Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Week 34 (Aug. 19-25): Members of the Club

Last week #52Ancestors focused on a Favorite Discovery, and my focus for the post was articles I had found in the newspapers.  Another newspaper discovery I have made was that several ancestors were Masons, including my great grandfather and great great grandfather on my mother's maternal line.  These were unexpected discoveries that I found when looking for death notices for both men. 

When my great great grandfather John Clark passed away on June 11th 1894, his family placed a notice in The Age inviting friends to attend his funeral.

Directly below this first notice was another, inserted by the Brighton Union Lodge, inviting members to also attend John's funeral.  Until I found this notice I had no idea he was a Mason.

When his son, my great grandfather James Nicholas Clark died in 1924, similar notices were placed.  Which is how I discovered James was also a Mason.

The above notices were published in The Age, Friday 8 February 1924, page 16.  Like his father, James was also a member of the Brighton Union Lodge, and the Lodge placed a funeral notice alongside that of his family.  Note that in the Lodge notice has his surname listed a Clarg - spelling errors can never be discounted.

Thursday, August 15, 2024

Family Tree UK Magazine

The latest issue of Family Tree UK magazine is now available free online for Campaspe Library members via our subscription to Libby eMagazines.

Inside this month's issue :  

  • What were their lives actually like?
  • Found under the floorboards: 17th century schoolgirls’ treasures
  • New archive: Discover 900 years of Durham history at The Story
  • How to trace a house history
  • A new era in Victorian education
  • The ever-advancing world of Y & MTDNA & how it can help you
  • A history of Pauper burial grounds
  • Getting started with a One-Place Study
  • It's a Fake! - the curious case of a forged marriage certificate
  • Testing out the new Ancestry Match Page
  • The Victoria County History
  • Families in British India Society celebrates 25th Anniversary
  • Passing on the joy...

 

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Week 33 (Aug. 12-18): Favorite Discovery

Over the years of my genealogical research I have made many fascinating discoveries, it is hard to choose just one as my favourite.  Many of the most fascinating discoveries I have made, however, come from searching old newspapers, and these are certainly my favourite resource.

One of the saddest stories I have found in my family history is that of Eliza Pummeroy (nee Beseler).  Eliza was born in 1871 in Learmonth, Victoria to Edward Beseler and Emma (nee Flower).  Eliza married Alfred Pummeroy in1895 in St Kilda, where Alfred worked as a plasterer.  They had four children before Alfred suddenly became ill with pneumonia and died on 6 Feb 1901, leaving Eliza with 4 young children and in a desperate situation.

The family lived in rented housing and had little by way of savings.  With four children to look after, the eldest 4 years old and deaf and mute, the youngest (my grandfather William) only 2 months old, Eliza was unable to do much by way of paid work.  She took in washing to make a little money, and was given 3 shillings a week by the local Ladies Benevolent Society.  It wasn't enough.

After struggling for a month after her husband's sudden death, Eliza took the step of applying to the local court for help, risking having her children removed from her custody and placed in an orphanage, something she was adamant she did not want.  The judges hearing the case awarded her 10 shillings from the poor box and committed the children to the department, with the recommendation they be handed back to their mother.

This appeal was reported in several newspapers.  Two reported the case with a fair amount of detail, including the fact that the children all appeared clean and well cared for, while a third much briefer article gave a somewhat different impression, especially with the heading 'Neglected Children'.

Prahran Telegraph, Sat 9 March 1901, p3.

The Argus, Sat 9 March 1901, p15.

The Herald, Fri 8 March 1901, p5.

Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Week 32 (Aug. 5-11): Free Space

When is free space a negative?  When it occurs on a ancestor's timeline or appears in your family history research.  That's when I hate free space.

We all have those gaps in our research, when we have progressed as far as we can and are searching for those elusive facts that will allow us to progress further. 

A notable free space in my tree starts with my great great grandparents David Mulholland and Eliza (McCrae), the first of my Irish ancestors to arrive in Australia.

David Mulholland died in Eurobin, Victoria, Australia on 10 April 1902 at the age of approximately 70.  He left behind wife Eliza Jane (McCrae) - although I have never found a marriage record for the couple - and 7 surviving children.  Death notices describe David as being 71 years of age and a colonist of 42 years, putting his birth at around 1831 and his arrival in Australia around 1860.  David's death certificate states his parents names as David Mulholland and Margaret (McGee)

Eliza - or Elizabeth, survived her husband for 23 years, dying 28 October 1925 in Eurobin.  Her obituary, published in the Albury Banner and Wodonga Express on 6 November 1925, describes Eliza as having "reached the advanced age of 85 years, 63 years of which were spent at Eurobin" and states that she was born in County Belfast, Ireland.  This puts her birth at around 1840 and her arrival in Australia around 1862.  Eliza's death certificate - under the name Eliza Mulholland - gives her parents names as James McCrae and Mary.

I have, thus far, found no records for either family in Ireland.  Neither have I found a marriage record for David and Eliza in Australia or Ireland.  I will keep looking, however, in the hopes of filling in this 'free space' in my family tree.

Thursday, August 1, 2024

Family Histories Podcast Bonus Episode

Season 7 of the Family Histories Podcast has ended with a bonus episode 'The Tower'.


Episode Credits include
  • Andrew Martin – Host and Producer
  • Morag Peers – Guest
  • George Orchard – King Edward V
  • George Mills – Richard, Duke of York

Watch the episode here, and check out the rest of the series if you haven't watched them already.

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Week 31 (July 29-Aug. 4): End of the Line

Many things spring to mind with the prompt 'End of the Line'.  Do you have an "end of the line" ancestor - one who you're convinced won't go any further back? What about an ancestor who lived at the end of a street, or one who lived in a small town where the train station literally was the end of the line?

For me, the 'End of the Line' is myself, on my father's line at least.  

My great grandfather died young, with only one child, a son, to carry on the family name.  My grandfather, one of five children, was the only boy to carry the name on to his generation.  Although he fathered ten children, 4 of them sons to carry on the family name, the line stops with my generation.

Of the four boys in his family, one was a lifelong bachelor.  Two had only daughters.  Only one had a son who would carry the family name into my generation, and he had only a daughter.  So while my surname is extremely common, the actual paternal line, going back 5 generations, dies out in my generation.  While there are cousins in plenty, none of them will carry the paternal surname.

The end of the line indeed. 

Saturday, July 27, 2024

Who Do You Think You Are Magazine

The latest issue of Who Do You Think You Are magazine is now available free online for Campaspe Library members via our subscription to Libby eMagazines.

Inside this month's issue :  

  • The best free family history websites - How to research your family tree for free
  • 48 hours in Dublin - Research your Irish ancestry in two days
  • Olympics - The history of the Olympic Games
  • Sporting ancestors - How to trace your sporting ancestors online
  • Around Britain - South Yorkshire
  • Family hero - Beth Freeman discovered her great grandmother's lifelong mourning for her first husband
  • And more...