26 May 2026

The Confusion in the Crosbie records

Carved in Stone 

An old stone in the Symonds Street Cemetery, Auckland has several errors carved into its face. Those who paid for and placed it would no doubt have had the best of intentions, but their knowledge of the exact death dates was not always correct.

These errors were then added in to indexes by those who carefully transcribed what they saw on the stone. The errors in the death dates have multiplied across the databases.


The Crosbie Memorial stone in Symonds St, Cemetery, Auckland


Transcriptions in the Auckland Cemetery lists

The truth lies in the death announcements that appeared in the newspapers of the day.

David Crosbie a three times great grandfather of my husband had migrated to New Zealand shortly after his marriage to Barbara Clarke in 1840. There he had established a tailor’s business with his wife working alongside him as a milliner. He advertised fine coats for gentlemen, so one might suppose that he would be well dressed to promote his business.

In 1859 David Crosbie set off from Auckland on the Easter weekend with three friends. The first indication in the papers of the day, was a report on the 14th May reporting that one of the missing men had been found dead.
About a fortnight ago four men, named Messrs. Crosbie, Bartlet, Fisher, and Captain McLean, left here in a small boat for the purpose of going to Wangaproa and other places on the coast. Fisher, we believe, has since been found by the natives at Waiheki described as an elderly man, rather bald, and having a watch in his pocket. No news has been heard of the other three, we fear have suffered the same fate as Fisher. (1)
Just three days later another report appeared.
Body Found. — Information arrived in town yesterday that a body, supposed from the description of the dress to be that of Mr. D. Crosbie, had been picked up at Brown's Island. It was carried into the house erected on the island. (2)
These notices were posted in 1859 but the inscription on the stone is 1860. The stone commemorates his death, but has the wrong year. David’s death is not recorded in the official New Zealand Historical death records. The inquest into the deaths is detailed in this report.

The Tombstone erected by his daughters clearly has the date as 1860, hence the transcription into the Cemetery Records is a correct transcription but the year of death is 1859. 

It is likely that this stone was commissioned and erected after the death of the son-in-law Charles F Helander in 1893. His is the last death recorded on the stone before the words:
Erected by the Loving Daughters of the above David & Barbara Crosbie

Time may have erased the exact year of their father's death from their memories. 1893 when Charles died was 44 years after David's death and there was no official record to check. Their mother Barbara, had died in 1878 so she was no longer there to correct any misconceptions.



David and Barbara Crosbie had six children, five girls and just one boy. 

The second name on the stone is that of the eldest daughter Elizabeth. Here the stone clearly reads 24th October 1861.

The death record shows that also is incorrect. 
Elizabeth Crosbie in Auckland death register 24th October 1860

The son was given the name John Clarke Crosbie, his mother’s maiden name as his second name. His birth is recorded in 1853. His death is not recorded in the official New Zealand Historical death records either. Like his father, the son also drowned.

The carving on the stone clearly states July 1877.  His sisters all those years later must have been unsure of the year. Again the errors have spread across multiple databases. 

The record is here in the newspaper of the time, published on 26 July in 1871.
DEATH. Crosbie. -Drowned on 7th July, off Rangitoto Island, John Clarke, aged 18, only son of the late David Crosbie, of Auckland. (3)

The tombstones are not always correct, hence databases such as FindaGrave and Billion Graves records may help spread erroneous death dates.


1. Auckland Examiner, Volume III, Issue 159, 14 May 1859, Page 2

2. Daily Southern Cross, Volume XVI, Issue 1221, 17 May 1859, Page 3

3. Auckland Star, Volume II, Issue 481, 26 July 1871, Page 2
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18710726.2.8

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

30 April 2026

Z the Zumarry

Living in Kashmir: A Year of People, Places and Memories

Z for Zummary

AI generated by NotebookLM - summary of posts

What is a Zummary? Just a summary with a slight slur after a drink or two! 😀

Ask what remains of a year in Kashmir and the answer is small sturdy things. 
Two woollen rugs, still serving after forty-seven years and eleven house moves. 
Two papier mâché bells that come out from the Christmas box every December, glowing in their original colours. 
A silver bangle, still worn. 
Three matching sets of garnet, amethyst, and moonstone bracelets and earrings, each in silver, bought from the silversmith during long winter afternoons in Srinagar's bazaars. 
An olive-green medical kit turned storage box, a quiet relic of another era and some faded and water damaged photos now digitized. 
Some copper and brass trays and these stories, reconstructed from what memory held, and written down at last, they are here. A world that no longer exists as it was, but remembered by the two of us who lived it.

In case you missed a post, or just choose to revisit. 
Thanks to all who read my posts, and to those who commented, multiple thanks.


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

29 April 2026

The Year in Retrospect

Living in Kashmir 1979-80: A Year of People, Places and Memories 


Some events throughout that year that influenced our lives

Pre-Posting Events

Long before we set foot on Pakistani soil, the world had already begun to rearrange itself in ways that would strip away our carefully laid plans. We had been rather pleased with ourselves; truth be told. The scheme was elegant, fly to Germany, collect our newly ordered vehicle, and make the overland drive southward, through Iran, across to Pakistan, where we would spend our posting year before shipping the vehicle home to Sydney.

After twelve months back on Australian soil, it could be sold at a tidy profit, having neatly sidestepped the punishing import duties then levied on luxury cars. We were not alone in this thinking; it was a well-worn path among those posted abroad. 

Then history intervened, as it so often does, with indifference to our plans.

16 January 1979 – The Shah fled Iran
11 February 1979 – Revolutionary forces in Iran took control
14 February 1979 – In Kabul, Muslim extremists kidnapped the American ambassador to Afghanistan, Adolph Dubs, who was killed during a gunfight between his kidnappers and police

The road through Iran became first imprudent, then impossible, and finally unthinkable. The deposit was forfeited. The vehicle was cancelled. The grand drive south existed only as a might-have-been.

AI generated image in NotebookLM

After Arrival

We arrived in Pakistan instead by altogether more conventional means, stepping into a country that was itself poised on a knife's edge.

• 4 April 1979 – Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was executed by hanging

A period of confinement in Flashmans Hotel in Rawalpindi as riots took place in the streets.

• 11 July 1979 – NASA's first orbiting space station, Skylab, began falling back Earth as its orbit decayed after more than six years.

In Srinagar, word spread that Skylab was tumbling from the heavens, and the city shuttered itself for two anxious days, uncertain what, precisely, to expect from a falling space station.

• 4 November 1979 - militants seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran, beginning a hostage crisis.
• 21 November 1979 – After false radio reports from the Ayatollah Khomeini that the Americans had occupied the Grand Mosque in Mecca, the United States Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan was attacked by a mob and set fire, killing four.

UNMOGIP personnel could no longer visit the US Embassy cinema or bar for entertainment as security there was tightened.

• 28 November 1979
– An Air New Zealand DC-10 crashed into Mount Erebus in Antarctica on a sightseeing trip, killing all 257 people on board.

Two months later we were aboard a flight from Delhi to Srinagar when the pilot had aborted a landing on late finals, the aircraft pulling away sharply as the ground rose too close beneath us. The Erebus disaster gave that event a sharper edge than was possibly necessary.

• 24 December 1979 - The Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan.

The border closed. Kabul which we had imagined visiting, simply ceased to be accessible, sealed away behind the machinery of a new war.

In March of 1980, we departed with considerable relief, making our way home via Hong Kong. On our first night back in Sydney, we sat at Watsons Bay as the evening light softened over the harbour, a feast of seafood spread before us. The sky was clean and blue and startlingly clear. The streets were quiet and free of the particular odours that had become so familiar.

We enjoyed our food, looked out at the water, and we felt the relief of having come through it all. 

Finally, we were home.

AI generated by NotebookLM


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