This year I have once again decided to participate in the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks blogging challenge run by Amy Johnson Crow. The challenge prompts often have me looking at my family history in new ways and exploring records I haven't revisited for a while.
Week 1 id "an ancestor I admire" and I have chosen my great grandmother Eliza 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'.
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Prahran Telegraph, Sat 9 March 1901, p3.
|
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The Argus, Sat 9 March 1901, p15.
|
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| The Herald, Fri 8 March 1901, p5. |
How much courage and desperation Eliza must have felt to take the step of appealing to the courts for aid. Standing before three magistrates to plead her case, knowing they had the power to take her children away, while still mourning the death of her husband. I admire her greatly.