Showing posts with label Jacob Pickard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacob Pickard. Show all posts

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