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Welcome!

This Gardener family history research blog is a work in progress. This is just the beginning and I hope you will chime in with ideas and information to fill in the gaps because there is still a lot of detective work to be done. A big thank-you to my cousin Dianne Turner for sharing her research. Dianne, you inspired me to set up this blog! I am still researching and will add to these posts as I find out more. Let me know when you see errors and inaccuracies – I will correct them as soon as possible. All additional information gratefully received. Regarding our New Zealand Roche connections, I would like to recommend a blog authored by (distant cousin) Karl Longley. Here is the link: http://rocheausnz.blogspot.com/2009/ There is some useful information in this NZ blog about our ancestor Letitia O’Brien’s parents, Letitia and Nicholas Roche. I have been able to contact Karl Longley and he has kindly helped me with further questions about Letitia and Nicholas Roche – thank-you Karl! My great great great grandmother Letitia O’Brien emigrated to Sydney in March 1839, just over 4 years after her brother Edward Bourke Roche. Edward Roche inherited the family property in Ireland and married his first cousin Maria Theresa Bourke who was distantly related to the Governor of NSW Richard Bourke, so unlike our O’Briens, the Roches had some money and connections in NSW. Edward and Maria Roche had 2 sons. One son emigrated to New Zealand and the other son remained in Victoria. Back to the Australian O’Briens now! This is my first blog ever, so thank-you for reading and for your patience! I’m starting with our Irish ancestors who are pretty tricky to find in Ireland and will (eventually) look further into our German roots (even trickier)!

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Arrival of Jeremiah & Letitia O’Brien

Jeremiah (age 31) and Letitia O’Brien (age 30) and their 4 daughters departed Cork, Ireland 7 December 1838 on the ship Aliquis, a total of 296 emigrants on board, destination Sydney, NSW. Our direct ancestor, Fanny O’Brien was just 5 years old when she arrived in Sydney on Saturday 16 March 1839 with her parents Jeremiah and Letitia, and sisters Maria (age 12), Bridget (age 6) and little Letitia (age 3).  They were among the 58 000 assisted or bounty immigrants (the government and/or employers paid all or part of their passage) arriving in NSW between 1837 and 1850, to boost the labour force, to correct the gender imbalance and to dilute the perceived convict ‘stain’ in the Colony. The Sydney Herald (Mon 18 March 1839, p3) reported that during this voyage on the Aliquis, there was some mutinous behaviour due to a disagreement between the first and second mates and ‘’had it not been for the good conduct of the emigrants, the consequences would probably have been serious’’.  Another report – see below (The Colonist, Wed 20 Mar 1839, p2) refers to the good health of all of the emigrants on arrival notwithstanding their affliction with ophthalmia (inflammation of the eyes/conjunctivitis) during the passage.  

Unfortunately for Jeremiah and Letitia O’Brien and family, they arrived in Sydney at a time of food scarcity, drought and unemployment. The Colony of NSW had been unable to grow enough wheat and corn for the colony’s consumption and due to the Government’s anti free trade stance, conditions were fast approaching famine status. The Government was forced to import emergency food supplies. On May 3 1839, the Aliquis took up a Government tender to bring back rice and flour from Calcutta but was wrecked on the way, in the Torres Straits. The Captain and crew were all saved and taken on to Calcutta. (Commercial Journal and Advertiser , Sat 10 Aug, 1839, p2).

Bent’s News and New South Wales Advertiser (Sydney, NSW : 1839) Sat 20 Apr 1839 Page 3 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article251530458

Commercial Journal and Advertiser (Sydney, NSW : 1835 – 1840), Wednesday 24 July 1839, page 2
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226457794
Sydney Standard and Colonial Advocate (NSW : 1839), Monday 25 March 1839, page 1
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article251536259

The Assisted Immigrants Shipping list for the Aliquis provides more information about the O’Brien family.  Unfortunately, the list doesn’t tell us anything about Jeremiah O’Brien’s employment prospects in NSW. Many immigrants on the Aliquis had jobs lined up and their employers’ names and terms of employment were documented in NSW immigration records. Jeremiah may have had employment lined up but his prospects are recorded as ‘unknown’. Jeremiah, an illiterate Catholic farm servant (his father John was a farmer) arrived in Sydney age 31, (born approx 1808) in good health, native to Killaloe, County Clare. His wife Letitia, a needlewoman and day servant was also noted as being in ‘very good health’, Roman Catholic, and able to read and write.  According to these same records, Letitia was a native of Vaucluse, County Limerick, daughter to Nicholas Roche of the same place (Architect). We know very little about what happened to Jeremiah after his arrival in Sydney apart from the fact that Jeremiah and Letitia had 2 more children – Anna Matilda in 1842 and Edward in 1845. There are many Jeremiah O’Briens in NSW. I have searched exhaustively in Trove Australian Newspapers and the NSW, QLD and Victorian BDM index to try and match up or eliminate the various Jeremiah O’Briens according to age and family relationships. We know he had a nick name ‘Darby’ like many Jeremiahs in Ireland (from Diarmaid) because he is called ‘Darby O’Brien’ on his daughter Fanny’s Baptism record. What happened to Jeremiah/Darby O’Brien after his arrival in Australia?

Jeremiah/Darby O’Brien

I do not know the date or place of death for Jeremiah ‘Darby’ O’Brien in Australia. When I find it, I am hoping to find his mother’s name which will provide clues to finding our ancestors in County Clare, Ireland. The transcript of his wife Letitia’s death certificate informs us that her husband Jeremiah/Darby was deceased at the time of her death in Sydney 1889. The informant was Letitia’s son-in-law J. Cavanagh who may not have known his father-in-law and either he or the transcriber of the death certificate has made an error with Jeremiah’s christian name, recording it as James. According to Killaloe Parish Marriage Records, Darby O’Brien, residing in Knockadereen married (widow) , Letitia Roach/Roche (widow Crotty residing in Parish of Abington) in 1833. Catholic Parish Registers for the Diocese of Killaloe (1655-1915) record the Baptism of their child Fanny on 1 June 1834. The family residence is noted as Knockadereen (one of the townlands in the Parish of Killaloe). The Baptism sponsors were Biddy O’Brien and John Scanlan both from Garraunboy/Garrenboy/Gerrenboy/Geranboy, County Clare. Perhaps Biddy (short for Bridget) is Jeremiah’s sister? Thanks to the helpful members of the County Clare Ireland Genealogy Facebook Group who suggested I look at the Tithe Applotment Books (Irish National Archives), I found a Darby O’Brien listed as a Knockadereen landholder in 1828 in partnership with Dennis McKeough. If this is our Darby, could his mother be related to the McKeoughs? It is likely that the eldest daughter Maria, was born of her mother Letitia’s previous marriage to William Crotty. Finding Jeremiah’s parents is proving to be very difficult. I have found death and marriage records for all of Jeremiah and Letitia O’Brien’s daughters in Australia (more information to be eventually added to this blog) and they have provided clues as to the occupation of Jeremiah O’Brien. His youngest daughter Anna Matilda O’Brien, seamstress (1842 -1915) married William Graham (signwriter) in Fitzroy Victoria in 1867. On the marriage certificate, her father Jeremiah O’Brien’s occupation is listed as Contractor.

Letitia O’Brien (Roche)

Letitia’s parents were Letitia (Burke) and Nicholas Roche of Vauchluce/Vauclause situated in Glenstall Woods on the Limerick side of the Limerick Tipperary border. Letitia’s father Nicholas is described as an Architect in Letitia O’Brien’s immigration papers but I have not been able to find any evidence of his qualifications or work in Ireland. When Letitia O’ Brien’ s mother died, Letitia’s brother, Edward Burke Roche inherited the premises and lands consisting of 470 acres. Prior to emigrating to Australia in 1834, Edward Roche sold the property to the Barrington family from Dublin, who had already been renting a portion of the lands. The Barrington family built a copy of a 12th century (Windsor Castle style) castle as their home, using the Roche family home Vachluce/Vaucluse as a hunting lodge (now in ruins). The nearby village of Murroe was founded to serve the needs of the Barrington Estate. It is possible to see the ruins of our ‘ancestral home’ Vauchluce by following a popular walking trail (The Slieve Felim Way) that starts from the village of Murroe. The Barrington family moved to England in the 1920s and sold their ‘castle’ and lands to a Benedictine Order. Today, the Benedictines of Glenstal Abbey run a farm and boarding school. They also offer accommodation for guests – there are very good descriptions and reviews on Trip Advisor ‘Glenstal Abbey’. My plea (on this blog) for photos of the Vaucluse ruins was answered by the wonderful Pat McCormack who went for a hike to take some photos for me. I have been very tardy in adding these photos to the blog – sorry Pat and thanks again!

http://www.walkjohnnywalk.com/long-distance-waymarked-ways/
Walk no. 26 The Slieve Felim Way.
Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 – 1954), Friday 20 December 1889, page 1

Letitia O’Brien died 25 June 1889 at the home of her daughter Letitia and son-in-law John Cavanagh, 19 Brisbane St, Sydney, at the age of 85. Her death notice in the Sydney Morning Herald names her father Nicholas Roach of Vauclause, County Limerick and names her (maternal) grandfather Captain Theophilus (Theobald) Bourke of Castle Connell, County Limerick, (near the boundaries of Counties Clare and Tipperary), Ireland. The Bourke connections and intermarriages with the Roches go back for centuries in Ireland (worthy of another post!) and that’s why Letitia’s grandfather Theobald/Theophilus Burke is mentioned in Letitia’s death notice. I have already mentioned that Letitia’s brother Edward Roche married his first cousin Maria Bourke (related to Sir Richard Bourke ex-Governor of NSW). Contrary to my opening statements about the ‘poor O’Briens’, I have since found evidence that Jeremiah and Letitia O’Brien made the most of their distant familial connections with Sir Richard Bourke on their arrival in Sydney (see post to follow on daughter Fanny O’Brien). The transcript of Letitia’s death names all of her daughters except for Bridget (more on her later – she went to Queensland and died in 1892 at Springsure).

Please note possible transcription error above regarding the name of Letitia’s husband Jeremiah. The abbreviation for James and Jeremiah can look similar in unclear handwriting.

Frances O’Brien (1834 -1927)

Baptism Record Fanny O’Brien 1 June 1834
See entry 1507

My great- great -grandmother Fanny O’Brien (see above entry 1507 in the Catholic Parish Registers Diocese of Killaloe, County Clare, Ireland) was baptised 1 June 1834. Her parents Darby and Letice (Roche) of Knockadereen and sponsors John Scanlan and Biddy O’Brien of (nearby) Garenboy were present. You already know that she arrived in Sydney with her parents and 3 sisters, Maria, Bridget and Letitia, at the age of 5, in March 1839. When she was 16 she married William Hubbard (Hubberd/Hubbert) (overseer of Tenterfield Station) on 6 August, 1850. William Hubbard was the Australian born son of First Fleeter convict and later Sydney Constable and Waterman (William Hubbard Senior) and his second wife (convict) Hannah Whitelock/Whitlock.

Freeman’s Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1850 – 1932), Thursday 8 August 1850, page 7
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article115765616

The NSW Register of Births records 5 children from this union: First there was William Hubbard (birth registered in Gundagai as William Hubbart) in 1853. The next registered births were Jeremiah F. Hubbard 1862, Letitia A. Hubbard 1865, Emma M. Hubbard, 1867 and there was another daughter Frances Elizabeth Hubbard (married and divorced Peter Ryan and later married Andrew Crawley) but I haven’t found her birth registration. Then on 4 June 1869 my great-grand-father Henry Charles Hubbard was born at Barrigan in the Mudgee district. I need to do more research but it’s possible that Fanny and her then 15 year old eldest son William found work on Barrigan Station at the end of 1868, through necessity after her husband William Hubbard died in Inverell Hospital, NSW on 27 May, 1868. His death certificate states that death was due to a 6 week illness caused by bronchitis. Henry Charles Hubbard’s name later changed to Gardener when his mother married George Gardener in 1869. Henry Charles was given the Hubbard name at birth but he could not have been William Hubbard’s son as he was born on 4 June 1869, just over 12 months after William Hubbard’s death. Was George Gardener from Somerton his father? We can’t be certain about that – more details to follow in a separate post on Henry Charles Gardener. And now, a real surprise – genealogical gold in the form of a newspaper article reporting on the ”97th” birthday celebrations in Darlington Sydney, of Frances (Fanny) Gardiner (Hubbard)! Via the reporter, Frances herself gives us a snapshot summary of her whole life, just one month before her death in August 1927. Most importantly, the article confirms that the O’Briens did make use of family connections on their arrival in Sydney in 1839. For several years, they lived (and most likely worked) at Barham, Darlinghurst, at the home of the Colonial Secretary Sir Edward Deas Thomson, who was married to Anne Maria Bourke (second daughter of ex-Governor of NSW Sir Richard Bourke) to whom Letitia O’Brien was distantly related. Remember that Letitia’s brother Edward Roche married his first cousin Maria Theresa Bourke (a second cousin of Sir Richard Bourke). I am interested to know how these connections to the ex-Governor of NSW and to the Colonial Secretary assisted our ancestors however it seems that Sir Richard Bourke also helped many immigrants (unrelated to him) to find work. After his death, there was widespread acknowledgment of his kindness and empathy for immigrants looking for work in the Colony. He would personally write to potential employers to recommend people for work. Let’s enjoy this amazing newspaper article (see below). Frances/Fanny O’Brien/Hubbard/ Gardiner describes some lively events that she experienced in her lifetime. The digitised newspaper article is in pretty poor shape so I have made a transcript for easier reading – see transcript in bold below the article.

The Richmond River Express and Casino Kyogle Advertiser (NSW : 1904 – 1929) 
 Fri 29 Jul 1927  
 Page 4 
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article121422573

”On Saturday, July 9, over 100 persons gathered in the Darlington Town Hall to celebrate the 97th birthday of Mrs Gardiner. Born in Ireland in 1830, she arrived in Sydney in 1840 with her parents and three sisters. They were met by Sir Edward Thompson (Colonial Secretary), and taken to a house called Barham in Darlinghurst, where they lived for some years. Mrs Gardiner was first married in Sydney to a Mr Hubbard. They left Sydney by a sailing ship, The Tamar, for Grafton, and after a couple of days rest, left for Tenterfield on horseback. Over a week was taken to complete the journey, and being the first time the then Mrs Hubbard had ridden a horse, one can imagine her pluck in completing the journey. Mr Hubbard was overseer on Tenterfield Station, and on arrival at the place, she says she cried all day. There were wild blacks about in those days, and she was very frightened for a time. she related how on one occasion she had to threaten a blackfellow with a loaded gun, who retreated, tomahawk in hand, at sight of the gun. In time the blacks got very quiet, and would often arrive with raspberries, knowing they would receive something in return.

Three years after arrival, Mr and Mrs Hubbard, accompanied by a child six months old, again went on horseback to Grafton, on their way to Sydney. During the night on board ship prior to sailing they had a narrow escape. The blacks who did not like the Captain of the ship, crept down and set fire to it, but fortunately, it was seen in time and extinguished.

After a short holiday they returned to Tenterfield Station. The then Mrs Hubbard was an expert at making cabbage tree hats. The blacks would bring cabbage tree from as far as Newton Boyd for her. She would then treat it and make the hats. She made one for a Mr Cowper (Lady Donaldson’e brother). Sir Stewart Donaldson was the owner of Tenterfield Station, and one time Premier of New South Wales. She remembers the first circus to come to Tenterfield, at which Mr Cowper presented one of the performers with a 5 pound note for a graceful exhibition of the Highland Fling. Mrs Hubbard was also present at the first race meeting held at Tenterfield, and she made a Union Jack to be flown at the meeting. She was presented with a lady’s whip from the Jockey Club by Mr Canning, the president of the club.

After spending some years on Tenterfield Station they moved to Goonoo Goonoo Station, near Tamworth, then managed by a Mr King. During her time she came in contact with Thunderbolt, but was not afraid of him, and he was always welcome to a meal at her place. She says he was forced to take to the bush. From Goonoo Goonoo her husband was sent to Myall Creek Station, near Inverell, on business, and whilst there became ill and died at Inverell.

Some years later Mrs Hubbard married a Mr Gardiner at Somerton. She recalls a flood at Tamworth when the water of the low-lying parts were under water. Mrs Gardiner is the mother of 10 children, those living being, Mr F. Hubbard (Quirindi), Mrs Crawley (Zetland), Mrs J.Keats (Glen Innes), Mrs Johnstone (Darlington), Mrs Knight (Melbourne), and Mrs Legatt (Newtown). There are 17 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren living. ”

I found another newspaper article (see below) about our Frances O’Brien’s 97th birthday party. It records much the same information as the above article including her meeting with Thunderbolt and her arrival in Sydney in 1840 as a child, with her family, being met by the Colonial Secretary and his wife Lady Thompson (a daughter of ex-Governor Bourke) ‘who drove them by carriage to a home in Darlinghurst.’ The new information pertains to Fanny’s father, Jeremiah O’Brien who the article records ‘was a stonemason by trade, and took his contract of church building from Bishop Broughton of the Church of England.’ It’s possible that Jeremiah worked on the St Andrew’s Cathedral in George St, Sydney but also likely that he worked on other church buildings in regional NSW or further afield in Victoria, where two of his daughters (Maria and Anna) settled after marriage. I am still looking for Jeremiah’s record of death and/or grave so perhaps Jeremiah’s work on Church building projects, is an important clue pointing to his possible departure from Sydney (and his wife) and could explain why there is no acknowledgement of him (dead or alive) at the time of his wife’s death in Sydney in 1889, in her death or funeral notices. Jeremiah’s immigration record states that he was a farm servant. As there was a need for agricultural workers, perhaps Jeremiah found it easier to immigrate under an agricultural classification and then reverted to his true trade as soon as he was able to find work?

1927 ‘WOMAN WHO KNEW THUNDERBOLT.’, The Uralla Times (NSW : 1923 – 1954), 7 July, p. 1. , viewed 29 Mar 2021, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article176002099

Understandably, newspaper reports of Fanny’s 97th birthday highlighted the most exciting events in her life. I found a much earlier (1868) newspaper article which describes a very sad scenario. By the end of 1868, Fanny was widowed with 5 children and expecting our great -grandfather, Henry Charles, when she fronted Armidale Police Court on 1st December with a desperate request to surrender her children to an institution because she could no longer support them. Her request was denied because the Court determined that she was a woman able to work. Furthermore, her 15 year old son was deemed capable of working to support the family because he was accustomed to station work. See 3rd paragraph below.

Armidale Express and New England General Advertiser (NSW : 1856 – 1861; 1863 – 1889; 1891 – 1954), Saturday 5 December 1868, page 2
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article187999393

One year after her Armidale Court appearance and six months after the birth of Henry Charles Hubbard, Fanny married George Gardener from Somerton (about 38 km from Tamworth) on 6 December 1869. See Marriage certificate below. George Gardener was a landowner and farmer in Somerton, selecting his small block in 1859.

It is interesting to note that Fanny does not mention her son Henry Charles (my great-grandfather) when she lists her living descendants at her 97th birthday celebrations. NSW Register of Births records the registration of 4 births to George and Frances Gardener. They were Matilda C. Gardiner in 1871, Florence Gardener in 1874, George O’Brien Gardiner in 1877 and Ellen Maude Gardner in 1879. I found a baptism record for another daughter Laura M. Gardner in 1872 aged 10 months (St Josephs, Gunnedah) but no registration of her birth.

Louisa Bock 1856 -1939

https://www.ancestry.com.au/family-tree/tree/56408306/family/familyview

Louisa Bock married William Walters in 1877 (see marriage certificate below). Their eldest daughter Lusia (Louisa) Elizabeth Walters (my great-grandmother) married Henry Charles Gardener. Lusia/Louisa Elizabeth Walters died in a Toowoomba Mental Hospital in 1950 and her mother Louisa Bock/Walters also died in a mental asylum (in Sunbury, Victoria 1939). I know very little about Louisa Bock’s origins but I will tell you what I know about her sad life in NSW and death in Victoria. I recently obtained Dad’s DNA test, the results of which I hope will eventually provide a breakthrough on this German line ( Bock and Wolters) in our family tree, because thus far I haven’t been able to find Louisa Bock’s emigration records, nor any possible family connections in Australia or Germany or elsewhere. Louisa Bock/Walter’s mental asylum records, her children’s birth certificates and a newspaper report all state that she was German, but there is no information about her parents or what part of Germany she came from. Her marriage and death certificates are sparse on detail, with the only clue to her origins being ”musician’s daughter” on her marriage certificate when she married William Wolters/Walters in 1877, on Brunswick Farm in Dundee, NSW (see below).

When did Louisa Bock arrive in the Dundee district? Why did she travel to Victoria on several occasions, pregnant and destitute? We can only imagine. I have spent rather a lot of time looking for possible Bock family ties in Victoria, to no avail and yet the surname Bock is surprisingly common in South Australia, Victoria, NSW and QLD. Louisa Bock first left her husband William Walters when she was pregnant with her first child (my great grandmother Louisa Elizabeth Walters/Gardener, who was born (according to Louisa Elizabeth/ Gardener’s marriage certificate) in Melbourne in 1878 although no record of her birth has yet been found. Louisa Bock/Walters returned to her husband at Dundee, NSW and had 3 more children (two of whom died in infancy in Dundee NSW – Mary and Henry). Louisa’s second born, Mary Wolters (see certificate below) was also born in Melbourne, 14 April 1879, at 96 Little Lonsdale St, Melbourne, at that time a slum area. The column ”Issue living and deceased” lists Louisa 1 year (old) (my great grand-mother). So it’s likely that Louisa Jnr was born in 1877 and not 1878 (as stated in Louisa Gardener’s marriage certificate 1897).

Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages Victoria
Department of Justice and Community Safety
Certificate of Birth number 10571 (14 April, 1879) Uncertified historical certificate

We know that Louisa returned to NSW because in July 1879, her baby Mary died at the age of 3 ½ months and was buried in Dundee cemetery, NSW. See photo of grave inscription below:

https://austcemindex.com/inscription?id=8855595#images

Baby Henry was born in Dundee, NSW the following year in 1880 (see transcript of birth certificate below).

Sadly, baby Henry Walters died suddenly at the age of 4 weeks, sparking suspicion and prompting authorities to hold an Inquest (see The Armidale Express article below):

 (1880, May 14). The Armidale Express and New England General Advertiser (NSW : 1856 – 1861; 1863 – 1889; 1891 – 1954), p. 4. Retrieved January 24, 2020, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article192877105

An inquest was held to investigate baby Henry’s death on Tuesday 11 May 1880 – see findings reported below in the Glen Innes Examiner.

 (1880, May 18). Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 – 1908), p. 2. Retrieved January 24, 2020, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article217783793

Soon, Louisa was pregnant again, and in 1881, she gave birth to Helena Margaret (known as Margaret). On the home front, the years 1880-1881 must have been particularly tumultuous. In addition to the death of baby Henry and subsequent inquest, William Walters was charged with stealing sheep, rock salt and hurdles (movable light fencing) from his neighbour Oswald Bloxsome. He was remanded in custody, released on bail and eventually acquitted of all charges. We know that Louisa Walters had left her husband William Walters by the 6 May 1881 because he placed an advertisement to that effect in the Glen Innes Examiner giving notice that henceforth he was not to be held responsible for her debts (see below):

1881 ‘Advertising’, Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 – 1908), 10 May, p. 3. , viewed 27 Jan 2020, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article217831854

This was to be the 3rd and final time that Louisa left her home and husband, never to return. Leaving 4 year old daughter Louisa Elizabeth on the farm in Dundee, Louisa Walters and baby Margaret left for Victoria, this time heading to Bendigo. She approached the Clerk of the Court seeking money to return to Germany but was forced to seek refuge at the local lock-up, and was subsequently charged with vagrancy, pending a medical assessment. (See article below): The next (involuntary) stop for Louisa was the Asylum in the Melbourne suburb of Kew. The newspaper article below describes Louisa’s husband as a farmer from the Riverina in NSW, however his full address is noted in subsequent Asylum records thus confirming that I have found the correct ‘Louisa Walters’.

(1882, August 18). Bendigo Advertiser (Vic. : 1855 – 1918), p. 2. Retrieved January 24, 2020, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article88629577

Another newspaper report (below) sets the scene even more poignantly – Louisa and her baby, wandering around the Bendigo District of Sandhurst in the cold and rain.

SANDHURST. (1882, August 18). The Ballarat Star (Vic. : 1865 – 1924), p. 3. Retrieved January 24, 2020, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article202126795

Louisa Walters was admitted to Kew Asylum in Melbourne on August 19, 1882, (see Kew Asylum Casebook record below which correctly identifies her husband William Walters as a farmer from Dundee, NSW). This record notes that her previous residence was the Benevolent Asylum in Bendigo, that she was brought to Kew Asylum by Police and describes the form of her lunacy as ”Mania”. Under the heading ‘Duration of present attack’ is the response ‘Supposed coming on for months’. What misery and hardship she must have experienced, losing 2 babies, desperate to return to her homeland Germany and becoming destitute and homeless after leaving her husband for the 3rd time.

Asylum Records from the Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Series Number: VA 2840; Volume Title: Case Books of Female Patients, 1871-1912; Doc Number: VPRS 7397; Reference Number: 07397-P0001-000006

The saddest part is the note ”milk in her breasts”. She was separated from baby Margaret and probably never saw her again. Notes on the bottom of the page include the following updates on her condition: 26/9/1882 Incoherent & excited, mumbling to occupy herself. Health good. 9/11/82 less excited. June 83, transferred to Sunbury.

Asylum Records from the Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Series Number: VA 2840; Volume Title: Case Books of Female Patients, 1871-1912; Doc Number: VPRS 7397; Reference Number: 07397-P0001-000006

On 12 June 1883, Louisa was transferred to the Sunbury Lunatic Asylum, situated about 39 km north -west of Melbourne’s CBD. She was around 28 years of age when she arrived at the Sunbury Asylum and she left there in a coffin in 1939 (age 83). She is buried in an unmarked grave, Sunbury cemetery, Methodist section A Grave 31, Burial reference 3026. Louisa’s Sunbury asylum record accounts for the years 1883 – 1906, barely covers 2 pages and skips quite a few years. One record page commences 24 June 1889, runs out of room and tacks on later records (1902 -1906) at the bottom of the preceding page. One record note has no year 24/6 – the saddest record of all: ”Seems incurable” I will need to go to the Public Record Office Victoria to find and read records from 1906 -1939. I will attempt a transcript of Asylum record notes (see original below): 29/8/83 or 85? No change, is very slovenly in her dress and deportment. 14/9/83 or 85? What is this word? 24/6 ? Sent to laundry & works well there. Subject to attacks of excitement. Seems incurable. 24/4/1902 Becoming demented. Health good. 29/12/1902 No change. 23/6/1903 No change. 20/12/1903 ? I think it says ‘no change’. 30/12/1904 Demented, does not speak, untidy. Gen health(y). 22/6/1905 The same. 27/12/1905 No change. 29/6/1906 No change.

Asylum Records from the Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Series Number: VA 2844; Volume Title: Case Books of Female Patients, 1877-1912 Vol 2; Doc Number: VPRS 7406; Reference Number: 07406-P0002-000001

See the first half of the second page of Louisa’s Asylum record below – transcript as follows : 24/6/89 Has been violent and should act ? (so she informs me) Is a good worker in sewing room. 28/8/89 Has good bodily health. A good worker and is described as treacherous (by ? ? Fitzgerald) 15/11/89 Mentally the subject of ? mania. Bodily health good. 20/2/90 No very clear statements received from her. ? of ? – answers questions fairly well. Is very restless & stood up several times since the process of my communication in the ward. Is in good bodily health. Is hoarse in speech. 25/6/90 The subject of (clonic?) mania – presently – restless she ? ? ? of head from Mary Campbell. In good bodily health & a good worker. 25/11/90 At times violent – bodily health good. 8/8/91 Moved to laundry ? ? ? & violent if interfered with. Health good. 19/2/92 Struck Ann Burton with a broom on the arm – special instructions given in reference to allowing her to be employed in this way. The injury was inflicted a few days ago.

Asylum Records from the Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Series Number: VA 2844; Volume Title: Case Books of Female Patients, 1877-1912 Vol 2; Doc Number: VPRS 7406; Reference Number: 07406-P0002-000001

See the rest of Louisa’s Asylum record below. Transcript to follow: 24/9/93 The patient has not presented any change towards improvement since last record. She is sullen & morose & resents the slightest interference. Bodily health is good. Inclined to be untidy in dress and appearance. 28/6/94 Mentally unimproved. Very untidy: is impulsive if interfered with. Good bodily health. 17/12/94 Sometime ago was transferred to 12 Ward as she was violent and it was deemed unsafe to allow her to be with helpless patients, such as the majority are in the wards here. She is in good bodily health. 8/11/95 No mental improvement – good bodily health. 11/1/96 Good bodily health: in good condition: mentally unimproved: still in No. 12 ward.

Asylum Records from the Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV); Series Number: VA 2844; Volume Title: Case Books of Female Patients, 1877-1912 Vol 2; Doc Number: VPRS 7406; Reference Number: 07406-P0002-000001

I will post further transcripts of Louisa’s asylum records as I discover them. But for now, here is Louisa’s death certificate, see below:

There is much more to discover (more tears) about poor Louisa Bock/Walters’ miserable life and ancestry – will keep you posted! Meanwhile, back on the farm in Dundee, William Walters was getting lonely (see below). Will be sharing research on the William Walters’ family soon.

Advertising (1885, July 28). Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 – 1908), p. 6. Retrieved January 23, 2020, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article217770000

George Gardener (1823-1902)

In a previous post I despaired of ever finding our George Gardener – there were so many George Gardeners! But I obtained his death certificate (see below) and saw the few words that were to reveal so much about his life – the words ”6 years in Tasmania, 58 years in NSW” (see death certificate below). Yes! The six years in Tasmania says it all – he’s our second convict (the other one in our family tree is Charles Chadburn). On George’s death certificate his ‘time in Australian Colonies’ amounts to 64 years which means he was only 15 or 16 years of age on arrival in Tasmania. And fortunately there is only one George Gardener of that age who arrived in Tasmania around 1839/1840. Based on the dates on his death certificate, he arrived in NSW in 1846 after completion of his 7 year sentence (of which he had served almost one year before his arrival in Tasmania in 1840). Without this reference to Tasmania on George’s death certificate, I would never have discovered his convict origins.

George Gardiner (15) and his 14 year old partner in crime, Edward Robottom, were indicted for stealing and appeared before the Old Bailey on 8 April,1839, found guilty and sentenced to 7 years transportation to a prison on the Isle of Wight. Parkhurst Prison, on the Isle of Wight, opened in December 1838 to cater for young offenders. The prison offered the boys training and discipline to prepare them for transportation and/or emigration to Australia, whenever a place on a ship became available. See below for Proceedings of the Old Bailey, detailing George’s crime (case no. 1234: Edward Robottom and George Gardiner).

Old Bailey Proceedings Online (www.oldbaileyonline.org, version 6.0, 17 April 2011), 8th April 1839, trial of George Gardiner (t18390408-1234). https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/images.jsp?doc=183904080061

George Gardener/Gardiner and his friend/accomplice Edward Robottom, together with many other boy convicts as young as 11, were transported to Australia on the ship Runnymede, departing London 11 November 1839 and arriving in Van Diemans Land 28 March 1840. Convict records (see description list below) reveal quite a lot about our ancestor George Gardener. We see in this record that George was a Shoemaker (3 years), almost 5 feet tall, with a pale complexion, ‘long’ head, red hair, red eyebrows, blue eyes, hook nose, oval face, high forehead, large mouth and a small chin.

Libraries Tasmania Online Collection
Description List
https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON18-1-1$init=CON18-1-1p210

Appropriation Lists (see example below) of convicts were created to record convicts’ skills/trades in order to best utilise their skills. This list dated 2 April 1840, shortly after George’s arrival in Van Dieman’s Land, records his trade, age, height and native place (London). There was a huge demand for shoemakers at Port Arthur (there was a thriving shoemaking industry and kangaroo tannery from 1835) yet there is no evidence that our George worked in this (his) domain. Perhaps his poor conduct kept him working outside with the convict road gangs?

Libraries Tasmania Online Collections
Appropriation List
https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON27-1-8$init=CON27-1-8P38
2 April 1840

George’s conduct record (below) gives us a tiny insight into the harsh reality of convict life in Van Dieman’s Land. I have managed to decipher most of the handwriting. Here’s a rough transcription with some explanatory details in bold. I have put a question mark where I cannot decipher the writing. George’s date of arrival (28 March 1840) and ship name (Runnymede) appears under his name and beside his Police Number (1490), together with the name of the Court where he was sentenced and convicted (Central Criminal Court & Assizes ie The Old Bailey) as well as the year of conviction: 1839. Transported for Larceny. Gaol report not known (refers to Gaol time on Isle of Wight). Hulk report ? (Hulk report refers to behaviour on floating prison ship awaiting transportation) ? stated that offense stealing a leg of pork Mr Portlock (name of butcher) at Chelsea ? surgeons report good (referring to ship doctor’s report on health and behaviour). May 5 1840: Absent himself without leave – 4 days solitary confinement. Bread & Water (instead of usual convict diet of gruel, cabbage,turnips, potato, salt pork or salt beef), PA (Port Arthur). May 18 1840 absent from the island ? without leave, 20 stripes on the breech. (Boy convicts were lashed on the buttocks) PA/ 27 December 1841, Most disorderly conduct 20 stripes on the breech/ PA/ 2 March 1842. Absent without leave 4 days solitary/ PA/ 11 March 184?/ Point Puer (Boys Prison)/misconduct/5 days solitary confinement/PA/ Jan 15 1844 Glen’y’ pty (Glenorchy working Party?)/ misconduct/14 days Sol?/ B & W (Bread and Water) / T of L (Ticket of Leave) 3 . 5. 1844 – Dec 5/44 ? / Misconduct in falsely stating hazard fire. 2 months hard labour TL (Ticket of Leave) susp’d (suspended)/ SP?/ Survey p? (party) going Hobart. Vide L.G Decs (see/refer to Lt Governor’s Decisions – these documents have not survived). 6/12/1844 – 3 Jan 1845 T of Leave / neglect of work ? & sentence to hard labour ? 2 months ? to be served a/to (assigned to) a party in the interior/? /? Glenorchy (road gang?) Vide LG decisions 3/1/1845/ 19 January 1845 Extend sentence of ? 3 days of solitary confinement /? / Free Certificate 1845 -1846

Librairies Tasmania Online Collection
https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON31-1-17$init=CON31-1-17p62

The date that George was granted his certificate of freedom is not very clear in his conduct record (above) however the document below (see 1490 Gardener, George) records the Certificate of Freedom date: 14/4/1846.

Comprehensive Register of Convicts (Core Series) A-L, 1841-1845
Ancestry.com. Tasmania, Australia, Convict Court and Selected Records, 1800-1899 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.
Original data: Tasmanian Colonial Convict, Passenger and Land Records. Various collections (30 series). Tasmanian Archive and Heritage Office, Hobart, Tasmania.

Now that we know that George’s freedom was certified on 14 April 1846 (he may not have received the paperwork immediately, if at all) we can hazard a guess as to his departure from Van Dieman’s Land. We know George went to New South Wales and it’s possible that he left the same year as he was granted his freedom, at the end of his sentence. There’s a George Gardener listed on the passenger list below (last name in the list on the right hand side: ‘Geo Gardiner’ that could fit the bill, leaving from Hobart for Sydney 17 October 1846 on the ship ‘Eliza Ann’. It is interesting to note the presence of a ‘Peter Casey’ on this passenger list – probably the same Peter Casey who was transported on the ‘Runnymede’ with George Gardener in 1839. It appears that George Gardener’s partner in crime, Edward Robottom, remained in Tasmania, applying to marry convict Ann Page (vessel Woodbridge) in 1848.

Libraries Tasmania Online Collection
https://stors.tas.gov.au/NI/551761
17 Oct 1846
Departure Hobart to Sydney, Ship ‘Eliza Ann ‘
Steerage

I need a lot of help with this next clue please. I found a convict record for George Gardener that provides a locality in London (see mysterious writing in document below, beside 1490 Gardiner, Geo, under the column ‘Native Place’). I asked the very helpful people in the Facebook history group ‘Genealogy My Ancestors Came to Australia’ who suggested it could be ‘Cow Cross’, (near present day Farringdon Station in Clerkenwell) a route for droving cattle to a cow market and precinct for associated trades in knackery, bones, butchery, and leather works, established since Medieval times. The poorest of the poor lived in tenements in the alleyways alongside, above and behind these smelly industries, in an area renown for violent crime and theft. Our convict George Gardener may have lived and worked as a shoemaker in this area, near the slaughterhouse and tannery.

Libraries Tasmania Online Collection
Alphabetical Registers of Male Convicts
https://stors.tas.gov.au/CON23-1-2$init=CON23-1-2-P040

I have enlarged (from the document above) the problem words (see below). What do you think? Could it be Cow Cross? I have started searching for George Gardener’s origins in London – all I know is the sparse information on his marriage certificate (see post on Frances O’Brien), i.e he came from London, his father’s name (George Gardener) and mother’s name (Ann Webb). I have searched UK marriage records (for his parents) baptism and census records but have not found anything to confirm his family origins. As yet, Dad’s DNA test has not provided any further clues.

George Gardener’s life in Somerton

I don’t know what George Gardener senior did after he left Tasmania and before he selected land in Somerton around 1857 ( a period of around 10 years). He may have married or had children in this time, although I have not found evidence of this.

Henry Charles Gardener 1869-1945

 H.C. Gardiner 1-42, One of the Soldiers Photographed in The Queenslander Pictorial, Supplement to The Queenslander, 1916. Photograph appears on p. 23 of The Queenslander Pictorial, supplement to the Queenslander, 23 September, 1916…

William Hubbard’s date of death (see death certificate below) confirms that he was not Henry’s father.

There’s no longer any mystery as to how Fanny and George Gardiner met – they both resided in the very small town of Somerton, NSW. I discovered a notice in the NSW Government Gazettes, 16/1/1875 (see below) that describes William Hubbard, ‘late of Somerton’. Even though William Hubbard worked away on sheep stations, his home base, appears to have been Somerton and he owned land there. William Hubbard died intestate and the notice below, indicates that his widow Frances (now married to George Gardiner) was still waiting in 1875 to inherit his (their) property.

ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION. (1875, January 22). New South Wales Government Gazette (Sydney, NSW : 1832 – 1900), p. 192. Retrieved November 4, 2019, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article223652661

In Warwick, Queensland, on 20 August 1915, at the age of 44 and 5 months, Henry Charles Gardener and his 16 year old son Melbourne (our grandfather) signed up to fight in World War 1. Henry Charles was actually 47 years old. Henry lowered his age (or it’s possible that he didn’t know his exact date of birth) and his 16 year old son, Melbourne put his age up to 18 years. The next day in Glen Innes, Henry’s eldest son, 17 year old George enlisted, putting his age up to 19 years. Henry’s physical characteristics are described on his enlistment papers as follows: Height: 5 feet 5 and a quarter inches, Weight: 140 pounds, Complexion: Dark, Eyes: Dark (grey is crossed out) , Hair: Dark. His marital status noted: ‘wife dead’. I have found evidence that Henry’s wife Louisa Elizabeth wasn’t dead at this time, because she is named on her father’s death certificate as living in 1917. More information on Louisa Elizabeth Walters later. Henry Charles listed his next of kin as (youngest) son Henry ”Charles” Gardener. George and Melbourne listed their next of kin as their father, Henry Charles with Henry’s (and Melbourne’s ) Warwick address: c/- A.E Morey, Glen Rd, Warwick. This Arthur Morey (friend of Henry Charles) was the ‘guardian’ for youngest son, 12 year old Henry ”Charles” Gardener, who remained in Warwick while his father and brothers embarked on a big (and terrible) adventure, culminating in the death of George Gardener in France on 3 September 1916 and the eventual return of Henry (31/10/1917) and son Melbourne (20/5/1919) to Australia. I can only surmise that life was pretty tough for the youngest (abandoned) sibling Charles Gardener alias Charles Morey, who was to spend time on the wrong side of the tracks – more on him later.

Henry’s War

The National Archives of Australia holds two sets of enlistment papers for two Henry Charles Gardeners (Gardiners). One set of papers has no service number attached and the other has the Service number 1637. I believe them to be one and the same person – same name, same age, same description, same place of birth listed (Somerton, NSW) very, very similar signatures, same weight, similar height (within an inch) and both records list a next of kin (son) in Warwick. On this basis, Henry’s first enlistment attempt in 1915 (with his sons) resulted in a 2 month stint with hard labour in Brisbane’s Boggo Rd Gaol and subsequent discharge from the Army on 26 November 1915 because it was determined that he was not likely to be an efficient soldier. It all started when Henry Charles Gardener was granted a 24 hour leave pass from Bells Paddock at Enoggera Army Camp, Enoggera, Brisbane from midday 17 September, 1915. He didn’t return to camp and after several weeks, he was classified as a deserter. Eventually, the Army was informed he was in Boggo Rd Gaol. I need to do some research at QLD State Archives to find out what this was about (and look at Henry’s gaol admission records). Henry’s sons left Brisbane together on 21 October 1915 for overseas duty, while their Dad remained in gaol. No doubt, Henry’s desire to join his sons would have motivated him to re-enlist, which he did in Toowoomba on the 22 February 1916 (his second enlistment). Finally, Henry Charles embarked at Sydney on 5 June 1916, for England. Henry Charles didn’t make it to France due to several hospital admissions (Corneal ulcer & VD). He was medically discharged due to the loss of his left eye and he embarked for return to Australia 22 July 1917. Like many soldiers, he was AWL in England on several occasions. Sadly, he wouldn’t have seen his son George again, but it’s possible he caught up with son Melbourne, in England. Melbourne Gardener was transferred from France to hospital in England, in May 1917 which coincides with periods of (his father) Henry’s absence without leave.