Archive for December, 2007

War Service

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

James Edward Courbarron, my Great Uncle, served in the AIF, 15th Battalion A Company.

Regimental number 122
Unit name 15th Battalion, A Company
AWM Embarkation Roll number 23/32/1

He was 24 at the time of enlistment and returned to Australia on December 14th 1918. He married Agnes and had a son, John Courbarron who died 1996.

His brother, Frederick, enlisted at the age of 15 in the AIF in 1915. He served at the Gallipolli Landing on 25th April 1915. He was discharged due to to effects of gassing. He lived in Brunswick Heads and died in 1983. Freddies wife, Mary Ellen, died in 1963 at Brunswick Heads.

Copyright 2007-2008 by Hamilton Family History. All rights reserved.

Popularity: 19% [?]

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Hennessy

Monday, December 10th, 2007

My great great grandmother, Margaret Hennessy, was born at Kurrajong NSW, on the 15th August 1854.

She was the daughter of : Micheal Hennessy - born 1807 in Tullow, Cork, Ireland; and Hannah Sherwood, born 18th January 1818 in North Richmond, NSW. The couple married at St Peter’s Catholic Church, Richmond NSW, on the 14th December 1836. I have no data at all on Hannah Sherwood and her family for now, other than what is listed here.

Micheal Hennessy was born in the small village of Tullow, Co. Cork Ireland. His mother Bridget, ran a boarding house, his father, Andrew, died when Micheal was a small child. When Micheal was 25 an incident occurred which was to change his life forever.

A guest at the boarding house reported a theft of his money and pointed the finger at Micheal and his mother Bridget. When police called to investigate Micheal was found to have been caught in a room of the house ‘in a compromising position with a woman of rather advanced years’. The case was well reported in the local paper.

Micheal was tried, found guilty (he professed his innocence throughout) and sentenced to transportation to the colony of Australia as a convict. His mother escaped with ‘a warning and bond’.

Micheal Hennessy is the first of my ancestors that I have found to be a convict. He was given his certificate of freedom in 1835 and chose to settle in the bushland region of Kurrajong in western Sydney. It was in this area that he met Hannah Sherwood, who had been born in nearby North Richmond. The couple married on the 14th December 1836 at Richmond. Both were Catholics.

Their children were:

Thomas - born 23rd December 1837; William - born 12th July 1840; Sarah - born 1841; Mary - born 18th May 1845; Hannah - born 1846; Johanna - born August 1847; Micheal - born 24th October 1849; Ellen - born 1st April 1852; Margaret (my gg grandmother) - born 15th August 1854; John - born 1856, and Ann - born 25th June 1859.

My GGG Grandfather Micheal Hennessy died on 11th April 1859, just prior to his youngest child’s birth. He is buried at St Gregory’s RC Cemetery Windsor, NSW.

Hannah Sherwood died 30th July 1884 at Orange, NSW.

My gg grandmother, Margaret, died 1934 at Willoughby, NSW.

Here is a photograph of one of the very last convicts transported to Australia, taken in the 1870’s. Just to give you an idea of how Micheal would have appeared during his time as one of Her Majesty’s Convicts.

Copyright 2007-2008 by Hamilton Family History. All rights reserved.

Popularity: 42% [?]

Butler - Hennessy

Monday, December 10th, 2007

My Great Grandmother, Emily Maud Mary Butler, was born at Geroge Street Newtown, Sydney, to parents William Butler and Margaret Hennessy on the 3rd March 1885. Her parents were William Butler and Margaret Hennessey; at the time of Emily’s birth William was 22 and Margaret 26.

William Butler was born 1862 at Windsor, NSW, Margaret was born 1858 at Kurrajong (near Windsor). The couple married at Petersham, Sydney, on the 24th February 1883.

I cannot write much about my Butler ancestors at the moment as Mum says her grandfather’s family were all quite old when she was a little girl. She has told me that they did live around Rookwood in Sydney and William’s brother Thomas was a gravedigger at the cemetery there.

William Butler, at the time of his marriage was working as a brickmaker and later served in the Bushmens Contingent with the newly formed Australian Regiment in the Boer War in South Africa in 1899-1901. He had a whistle that the infantrymen used and that is now in the possession of my cousin. William Butler’s army uniform and medals from his Boer War service were eventually donated by his family to the Australian War Memorial Museum in Canberra. He worked in his later years at a tannery in Chatswood.

The historic town of Windsor, NSW Australia.

The NSW Bushmens Contingent: served in the Transvaal Boer War.

Copyright 2007-2008 by Hamilton Family History. All rights reserved.

Popularity: 48% [?]