Category Archives: Family History

Jim and Elsie’s 1978 Tour – Day 5

Wednesday 5 April 1978

Fine, cloudless, warm

Picked up at hotel at 7.00 am. We had peaches, bread roll and tea (boiled the billy) in the room as the dining room does not start to serve breakfast until 7.

Visit to Argolis and the Corinth Canal – Huge rock excavation joining Gulf of Corinth & Aegeon.

Corinth Canal

Corinth

Excavating at Corinth

 

Old town of Corinth – rebuilt in Roman times – photos of temple, ruins, present day excavations.

 

 

Mycenau

The Lion Gate at Mycenau

Mycenae – ruins back to 15th century BC. Imposing entrance gate – Lion Gate – facade on heavy stone lintel above the gate. Triangle used to take the weight off the lintel. Huge rocks used to make the wall.

 

 

Lunch at Nafplio in hotel on hill overlooking the Aegean.

Amphitheatre at Epidaurus

Ancient theatre of Epidaurus. Vast amphitheatre that seats 5000. If a coin is dropped on centre stage it can be heard quite clearly up at the top row. The stone on the seats channelled so that the seat is up about 1” to 1½” above the rest. Very impressive sight.

Late tea – 331dr ($8.25)

Jim and Elsie’s 1978 Tour – Day 4

Tuesday, 4 April 1978

Cloudy, cool, some showers

Morning tour – picked up by bus.

Drove past Houses of Parliament – Tomb of Unknown Soldier (2 ceremonial guards) to the Acropolis (highest hill in a city), Propylaea (entrance building) and Temple of Wingless Victory.

Soldiers on guard outside Parliament House

View from the Acropolis

Tourist buses parked at the Acropolis

 

 

 

 

 

[Travelled] on to the Parthenon. The size of the Parthenon is staggering. Some restoration work going on. Marble brought from the hills some distance away.

Elsie (centre, front) at the Parthenon

The Parthenon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Afternoon walked to Flea Market area. A maze of small lanes, small shops stacked with all types of goods. One fellow had a downstairs shop. He had been in Victoria 20 years – married a girl from Albury [New South Wales]. Came back here to live 18 months ago. His father wanted him to come back to run his business. He said wages very low and conditions not so good. No place like Australia. He was a true salesman. Elsie bought a blouse.

Visited a Greek Orthodox Church just before 6 pm and service started. Elsie told she was not permitted to sit with her knees crossed.

Jim and Elsie’s 1978 Tour – Day 3

Monday, 3 April 1978

Cool to cold – heavy, overcast

George Stergiopoulos (Sunny Way Tours) arranged the vouchers for our trips. Had checked the hotel to find out where we were as he had a different arrival date. Very obliging.

Afternoon tour of city. Bus picked us up at the hotel and we toured around to other hotels making pickups. The driver was expert in the heavy traffic and narrow streets. Most of the streets are one way.

Jim (centre) – Temple of Poseidon

Elsie – Temple of Poseidon

Afternoon tour to Cape Sounion. Drive along the coast road past summer houses. Athen’s temperature 35o to 48o in summer so some people have a house by the sea. All styles of houses the same. No painting, no gardens, dirty looking.

Visited the Temple of Poseidon. Windy and cold.

Jim and Elsie’s 1978 Tour – Day 2

Sunday, 2 April 1978

Taxi [from airport] to Athens – 120 drachma. Battered Mercedes. Cloudy and cold – 15oC.

Walked to [National] Gardens as room not yet ready. All the men in dark suits. No women about. Traffic very noisy. Had roast chestnuts. Wit [Elsie] received hot change. Walked through Gardens area, Exhibition Hall, ruins of Temple of [Olympian] Zeus.

Titania Hotel, Athens

Back to Titania Hotel about 12. Excellent room in front overlooking the main street. Looked for a restaurant. Went to Floka’s. Swordfish shish kebab, Greek salad and tea [350dr]. Crepe Suzette [200dr]. Grossly overpriced.

Porter had lived in Bristol Road, Hurstville 2 years ago.

Elsie flaked out about 4.15 (and slept til next morning). I had a couple of hours sleep.

Walked around Omonia Square and subway. Lots of eating snack places. Men everywhere, no women. In the underground, men standing in groups with one person dominating the loud conversation. The place was a hive of activity. Men with small wheeled carts selling books, nuts, tapes, drinks. I tried a plate of chips, minced hamburger steak and frankfurt.

View from hotel toward Omonia Square

Another view from hotel to Omonia Square, Athens

Jim and Elsie’s 1978 Tour – Day 1

In 1978 one of our uncles, Jim, was eligible to take accrued long service leave and on Saturday, 1 April 1978, Jim and his wife Elsie took off on what would become their overseas trip of a lifetime.

Jim kept a diary of the holiday and wrote that the flight was: Very smooth all the way. Arrived in Athens 7.45 am (2.45 Sydney time) – Elapsed time 22 hours.

Leaving Sydney Airport at 4.45 pm – in a Qantas DC10 – they travelled seven hours to Singapore (hot, humid, a hive of activity – 28oC – snack and dinner [provided on the flight]), followed by seven hours to Bahrain (snack and breakfast), and then four hours to Athens (breakfast).

We lost Jim in 1988. We lost Elsie in 2017.

As a tribute to their memory I thought it would be nice to reproduce – day-by-day –Jim’s diary and photos of their holiday over the coming weeks. Starting tomorrow you can follow their arrival in Athens and travel along with them as they explore Greece, Belgium, Germany, Sweden, Italy, Switzerland, France, Russia, Denmark, Norway, Scotland, Wales and England.

Make sure you check back each day to follow their journey and click on hyperlinked words for fascinating descriptions of the places they visited.

England to Australia – via New Zealand?

It was during a holiday to New Zealand in 2006 that I found myself in the vicinity of the Wellington branch of Archives New Zealand. Deciding I couldn’t pass up this opportunity, I wandered inside and thought I would just have a quick look at their various card indexes for any family surnames – including Wintle.

James Wintle married Margaret Hamilton Forsyth at Hartley Vale, New South Wales on 26 January 1889. James had been born at Abinghall, Gloucestershire, England on 8 August 1858 and for years I had struggled to find his arrival in New South Wales. Also living at Hartley Vale was James’s older brother John, who had been baptised at Abinghall on 7 January 1855. Abinghall is one of the beautiful villages of the Forest of Dean.

But back to James and Margaret. Following the birth of their first child in 1891, the new family moved to Waihi on the North Island of New Zealand.  Armed with this knowledge, I thought I would see if I could locate their date of arrival in New Zealand – post-1891 – by perusing  the card index for passengers arriving held at the Wellington archives office. Instead, I found something that had eluded me for years. James and John Wintle had actually arrived in New Zealand from England in 1877 per the Rangitikei as government assisted immigrants. No wonder I couldn’t find their arrival in Australia – I had been searching the Sydney passenger arrival lists from England NOT New Zealand!

Photograph of a painting depicting the Rangitiki. Kinnear, James Hutchings, 1877-1946 :Negatives of Auckland shipping, boating and scenery. Ref: 1/2-015976-B-G. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. http://natlib.govt.nz/records/22495523

Photograph of a painting depicting the Rangitiki. Kinnear, James Hutchings, 1877-1946 :Negatives of Auckland shipping, boating and scenery. Ref: 1/2-015976-B-G. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. http://natlib.govt.nz/records/22495523

The ultimate cost to the New Zealand government for the passage of James and John was £13/11/6 each with the brothers declaring they were a bricklayer’s labourer and a farm labourer respectively. The brothers, however, went on to a life of mining. And, unfortunately, we will never know the reason why James and John chose to travel to Hartley Vale from New Zealand – or why James eventually returned  to New Zealand, with his wife and child, but John remained in New South Wales.

Shipping Report for the Rangitikei - The Star, 10 Nov 1877, p2 https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS18771110.2.3.2?query=rangitikei

Shipping Report for the Rangitikei – The Star, 10 Nov 1877, p2 https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS18771110.2.3.2?query=rangitikei

Family Finder DNA

Several years ago I undertook a mtDNA test and, honestly, I am still not any wiser at understanding the results. However, recently, I upgraded my test sample and today I received my Family Finder results from FamilyTreeDNA.

Interesting to read that I am 56% Scandinavian, 41% Western and Central European and only 3% British.

JF ethnic makeup

The bulk of my ancestry that I have traced back to the 17th and 18th Centuries is made up from Scotland, Ireland, and England with a very small percentage from the Hessen district in Germany so I have no idea why the Scandinavian and Western and Central European figures are so high.

I now need to track down a simplified guide to DNA so I can sit back and study these new results.

 

 

Nancy’s Lemon Meringue Pie

Nancy Casey (nee Dempsey) was renowned for her lemon meringue pies and this recipe comes from her handwritten recipe book

1 can condensed milk
1/2 cup lemon juice
grated rind of 1 lemon
2 eggs separated
2 tbsp granulated sugar
baked pie shell

Blend together condensed milk, lemon juice, grated rind and egg yolks.
Pour into baked pie shell.
Cover with meringue made from egg whites.
Bake in moderate oven 10 minutes or until brown.

Slice of lemon meringue pie on wooden cutting board

Photo source: Depositphotos.com

Annie Edenborough

Annie Edenborough was born on 16 July 1888 at Paddington, New South Wales, the fourth of eight children born to Edwin and Teresa Edenborough (nee Persiani).

Annie’s paternal grandfather was Arthur Edenborough who worked for many years as a tidewaiter for the New South Wales Customs Department, an occupation that was to see him forcibly carried away aboard an American vessel, the Emerald Isle, in January 1851. He was finally released in Honolulu, and with the help of the British Consul there, was returned back to Sydney via New Zealand in June 1851.

Annie’s maternal grandfather, Peter Persiani, was also involved with seafaring: family lore being that he was a sea captain who went down with his ship! He certainly disappeared after his daughter Teresa (Annie’s mother) was born in Sydney in 1862 but whether he perished at sea or deserted his family remains a mystery.

Prior to marriage, Annie Edenborough remained at home assisting her mother with younger children and other domestic duties required in a large household instead of obtaining a profession for herself. She eventually met and married James Dempsey at Paddington, New South Wales, in 1910.

James Dempsey and Annie Edenborough on their wedding day

James Dempsey and Annie Edenborough on their wedding day

Throughout their courtship, James sent many beautiful greeting cards to Annie and, as was the common practice of the day, Annie faithfully stored them in a postcard album that had been an eighteenth birthday present to her from her older sister Jessie and Jessie’s husband, Frank Booth.

Annie & James Dempsey at Taylors Bay, Sydney

Annie & James Dempsey at Taylors Bay, Sydney

Catherine Medway (née Dempsey)

Catherine Medway, (nee Dempsey)

Catherine Medway, (nee Dempsey)

Catherine, the eldest known child of James and Jane Dempsey, married Henry Robinson, a mariner of Sydney, at her father’s residence, Clarence Street, Sydney on 12 December 1849.1 Catherine’s brother James acted as one of the witnesses.

Register of marriage for Catherine Dempsey and Henry Robinson, 12 Dec 1849. [NSW Registry of BDMs Entry 226/1849 ]

Register of marriage for Catherine Dempsey and Henry Robinson, 12 December 1849.

A little more than a year later, Catherine and Henry’s only child, Henry Jnr, was born at Balmain on 18 January 1851.2 However, in June 1851, the news that gold had been discovered on the Turon was announced, and like so many other men, Henry Robinson, took to the goldfields to make his fortune.

Henry had been mildly successful fossicking at Golden Point when disaster struck in December 1851. While working at Golden Point a freak storm hit the Turon causing flash flooding and resulting in the loss of Henry’s life.

THE FLOOD AND LOSS OF LIFE ON THE TURON

Erskine Point, December 19: Yesterday afternoon we were visited with a storm of no ordinary description … it appears that a large quantity of rain must have fallen on the mountains in a very short space of time, and more particularly on those from whence the waters are conducted by gullies and tributary streams into Oakey and Little Oakey Creeks., so sudden and unexpected was the rush of waters down these places, a considerable loss to the miners, and I am sorry to say loss of life, was the result … a Captain Robinson (who formerly had command of one of the Sydney coasters), and two other men, were at in a tunnel on Little Oakey Creek, about a quarter of a mile from its junction with the Turon River, when the waters rushed in upon them before they could make their escape. It appears that Captain Robinson was carried by the stream to the junction, and from thence about 500 yards down the Turon River … his body was taken from the water in a dreadfully bruised condition from coming in contact with the trunks of the trees, rocks, &c., &c., no part of his clothing remaining except a leather belt; he was Immediately carried into a tent occupied by the miners in the employ of Messrs. Trappitt and Co., and every means was used by two medical men to restore life, but without success.3

Henry’s body was interred in the grounds of the Episcopalian burial grounds at Sofala.4

 

Grave of Henry Robinson, Sofala, NSW

Grave of Henry Robinson, Sofala, NSW

Catherine eventually remarried but not for 31 years – at the age of 60, Catherine married Matthew Medway, a widower. The marriage was performed on 9 December 1882, at Medway’s residence in Laura Street, Newtown.5 Medway’s daughter Elizabeth and her husband Rowland Pawley were witnesses to the marriage.

Matthew Medway, a builder by trade, was an Alderman of Newtown Municipal Council from 1886 until his death in 1892. He is buried with his first wife, Elizabeth, and their daughter in the Church of England section of Rookwood Cemetery.

Catherine Medway (née Dempsey) died from cancer of the liver four years after her husband Matthew on 9 December 1896,6 and is buried in the old Wesleyan section of Rookwood Cemetery with her mother and father – James and Jane Dempsey.

Handwritten will of Catherine Medway (nee Dempsey) dated 11 December 1895

Handwritten will of Catherine Medway (nee Dempsey) dated 11 December 1895

1 NSW Registry of BDM 1849 V84 No. 226
2 NSW Registry of BDM 1851 V56 No. 195
3 Sydney Morning Herald, Tuesday, December 23, 1851, p2
4 Baker, RGV. The Second Rush: A Story of the Second Goldrush to Sofala in 1851, 1986, Centre Pak Research, Cronulla, p19
5 NSW Registry of BDM 1882 No. 2622
6 NSW Registry of BDM 1896 No. 15252