Monday, March 23, 2020

Memorable holidays - England August/September 2007

http://joyolneyfamily.blogspot.com.au

England - August/September 2007

Darren, Fiona and family joined us for a week in London, then Peter and I spent 3 weeks going to the villages where our forefathers had lived, seeking out the houses they lived in, Churches they had attended and the cemeteries.  Firstly though, we visited the town of Olney where Rev John Newton was Curator and wrote "Amazing Grace".  Next to Pulloxhill where many of the Olney family came from. (Refer to Olney Family Archives Blog).  "Stanfield Hall" near Norwich was of particular interest.  (Refer to Riches Family Archives Blog).  Pulham Market in Norfolk was where the Riches family lived.  (Refer to Riches Family Archives Blog and Wallis Family Archives Blog).  Hull, Brantingham, South Cave and Kirk Ella were of particular interest as the Petfield family came from there.  (Refer to Petfield Family Archives Blog).  Great Oxendon and Simpson was where the Wells and Saunders families lived.  (Refer to Saunders Family Archives and Wells Family Archives).  Low Row was where Rev John Allason was minister 1807-1835.  We visited his Church 200 years later.  (Refer to Allason Family Archives Blog). 

We were able to spend quality time with cousins in Wormley and Nordley Common.

Low Row is a small village in North Yorkshire Dales on Swaledale River and within the Yorkshire Dales National Park.


Low Row Reformed Church where Rev John Allason ministered 1807-1834.
Joy's great great great grandfather.

Plaque in Low Row Reformed Church to Allason family 1807-1834. John's wife Susannah
and 5 children died while he was Minister at Low Row. 

Cousins Lawrence & Sheila Barker at Healaugh
John Allason's daughter Rebecca married a Barker. John's 2 sons came to Australia.
I am a descendent of Edward Allason.

Peter & Joy at Codicote where many Olneys came from. I have the book "From Codicote to Carievale"
The main emphasis was on William Olney (1676-1752), his son Samuel Olney (1723) and his son James (1748)


"As you like it", a Chinese Restaurant today and the oldest Inn in Hertforshire.
 Once was called "George & Dragon Inn" but called "Coarch and Horses" when William Olney owned it.




Once the home of George & Lavinia Olney in Pulloxhill. The present owner was 87, born in this home and he remembered his parents talking about the Olneys who were the previous owners.

Interior St James Church at Pulloxhill where many Olney babies were baptised.




Olney family in the town of Olney which is famous for The Pancake Race held since 1445 on Shrove Tuesday.




Peter "preaching" in  St Peter and St Paul Church in Olney where Rev John Newton was Vicar 1764-1780.
John Newton wrote 280 hymns including "Amazing Grace".

Market Place in the town of Olney


Tombstone of Rev John Newton who was the Vicar at
St Peter and St Paul Church in the town of Olney.
He wrote "Amazing Grace" among many hymns.
He died 1807.







Matthew (1775-1855) and Ruth (1783-1860) Petfield, Joy's great great great grandparents at Kirk Ella Cemetery.
South Cave Church where many of the Petfield family worshipped.

"Stanfield Hall" where James Bloomfield Rush murdered the owner on 28 November 1848.
It is said that Peter's great great grandfather John Riches worked at "Stanfield Hall" as a strapper at the time of the murder.


Peter's great grandfather, James Benjamin Riches was born in Pulham Market in 1854.

Michael and Margaret Breese in Wormley, Peter's cousin.

St Peter's Church in Drayton where Grisold family worshipped and their 8 children baptised.
Thomas (1808-1874) and Elizabeth (1806-1882) Grisold were Joy's great great great grandparents.


"Freedom Cottage" in Simpson where Thomas (1833-1909) and Sarah (1837-1916) Saunders lived 1894-1916.
Joy's great great grandparents.

"White Cottage" where John (1828-1906) & Sarah (1830-1900) Matthews lived in Simpson.
Sarah was the sister of Joy's great great grandfather Thomas Saunders (1833-1909).


John (1830-1907) & Harriet (1822-1890) Wells in Great Oxendon
John was brother of Thomas Wells (1832-1908), Joy's great great grandfather.

Interior of 12th century St Helen's Church in Great Oxendon. 
I have a candlestick made from a pew.

Font in St Helen's Church, Great Oxendon where many Wells babies were baptised.

Cousin Herbert John Wells (1929-2014) with Peter and Joy at Great Oxendon
John's grandfather Charles Wells (1864-1948) was the brother of my great grandfather Harry Wells (1858-1935).

Cousins Eleanor (born 1953) & Alec (born 1934) Andrews with Joy in Nordley Common.
Eleanor's grandmother Kate Saunders (1866-1941) and my great grandmother Elizabeth Saunders (1862-1950) were sisters.



If you have any comments, please email Joy Olney - joyolney@gmail.com

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Memorable holidays - Tasmania 2005 & September 2006

http://joyolneyfamily.blogspot.com.au

Tasmania - October 2005 & September 2006

I had recently become interested in family history and having read my Grandpa's diaries dated from 1897-1921 while he was a Methodist Minister in Tasmania, I knew it was time to go and see the Churches, houses and cemeteries.  Both Grandpa and Grandma were born in Tasmania, their siblings lived there and had businesses in Hobart.  (Refer to my Blogs - Macdougall Family Archives, Rev.Leslie Macdougall's Diaries and Beatrice Macdougall's diaries) .

William Davidson was the First Superintendent of the Hobart Botanical Gardens in 1828.  (Refer to Davidson Family Archives).  John Macdougall arrived as a Convict in 1821.  He and his 2 sons, John and Archibald Macdougall were Proprietors and Editors of "Colonial Times" in Hobart 1825-1855.  (Refer to Macdougall Family Archives Blog).  Charles Haywood was a Biscuit Maker with many shops in Hobart. (Refer to Allason Family Archives Blog).   Harry Wells was the Station Master at Hobart Railway Station 1914-1924.  (Refer to Wells Family Archives Blog).  His wife, Elizabeth Saunders brought up three children, Beatrice, Winifred and Gladstone.  (Refer to Saunders Family Archives Blog).




The cottage built for William Davidson when he was appointed the Superintendent at Hobart Botanical Gardens in 1828.  He was appointed 9 convicts to help establish the Gardens.  In those days there was a courtyard between his cottage and the convicts accommodation.  Today it is the Administration Office.



Inside the Director's office is an ink sketch of William Davidson and hanging on the wall is the pain of glass from the window which has William's signature "William Davidson, February 18th 1833". 


                                                       
                                                         William Davidson 1804 - 1837.


William Davidson's sundial is now outside the Administration Office.  
The plaque reads: This sandstone sundial was a gift from the first Superintendent William Davidson to his wife Elizabeth and is thought to be carved by convict stone mason Daniel Herbert.  The sundial was passed down through the female line and donated in 1999 by Elizabeth's great great grand daughter Brigid Davis.








Arthur Wall was built during the Superintendency of William Davidson in 1829, under instruction from Governor Arthur.  The wall is heated by 3 coal fired furnaces on which exotic fruits, such as espaliered apricots could be grown.


Captain John Macdougall, the convict who arrived in 1821 and his son John Macdougall were Owners and Editors of a number of Newspapers in Tasmania from 1827-1857.  "Tasmanian", "Tasmanian & Austral-Asiatic Review", "Trumpeter", "Colonial Times".











This memorial is in the Old Presbyterian Trinity Hill Cemetery in Church Street, Hobart.
Captain John Macdougall (1783-1845) and his son John Macdougall (1804-1848) were buried here. 

"To the memory of the Scottish Pioneers and to mark their first burial ground 1957".


      
Archibald Macdougall (1815-1970) printed & published "The Life and Adventures of William Buckley" in 1852.  Archibald was Joy's great great grandfather.




Charles Duncan Haywood married Susanna Allason.  He was a Councillor, and Mayor of Hobart in 1907.  He owned several stores in Hobart - Haywood's Stem Biscuit Manufactory, Excelsior Steam Biscuit Factory, Haywood's Biscuit Factory. C.D.Haywood & Co existed just 2 years short of a century 1854-1952.


137-139 Elizabeth Street, Hobart

                                                               94 Elizabeth Street, Hobart.


                                                                       109 Elizabeth Street, Hobart.




12 Mercer Street, New Town, home of Gwen Calvert, Joy's great aunt.                                                        

               
                                                           
31 Sandy Bay Road, Sandy Bay, home of Gwen Calvert, Joy's great aunt.


ABC building was the Hobart Railway Station where Harry Wells was Station Master 1912-1924.



                                    William Davidson's plaque at St Davids Park, Hobart.



William Davidson 1804-1837.




Was Macdougall Printers 1850, then 
Haywoods Biscuit Factory, 44 Melville Street, Hobart from 1854.



86 George Street, Launceston.  Was Macdougalls Draper's shop 1881-1900.



                                   "Hawthorn Lodge", home of W.E.Shoobridge in Bushy Park.



                                    "Forest Lodge", home of Sir Rupert Shoobridge in Glenora.



Red Hill Cemetery with lots of Shoobridge graves.



3 Elboden Street, South Hobart, built 1831.  
 Home of William & Elizabeth Davidson.


Was Milton Hall, Launceston High School where Leslie Macdougall went in 1886.


                      72 Warwick Street, Hobart, where Edward & Elizabeth Allason lived in 1866. 
                                         Parents of Sarah Allason, Joy's Great Great Grandparents.


                       St David's Park where many ancestors are buried and have their plaques.


            The Surgeon's house at Port Arthur, Tasmania -  Dr. Thomas Coke & Elizabeth Brownell.

                      


                    
Wesley Chapel, Melville Street, Hobart where Macdougall & Haywood families worshipped.


         New Norfolk Parsonage, the first marital home of Leslie & Beatrice Macdougalls in 1912.


                       Penguin Methodist Church, Tasmania where Macdougall's were 1918-1921.


Queenstown Methodist Church where Leslie Macdougall was 1910-1912.


                          Harry Wells  (1858-1935) & Elizabeth (Saunders) Wells (1862-1950) 
                               at Cornelian Bay Cemetery, Hobart.     Joy's Great grand parents.


                      William Arthur Macdougall (1849-1930) and Sarah Ann (Allason) Macdougall 
                           (1850- 1941) at Cornelian Bay Cemetery, Hobart.  Joy's Great grand parents.


If you have any comments, please email Joy Olney - joyolney@gmail.com