealand.  John had moved from Akaroa to Wairarapa as a young man around the same time that his Uncles of around the same age,  possibly William and Harry THOMAS.   They all got farms in the Pongaroa and Pahiatua area.  John Harold THOMAS and Margaret Eleanor ROSS had three children:  Cyril Alexander THOMAS 1910, Ina Lucy THOMAS 1911 and Roy Harold THOMAS in 1914.
It was a rough life and Joe would have known his Uncle, Harry THOMAS.  It is thought that he moved to Hawkes Bay around the same time as Joe.  Harry THOMAS was not much older than Joe.  He was born in 1871 at Akaroa and had married Lucy WRIGHT on 18 March 1890.  Joe’s brother Gordon had been a witness at the wedding.  There was an accident at Pongaroa on 29 January 1909 where Harry THOMAS and his son William THOMAS had been arguing around a fire.  It became heated and Harry ended up shooting himself and his son.  His wife and daughter had run out into the bush to hide.
Joe’s other Uncle, George THOMAS who was only two years older than Joe got into a fight with somebody at Pahiatua and thought he had killed the person.  He hadn’t but he went running and was never heard of again.
Joe’s Uncle William who had been a widower since the death of his wife Mary Ellen SMITH married a second time to Francis SHASKEY in 1910.  Francis’ sister Annie had married Joe’s Uncle Isaac (known as Sam).  Annie SHASKEY died in 1913.  Joe was still living in the Hawkes Bay area at this time.
In 1915 (though not eligible by age which he lied about), Joe enlisted fro World War One, together with his half brother Gordon HEWITT.  The people of Douglas gave them a farewell and they each received a pair of binoculars.
Joe’s half brother Stanley John Livingstone HEWETT married Margaret Amy SLY in 1915 at Christchurch, New Zealand.  We don’t know whether Joe was able to attend the wedding as it might have been after he left for the war.
Joe and Gordon were in the trenches together and Joe was hit by the Germans.  Gordon was a bit further along the line, so he put his helmet, gun and binoculars down, and went along the trench to see Joe carried away to the Red Cross Station.  When Gordon returned to his place in the trench, his helmet, gun, binoculars had been blown up, right at the spot where hd had been standing.
Joe’s is remembered for his pranks.  He was quite a larrikin but Gordon was a very serious man.  He  was the recipient of a Distinguished Conduct Medal in the war.  He had been wounded in France in 1917 and wounded again in 1918 with gun shots to his head.  Even after this he returned to his battalion in France and was finally discharged on 14 April 1919.
On 24 July 1915, Joe’s sister Annette Mary Eleanor Jane THOMAS married Henry Herbert CLIFFORD who was quite a renowned photographer born in 1872 Dunedin
Joe’s half-brother Edward (Ted) Bertram HEWITT died at Gallipoli in 1916.  He was buried 12 January 1916 at Linwood Cemetery, Christchurch, New Zealand
Joe’s Aunt, Betsy Ann THOMAS who had married Andreas Emmanuel ERIKSEN died 16 May 1916. She was another one of the THOMAS family who had moved to Pahiatua in the North Island of New Zealand so Joe would have spent time with her and the family.
On 13 July 1916, Joe’s mother Elizabeth HEWETT previously Elizabeth THOMAS and prior to that Elizabeth Ann BATES died at 317 Montreal Street, Christchurch, New Zealand.  It’s likely that she was sharing a house owned by her daughter Annie.  Joe was probably still away at the war.
Joe’s cousin Samuel THOMAS (son of Joe’s Uncle Isaac, also known as Sam THOMAS) was killed in action.  He died 14 January 1918
Another cousin, William THOMAS son of Joe’s Uncle William THOMAS and Mary Ellen SMITH also died in World War I.
Joe found it hard to settle when he came home from the war.  The army life had suited him and as Helena and their son Jack had managed the farm and milking while he was away, he let them continue to do this when he returned while he went out drinking.
Joe’s Uncle William’s second wife Francis SHASKEY  died around this time on 30 January 1923 at Pongaroa.  She was 49.
Joe’s wife, Helena had been very close to her sister Agnes Gertrude KEEGAN known as Gertie.  Gertie married William Herbert HALLAM and moved to Auckland.  When son Jack was old enough he saved up and bought a car and drove Helena to Auckland for a visit with her sister.  Gertie’s daughter Jessie, was quite impressed that Jack had a car and in time a romance started.
Around this time a family secret was announced because Jack and Jessie were first cousins. Story goes that there was some illegitamacy in the family so even though the whole story wasn’t told, it was understood that one of the sisters had different parents.  The rest of the secret was guarded to the grave.  Those sorts of things were private and caused family shame in those days.
Helena’s birth certificate indicates that her mother was Alice Dobson.  We could suggest a number of various scenarios but nothing further is known for sure.  The long and the short of it is that Jack and Jessie were able to marry and on 30 June 1931 they married at St Barnabas Church, Mt Eden, Auckland, New Zealand.
Jack and Jessie lived near Joe and Helena.  Two children followed in the next couple of years.
Sadly Helena, became ill and on 22 February 1935 and died at New Plymouth Hospital of Aortic regurgitation and mitral stenosis, Cerebral tumour.  She was buried on 23 February 1935 at Te Henui Cemetery, New Plymouth, New Zealand.
When Helena died so suddenly it was an extreme shock to Joe but also his son Jack and daughter in law Jessie.  Joe simply ran away unable to face his loss.  Nobody knew where he was.  Jack eventually left Jessie with two young children and a farm worker for a month, while he looked for Joe.  He finally found him in Weymouth, near Manurewa in Auckland, New Zealand.  He was in a drunken sleep under a hedge.  He didn’t ever return to farming but left the farm and it’s debts to Jack and Jessie and returned to the sea which he loved.
In 1940 Joe’s Uncle, Isaac Samuel THOMAS died.  Isaac lived at Pongaroa so Joe would have grown up with him in Akaroa and then in Hawkes Bay as a young adult.  1940 was also when Joe’s two nephews died.  Robert Henry CLIFFORD died in action in August and Alistair Bertram CLIFFORD died in November from a tumour in his head.  These two nephews were sons of Joe’s sister Annette Mary Eleanor Jane THOMAS (known as Annie).
When Joe left Taranaki, it was by boat that he apparently rowed solo to Kawhia, with his dog and a few possessions.  It was a rough trip, but Joe had been a good oarsman from his childhood when he and brother Gordon Hewitt won rowing championships in Akaroa.  As the story goes, he tipped some of his possessions overboard when it got too rough and he was in danger of not making it.  After walking up onto the beach at Kawhia, he roamed back down the coast and fetched the belongings that the tide had washed up.
Joe acquired a one-roomed batch on the sea shore of Weymouth, painted black with pitch.  It was right on the water’s edge, perched on stilts, with the water washing under it at high tide.  At one point he had an argument with the town council who wanted him to pay rates, but because his batch stuck out over the water, he was indignant and refused to pay.  The batch also had a ‘long-drop’ toilet system into the water!  When the council chased him about rates, he made sure he was living out at sea in his boat.  Throughout his whole life he loved the sea.
Joe would visit his son at Ngatea in later years and daughter-in-law Jessie would clean him up and look after him.  He also spent time at Hawkes Bay with his first cousin William George Samuel (Bill) THOMAS where he would help dig the garden.  His sister Annie had offered to give him a job collecting rents and debts but he didn’t think that was for him.
Joseph William THOMAS died on 10 November 1955 at Weymouth, Auckland, New Zealand. His funeral was remembered as a lonely affair with only a few family present.  He was buried at Weymouth, Auckland, New Zealand.
CHARLESWORTH

7. May Victoria CHARLESWORTH 1881 – 1951

 

 

 

May Victoria CHARLESWORTH was born 25 May 1881 at Woolongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  May’s parents, Sam CHARLESWORTH and Margaret MCDOUGAL had emigrated from England.  They had got married in 1869 at Sheffield, Nottinghamshire, England.

May’s parents, Sam CHARLESWORTH and Margaret MCDOUGAL were still living in England in 1871 as they can be found on the English census.  At this time, they had left Mansfield, Nottinghamshire where they were both from and Sam was working in Heeley in Yorkshire.  It was very soon after that they would have emigrated to Australia.  Their first child was born in Brisbane in 1872 so one can assume that Margaret was pregnant when they emigrated to Australia or that the baby was born on the voyage.

May had five siblings:  Lily CHARLESWORTH 1872, Maud CHARLESWORTH 6 May 1876, Violet CHARLESWORTH 11 April 1877, John Joseph CHARLESWORTH 15 December 1879 all before May Victoria CHARLESWORTH was born on 25 May 1881.  Another brother followed:  Sam Albert CHARLESWORTH born 10 October 1883.

May’s siblings, Maud CHARLESWORTH, Violet CHARLESWORTH and John Joseph CHARLESWORTH all died in infancy.  they had all died by 1881 so after starting off in working class Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, England, taking a chance in another country which in those days meant a long, uncomfortable and difficult voyage and never returning home, the couple then saw some heartache with the loss of children.  The family resided on the Southside of Brisbane.

May’s sister, Lilly married James Lee KERR on 25 January 1905 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  They didn’t have children but resided on the Southside of Brisbane in suburbs Coorparoo and Wynnam.  From 1936 – 1943 they can be found on the electoral rolls at Southport on the Gold Coast of Queensland.  James Lee KERR was born 29 August 1873 at Leith, Midlothian, Scotland.

May Victoria CHARLESWORTH married Hugh GILMORE on 29 March 1911 at the Presbyterian Church, Norman Park, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

May’s husband Hugh was born 19 August 1881 at Rogers Street, Spring Hill, Brisbane, Australia.  He was the son of Adam GILMORE and Annabella NICHOLS.  They had come to Australia from Ireland.  Hugh’s parents had married on 9 December 1865 at the First Presbyterian Church, Ballymena, County Antrim, Ireland.

On 26 June 1866 Hugh’s parents, Adam GILMORE and Annabella NICOLS emigrated to Australia.  They had only been married six months.  they travelled on the ship ‘Wansfell’ for Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Just like May’s parents, Sam CHARLESWORTH and Margaret MCDOUGAL, Adam GILMORE and Annabella NICOLS made a bold move that meant that they would never see any of the family again who they had left behind.  The ship ‘Wansfell’ departed from Southampton, England.  Hugh’s father, Adam was one of the committee members that represented passengers on the ship commending the ship’s captain.  The ship transported immigrants from England, Ireland and Scotland.  Of the total 225 immigrants, 172 were Irish.  Among the single girls were a large number of domestic servants.  60 were advertised as being for hire on arrival of the ‘Wansfell’.  The voyage was smooth for that period with no passenger births or deaths recorded on board.

Hugh’s parents, Adam GILMORE and Annabella NICOL moved into a home in 1866 at Rogers Street, Spring Hill, Brisbane.  Rogers Street is now inner city Brisbane so the house is no longer there.

Hugh GILMORE was the ninth of 10 children.  His siblings were:  Annie Jane GILMORE 1867, Matilda GILMORE 1868, Elizabeth GILMORE 1869, Isabella GILMORE 1871, Rose GILMORE 1874, John Alexander GILMORE 1875, William James GILMORE 1876, Agnes GILMORE 1880, all before Hugh GILMORE was born on 19 August 1881.  Four of Hugh’s siblings had died before he was born.

Hugh GILMORE‘s birth certificate states that his father Adam was a drayman.  Other documentation tells us that he also worked as a store man and labourer.

Hugh’s younger sister, Emma GILMORE was born three and a half years after Hugh on 26 January 1885.

Hugh’s mother, Annabella GILMORE previously Annabella NICOLS died on 9 April 1912 of chronic nephritis and Uraemia.  It was only soon after May Victoria CHARLESWORTH and Hugh GILMORE had got married.  She was buried on 9 April 1912 at Toowong Cemetery, Toowong, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Hugh and his wife May had four children:  The first was Lilly Margaret Nicol GILMORE born in 1912.

There was an accident and May’s father, Sam CHARLESWORTH was killed after being knocked down by a bike.  He hit his head on the kerb.  Family records report that it was the first time he was sober in years!  Sam CHARLESWORTH had worked as a stone mason in England and he had continued that work in Australia.

May’s father-in-law, Adam GILMORE died on 9 January 1914 soon after the birth of their first child Lily.  Quite a large number of mourners were listed in the Brisbane Courier Mail on Saturday 10 January 1914.  The funeral service was at Norman Park Presbyterian Church, Brisbane which was where May and her husband Hugh were married.

The same year, May and Hugh had a son.  Kenneth Hugh GILMORE was born on 30 September 1914 followed by a daughter, Rita May GILMORE five years later on 10 March 1922 and Douglas Norman GILMORE five years later on 10 March 1922.

May’s brother-in-law John Alexander GILMORE died on 20 April 1926.  He had worked as a photographer.  May and Hugh’s children were still very young when their Uncle died.

May’s brother Sam Albert CHARLESWORTH married Esther Dora MADDOCK on 7 November 1931 in Queensland.  The couple resided on the southside of Brisbane at Buranda

May was the only one of her siblings to have children.

May’s mother, Margaret CHARLESWORTH previously Margaret MCDOUGAL died in Brisbane in 1935.  She was buried at Southside Cemetery, Brisbane.  We can’t be sure of which year, but around this time May and Hugh’s daughter Lily Margaret Nichol GILMORE married Cecil Ernest KROLL.  They moved to Margate near Redcliffe in Brisbane.

May and Hugh’s son, Kenneth Hugh GILMORE married a woman called Melba.  Their third child Rita married Arthur Henry KROLL who was the brother of Cecil Ernest KROLL who had married May and Hugh’s first daughter Lilly.

Hugh’s older sister Matilda MCKINNEY previously Matilda GILMORE died on 31 October 1946.

James Lee KERR, husband of May’s sister Lilly died on 9 September 1947 at Queensland, Australia.

May Victoria GILMORE previously May Victoria CHARLESWORTH died in August 1951.  She was cremated on 16 August 1951 at Mt Thompson.

May’s son, Douglas Norman GILMORE married Dawn Eliza EVANS about a year later on 10 May 1952.

May’s husband, Hugh GILMORE died 20 September 1952 at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  He was cremated on 23 September 1952 at Brisbane Crematorium, Mt Thompson, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

CHARLESWORTH

7.3.7 Samuel CHARLESWORTH 1827 – 1888

Samuel CHARLESWORTH

 

 

Samuel CHARLESWORTH was born in 1827 at Nottinghamshire, England.  His parents were Thomas CHARLESWORTH and Dorothy SLANEY.  Both of Samuel’s parents had been born at Nottinghamshire.

Thomas CHARLESWORTH and Dorothy SLANEY were married 22 August 1806 at Mansfield Woodhouse, Nottinghamshire, England.  They had 10 children:  Elizabeth CHARLESWORTH 1807, William CHARLESWORTH 1809, Mary CHARLESWORTH 1811, George CHARLESWORTH 1814, Thomas CHARLESWORTH 1821, John CHARLESWORTH 1824, Ann CHARLESWORTH 1826 all before Samuel CHARLESWORTH who was born about 1827 at Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, England.  He was baptised on 11 January 1827.

In 1829 another sister was born at Mansfield;  Hannah CHARLESWORTH.

In 1831 Samuel’s eldest sister Elizabeth CHARLESWORTH married Henry MUSGRAVE at Mansfield Woodhouse, Nottinghamshire, England.  Henry MUSGRAVE  was born in 1808 at Edingley, Nottinghamshire, and was the son of John MUSGRAVE and Ann BAGGALEY.  He worked as an agricultural labourer.

Elizabeth CHARLESWORTH and Henry MUSGRAVE had a large family who all seemed to have stayed in Mansfield and surrounding towns of Nottinghamshire for the next few generations.  They mostly worked in the Coal Mines or the Cotton Mills.  It’s unclear what sort of relationship Samuel would have had with his sister.  He was only 2 years old when she married and she started having children of her own soon after that.

After the marriage of Samuel’s sister, Elizabeth, another brother was born in Samuel’s family.  Henry CHARLESWORTH was born in 1832.

It’s unclear when Samuel’s older brother William CHARLESWORTH got married.  He was definitely married by 1851.  William married Sarah Anne and worked in the Cotton Mills.  He moved his family to Lancashire which produced a lot of cotton at that time.  William’s children also worked in the cotton mills.

Samuel would have had a closer relationship with his siblings who remained at home during his childhood.  Older siblings, Mary, George, Thomas, John, Ann and younger siblings Hannah and Henry were still living at home with their widowed mother in 1841.  It would appear that Thomas CHARLESWORTH, Samuel’s father had died.

In July of 1844 Samuel’s brother John CHARLESWORTH married Sarah GRAFTON.  Samuel would have been 17 by that time.  John stayed in Nottingham and raised his family there.  He worked as a stone mason for most of his life.  The 1881 census shows him taking his skills further and by then he was listed as a Master Builder employing two men.

Samuel’s brother John named his first son Samuel.  He was known as Sam.  Perhaps he was named after Samuel CHARLESWORTH who is featured here.  This nephew is significant though because the two of them both ended up emigrating to Australia.

On 2 December 1846, Samuel’s brother George CHARLESWORTH married Elizabeth HURST.  George worked in the cotton mills.  His wife Elizabeth, known as Betty worked as a dressmaker and shopkeeper at Hayfield.  By 1861, George and Betty were living apart possibly for work reasons.  A lot of cotton was being produced in Lancashire from 1861 to 1865.  This time was known as the cotton panic or cotton famine.  George was still lucky to have work in 1871.  He remained in Lancashire while his wife worked as a dressmaker and seamstress at Hayfield, Derbyshire.  It’s uncertain as to how much contact George would have been able to have with his brother Samuel at that time.

Elizabeth CHARLESWORTH, known as Betty, wife of George CHARLESWORTH, previously Elizabeth HURST died in 1883 at Hayfield, Derbyshire, England.  Samuel’s brother George with his son Darius CHARLESWORTH and daughter Sarah Hurst CHARLESWORTH emigrated to Dakota, United States of America in 1891.  George CHARLESWORTH died the same year on 10 August 1891 at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States of America.  He is buried at Pilgrims Rest Cemetery, Milwaukee, Milwaukee County.

George’s son Darius CHARLESWORTH worked from 1900 as a printer in Ohio.  In 1910 he worked at the Republican Office, Mitchell City, United States America.  He was living at Math Avenue, Mitchell Ward 3, Davidson, South Dakota, United States of America and his cousin Sarah HURST who had been raised with the family was also in the United States.  Darius CHARLESWORTH and his wife Anna ALCOCK had five daughters.  Darius died on 7 August 1916 at Davidson, South Dakota, Untied States of America.

The same year that Samuel’s cousin Darius CHARLESWORTH married Ann ALCOCK, his brother Thomas married Harriet GREAVES between April and June of 1846 at Nottinghamshire, England.  Thomas worked as a wire worker and remained in Nottingham so would have been able to maintain some relationship with his brother Samuel.  There is a separate video and story about Thomas CHARLESWORTH.

Samuel CHARLESWORTH married Eliza HURST on 28 May 1849.  Eliza was possibly related to Elizabeth HURST who married Samuel’s brother George.  Dorothy CHARLESWORTH previously Dorothy SLANEY had died only a few months earlier on 22 March 1849.

Samuel’s first child was born on 28 June 1850.  A daughter, Sarah Ann CHARLESWORTH born at Hayfield, Derbyshire, England.  Sarah Ann CHARLESWORTH, daughter of Samuel and Eliza CHARLESWORTH was baptised 1 September 1850 at Hayfield, Derbyshire, England.

The 1851 British Census a year later lists Samuel CHARLESWORTH as a cotton carder.  His wife Eliza was a cotton weaver.

There are birth and death records of another daughter, Henrietta CHARLESWORTH who was born 19 March 1856 at Hayfield, Derbyshire, England.  She died 11 days later on 30 March 1856 at Hayfield.

Samuel and Eliza had another daughter.  Harriet CHARLESWORTH was born at Glossop, Derbyshire, England in 1860.

As a result of the American Civil War there was an over supply of cotton.  1861 to 1865 was known as the cotton panic.  More cotton was being produced than could be sold and raw cotton was being held in warehouses and dockyards.  The price of cotton increased due to a blockade and lack of imports all of which caused a change in the social circumstances of the cotton mill workforce in Lancashire and surrounding regions.  Queensland, Australia with it’s hot and humid conditions was being considered for cotton mills so those who had worked with cotton were encouraged to emigrate.

Samuel and Eliza’s daughter Sarah Ann CHARLESWORTH died some time between 1861 and 1863.  She would have been about 13 or 14 years old.  Samuel states on records at the end of his life that five children had died before the couple ventured out to Australia.

Samuel CHARLESWORTH and his wife Eliza sailed for Australia in 1863 with only one surviving child, Harriet CHARLESWORTH.  Eliza was expecting another child so it would have been a hard voyage for them both.  The ship Fiery Star was overcrowded during it’s voyage from England to Brisbane.  The maximum number of passengers was 470, but 554 emigrants were noted on arrival.  Although the captain and surgeon were praised by saloon passengers, others were very unhappy.  The sale of alcohol from a storeroom in the single females quarters encouraged harassment of these women by inebriated men.  It was also noted that married men were unable to protect their wives and children from drunken persons.

It seems that Samuel and Eliza’s little daughter, Harriet died on the voyage.  She is reported to have died in Queensland 0n 26 October 1863.  The  Fiery Star didn’t actually dock until November.

Samuel CHARLESWORTH and his wife Eliza moved to the Darling Downs in Queensland, Australia.  This area was quite isolated but there was labouring work and sheep stations.

Samuel and Eliza CHARLESWORTH had another child, Samuel Hurst CHARLESWORTH born in Queensland, Australia on 23 October 1864.  In 1866 when the baby was just a toddler, Eliza died leaving Samuel with his young son by the same name.

It’s not certain how Samuel managed with a small child but there are records of Samuel Hurst CHARLESWORTH being put in a Reform School so he may have been in some sort of trouble on 11 November 1888.  This school was known as the Reformatory School for Boys.  It was place for boys to be sentenced to a term of confinement at the reformatory by Children’s Courts.

Samuel continued to work on the Darling Downs in Queensland as a labourer and shepherd.  In 1885 he fell into a 16 foot chasm while driving sheep.  He never completely recovered from the accident.  He spent the rest of his life at the Benevolent Asylum at Dunwich on Stradbroke Island off Brisbane in Australia.

The Benevolent Asylum was established in 1864 and was designed to service all of Queensland.  It was built along the lines of the British Poor House where you put out of the public eye any illness, poverty or infirmity.  There were no pensions in those days so the council built the people a town on Stradbroke Island.  The people were mostly old pioneers from England who had come and worked in the Australian Bush.  They were unwanted by both the Brisbane hospital and colonial government so an institution was sent to Dunwich because of the availability of vacant buildings.  People were therefore removed from the main city and moved to Stradbroke Island.  Anyone who was unable to keep up with the demands of society was admitted and most accepted their fate because they had become institutionally dependent.

The asylum occupied most of Dunwich.  There were buildings with wards as well as a kitchen, bakery, laundry and other service buildings.  It had a public hall and recreational facilities.

Samuel CHARLESWORTH died on 8 December 1888 at Dunwich, Stradbroke Island, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  He was buried on 9 December 1888 at Dunwich Benevolent Asylum Cemetery, Stradbroke Island, Queensland, Australia.  Over 8000 people who died at the Benevolent Asylum are buried in the cemetery.

Samuel’s surviving son Samuel Hurst CHARLESWORTH spent his life at Maranoa in Queensland.  It was a long way away and we can’t be sure of whether he kept in touch with his father.  Samuel Hurst CHARLESWORTH died 21 January 1946 at Maranoa, Queensland, Australia.

Low Family

3.1 Harold Auton LOW 1938-1952

Harold Auton LOW (3.1)

Harold Auton LOW was born on 19 August 1909 in Gisborne, New Zealand.  He was the eldest son of Harold Beauchamp LOW and Elizabeth AUTON.  Harold Auton LOW was known as Auton LOW and because his father was called Harold, I will refer to Harold Auton LOW as Auton.

Auton’s parents, Harold Beauchamp LOW and Elizabeth AUTON had married on 2 October 1906 at the Methodist Church, Durham Street, Christchurch, New Zealand.  The Marriage Witnesses were Elizabeth’s sister, Jessica AUTON and Harold Beauchamp LOWs brother, Gibson LOW.

Both of Auton’s parents had grown up in and around Christchurch, New Zealand.  Harold Beauchamp LOW was born at Styx which in those days was a little outside of Christchurch.  It has now been absorbed into the main city.

Auton’s father, Harold Beauchamp LOW entered the grocery business at the age of 15 and by age 22 he had attained the position of manager of the Papanui Stores Co.  In 1906 he opened his own grocery business at the corner of Barbados and Armagu Streets in Christchurch, New Zealand.  He was there for 10 years and at one time had five branch shops in Sydenham, in Babados Street at the corner of Columbo and Casual Street, Linwood and at the corner of Manchester and Armagh Streets.  Later he began as a general merchant of Messrs Lows Ltd at Manchester Street.  He was also manager of mercantile branch of Canterbury Farmers’ co-operative Company in Rangiora and Sales Manager of the New Zealand Flour Mills.  He sold out when he had a serious illness preventing him from carrying out his business for a long period.

Harold Beauchamp LOW and his wife Elizabeth LOW nee AUTON moved to the warmer climate of Gisborne for health reasons and Harold became the first representative of the Hoover Vacuum Cleaning Company and was on staff of the Poverty Bay Electric Power Board.  He was also with the Gisborne Sheepfarmers Frozen Meat and Mercantile Company Ltd while later his family took over the business of Le Grand Cafe.

So Auton LOW was born 19 August 1909 in Gisborne, New Zealand.  In 1912 another child was born.  Auton had a brother who his parents called Cyril Francis LOW.  In 1918 another child was born.  Victor Gibson LOW.  All three boys grew up in Gisborne and made their lives there.

Auton joined the Airforce during the war and was a war photographer.  He was interested in photography and some of his photos were published in magazines.  He photographed Queenie GRIFFITHS for some magazines who he later married.

Auton’s father Harold Beauchamp LOW died on 29 August 1935 at Cook Hospital, Gisborne, New Zealand of Chronic Gastro Enteritis resection Powell Intussuseption and Secondary Anaemia.

Auton’s brother Cyril Francis LOW married Elizabeth Gould TRENGROVE on 19 April 1937 at St Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, Gisborne, New Zealand.  Elizabeth was known as Betty and was born in 1912.

Auton married Queenie Evelyn GRIFFITHS on 9 April 1938 at Gisborne, New Zealand.  Queenie Evelyn GRIFFITHS was born 29 November 1914 in Wellington, New Zealand.  Her parents were Clarence GRIFFITHS and Theresa QUINN.  Her mother was of Irish heritage.  It has been difficult to find any information about Clarence GRIFFITHS as he left his wife Theresa when Queenie was still a baby.  He never returned.

Little twins were born a few months after Auton had married Queenie in November of 1938.  One of the twins was stillborn.

Auton went on to own the Le Grand Cafe in Gisborne which was a family business first started up with his father Harold Beauchamp LOW.  Auton and Queenie had three children and they spent a lot of time with the families of Auton’s two brothers Cyril and Victor (known as Gibson).

Auton’s brother, Victor married Gloria Joyce FOSS.  Auton’s daughter was a flower girl at the wedding.

The LOW family lived at 22 Salisbury Road, Gisborne.  The house is no longer there.  It is a popular holiday destination and as it was a beachfront property, the street now has Motels on it.

Auton died of Influenza on 6 March 1952 in Gisborne, New Zealand.  His children were still very young.  His wife, Queenie was only 36 when she was left as a widow with three young children.

Harold Auton LOW (known as Auton) is buried at Taruheru Cemetery, Gisborne, New Zealand.  He left behind a young wife and young children.  Auton’s brothers Cyril and Victor (known as Gibson) continued to take care of the family.  They are remembered as being very helpful.

Queenie, Auton’s wife helped Auton’s mother, Elizabeth LOW nee AUTON and nursed her in her old age.

Gilmore Family

2.3.2.2 Mary MCKINNEY

2.3.2.2  Mary MCKINNEY

 

 

Mary MCKINNEY was born on 3 November 1888 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Her parents were Matilda GILMORE and Charles MCKINNEY who had a large family.  Mary’s maternal grandparents had emigrated from Ireland shortly before Mary’s mother, Matilda was born in Brisbane.  Mary’s mother Matilda was also from a large family and although she was not the first born, she was the eldest child in her family as her eldest sister Annie had died before she was born.  This was the same for Mary whose elder brother had died shortly before she was born.

Mary’s parents, Matilda GILMORE and Charles MCKINNEY married on 4 August 1886.  Alexander, Mary’s brother was born soon after on 16 July 1887 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  He died in January 1888.

Mary MCKINNEY, known as Minnie was born a little over a year later on 3 November 1888 followed by a sister, Agnes May MCKINNEY on 14 May 1890 and a brother Robert MCKINNEY on 11 February 1892.  Two more sisters followed:  Annabella Nichol MCKINNEY known as Belle on 17 May 1896 and Marjorie Emma MCKINNEY on 23 March 1906.

Mary would have remembered the wedding of her Uncle, John Alexander GILMORE who married Emma Mary COSTAR on 18 October 1899.  Mary would have been  eight years old at that time.  Mary’s Aunt, Agnes GILMORE married Herbert BARNES a month later on 9 November 1899.  Mary’s Aunt, Rose GILMORE married James BOTHWELL on 6 November 1901 and her Uncle, Hugh GILMORE married May Victoria CHARLESWORTH on 29 March 1911.  Hugh GILMORE was married at the Presbyterian Church, Norman Park, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  It’s likely that the other family weddings also took place there.

Mary’s mother Matilda was from a large family who all resided in Brisbane so Mary or Minnie as she was known would have celebrated the births of the babies that followed the weddings.  Some of the babies died.

On 9 April 1912, Mary’s maternal grandmother Anabella GILMORE previously Anabella NICHOLS died of chronic nephritis and Uraemia.  She was buried on 9 April 1912 at Toowong Cemetery, Toowong, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Mary’s maternal grandfather Adam GILMORE died on 9 January 1914. Quite a large number of mourners were listed in the Brisbane Courier Mail on Saturday 10 January 1914.  The funeral service was at Norman Park Presbyterian Church, Brisbane which was where Mary’s Uncle, Hugh GILMORE and his wife May were married.  Adam GILMORE, grandfather of Mary MCKINNEY was buried on 10 January 1914 at Toowong Cemetery, Brisbane, Australia.

In 1924 Charles MCKINNEY, Mary’s father died.  It seems that Charles’ ancestry was from Forfarshire, Scotland.  There are records of a Charles MCKINNEY coming out to Queensland on the ship Anglo Indian which departed from Glasgow Scotland.

On 20 April 1926 Mary’s uncle, John Alexander GILMORE died and her Aunt, Agnes GILMORE died in 1930.

Mary got married to Alexander Anderson BROWN on 17 December 1927 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Mary was 39 at that time.  Alexander Anderson BROWN was born on 16 July 1880 Queensland Australia.  He was the son of James BROWN and Margaret RITCHIE.

Alexander Anderson BROWN had previously married to Isabel White MACMINN on 22 December 1914.  and the couple had resided at Beaudesert which is now absorbed into the city of Brisbane.  The couple were already known to Mary as she is pictured at their wedding.  It looks as if she might have been a bridesmaid.  Isabel White MCMINN, first wife of Alexander Anderson BROWN died on 14 November 1924 at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  She was buried at Toowong Cemetery, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Alexander Anderson BROWN who later married Mary MCKINNEY known as Minnie had had three children with his first wife.  Margaret Anderson BROWN had been born on 24 April 1918 in Queensland, Australia.  Her death record also has the date of 24 April 1918.  She was stillborn.  Alexander Ross BROWN born 16 January 1917 at New Farm, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Thomas Graham BROWN was born 6 February 1921 at New Farm, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

On 20 April 1926, Mary’s Uncle, John Alexander GILMORE died.  He had lived and raised his family close by in Brisbane and had worked as a photographer.  John Alexander GILMORE was buried at South Brisbane Cemetery, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Mary MCKINNEY and her husband, Alexander Anderson BROWN had a baby of their own.  A boy who was still born and unnamed.  He was born on 3 February 1932 at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Mary’s brother Robert MCKINNEY Enlisted in World War I in 1914.  He was 23.

Alexander Anderson BROWN, husband of Mary MCKINNEY died on 27 February 1940 at Logan Village, just outside of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Mary maintained a relationship with her two step-sons and she is listed as next of kin on some of their war.  Mary’s stepson Alexander Ross BROWN enlisted for World War II and served in the Army from 1940 to 1947.  Youngest stepson, Thomas Graham BROWN was listed as a sergeant and is listed on the World War II Nominal Roll for his Royal Australian Airforce service.

Thomas Graham BROWN married Joan GITTOES during war time on 15 September 1945. At Prahan, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.  Joan GITTOES was born 16 January 1924 at Cowra, New South Wales, Australia.

Matilda MCKINNEY, Mary’s mother, previously Matilda GILMORE died on 31 October 1946 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Mary’s mother, Matilda was buried at Holland Park West, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

On 7 May 1948 Mary’s brother Robert MCKINNEY died in Queensland, Australia.

When the war was over, Mary’s stepson Alexander Ross BROWN married Hilary Margaret DAVEY 20 November 1948.  Hilary Margaret DAVEY was born 14 December 1918 at Toowong, Brisbane.  She died on 25 July 2003 at Roma, Queensland, Australia.

On 31 July 1956, Mary’s Aunt, Rose BOTHWELL previously Rose GILMORE died.  Mary’s Aunt Emma GILMORE had never married but had  worked and lived in different parts of Brisbane.  She was the Matron at General Hospital.  Emma GILMORE died in 1966 at Balmoral, Brisbane, Australia.

Mary’s step-son Alexander Ross BROWN died 8 November 1968 at Murgon, Queensland, Australia.  He was buried at Albany Cree, Memorial Park Cemetery and Crematorium.

Mary’s step-son Thomas Graham BROWN died on 23 September 1971 at Beechmont, Queensland, Australia.

Mary’s sister Agnes MCKINNEY died on 10 August 1979 at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Agnes and worked as a Clerk and had lived all of her life close by in Brisbane.  Agnes MCKINNEY was buried at Albany Creek Memorial Park Cemetery and Crematorium, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Mary BROWN previously Mary MCKINNEY who was known by the name of Minnie died on 9 March 1980 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  She was buried at Albany Creek Memorial Park Cemetery, and Crematorium.

Gilmore Family

2.3.2 Matilda GILMORE

Matilda GILMORE

 

 

 

Matilda GILMORE was born on 14 July 1868, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Her parents were two Irish Pioneers Adam GILMORE and Annabella NICHOL.

Adam and Annabella had married on 9 December 1865 at First Presbyterian Church, Ballymena, County Antrim, Ireland.  Only six months after Matilda’s parents had married, they emigrated to Australia.  They travelled on the ship ‘Wansfell’ for Brisbane, Queensland, Australia on 26 June 1866.  It was a bold move as in those days when communication was slow it meant that they would never return again to Ireland or see any of the family again who they had left behind.  The ship ‘Wansfell’ departed from Southhampton, England.

Matilda’s father, Adam GILMORE was one of the committee members that represented passengers on the ship commending the ship’s captain.  The ship transported immigrants from England, Ireland and Scotland.  Of the total 225 immigrants, 172 were Irish.  Among the single girls were a large number of domestic servants.  60 were advertised as being for hire on arrival of the ‘Wansfell’.  The voyage was smooth for that period with no passenger births or deaths recorded on board.

Annabella and Adam GILMORE moved into a house at Rogers Street, Spring Hill, Brisbane in 1866.  Rogers Street is now inner city Brisbane so it’s unlikely that the house is still there however some of the little workers cottages have survived with renovation so it’s not a possibility that can be dismissed.

Adam and Annabella GILMORE had a daughter Annie Jane GILMORE before Matilda was born.  Annie Jane GILMORE was born 11 March 1867.  She died before her first birthday.  Annabella would have been pregnant with Matilda at that time.

So Matilda GILMORE was the second child but once she was born she was the eldest child as her sister had already died.  Matilda was born 14 July 1868 at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

A sister was born the next year.  Elizabeth GILMORE was born 30 September 1868 but only a week later on 7 October 1869 she died.

Another little sister was born.  Isabella GILMORE was born on 20 January 1871 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  This sister to Matilda died 11 months later on 15 November 1871.  John Alexander GILMORE was the first son of Adam GILMORE and Annabella GILMORE.  Matilda‘s brother was born on 8 December 1872, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Sister Rose GILMORE was born on 22 December 1874 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia and another brother William James GILMORE was born on 25 July 1876.  He died about eight months later on 4 April 1877.

A sister, Agnes GILMORE was born in 1880, and in 1881 a brother, Hugh GILMORE was born.  The youngest of Matilda’s siblings was Emma GILMORE born 26 January 1885, Brisbane, Australia.

Matilda’s father Adam worked in Brisbane in various occupations.  Documentation informs us that he worked as a drayman, storeman and labourer.  At one time he and Annabella had a fruit shop.

Matilda married only one year after her youngest sister was born.  She married Charles MCKINNEY on 4 August 1886.

Her first child Alexander MCKINNEY was born on 16 July 1887 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  He died on 14 January 1888.  Matilda would have been pregnant with her second child at this time.

Matilda and Charles had a daughter on 3 November 1888.  Her name was Mary MCKINNEY but she was known as Minnie.  Another child Agnes May MCKINNEY was born on 14 May 1890 and a fourth child, Robert MCKINNEY on 11 February 1892 followed by Annabella Nichol MCKINNEY on 17 May 1896.  Anabella was known as Belle.  The last child of Matilda GILMORE and Charles MCKINNEY was Marjorie Emma MCKINNEY born 23 March 1906.

There was another wedding in the family.  Matilda’s brother John Alexander GILMORE married Emma Mary COSTAR on 18 October 1899.  The younger children were older by this time so this wedding would have been remembered by everyone in the family.  Matilda’s first child Alexander, would have remembered this event too as he was nine years old.

Matilda’s brother John Alexander GILMORE and Emma Mary COSTAR had two children, John Audrey GILMORE 15 November 1903 and Gwendoline Armour Rose GILMORE 18 May 1906.  Like Matilda, they lived in Brisbane.

Only a month after the marriage of Matilda’s brother John, her sister, Agnes GILMORE married Herbert BARNES on 9 November 1899 and on 14 September 1900 Agnes and Herbert BARNES had a child Roy Nichol BARNES.  Other children followed.  Edna May BARNES 21 August 1901, Vera Agnes BARNES 8 January 1902 and Thelma Rose BARNES on 19 April 1907.  Sadly Agnes and Herbert’s last two children died in infancy.

Matilda‘s sister Rose got married on 6 November 1901.  Rose Married James BOTHWELL.  This couple also had children.  Meryl Nichol BOTHWELL born 10 December 1902, Margaret Joyce BOTHWELL born 24 April 1904, Gustavus Ronald BOTHWELL born 3 March 1907, Colin James BOTHWELL born 12 October 1908.  The couple had another child in 1912 Hugh Alan BOTHWELL.  This boy died in 1914 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Matilda‘s brother Hugh was living at Norman Park, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  He worked as a silver plater.  He married May Victoria CHARLESWORTH on 29 March 1911.  They were married at the Presbyterian Church, Norman Park, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Matilda‘s mother, Anabella GILMORE previously Annabella NICHOLS died on 9 April 1912 of chronic nephritis and Uraemia.  She was buried on 9 April 1912 at Toowong Cemetery, Toowong, Brisbane, Australia.

Matilda’s brother Hugh and his wife May had four children.  They were Lilly Margaret Nichol GILMORE born 25 September 1912, Kenneth Hugh GILMORE 30 September 1914, Rita May GILMORE 10 January 1917, Douglas Norman GILMORE 10 March 1922.

Matilda‘s father Adam GILMORE died just after her brother Hugh’s first child was born.  Adam GILMORE died on 9 January 1914.  Quite a large number of mourners were listed in the Brisbane Courier Mail on Saturday 10 January 1914.  The funeral service was held at Norman Park Presbyterian Church, Brisbane which was where Hugh and his wife May were married.  Adam GILMORE was buried on 10 January 1914 at Toowong Cemetery, Brisbane, Australia.

The first world war had started and Matilda’s son Robert MCKINNEY enlisted on 11 December 1915.

In 1924 Charles MCKINNEY, Matilda’s husband died.

On 20 April 1926 Matilda’s brother John Alexander GILMORE died and her sister Agnes GILMORE died in 1930.

All of Matilda’s siblings had remained in Brisbane.  They mostly lived between Norman Park and Balmoral on Brisbane’s Southside though Matilda and Charles had had their family at Fortitude Valley, which is now central Brisbane.

Matilda MCKINNEY previously Matilda GILMORE died on 31 October 1946 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Matilda was buried at Holland Park West, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

 

NICHOL Family

12. Anabella NICHOL

 

Annabella NICOLS

Born

1842 County Derry, Ireland

Parents

William NICOL and Ann MILLER

Marriage

Adam GILMORE

9 December 1865 First Presbyterian Church, Ballymena, County Antrim, Ireland.  Registered at Kilconriola

Emigration

26 June 1866 On the ship ‘Wansfell for Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It departed from Southhampton, England. Adam GILMORE was one of the ommittee members that represented passengers on the ship commending the ship’s captain. The ship transported immigrants England, Ireland and Scotland. Of the total 225 immigrants, 172 were Irish. Among the single girls were a large number of domestic servants. 60 were advertised as being for hire on arrival of the ‘Wansfell’. The voyage was smooth for that period with no passenger births or deaths recorded on board.  Adam and Isabella were assisted immigrants.

Children

Annie Jane GILMORE

Matilda GILMORE

Elizabeth GILMORE

Isabella GILMORE

Rose GILMORE

John Alexander GILMORE

William James GILMORE

Agnes GILMORE

Hugh GILMORE

Emma GILMORE

Residence

1866 at Rogers Street, Spring Hill, Brisbane, Australia

Balmoral, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Legal

There is a reference in the Brisbane Courier Mail 29 December 1892 to an event at the Petty Debts Court.  Annabella summoned George Manley Smith and W Lane who traded as Smith and Lane for 30 pounds damages.  The defendants kept a fruit shop in Stanley Street and had encouraged Annabella to purchase the fixtures, stock in trade and goodwill for 50 pounds when net returns were said to be 1.10pounds to 2 pounds per week.  She felt that this representation was false so claimed 30 pounds damages for loss sustained.  The defendants denied indebtedness.  Annabella stated that she made nothing out of the business, the grown takings in the shop for six weeks being about 10 pounds.

 

Died

8 April 1912 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Cause of Death

Chronic nephritis, Uraemia

Buried

9 April 1912 Toowong Cemetery, Toowong, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

 

Gilmore Family

2.3 Adam GILMORE

 

Adam GILMORE (2.3)

Born

1842 Antrim, Northern Ireland

Parents

James GILMORE and Jane MCCLOY

Marriage

Annabella NICOLS

9 December 1865 First Presbyterian Church, Ballymena, County Antrim, Ireland.  Registered at Kilconriola

Emigration

26 June 1866 On the ship ‘Wansfell for Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It departed from Southhampton, England. Adam GILMORE was one of the ommittee members that represented passengers on the ship commending the ship’s captain. The ship transported immigrants England, Ireland and Scotland. Of the total 225 immigrants, 172 were Irish. Among the single girls were a large number of domestic servants. 60 were advertised as being for hire on arrival of the ‘Wansfell’. The voyage was smooth for that period with no passenger births or deaths recorded on board.

 

Children

Annie Jane GILMORE

Matilda GILMORE

Elizabeth GILMORE

Isabella GILMORE

Rose GILMORE

John Alexander GILMORE

William James GILMORE

Agnes GILMORE

Hugh GILMORE

Emma GILMORE

 

Legal

22 July 1871 Brisbane, Australia Fined 10s for obstructing a footparth in one of the the thoroughfares with a horse and cart

Occupation

Drayman, Storeman, Labourer

Residence

1912 at Longfellow Street, Norman Park, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

1866 at Rogers Street, Spring Hill, Brisbane, Australia

Died

9 January 1914 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Cause of Death

Senility, Asthenia, Syncope

Buried

10 January 1914 Toowong Cemetery, Toowong, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

 

Gilmore Family

2.2 Hugh GILMORE

 

 

 

Hugh GILMORE

Born

19 August 1881 Rogers Street, Spring Hill, Brisbane, Australia

Parents

Adam GILMORE and Annabella NICOLS

Resided

1911 at Norman Park, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Occupation

Silver Plater

Marriage

May Victoria CHARLESWORTH

29 March 1911 Presbyterian Church, Norman Park, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Children

Lily Margaret Nicols GILMORE

Kenneth Hugh GILMORE

Rita May GILMORE

Douglas Norman GILMORE

Died

20 September 1952 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Buried

23 September 1952 Brisbane Crematorium, Mt Thompson, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.  Ashes placed in Double Niche No. 153, Section 9 of No. 6 Columbarium Wall at Mt Thompson