Showing posts with label TROVE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TROVE. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 September 2017

LEAD UP TO IRISH FAMINE as depicted in TROVE 26th SEPT. 2017






TROVE 
REVEALS AWARENESS 
OF PROBABLE IRISH FAMINE. 





Scene at Skibbereen during the Great Famine, by Cork artist James Mahony (1810–1879), commissioned by The Illustrated London News, 1847. Courtesy of Wikipedia



"The Great Hunger" as the Irish famine was called, was  heralded many years before it happened. Here in Australia, the press was posting all manner of articles about what could be expected. 

Here is just a small selection of articles that were published...



Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1803 - 1842), Thursday 5 January 1832, page 2  

National Library of Australia
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2204331

 Excerpts... 

Connaught and Munster were showing some of the first  signs of the forthcoming famine.






Colonial Times (Hobart, Tas. : 1828 - 1857), Wednesday 1 February 1832, page 2 


National Library of Australia        http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8646286  

Excerpts.. Please click on images to enlarge...



The stories were coming regularly from Ireland...





and just for interest in the same publication...








Australasian Chronicle (Sydney, NSW : 1839 - 1843), Thursday 17 November 1842, page 4 

National Library of Australia http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article31737894 



There was an impassioned plea from the Archbishop of Tuam to Sir Robert Peel...he could see no other way to help the people.. can be enlarged..






Morning Chronicle (Sydney, NSW : 1843 - 1846), Saturday 26 October 1844, page 2


National Library of Australia http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article31743852

 The Irish spirit prevailed... 





Morning Chronicle (Sydney, NSW : 1843 - 1846), Saturday 11 April 1846, page 1 
National Library of Australia
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article31747777

This article is too hard to read... so here is the transcription... 
from the Lord Mayor of Dublin..

THE POTATO PLAGUE.
At a meeting of the Mansion House Committee
on Wednesday, the following resolutions were una-
nimously adopted :-
" 1st. -- That we feel it an imperative duty to dis-
charge our consciences of all responsibility regarding
the undoubtedly approaching calamities, famine and
pestilence throughout Ireland, an approach which is
imminent and almost immediate, and can be obviated
only by the most prompt, universal, and efficacious
measures for procuring food and employment for
the people.
" 2nd -- That we have ascertained beyond the
shadow of doubt that considerably more than one-
third of the entire of the potato crop in Ireland has
been already destroyed by the potato disease, and
that such disease has not by any means ceased its
ravages, but on the contrary, it is daily expanding
more and more, and that no reasonable conjecture
can be formed with respect to the limits of its effects,
short of the destruction of the entire remaining
potato crop.
"3rd -- That our information upon the subject is
positive and precise, and is derived from persons
living in all the counties of Ireland. From persons
also of all political opinions, and from clergymen of
all religious persuasions.
" 4th -- We are thus unfortunately able to proclaim
to all the inhabitants of the British Empire, and in
the presence of an all-seeing Providence, that in
Ireland famine of a most hideous description must
be immediate and pressing, and that pestilence of
the most frightful kind is certain, and not remote,
unless immediately prevented.
" 5th -- That we arraign in the strongest terms
consistent with personal respect to ourselves, the
culpable conduct of the present administration, as
well in refusing to take any efficacious measure for
alleviating the existing calamity with all its ap-
proaching hideous and necessary consequences, as
also for the positive and unequivocal crime of keeping
the ports closed against the importation of foreign
provisions, thus either abdicating their duty to the
people or their sovereign, whose servants they are,
or involving themselves in the enormous guilt of
aggravating starvation and famine by unnaturally
keeping up the price of provisions, and doing this
for the benefit of a selfish class who derive at the
present awful crisis pecuniary advantages to them-
selves by the maintenance of the oppressive corn laws.
" 6th -- That the people of Ireland, in their bitter
hours of misfortune, have the strongest right to
impeach the criminality of the Ministers of the
Crown, inasmuch as it has pleased a merciful Pro-
vidence to favour Ireland In the present season with
a most abundant crop of oats. Yet, whilst the Irish
harbours are closed against the importation of
foreign food, they are left open for the exportation
of Irish oats and grain, an exportation which has
already amounted in the present season to a quantity
nearly adequate to feed the entire people of Ireland, 
and to avert the now certain famine, thus inflicting 
upon the Irish people, the abject misery of having 
their own provisions carried away to feed others 
whilst they themselves are left contemptuously to 
starve. 
" 7th -- That the people of Ireland should parti- 
cularly arraign the conduct of the Ministry in 
shrinking from their duty, to open the ports for the 
introduction of provisions by royal proclamation, 
whilst they have had the inhumanity to postpone the 
meeting of Parliament till next year. 
" 8th -- That we behold in this conduct of the 
Ministry the contemptuous disregard of the lives of 
the people of Ireland, and that we therefore do pre- 
pare an address to her Majesty, most humbly pray- 
ing her Majesty to direct her Ministers to adopt, 
without any kind of delay, the most extensive and 
efficacious measures to arrest the progress of famine 
and pestilence in Ireland." 
John L. Arabin, Lord Mayor of Dublin. 







Earliest known photograph of Victoria, here with her eldest daughter, c. 1845
Courtesy of Wikipedia   


In January, 1846, the Lord Mayors of London and Dublin presented addresses to Queen Victoria... 






The South Australia Register reported this with full details...


South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), Wednesday 20 May 1846, page 1 

National Library of Australia
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article73843513











Henry Edward Doyle - Illustration from Preface to the First Edition of An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800, by Mary Frances Cusack, Illustrated by Henry Doyle scanned into 001.jpg extracted from Gutenberg project's zip file linked from [1]. First published in 1868.
Public Domain.

Engraving of Emigrants leaving Ireland by Mary Frances Cusack

For further reading, go to     http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper or simply Google 'pre Irish Famine' or 'Irish Famine'.

Tuesday, 6 June 2017

TROVE TUESDAY 6TH JUNE, 2017... GEORGE HOWE.. OF FIRST AUSTRALIAN NEWSPAPER FAME









 A recent post about the publication of the first Australian newspaper attracted a lot of comments and communication.  Many were interested in the newspaper itself, but even more were interested in George Howe, the man responsible for the printing of  the "Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser".


 It seems there are quite a number of my readers who are descended from, or connected to, George Howe. I have been sent quite a lot of information on him and have also researched more about this quite interesting man. Who would have thought a former convict would have attracted so much attention.

TROVE had quite a bit more re him, as in this article from

Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), Thursday 11 April 1935, page 10 

Please click on images to enlarge...

When George Howe died, this letter to the Editor appeared in the

Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954), Monday 23 May 1932, page 12 ... written by W. A. THOMAS  of Fullerton..

nla.news-article46860522.3 

 It gives a short summary of his life..

I felt that there was so much more to George Howe, and two of my readers, Ruth Miller and Janeen Beck, have kindly contributed some of their information, to which I have added my own research. Both ladies are connected to George. I thank them for their contributions and quote a few of their items in this post.


From Ruth Miller....

"My 3g grandfather George Williams, an actual free settler in 1814, worked for George Howe as a compositor on the Sydney Gazette, and then Cryer for the Supreme Court. He was very involved with the Bent family, lawyers Ellis and Jeffrey Bent, and seems to have fallen into disfavour with Governor Macquarie for his involvement in signing a petition (the Vale-Bent petition, signed “PhiloFree”) objecting to Macquarie’s punishment of free settlers without a trial, drawn up by William Moore an arrival on the same ship as George, and one of the first non-convict lawyers. He had also refused to publish an advertisement about a reward for information on the signatories. His participation in these political acts led to his land grant being initially refused. Macquarie had him sacked from the Sydney Gazette and he obtained the job of Cryer for the Supreme court through the connections he had made with lawyers and barristers he had met on the Broxbornebury voyage to New South Wales."



 Firstly, a few links to follow... 

Cape Banks Family History Society


Australian Royalty

 This site has a lot of information on his family and various relationships.. always check yourself.

TROVE

Obituaries Australia


Wikipedia

Early Australian Adventures

Old George Street



George Howe (1769 - 1821) was a son of a Government Printer, who was born in St Kitts, West Indies.  Howe went to England in 1790 and worked as a printer for The Times as well as other papers.  In 1799 Howe was convicted at the Warwick assizes for shoplifting and sentenced to life and transportation.  On arrival in New South Wales in 1800 he was quickly appointed as Government Printer and published the paper, then known as The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser that had started in 1803. 

Source : Extract from draft of the Williams family book by Annie and Wal Lotocki

Wikipedia tells us that ...George Howe..

was the son of Thomas Howe, a government printer on Basseterre, Saint Christopher Island (now better known as Saint Kitts) in the West Indies.[1] When he was 21, he went to London and worked as a printer for The Times. In March 1799, he was charged with shoplifting and sentenced to death, but this was commuted to transportation for life to New South Wales.[1] Howe arrived at Sydney on 22 November 1800.[2]
Editor of the Sydney Gazette[edit]
A small printing press had been brought to Australia by Governor Arthur Phillip, and a convict named George Hughes used it to print a considerable number of orders, rules and regulations.[2] Soon after he arrived George Howe became the government printer, and in 1802 printed New South Wales General Standing Orders consisting of 146 pages, the first book to be printed in Australia. In May 1803 Governor King, in a dispatch to Lord Hobart, mentioned the establishment of the Sydney Gazette as a weekly publication—its first number had appeared on 5 March and asked that a new font of type should be sent to Sydney. The paper was carried on at the risk of Howe, who, though he had been fully emancipated in 1806,[1] did not receive a salary as government printer until 1811 when he was granted only £60 a year. In the meantime Howe conducted the Gazette under difficulties, often running out of paper and suffering much from patrons who fell behind in their subscriptions. In 1810 a lighting strike almost destroyed Howes's printing office.[1] Howe tried various expedients to keep his household going, at one time keeping a school and at another becoming a professional debt collector. Another of these expedients was becoming a professional mobile food stand for the public, he did this for 3 years.
In addition to the Gazette Howe began the publication of the New South Wales Pocket Almanac in 1806, which became a regular yearly publication from 1808 to 1821. He also began trading in sandalwood, and in 1813 found himself liable for over £90 of duty on two consignments. He appears to have become more prosperous, as in 1817 he was one of the original subscribers when the Bank of New South Wales was founded. Howe died on 11 May 1821 and left an estate of £400. He was married twice, and his second wife survived him with children of both marriages. He seems to have been a man of indomitable spirit and, considering his difficulties, was a good printer and editor. The memorial placed in the printing office by his son stated that "his charity knew no bounds".

 You can read about his son, Robert, who followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather re printing...here

References[edit]

  1. ^ Jump up to:
    a b c d e f J. V. Byrnes, 'Howe, George (1769–1821)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1, MUP, 1966, pp 557–559. Retrieved 8 August 2009
  2. ^ Jump up to:
    a b Serle, Percival (1949). "Howe, George". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus and Robertson. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  3. Jump up
    ^
    Goff, Victoria (1998). "Convicts and Clerics: Their Roles in the Infancy of the Press in Sydney, 1803–1840". Media History. 4: 105. doi:10.1080/13688809809357939. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
  4. Jump up
    ^
    More Pig Bites Baby! Stories from Australia's First Newspaper, ed. Michael Connor, Duffy and Snellgrove, 2004, ISGN 1-876631-91-0, introduction page X


From Janeen Beck...

"George married Sarah, the widow of Edward Wills, One of her five existing children, Horatio Spencer Wills, became editor of the Gazette and published the first paper edited by a native-born Australian, The Currency Lad, which first appeared in August 1832... "  

George was asscoiated with many of the colony's well known names, including Governors Bligh and Macquarie.

 More from the draft of the Williams family book by Annie and Wal Lotocki:
“In 1810 Governor Macquarie re-opened the Colony’s newspaper The Sydney Gazette, which was shut down by Governor Bligh in 1808. The newspaper was a heavily censored government paper and the editor’s title was Government Printer."

To get an idea of the times, I've included a further extract from the Williams family book...

“In 1810 Governor Macquarie re-opened the Colony’s newspaper The Sydney Gazette, which was shut down by Governor Bligh in 1808. The newspaper was a heavily censored government paper and the editor’s title was Government Printer.  This paper was run by George Howe (1769-1821) son of a Government Printer, who was born in St Kitts, West Indies.  Howe went to England in 1790 and worked as a printer for The Times as well as other papers.  In 1799 Howe was convicted at the Warwick assizes for shoplifting and sentenced to life and transportation.  On arrival in New South Wales in 1800 he was quickly appointed as Government Printer and published the paper, then known as The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser that had started in 1803.
          
“George Williams, his wife Mary and son Vincent arrived in Australia on the Broxbornebury in 1814.  Later he [Williams] reports he came with three sons.  On the ship he befriended a solicitor Jeffrey Hart Bent (1781-1852), Ellis’ older brother, who was born in Surrey England, and educated at Cambridge University. Jeffrey Bent was an arrogant man with great pomposity, who refused to leave the ship until he received a formal salute.  He was appointed as Judge of the first Supreme Court in New South Wales. He did not serve on the bench until a new Courthouse was constructed and he required the services of two attorneys to assist him.  He appointed George Williams as a Supreme Court Crier. Jeffrey Bent was committed to the exclusion of convict solicitors from attending the Courts and in one instance closed the court so that the convicts could not defeat him.  
         
“After his arrival in the Colony in 1814, Howe as the compositor for the newspaper hired George privately. Also on the same ship as George was a solicitor named William Moore, being one of the first non-convict lawyers, who also had the same idea as Jeffrey Bent, in that emancipist solicitors within the role of the Colony’s legal system should be restricted.  When Jeffrey Bent was given all the Colony’s civil action cases this further soured the relationship between Ellis Bent and Macquarie, and Macquarie terminated Ellis’ commission as Judge Advocate, but before Ellis received the formal letter from Britain, Ellis died (10 November 1815). 
          
“In 1816 Governor Macquarie was concerned about people trespassing at night on the Common and he ordered two constables to bring in anyone who ventured thereon.  Three people were caught that night, a convict, and two free settlers. Macquarie decided to set an example of them and ordered them to 25 lashes each. Wentworth (1790-1882) as Administrator and Judge for the Colony of New South Wales was upset that Macquarie was overriding the State’s jurisdiction, however since they were friends allowed the lashings to be enforced. Jeffrey Bent, like his brother was also passionate about segregating emancipist lawyers from the “British” lawyers and opposed the flogging of free settlers. William Moore took up a petition to send a memorial to England in relation to the punishment of free settlers without a trial (“Vale-Bent petition”) signed “PhiloFree”.  George Williams was thought to have signed the petition.  George was said to have refused to place an advertisement in the paper for “information wanted, reward etc.” on the signatories.  Campbell was reported as the architect of a letter that was compiled by George for the Sydney Gazette.  When Macquarie heard of this, and the implication that Campbell was involved he was angry and accused Moore of forging the signatures of the petitioners. Macquarie took his vengeance on those he could under his control and George as one of the purported signatories, was dismissed from his position at the Sydney Gazette. Likewise, Wentworth then also withheld several land grants from others who had signed the petition. "





From the State Library NSW Archive... first gazette...use your Zoom to read... they aren't very clear..

The first edition was printed on a wooden press. The page below was from a later edition..














Tuesday, 23 May 2017

TROVE TUESDAY 23rd May, 2017 - INTRODUCING 'DAISY O'DWYER OF TIPPERARY'






DAISY O'DWYER
born
 on 16 October 1863 in Tipperary, Ireland, 
daughter of James Edward O'Dwyer, gentleman, 
and his wife Marguarette, née Hunt.

'Her mother died in Daisy's infancy and she had an unstable childhood. On the death of her maternal grandmother she was put, aged about 8, in the care of Sir Francis Outram's family in London.'

 (Is she familiar to you? Perhaps a little more of her biography might help...)

'On the death of her maternal grandmother she was put, aged about 8, in the care of Sir Francis Outram's family in London.
Suspected of having contracted pulmonary tuberculosis, she migrated to Australia in 1884 and lived briefly at Townsville, Queensland, as a guest of Bishop G. H. Stanton. On 13 March 1884, at Charters Towers, Daisy May O'Dwyer married Edwin Henry Murrant. It is almost certain that this was Harry Harbord Morant. Shortly afterwards, he and Daisy separated. Late that year she was employed as a governess at Berry, New South Wales.'
  

Maybe just a little more...

On 17 February 1885 at Nowra she married Jack Bates, a cattleman. When he resumed droving she travelled to Sydney where, on 10 June 1885, she married Ernest Baglehole. Within months she was back with Bates; they had a son Arnold in 1886. She showed only a distant attachment to husband and son, leaving both in Australia when she returned to England in 1894 for what turned out to be a stay of five years. In London she worked on the Review of Reviews, learning the craft of journalism which was to become a crucial source of income when she lived with the Aboriginals.
Daisy Bates returned to Australia in 1899. Interested in an allegation in The Times about atrocities against Aboriginals in north-west Australia, she went to the Trappist mission at Beagle Bay, north of Broome. Here she had her first long contact with Aboriginals while working at this decaying settlement and its market gardens. '

 You can read a lot more about the energetic Daisy May Bates
here in her biography, though TROVE also has numerous articles...
I knew of her as grandmother or 'kabbarli' as Australian natives called her. I knew she was always working to improve their standards of living and health care, as I was taught in school, but not a lot more. These articles helped me to learn more.



West Australian (Perth, WA : 1879 - 1954), Friday 19 October 1934, page 24


nla.news-article52258038.3 Daisy Bates 1939




nla.news-article47243762.3 Daisy Bates 1940

Australian Women's Weekly (1933 - 1982), Saturday 28 September 1940, page 2



 Apologies for the awkwardness of the clippings positions...









1950



nla.news-article48196528.3 Daisy Bates 1951




nla.news-article48196528.3 1951


nla.news-article49026922.3  1952



Despite other memorials that were dedicated to Daisy O'Dwyer Bates, I somehow think that this one may have pleased her the most...


nla.news-article59684387.3 




You can find further information at 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daisy_Bates_(Australian_author)

From Wikipedia...
BornMargaret Dwyer
16 October 1859
RoscreaTipperary, Ireland
Died18 April 1951 (aged 91)
Adelaide, Australia
Resting placeNorth Road CemeteryNailsworth, South Australia
Other namesDaisy May O'Dwyer, Daisy May Bates
OccupationJournalist
Spouse(s)Harry Harbord 'Breaker' Morant, bigamous marriages to John (Jack) Bates and Ernest C. Baglehole
ChildrenArnold Hamilton Bates



North Road Cemetery, Nailsworth, S.A. 5083



undefined
Daisy Bates (centre, in the hat) with a group of Aboriginal women, circa 1911. PD-Australia as a photograph taken before 1 Jan 1955.
Courtesy of Wikimedia