3 April 2025

Collect and Collate


This series of posts focuses on an A-Z theme for April in 2025. I have chosen events that occurred On This Day in April of years in the past. These events are recorded in my genealogy database.

C- Collect and Collate

I collect as many facts as possible for each person - births, marriages, membership of organisations, any census data and so much more to build a picture of a person's life. At times information is limited to the newspapers of the day. There are sometimes surprises when a known person from the past turns out to be a relation. Sr M Stanislaus was one of those surprises.

On this day - April 3

1907 - Marriage: Thomas Benjamin COCKSHELL and Catherine Frances (Kitty) O'DEA

COCKSHELL—O'DEA.—On the 3rd April, at St. Michael's and St. John's Church, Terowie, by the
Rev. W. Doyle, Thomas B. Cockshell, of Broken Hill, to Catherine F., second daughter of T.
O'Dea, Terowie
1907 'Family Notices', The Express and Telegraph (Adelaide, SA : 1867 - 1922), 23 April, p. 1. (4 o'clock.), viewed 02 Jan 2025, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article208908730

Kitty O'Dea as she was known, a 2nd cousin once removed, was the fifth child born to Thomas and Margaret O'Dea in Terowie, South Australia. Two of her older siblings had died as babies. Three more children were born after Kitty. Thomas, a younger brother only lived for 4 days, so Kitty grew up with four siblings. 
When she married in 1907 Kitty was 23. The Catholic Church in Terowie had originally been built as a Wesleyan place of worship in 1877 but in 1882 was sold to the Catholics when the Wesleyans built a new church.
 
St. Michael and St. John Catholic Church, Terowie
Thomas and Kitty had five children but the two baby girls died in their infancy leaving three boys. In 1939 Kitty, her husband and the two older boys were all still living at Terowie.
Kitty died in 1959, her husband Thomas had predeceased her in 1945. They are both buried in the Terowie Cemetery.
**********************
1907 - Johanna Horgan - Reception into the Dominican Order as Sister Mary Stanislaus
Johanna Horgan, a first cousin twice removed, was born in 1883. She was the sixth child of eight born to Thomas Horgan and Mary Carroll. Johanna's family were devout Catholics who lived at Manoora in South Australia. Johanna was named after her grandmother Johanna, who had brought her father and his two brothers John and Daniel to South Australia in 1852.
When she joined the Dominican nuns in April 1907, Johanna took the religious name Stanislaus. Eighteen months later she took her final vows.
The impressive ceremony of the reception into the Dominican Order of three young ladies took place at St. Mary's, Cabra, on Wednesday, April 3. The Right Rev. Monsignor Byrne, V.G., assisted by the Very Rev. Archpriest Nevin, presided. The names of the young ladies received are Miss Kinnane, in. religion Sister M. Francis; Miss Horgan (Sister M. Stanislaus); and Miss Ryan (sister of Rev. J. Ryan, Snowtown), of Limerick, Ireland, in religion Sister M Vincent de Paul.
During my years at Cabra Convent in Adelaide in the late 1960s, we viewed her as a very old nun, but I had no idea she was related to me on my paternal side. After many years of teaching, Mother Stanislaus as she was then known, died at age 94 in January 1978.
1907 'Reception at Cabra Convent.', Southern Cross (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1954), 12 April, p. 11. , viewed 02 Jan 2025, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article167038162

1908 'Profession at Cabra.', Southern Cross (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1954), 23 October, p. 11. , viewed 02 Jan 2025, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article166973318


This post first appeared on earlieryears.blogspot.com by CRGalvin

2 April 2025

The building blocks


This series of posts focuses on an A-Z theme for April in 2025. I have chosen events that occurred On This Day in April of years in the past. These events are recorded in my genealogy database.

B - The building blocks of genealogical research 

Throughout this series there will be many births, deaths and marriages, the building blocks of genealogical research. Immigration, marriage and residence records provide additional details. 

On this day - April 2

1855 - Immigration: Lucy Elizabeth JAMES, Launceston, Tasmania, Australia - my children's 3x gt. grandmother

Lucy Elizabeth James was 8 years old when she arrived in Tasmania on the ship "Whirlwind" with her parents and 2 sisters and a brother on April 2nd 1855. 
The James family had migrated from England. Lucy's parents, Jacob James and Lucy Statham are my husband's 3x gt-grandparents on his maternal side. They had paid $82 for the passage on the ship in steerage conditions. 

It had been a stressful journey, first leaving London in January but delayed by sickness and deaths, the passengers suffered from scarlatina. Many deaths were recorded in newspaper reports. The ship finally left Plymouth and arrived in Launceston on April 2nd but the passengers did not disembark until April 5.

Two more children were born to Lucy's parents in Launceston, Walter in 1856 and Ellen in 1858. By 1860 Lucy's parents moved their family to New Zealand, where land was gradually being released for white settlement.  Another child Alfred was born in 1860 in New Zealand. 

Lucy’s first marriage

Lucy may have remained in Launceston, perhaps by then she had paid work. Here her marriage to Jacob Pickford is recorded in Launceston, Tasmania in 1863. Lucy is recorded as being 17 years old with Jacob eight years older than her.


12 Dec 1863 marriage of Lucy James and Jacob Pickford
https://libraries.tas.gov.au/Digital/RGD37-1-22/RGD37-1-22P267

By 1866 Lucy was in New Zealand where her first daughter Amy Ada Pickford was born in August.
The Pickford marriage must have been short lived as she was soon reunited with her parents.

Lucy’s second marriage 

By 1864 Hokitika had become a centre for those who flocked to the New Zealand West Coast goldrush. It was there in Hokitika that Lucy (now Pickford) married Cornelius Gothard on 2 March 1869. 

Cornelius Gothard at age 18 and his brother Ebenezer, who was 3 years older, had arrived in Victoria in 1857. Ebenezer established a butcher's shop at Kyneton in Victoria. After it was sold he advertised a grand opening for the Albion Hotel in Taradale, Victoria in 1862.  By January 1863 the hotel was advertised for sale.  Like many others, the brothers migrated across to New Zealand. In 1870 they dissolved a partnership in Nelson, where they had been  butchers together since 1867.

Adelaide Gothard's  birth to Cornelius and Lucy in August 1869 was just a few months after their marriage in March of that year. Four more girls were born to the couple in the next few years. Maud my children’s 2x gt grandmother, in 1871, Eva in 1872, Cornelia in 1874 and Jane in 1875.

Tragedy struck in 1877 when Lucy died leaving behind six girls under the age of 11.
This notice appeared in the Grey River Argus on 24 July 1877.

A report of the funeral funeral details appeared in the Inangahua Times on the 25 July : 

The remains of Mrs C. Gothard were interred in the Reefton cemetery yesterday afternoon. The funeral moved at 4 o'olock) and was very numerously attended. The members of the Loyal Reefton Lodge of Oddfellows attended in mourning regalia and marched to the place of burial. The burial service was performed by the Bishop of Nelson, assisted by the Rev. Mr Rutherford.

Line of descent to Galvin from Lucy James



1855 'MISCELLANEOUS.', 
Launceston Examiner (Tas. : 1842 - 1899), 3 April, p. 2. (AFTERNOON), viewed 02 Jan 2025, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article36292212 

1860 'Advertising', The Kyneton Observer (Vic. : 1856 - 1900), 27 December, p. 5. , viewed 02 Jan 2025, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article240850851 

1862 'Advertising', Mount Alexander Mail (Vic. : 1854 - 1917), 6 June, p. 1. , viewed 02 Jan 2025, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197094168

1863 'Advertising', Mount Alexander Mail (Vic. : 1854 - 1917), 13 January, p. 3. , viewed 02 Jan 2025, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article200379640

1877 Inangahua Times, Volume IV, Issue 46, 25 July, Page 2 

This post first appeared on earlieryears.blogspot.com by CRGalvin

1 April 2025

Associate names and places


This series of posts focuses on an A-Z theme for April in 2025. I have chosen events that occurred On This Day in April of years in the past. These events are recorded in my genealogy database.

A - Associate Names and Places

Many of my relatives lived and died in a small area within South Australia. When researching family history, one way to bring ancestors to life is by connecting their names to the places they lived. Streets, towns, and landmarks that may seem ordinary today were once the backdrop of their daily lives, shaping their experiences and stories. Here we have Minnie from Freeling, and Margaret who lived in Riverton and was buried in the local Catholic cemetery.

Lower mid-north, South Australia

On this day - April 1

Birth 1922 - Minnie Patricia MEANEY 2nd cousin once removed 

Minnie was the eleventh child born to Catherine Peters and Thomas John Meaney near Freeling in South Australia. Freeling in 1922 was still a small town with the surrounding farms growing mainly cereal crops, wheat, oats and barley.

On October 24, 1946 at age 24 she married Michael Collins. 

MEANEY—COLLINS.—The marriage of Minnie Patricia, youngest daughter of Mr. T. J. and the late Mrs. Meaney, of Freeling, to Michael Francis, youngest son of Mrs. E. and the late Mr. D. Collins, of Mallala, will be solemnised with Nuptial Mass at St. Peter and Paul's Church, North Adelaide on Thursday October 24, at 3 pm.
1946 'Family Notices', The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954), 24 October, p. 16   http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article35762902 


Death 1992 - Death: Margaret Mary CALLERY 1st cousin once removed

Margaret Mary Callery was the second child of five born to Catherine Smyth and John Callery in Riverton in December 1901. Her mother died of acute meningitis before her ninth birthday leaving John with five young children. The youngest was only five months old. 
When Margaret’s eldest sister Ann became a nun in 1924 it would have been up to Margaret as the next eldest daughter to take responsibility for the household. Her brother Edward married in 1926 then her father died in 1928. By 1941 her two younger sisters had married Shanahan brothers. 
In 1950 when she was 48 she married Donald Bascombe. They were to have 34 years together.

CALLERY — BASCOMBE. — The marriage of Margaret Mary Callery, second daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Callery, of Riverton, to Donald Allan Bascombe, second son of Mrs. and the late Mr. James Bascombe, of Streaky Bay, will be solemnised at Sacred Heart Church, Hindmarsh, on April 17, at 9 a.m. Reception at Berkley Hotel.
1950 'Family Notices', The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954), 8 April, p. 24.  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article50201944

Donald died in 1984. After her death on 1 April 1992, she was buried alongside him in the Navan Cemetery near Riverton.

Tombstone in Navan Catholic Cemetery

The Callery Family



This post first appeared on earlieryears.blogspot.com by CRGalvin

Collect and Collate

This series of posts focuses on an A-Z theme for April in 2025. I have chosen events that occurred On This Day in April of years in the pas...