Showing posts with label Stereographs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stereographs. Show all posts

Prisoner George CHARLTON, photo by T. J. Nevin, September 1874

Thomas J. NEVIN's photography: a prisoner mugshot and a New Town stereograph
George CHARLTON, prison records, aliases and monikers
SIMS' Excelsior coal mine, Kangaroo Valley, Hobart, Tasmania

The Mugshot
Prisoner George Charlton, photographed by T. J. Nevin, Hobart Gaol, September 1874.



Prisoner CHARLTON, George
TMAG Ref: Q15571
Photographer: Thomas J. Nevin
Date and Location: Hobart Gaol, September 1874.

The numbering on recto "58" was applied in 1983 when this cdv was removed from the Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery (QVMAG), Launceston, together with another three hundred or more 1870s mugshots taken at the Hobart Gaol by government contractor Thomas J. Nevin which were acquired by the QVMAG as part of the bequest from the estate of convictarian John Watt Beattie in the 1930s. When they were removed from Beattie's collection and taken down to the Port Arthur prison heritage site for an exhibition as part of the Port Arthur Conservation Project in 1983, they were not returned to the QVMAG. They were deposited instead at the TMAG where this cdv is currently held .



Verso of cdv of prisoner CHARLTON, George
TMAG Ref: Q15571
Photographer: Thomas J. Nevin
Date and Location: Hobart Gaol, September 1874.

The verso information is incorrect. George Charlton was not photographed at the Port Arthur prison in 1874, he was photographed in the week ending 14th September 1874 on discharge from the Hobart Gaol by government contractor and professional photographer Thomas J. Nevin.

Police and Court Records
George Charlton aliases, monikers and misspellings:
George Charletan, Geordie, John Scott, George Chilton



6th July 1844
Convict transport Blundell arrived Hobart 6 July 1844
Charlton, George
Record Type: Convicts
Ship: Blundell
Place of origin: Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland
Origin location: Latitude and Longitude
Voyage number: 365
Index number: 11912
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1380271

3rd June 1858
Charlton, George
Record Type: Court
Status: Ticket of leave
Trial date: 3 Jun 1858
Place of trial: Hobart town
Offense: Burglary in the dwelling of Martha Wilcox with intent to steal
Verdict: Guilty
Prosecutions Project ID: 100095
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1504770

31st January 1868

TRANSCRIPTS
HAMILTON.-On the 29th instant, by J. F. Sharland, Esquire,
J.P., for the arrest of George Charletan [sic], per Blundell,
charged with house-breaking, and stealing £26 (since
recovered) the moneys of Mrs. Smith, Ouse.
Description.
50 or 52 years old, 5 feet 1 or 2 inches high , brown to
grey hair, light complexion, bald, wore a new black
billy-cock hat, brown vest (new), old brownish trousers,
striped jumper, and blucher boots, slight made, a miner,
an Englishman. He is likely to make for the coal
mines at New Town
, where he formerly worked. He
was convicted 10 years ago for a similar offence at Mrs.
Williams's. See Crime Report of the 27th October, 1865,
page 174, prisoners discharged.( Tasmania Reports of Crime, 31 Jan 1868, p. 16)

14th February 1868
Vide Crime Report of the 31st ultimo, page 16. Referring to George Charletan charged with housebreaking, &c. He is likely to get on one of the crafts trading from Hobart Town to the Huon. He is known as Geordie. A Reward is offered for his arrest if effected within two months from the 5th instant.(Tasmania Reports of Crime, 14 Feb 1868, p. 24)

7th August 1868
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION.
Vide Crime Report of the 31st January 1868, page 16.
Referring to George Charletan charged with housebreaking, he left the service of Mr. Kermode about a month ago, having been employed as cook to the Mechanics under the name of John Scott. He wore Bedford-cord trousers and a long blackcoat. Was heard of at Campbell Town about a fortnight ago. (Tasmania Reports of Crime, 7 Aug 1868, p. 124)

14th August 1868
Vide Crime Report of the 31st January, 14th February, and the 7th instant, pages 16, 25, and 124. George Charletan has been arrested by Sub-Inspector Stevens, of the Campbell Town Municipal Police. Vide Crime Report of the 17th April, 1868, page 60. (Tasmania Reports of Crime, 7 Aug 1868, p. 128)
15th September 1868
Trial id: 110237
Name: GEORGE CHARLTON
Sex of offender: MALE
First offence for which indicted: LARCENY IN A DWELLING HOUSE
Date of trial: 1868-09-15
Location of trial: HOBART TOWN
Judge: FLEMING
Verdict first offence: GUILTY
Sentence: 8 YEARS
Source: Prosecution Project
https://prosecutionproject.griffith.edu.au/



Conduct register - Port Arthur
Item Number:CON94/1/1
Start Date:01 Jan 1868
End Date:31 Dec 1869
Source: Archives Office Tasmania Ref: CON94-1-1_00004_L

George Charlton's name was misspelt as CHILTON, George per Blundell (folio 6) on this index to the Conduct Register, Port Arthur, 1868-1869, though correct on his record of payments while serving time at the Port Arthur prison, arriving there on 30th September 1868, sentenced to eight years, discharged on 14 September 1874.



George Charlton, CON94-1-1 Image 29
Conduct register - Port Arthur
Item Number:CON94/1/1
Start Date:01 Jan 1868
End Date:31 Dec 1869
Source: Archives Office Tasmania

16th October 1877



TRANSCRIPT:
GLENORCHY POLICE COURT.-Mr. Harry Gordon writes complaining that in our report of the last sitting of the Police Court at Glenorchy, a man named Charlton, charged with using bad language, was described as being a lodger in his house. Mr. Gordon says that he does not keep a lodging-house, and that Charlton was a farm servant employed by him.
Source: The Mercury (Hobart, Tas.) Tue 16 Oct 1877 Page 2

Coal Mines at New Town (Tasmania)
George Charlton had worked in the New Town coal mines in the 1860s, located at Kangaroo Valley, Hobart (now Lenah Valley), Tasmania, and was thought to make his way there again when he was sought for housebreaking and stealing at Ouse in January 1868. He may well have encountered Thomas J. Nevin in the vicinity while acting as guide and photographer for visiting tourist groups to the Lady Franklin Museum.



TRANSCRIPT:
HAMILTON.-On the 29th instant, by J. F. Sharland, Esquire,
J.P., for the arrest of George Charletan [sic], per Blundell,
charged with house-breaking, and stealing £26 (since
recovered) the moneys of Mrs. Smith, Ouse.
Description.
50 or 52 years old, 5 feet 1 or 2 inches high , brown to
grey hair, light complexion, bald, wore a new black
billy-cock hat, brown vest (new), old brownish trousers,
striped jumper, and blucher boots, slight made, a miner,
an Englishman. He is likely to make for the coal
mines at New Town
, where he formerly worked. He
was convicted 10 years ago for a similar offence at Mrs.
Williams's. See Crime Report of the 27th October, 1865,
page 174, prisoners discharged.

Source: Tasmania Reports of Crime for Police
31st January 1868, p.16

Sims' Excelsior Coal Mine
Thomas J. Nevin offered more than just photographic services from his studio at 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart from 1868 to 1876 while operating as both a commercial photographer and government contractor. He organised events on the social committees of the Benevolent Society and the Loyal Odd Fellow's Lodge, and acted as the city agent for several businesses such as Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine, Kangaroo Valley, New Town . He took orders at his studio for coal deliveries from Messrs Sims and Stops'  mine which was located not far from the family house built by his father John Nevin on land in trust to the Wesleyan church in 1854 adjacent to  the Lady Franklin Museum. A lengthy geological report was published on Christmas Day in the Mercury, 25 December 1883 (p. 3) - (see Addendum below), on the coal mines and seams around kunanyi/Mt Wellington, including a description of the methods of mining at Mr Ebenezer Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine and an account of the formation of anthracite, shale and sandstone in the Kangaroo Valley area.

This photograph of the horse-drawn whim working the coal mine at Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine, Kangaroo Valley, New Town, was taken by Thomas J. Nevin in the late 1860s. He printed it as a stereograph on an arched buff mount.



Detail: single image of double image stereograph
Horse-drawn whim at Mr Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine, Kangaroo Valley, New Town, Tasmania
Stereograph on arched buff mount by Thomas J. Nevin, 1870s
"Thos Nevin New Town" studio stamp on verso
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Collection. TMAG Ref: Q16826.11



Sims Coal Mine, T. J. Nevin photo

Verso: Horse-drawn whim at Mr Sim's Excelsior Coal Mine, Kangaroo Valley, New Town, Tasmania
Stereograph on arched buff mount by Thomas J. Nevin, 1870s
"Thos Nevin New Town" studio stamp on verso
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Collection
TMAG Ref: Q16826.11

Addendum
Extract from the report on carboniferous deposits in New Town near Hobart, Tasmania by the Inspector of Mines and Geological Surveyor, G. THUREAU, F.O.S., published in the Mercury, Christmas Day, Tuesday 25 December 1883, page 3:



TRANSCRIPT
THE CARBONIFEROUS DEPOSITS NEAR NEW TOWN.
The following report has just been issued from the Government Printing office :-
These occur at the north-eastern slopes of the spurs or foot-hills descending from Mount Wellington, and therefore within the western parts of New Town.
As the question whether the diamond drill could be recommended to be beneficially employed in that locality formed the principal part of my instructions, an extensive surface examination has been made in order to ascertain, from the lithological and palaeontological character of the carbonaceous strata and that of the contained seams of coal* whether boring to greater depths could possibly give good results or otherwise.
It is deemed necessary, before going any further, to give a few particulars as to the principal coal-yielding mines, in order to be able to refer to same in the following portions of this report.
Mr. Tim. Meredith's mine is worked by means of a horse-whim and a shaft 200ft. deep from the surface, in which the second seam of this district was intersected at 195ft. ; the coal varies from 1ft. 3in. to 2ft. 6in. in thickness, and is subjected to numerous faults and jumps, rendering it some-times difficult to recover the faulted or missing continuations of this seam. The main fault observes a bearing of south 67 deg. east, and a nearly parallel fault close by, south 40 deg. east. The coal is of a better quality generally at this greater depth than any other, as it is disposed of at from 22s. to 25s. per ton. Five men and a whim-boy are employed at this private mine.
-----------
* The word coal, continued throughout this report, though, as it is explained, it is not really the coal as known to consumers.
-----------
The Enterprise Coal Mining Co. (private) is the only one that employs steam winding machinery for working their mine. Their shaft is 110ft. in depth, and they are also working the second seam from the top, which averages 22in. of useful coal, the seam itself, with a parting of shale or "clod," being 2ft. 10in. thick. In the direction of the dip of the coal, or south 44 deg. west, they have extended their workings to a distance of 200yds., thus following the best description of the coal : and their experience has been that, towards Hobart, as exemplified in the adjacent Jarvis and Old Rosetta mines - now abandoned - the seams become very disordered, and that towards the south rises considerably and gets much thinner and therefore unremunerative. In following that seam from the shaft along its dip, the subterranean water follows the workings as they in-cline in that direction, necessitating the employment of an underground force-pump to permit the coal hewers to work. Fifteen to 17,000 gallons of water are raised daily from this mine, and the cost of cutting the coal is at the rate of 8s. per ton, fetching 22s. in the market.
Mr. Ebenezer Sims' coal mine, adjoining the last named, is wrought by means of a horse-whim. The coal occurs at 65ft., and at 70ft. or 80ft. below that measuring 18in. in thickness. From the upper seam, which is about 2ft. 6in. thick, 16 tons are raised by five miners per week on the average, which are sold on the " bank" at 7s. per ton, and at 22s. if delivered to consumers at their houses. The average dip is in the same direction as last, at the rate of 6in to the yard, indicating either a fault or other disturbance between this and the Enterprise Co.'s shafts. The coal in its undulating dip has been found quite irregular, "clumpy," and of but little value if inclining to the south-east ; there is also a considerable influx of water per diem, at the rate of from 18,000gals. to 20,000gals.
The region, in the near neighbourhood of the above described coal mines, now working or abandoned, presents some remarkable features, directly due to the close vicinity of "vents" of volcanic rocks, and the actual protrusion of dense basaltic dykes through the formations carrying the coal. The results of the penetration of the coal measures by these volcanic vents and dykes appear to have led to and caused, in the first instance, the conversion of the pre-existent true coal measures into carbonaceous shales and sand-stones, and of the seams of coal into "Anthracites."
As regards the former, they are of considerable thickness, as seen on the top of the New Town-road near the old tollgate ; their lower series exhibit occasionally very thin veins of black carbon-non-bituminous. The embedded seams, belonging also to the series of converted coals, -i.e., anthracites, -presents the usual appearance of black vitreous to half metallic and iridescent lustre, with a black streak ; they are not easily ignited, but burn with an evolution of great heat, very little smoke and smell, leaving residues after burning almost the same in bulk as the raw mineral itself before, combustion. They are non-bituminous, forming a natural stratified and compact, coke as the result of contact with and in the vicinity of igneous rocks. With an admixture of other suitable fuel they are very useful for the production of quicklime, and for smelting raw iron ores for rough cast-iron.
I did not succeed in observing or collecting any paleontological specimens of any kind.
The New Town anthracites, occurring in close contiguity to Mount Wellington, the extinct ' crater or centre of stupendous volcanic action, lose their character as such whenever they approach any of those more recent eruptive igneous rocks. It appears that from this great centre of pre-historic upheavals and convulsions, the adjacent or overlying strata was shattered and disrupted by fissures radiating from the former, and those clefts were filled with volcanic matter which converted not only the coal measures and scams of coal as described, but caused likewise many faults and other irregularities.
As a matter of fact the New Town carboniferous deposit may be regarded as the lower series or the remnants of coal measures that were altered or transmuted into non-bituminous deposits by the action of under-lying volcanic rocks or of analogous dykes traversing the country. Under these circumstances the permanency of the present seams of anthracite depend on the more or less frequent intrusion of those dykes, and consequently, as the latter occur at uncertain and irregular intervals and places, the output of this mineral is also subjected to the same... [etc etc - end of extract]

G. THUREAU, F.O.S.,
Inspector of Mines and Geological Surveyor.
Source: THE CARBONIFEROUS DEPOSITS NEAR NEW TOWN. (1883, December 25). The Mercury p. 3.
Link:https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9013224

RELATED POSTS main weblog

Captain Edward Goldsmith: imports to Tasmania, exports to everywhere, 1840s-1860s

CAPTAIN EDWARD GOLDSMITH (1804-1869) merchant mariner
IMPORTS of exotic flora and bloodlines 1850s
EXPORTS of indigenous plants, birds and animals 1860s
FRANK HAES stereogram of the thylacine London Zoo 1865



Glover, John. Hobart Town, Taken from the Garden Where I Lived, 1832 / by John Glover (1832).
Glover, John, 1767-1849
Painting oil on canvas - 76 x 152 cm, State Library of NSW
Link: https://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/collection-items/hobart-town-taken-garden-where-i-lived

The Pretty Views of Hobart 1850
From the deck of HMS Havannah approaching the port of Hobart, Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) on 26th December, 1850, deputy adjutant Godfrey Mundy made these observations:
The extraordinary luxuriance of the common red geranium at this
season makes every spot look gay; at the distance of miles the sight is
attracted and dazzled by the wide patches of scarlet dotted over the
landscape. The hedges of sweet-brier, both in the town-gardens and
country-enclosures, covered with its delicate rose, absolutely monopolize
the air as a vehicle for its peculiar perfume: — the closely-clipped mint
borders supplying the place of box, sometimes, however, overpower the
sweet-brier, and every other scent of the gardens.

Every kind of English flower and fruit appears to benefit by
transportation to Van Diemen's Land. Well-remembered shrubs and
plants, to which the heat of Australia is fatal, thrive in the utmost
luxuriance under this more southern climate. For five years I had lost
sight of a rough but respected old friend — the holly, or at most I had
contemplated with chastened affection one wretched little specimen in
the Sydney Botanic Garden — labelled for the enlightenment of the
Cornstalks. But in a Hobart Town garden I suddenly found myself in the
presence of a full-grown holly, twenty feet high and spangled with red
berries, into whose embrace I incontinently rushed, to the astonishment
of a large party of the Brave and the Fair, as well as to that of my most
prominent feature!

The fuchsia, the old original Fuchsia gracilis, attains here an
extraordinary growth. Edging the beds of a fine garden near where I
lived, there were hundreds of yards of fuchsia in bloom; and in the
middle of the town I saw one day a young just-married military couple
smiling, in all the plenitude of honey-lunacy, through a cottage-window
wholly surrounded by this pretty plant, which not only covered the entire
front of the modest residence, but reached above its eaves. And this
incident forces on my mind a grievous consideration, however out of
place here, namely, the virulent matrimonial epidemic raging lately
among the junior branches of the army in this colony. “Deus pascit
corvos
,” the motto of a family of my acquaintance, conveys a soothing
assurance to those determined on a rash but pleasant step. But who will
feed half-a-dozen ravenous brats is a question that only occurs when too
late! At this moment the regimental mess at Hobart Town is a desert
peopled by one or two resolute old bachelors and younger ones clever at
slipping out of nooses, or possessing that desultory devotion to the sex
which is necessary to keep the soldier single and efficient. Punch's
laconic advice “to parties about to marry,” which I have previously
adverted to, ought to be inserted in the standing orders and mess rules of
every regiment in H.M.'s service.

Here, too, to get back to my botany, I renewed my acquaintance with
the walnut and the filbert, just now ripe, the Spanish and horse-chestnuts,
the lime-treewith its bee-beloved blossom, and the dear old hawthorn of
my native land. As for cherryand apple-trees, and the various
domesticated berry-bushes of the English garden, my regard for them
was expressed in a less sentimental manner. I defy schoolboy or
“midship-mite” to have outdone me in devotion to their products,
however much these more youthful votaries may have beaten me in the
digestion of them.
Source: Extract from: MUNDY, Godfrey Charles (1804-1860)
Our Antipodes or, Residence and Rambles in the Australasian Colonies, with a Glimpse of the Goldfields
(London, Richard Bentley 1852)
* Read the entire extract about Tasmania by Mundy in this post here.



Fuchsia gracilis
Source: https://www.gardenia.net/plant/Fuchsia-magellanica-var-gracilis-Hardy-Fuchsia



Geranium striatum: Bot. Mag. 2, 1788.
Source: Biocyclopedia.com
Pelargonium (Geraniaceae) 1:98. Tasmania has three native species of Pelargonium and three species that are naturalised garden escapes. The latter include species that are commonly called geraniums. However, the Tasmanian Pelargonium species have thicker leaves and more asymmetrical flowers than the true Geranium species.
Source: Key to Tasmanian Dicots
Link: https://www.utas.edu.au/dicotkey/dicotkey/GERAN/gPelargonium.htm

Imports and Exports
By 1850 and less than half a century since British occupation, Hobart (Van Diemen's Land/Tasmania/lutruwita) was a town abundant in exotic flora, in no small measure due to the importation of every kind of fruit, flower and vegetable by merchant mariner Captain Edward Goldsmith (1804-1869) of Chalk, Kent and Rotherhithe, Surrey, UK. His niece Elizabeth Rachel Day, born Rotherhithe 1847 to his wife's brother and sometime navigator, James Day and Elizabeth (Pocock) Day, married photographer Thomas J. Nevin at Hobart in 1871.

The press reported on 19 December 1850 that: -
"Captain Goldsmith ... has more than any other skipper, added to our Floral and Horticultural treasures"
The botanical "treasures" originated from the Americas, Europe and South Africa, in addition to carefully chosen specimens from the Royal Botanical Gardens in Kew (UK) and Sydney (NSW). Several were from Captain Goldsmith's own plantations and nurseries in Kent (UK). Many varieties were imported at his own expense, others were consignments such as Mammoth strawberries for nurseryman Mr. Lipscombe, hops for Mr. Sharland, and a variety of exotic species selected for the Tasmanian Royal Society's Botanical Gardens which were expected to thrive in Tasmania's temperate climate. On return voyages Captain Goldsmith exported Tasmanian varieties of potato to assist Ireland in the grip of famine, and Norfolk Island pines to inhabit the otherwise bare hills of the Falklands Islands.

From NSW he also imported animal stock such as merinos to improve Mr. Bethune's bloodlines, and from the bloodstock of the Duke of Richmond he imported three fillies to improve the racing stock of the Lord brothers. There were also quantities of blue gum (eucalyptus globulus), skins of native animals, and indigenous plants conveyed back to Europe, destined for the great exhibition halls of London and Paris (1851-1855). Captain Edward Goldsmith retired to his estate in 1856 at Gadshill House, Telegraph Hill, Higham, Kent, UK. The large marsupial thylacine known then as the "Tasmanian wolf" and in modern times as the "Tasmanian tiger" may have been among the exports of indigenous animals he carried on one of his return voyages to London up to 1855 but the only export of a live thylacine to survive long enough to be photographed in 1865 by Frank Haes arrived at the London Zoo almost a decade later, in 1863, under the auspices of Tasmanian botantist Ronald Gunn (Haes' "stereogram" - and see below).



Photographer: Frank Haes,stereogram 1863 of a Tasmanian thylacine, London Zoo
Source: https://doi.org/10.7882/AZ.2016.022

TIMELINE

February 1840: trees from Hobart for the Falklands
The suggestion that the Falklands become a penal colony similar to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) was put forward to the Colonial Office by Captain William Langdon R.N. as early as 1830. For merchant traders such as Captain Edward Goldsmith, the Falkland islands were of primary importance as a naval depot and resort for merchantmen needing supplies. With probate matters on his father's estates at Rotherhithe, Surrey and Chalk, Kent left in the hands of his brother John Goldsmith and sister Deborah Goldsmith, Captain Goldsmith arrived back in Hobart, VDL, once more in command of the Wave, on 26th September 1839, where he attended a dinner held at Government House by his close friend, Sir John Franklin (23 October 1839). He departed Hobart on 11th January 1840 bound for London with wool and passengers, intending to anchor at Berkeley Sound East Falkland en route, as stated in his letter. The Wave arrived at Port Louis in late February 1840, the first vessel to do so in the new Crown Colony. According to this optimistic report from Lieut. John Tyssen dated 29th February 1840 (a valid leap year), which Captain Goldsmith duly conveyed on his behalf to the Admiralty, London, one hundred different tree seeds were sourced from a Hobart gardener by Captain Goldsmith as a gift to the settlement where the only other trees " upon the Island" were one American pine and a few Silver fir.



Captain Goldsmith's gift of tree seeds to the Falklands
Source: Sessional Papers printed for the House of Lords ... 1841

TRANSCRIPT extract
Enclosure in No.6.
Settlement House, port Louis, 29th February 1840
Sir,

By the Wave Merchant Barque, Mr. Goldsmith Master, I take the opportunity of communicating direct to inform you, for the Information of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, of my Proceedings since I took charge of the Falkland Islands.... Mr. Goldsmith, the master of the Wave, has just given me 100 different Sorts of Tree Seeds, which I intend to sow at a favourable Season; they are from a very good Gardener at Hobart Town.... The Wave is the first Vessel that has touched here since I arrived, but I have every Reason to believe more Vessels will frequent this Harbour.
Nothing of any Importance has occurred since I took Charge,
I have, & (Signed) JOHN TYSSEN, Lieut. R.N.
Captain Goldsmith's gift of tree seeds to the Falklands
Source: Sessional Papers printed for the House of Lords ... 1841

January 1847: export of the black Derwent potato
Even as the potato famine in Ireland was taking hold, Captain Goldsmith offered to export varieties of seed potatoes which had proved successful in experiments, in the hope that a change of seed and further experimentation in the "kingdom" amongst his friends might assist. Again, his offer to pay for the transport and experiments in England from his private account was noted. Some Tasmanian varieties exported were the "black Derwent" and the "fine ash-leaved kidney".



Captain Goldsmith's export of Tasmanian potatoes

TRANSCRIPT
SEED POTATOS FOR ENGLAND.-We noticed recently the importance that would be derived by the Home-country,could the potato disease be eradicated by a change of seed. At the same time, we did not express any sanguine opinion, founded on experiments that had been already tried, of the success of any extensive exportations from this colony. Experiments, however, are about to be tried-not, it is true, on a large scale, by merchants in the way of business, but by the philanthropic efforts of private individuals. We have heard within the last few days, of several samples of very fine and ripe seed potatos-including especially the black Derwent and the fine ash-leaved kidney-being already on their way to England in the vessels that have recently left our shores, freighted with colonial produce. Captain Goldsmith, of the Rattler, took with him, not as merchandise, but on his own private account, as presents for experiment by his agricultural friends in England, samples of several varieties. Many samples are now being packed for transmission in the Derwent and other vessels, whose departure may shortly be expected. These also are comparatively small; but as they will be dispersed as presents to friends in different parts of the kingdom, the experiment of success in eradicating the disease, by change of seed from this colony, will have, perhaps, a fairer and more satisfactory trial than if exportation had taken place on a larger scale on merchants' account.
Captain Goldsmith's export of Tasmanian potatoes
Source: The Courier p. 2. LOCAL. (1847, January 30)
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2972781

December 1848: arrival of new and perished varieties
The Mammoth and Elizabeth strawberries had perished on this voyage for having been placed in mould at the bottom of the case, an oversight which consignee Frederick Lipscombe turned into a tasteless political round of blame directed at Captain Goldsmith which he pursued in the press.



From The Hobart Courier, 14 December 1848:

TRANSCRIPT

IMPORTED PLANTS.- ... The flora of this country has also received a great addition by the importation of some plants for Mr. F. Lipscombe in the Rattler, Captain Goldsmith. The following are in good condition :-Lilium rubrum, schimenes picta, campanula novilis, gloxinia rubra, Rollisonii, speciosa alba, and Pressleyans ; anemone japónica, lilium puctata, torenia concolor, lobelia erinus compacta, myasola (a "forget-me not"), and another new specimen of the same; cuphan mineara, weigella roses, phlox speciosa, cuphea pletycentra, lantana Drummondii and Sellowii, phloz rubra, achimines Hendersonii ; with the following camellias - Queen Victoria,- elegans, tricolor, triumphans, speciosa, Palmer's perfection, and Reevesii. These were ail contained, with others, in one case ; they were well established in pots before packing, which has tended to their preservation. Another case contains lemon thyme, sage, and the Mammoth and Elisabeth strawberries. The same course in this instance had not been pursued; the plants were put into mould at the bottom of the case, and in almost every instance have perished. A quantity of carnations unfortunately experienced the same fate. Importers will therefore do well to impress upon their agents in England the necessity of establishing them in pots before packing. In the exportation of Van Diemen's Land shrubs to the United Kingdom, India, and Mauritius, Mr. Lipscombe always adopts this method, and it is of rare occurrence for any specimen to be lost.
Source: LOCAL. (1848, December 13). The Courier (Hobart, Tas. : 1840 - 1859), p.2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2967335

January 1849: testimonial to Captain Edward Goldsmith



Testimonial to Captain Goldsmith
Source: Colonial Times 19 January 1849 p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8764279

TRANSCRIPT
TESTIMONIAL TO CAPTAIN GOLDSMITH.-A handsome twelve-ounce silver goblet was presented to Captain Goldsmith on Wednesday, last, as a testimonial in acknowledgment of the services he has rendered to floral and horticultural science in Van Diemen's Land, by importing rare and valuable plants from England. The expenses incurred were defrayed by private subscription. The testimonial was presented by W. Carter, Esq., in the name of the subscribers, who observed that he had hoped the task would have been committed to abler hands. Mr. Macdowell, who was engaged in Court, he said, had been first deputed to present the testimonial, as being a private friend of Captain Goldsmith. A token twenty times the value would no doubt have been obtained had the subscribers publicly announced their intention.
-Upon receiving the cup, Capt. Goldsmith remarked that he would retain the token until death ; and, with reference to some observations made by Mr. Carter, intimated it was not improbable he should next year, by settling in Van Diemen's Land with Mrs. Goldsmith, become a fellow-colonist
-The goblet, which was manufactured by Mr. C. Jones, of Liverpool-street, bears the following inscription:-"Presented to Captain Goldsmith, of the ship Rattler, as a slight testimonial for having introduced many rare and valuable plants into Van Diemen's Land. January, 1849." The body has a surrounding circlet of vine leaves in relief. The inscription occupies the place of quarterings in a shield supported the emu and kangaroo in bas relief, surmounting a riband scroll with the Tasmanian motto-" Sic fortis Hobartia crevit." The foot has a richly chased border of fruit and flowers. In the manufacture of this cup, for the first time in this colony, the inside has undergone the process of gilding. As heretofore silver vessels of British manufacture have taken the lead in the market through being so gilt, it is satisfactory to find that the process is practically understood in the colony, and that articles of superior workmanship can be obtained with out importation.
Source: Colonial Times 19 January 1849 p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8764279



Print: Jardin botanique D’Hobart Town (Ile Van Diemen) / dessine par L. Le Breton Lithe par P. Blanchard.
Publisher: Paris : Gide, [184-?]
Source: W.L. Crowther Library, Tasmania. Ref: ADRI: AUTAS001125294538

February 1849: export of live native specimens on the "Rattler"
Exports to taste, these animals were not merely destined to be wondered at in the zoos of Britain, they were sometimes served up on the plates of their importers' dinner guests.



TRANSCRIPT
THE "RATTLER" - Captain Goldsmith has kindly taken the commissions of several residents in the colony, and is expected in his next trip to bring some very rare shrubs and plants, of a description not yet seen here. He takes home with him several live specimens of our kangaroo, emu, black swan, native cat and is is generally wished he may have a successful trip.
Source: Colonial Times (Hobart, Tas. : 1828 - 1857) Tue 20 Feb 1849 Page 2 Domestic Intelligence.
Link: https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/8764448



John Gould visited Tasmania with his wife, celebrated ornithological illustrator Elizabeth Gould in 1838. He wrote that he liked the taste of the "delicate" flesh of baby emus, but the adult emu tasted like "coarse beef".



The Tasmanian rosella or Platycercus caledonicus, or the yellow-bellied parakeet, from volume five of Illustrations: John Gould’s The Birds of Australia 1848/ State Library of New South Wales.

Gould wrote of the Tasmanian rosella or Platycercus caledonicus:
Most of my readers are doubtless aware that Parrots are frequently eaten by man, but few of them are, perhaps, prepared to hear that many species of the family constitute at certain seasons a staple portion of the food of the settlers ....Soon after the establishment of the colonies of Van Diemen’s Land, pies made of the bird here represented were commonly eaten at every table, and even at the present time are not of unfrequent occurrence. It was not long after my arrival in the country before I tested the goodness of the flesh of this bird as a viand, and I found it so excellent that I partook of it whenever an opportunity for my doing so presented itself. It is delicate, tender, and well-flavoured.
Source: Calla Wahlquist "Pecking order: how John Gould dined out on the birds of Australia"
The Guardian Australian edition Sat 30 Dec 2017 14.16 AEDT

December 1850: flora and fillies arrive on the "Rattler"
Captain Goldsmith arrived with "seven cases of his old favourites." The reporter of this newspaper article assumed his reader would have prior knowledge as to the exact composition of those favourites, such was the affection and esteem in which Captain Goldsmith was held in matters horticultural.



Arrival of the Rattler at Hobart, December 1850
Source:The Irish Exile and Freedom's Advocate (Hobart Town, Tas. Sat 21 Dec 1850 Page 7 LOCAL.
Link: https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/233330897

TRANSCRIPT
THE Rattler, - has conveyed to these shores, once more Mr. and Mrs. Cox, the worthy parents of Mr. Charles Cox of the Salutation Inn, Liverpool Street, to remain, we hope, permanent residents in the Colony. Captain Goldsmith is famed for useful importations, and has, more than any other skipper, added to our Floral and Horticultural treasures: on the present occasion Capt. Goldsmith has brought out seven cases of his old favourites and also, three fillies from the stock of the Duke of Richmond of Goodwood celebrity, which we understand, have arrived in most excellent condition; one was purchased for Mr. James Lord, and the other two for Mr. John Lord.

December 1851: election to the Royal Society



TRANSCRIPT
17th December, 1851.— John Lillie, D.D., a Vice-President of
the Society, in the chair.
After a ballot, the following gentlemen were declared duly elected
into the Society :— Captain Goldsmith, of Hobart Town, and
Andrew Mowbray, M.D., of Circular Head.
Source; Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Van Diemen's Land
Vol.II, Part I. January 1852 Tasmania
Source: Smithsonian Institution Museum Library
https://archive.org/stream/papersproceeding2185253roya/papersproceeding2185253roya_djvu.txt

1855: export of blue gum plank
Captain Edward Goldsmith's entry of a blue gum plank (eucalyptus globulus) was shipped to France for the opening of the Paris Exposition on 15 May 1855, closing on 15 November 1855. Over five million people visited the exhibition which displayed products from 34 countries across 6 hectares (39 acres).

Exposition universelle de 1855 à Paris
Opened: 15 May 1855
Closed: 15 November 1855
Attendance:5,162,330
Site: 16 hectares(39 acres)
Participating Countries: 34



Exhibitors: Appendix p.295
Goldsmith, Captain .... Blue gum plank
Source: Captain H. Butler Stoney of the 99th Regiment, author of A residence in Tasmania: with a descriptive tour through the island, from Macquarie Harbour to Circular Head (London, Smith, Elder & co., Sept. 1856).

The plank was 70 feet long, 11 feet wide and 3 inches thick, according to the report in the Hobart Courier, 6 September 1855. Although the Exposition catalogue listed his plank, the report suggested it never left Hobart, that is, if the plank was originally cut by the Commandant of Port Arthur, James Boyd, and Captain Goldsmith was his proxy as both shipping agent and exhibitor.

TRANSCRIPT
Blue Gum of Tasmania,- Eucalyptus globulus, plank 70 + 11 +3 inches. Captain Goldsmith.
This is perhaps the most valuable and important of the timber trees of Tasmania. Its principal habitat is in the south side of the island ; but it is also met with in the valley of the Apsley and at the Douglas River, on the East Coast, and it re-appears upon Flinder's Island, in Bass's Straits: its stronghold, however, is D'Entrecasteaux's Channel and along the south side of the island, whence it has been exported in various shapes within the last three years to the value of about £800.000.
The Blue Gum attains, when-at maturity, an average elevation and size greater probably than any other tree in the world ; a plank forwarded to the London Exhibition of 1851, which from the difficulty experienced in procuring a ship to carry it, arrived in England too late forexposition, measured 145 feet in length, and was 20 inches broad by 6 inches in thickness. A plank of the same width and thickness was cut 60 feet in length by Mr. James Boyd, Civil Commandant at Port Arthur, Van Diemen's Land, in order to be forwarded to the Paris Exhibition of 1855, but it has been found impracticable to get it shipped by any vessel at this port, (Hobart Town), and it does not therefore appear in this catalogue.
This tree attains at its full growth a height of 250 to 350 feet, and a circumference varying from 30 to upwards of 100 feet, at four feet from the ground. In regular forest ground it rarely gives off its principal limb under 100 feet, and there is not unfrequently a stem clear of any branch for 200 foot and upwards. The most important purpose for which this timber is adapted, and to which it is extensively applied, is that of ship-building. The Messrs. Degraves and Messrs. Watson of this place have built and fitted out vessels with it of which several are now trading regularly to and from England. Its specific gravity is greater than that of Teak, British Oak, or even Saull; and experiments instituted to ascertain its breaking weight &;c., have established the fact, that in strength and elasticity it is superior to all other timbers. For planking and stringers, and for keels of ships, the blue gum possesses a suitability beyond all other timbers, since it affords length and dimensions which it would be impossible to obtain from any other tree.
The purposes to which the wood of the blue gum is applied are as numerous as the varieties of work which devolve on the shipwright, millwright, house carpenter, implement-maker, and engineer, for in all these departments of mechanical labour and skill it is found to be a material all but indispensable, notwithstanding the great diversity of woods available in the Colony. For instance, it is in constant use for tree-nails in ship-building, - as gunwales for boats,- for house-building. for fitting up steam engines and the heaviest machinery,- in the construction of wheels, wheelbarrows, carts. &c, and for piles on which to raise wharves ; bridges of great span are built of it, -that at Bridgewater, about II miles from Hobart Town, of which a model was sent to the London Exhibition. and which is raised upon piles measuring 65 to 90 feet each in length, stands 9 feet above the highest high watermark, and measures 96 feet from end to end, by a breadth affording a roadway of 24 feet, is constructed entirely of this timber. This tree, like most of the Eucalypti, yields a red, highly astringent gum, which has been extensively used,and found to answer, as a "kino," and the leaves by distillation yield an essential oil, having the properties of "Cajeput oil.
Source: TASMANIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO PARIS 1855. (1855, September 6). The Courier  p. 2.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2489968

1863: export of a thylacine to London Zoo
A young male thylacine (coll. Tasmanian wolf in the 19th century) was sent in 1863 (as part of a family group) to London Zoo in Regent’s Park by the Launceston botanist and politician, Ronald Campbell Gunn (1808-1881). This specimen became the reluctant subject of Frank Haes' calotype photograph.

Another Tasmanian indigenous export which may have acompanied the thylacine in 1863 as part of a family group sent to London Zoo was a medium-sized macropod marsupial known as the red-necked wallaby or Bennett's wallaby (Notamacropus rufogriseus) which Frank Haes also photographed:




Title: The Wallaby, Hybrid. (Between H. Ruficolus, & H. Bennettii.)
Artist/Maker: Frank Haes (English, 1833 - 1916)
Date: about 1865
Medium: Albumen silver print
Culture: English
Object Number: 84.XC.873.5355
Department: Photographs
Classification: Photograph Object Type: Stereograph
Provenance - 1984, Samuel Wagstaff, Jr.American, 1921 - 1987 sold to the J. Paul Getty Museum, 1984.
Link:https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/object/10719N

The extracts and photographs (below) are cited from an article published in the Australian Zoologist 2016 (Vol. 38, 2).

"Frank Haes' thylacine"
Stephen R. Sleightholme; Cameron R. Campbell; Andrew C. Kitchener
Australian Zoologist (2016) 38 (2): 203–211
https://doi.org/10.7882/AZ.2016.022

ABSTRACT
Until recently, the earliest surviving photograph of a thylacine (albeit that of a dead trophy specimen) was from 1869. An earlier photograph, taken in 1864 by Frank Haes of a living thylacine at London Zoo, was known to have existed, but was feared lost or destroyed. This paper describes its recent rediscovery, and the identity of the thylacine it portrays. The Haes photograph is the only known image of a living thylacine from the 19th century and comprises a stereo view and lantern slide, both of which are presented together here for the first time.



Page 207: "Frank Haes' thylacine" Australian Zoologist (2016) 38 (2)



Op. cit. p.207
Source: https://meridian.allenpress.com/australian-zoologist/article/38/2/203/135313/Frank-Haes-thylacine




Op.cit: p.208
Source: https://meridian.allenpress.com/australian-zoologist/article/38/2/203/135313/Frank-Haes-thylacine


EXTRACTS pp 204-208
In the summer of 1864, Haes was commissioned by the Zoological Society of London to take a series of photographs of animals in London Zoo, which included the first photographs of a living elephant (Edwards, 1996b, p.63), the now extinct quagga (Equus quagga quagga) (Edwards, 1996b, p.132), and the thylacine.

In a paper Frank Haes presented to a meeting of the members of the Photographic Society at Kings College on the 3rd January 1865, he stated:
"Casting about for some novelty at the commencement of last spring, we thought that a series of photographs of animals from life would be very useful and instructive; and having obtained the necessary permission, we removed everything requisite for working to the Gardens. It might be entertaining to the Members to hear the troubles and difficulties I encountered this summer in producing the present series of stereograms and larger photographs of the animals in the Zoological Gardens".
The thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus) is the largest marsupial carnivore to have existed into modern times. The last known captive specimen was a male that died at the Beaumaris Zoo on the Queen’s Domain in Hobart on the night of the 7th September 1936 (Sleightholme, 2011). Few thylacines in the International Thylacine Specimen Database (ITSD) can be traced directly from their point of capture in Tasmania into a museum collection (Sleightholme & Ayliffe, 2013). One such specimen, a young male, was sent in 1863 (as part of a family group) to London Zoo in Regent’s Park by the Launceston botanist and politician, Ronald Campbell Gunn (1808-1881). It is this specimen that eventually became the reluctant subject of Frank Haes’ photograph.

The Photographer
The photographer Frank Haes (3/1/1833 - 7/1/1916), was born in Camberwell (London) of Jewish parents. He was an honorary life fellow of the Royal Photographic Society and an early commercial pioneer of photography. Haes visited Australia in 1857 and took photographs of buildings in Sydney, including the Royal Exchange. He delivered a lecture at the Sydney Mechanics School of Arts on the 21st July 1857, where his photographs of Sydney were received with great enthusiasm. On returning to London later that year he presented a paper on photography in Australia to the newly formed Blackheath Photographic Society. Haes revisited Australia in August 1858 and married Adele Vallentine (of Hobart) in Sydney on the 24th November 1858. He exhibited 300 photographs of the Middle East and Crimea at the Philosophical Society of NSW in 1859 and photographed the Sydney Botanical Gardens in 1861. Haes returned to London in 1862, and went into business with Thomas Miller McLean (publisher/printer) and Arthur James Melhuish (photographer). Together they ran a photographic studio at 26 Haymarket until their partnership was dissolved in 1865. From 1865 to 1872 Haes relocated his studio to St. George’s Place in Knightsbridge, London. In the summer of 1864, Haes was commissioned by the Zoological Society of London to take a series of photographs of animals in London Zoo, which included the first photographs of a living elephant (Edwards, 1996b, p.63), the now extinct quagga (Equus quagga quagga) (Edwards, 1996b, p.132), and the thylacine.

Following the delivery of Haes’ paper, Mr James Glaisher, the vice president of the Society, stated:
"It would be difficult to over-estimate the value of these photographs as means of instruction for those who had no opportunity of seeing the living specimens. He was especially struck with the fine and life-like effect of the attitude of the animals, so different to what had been common in pictures. How graceful and easy in pose they were. To artists they must possess an especial value,and to naturalists for examination and comparison. The sharpness was very remarkable, and the position, proportions, &c. of the animals were admirably rendered,and reflected great credit not only on Mr Haes’s ability, but on his patience in dealing with such intractable animals. He understood that Her Majesty had seen them, and expressed her high approval of them."
An article by the zoologist and natural historian Frank T. Buckland (1826-1880), published in the Geelong Advertiser of the 15th March 1867 (p.3), stated with reference to Haes
"Many of our countrymen, especially those who are not resident in the metropolis, have no opportunity of seeing these living gems of creation. The wonderful art of photography has however, rendered it possible for us to have upon our tables accurate life-like pictures of the animals at the Zoological Gardens. Mr Frank Haes has lately completed a series of as many as one hundred and twenty-two animals. To do this with accuracy (as the animals seem to have objection to what is called: “sitting for their portraits”) has taken Mr Haes no less than three years, and he has had the greatest difficulty in carrying out his design. The photographs are now at last completed...."
All text and photographs sourced and cited from: -
"Frank Haes' thylacine"
Stephen R. Sleightholme; Cameron R. Campbell; Andrew C. Kitchener
Australian Zoologist (2016) 38 (2): 203–211.
https://doi.org/10.7882/AZ.2016.022

Royal Botanical Gardens 2014



Ginger, Royal Botanical Gardens, Hobart, Tasmania
Photos © copyright KLW NFC 2014



Sunflowers, Royal Botanical Gardens, Hobart, Tasmania
Photos © copyright KLW NFC 2014





Palms, Royal Botanical Gardens, Hobart, Tasmania
Photos © copyright KLW NFC 2014



Quinces, Royal Botanical Gardens, Hobart, Tasmania
Photos © copyright KLW NFC 2014



Varieties of exotica and botanist Ronald Gunn
Royal Botanical Gardens, Hobart, Tasmania
Photos © copyright KLW NFC 2014

EXTERNAL LINKS

Getty Museum
Frank Haes (1833 - 1916)
20 stereographs taken by Haes of animals at the London Zoo
https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/person/104VZ2
https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/artists/9105/frank-haes-english-1833-1916/

Australian Dictionary of Biography
Ronald Campbell Gunn was a first-rate botanist whose contribution was commemorated in Sir Joseph Hooker's introduction to his Flora Tasmaniae:
'There are few Tasmanian plants that Mr. Gunn has not seen alive, noted their habits in a living state, and collected large suites of specimens with singular tact and judgment. These have all been transmitted to England … accompanied with notes that display a remarkable power of observation, and a facility for seizing important characters in their physiognomy'.
https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/gunn-ronald-campbell-2134

TMAG
Tasmanian Herbarium project to provide a modern Flora for Tasmania.
https://flora.tmag.tas.gov.au/

YouTube
Julie Gough
kaparunina (for the dead are many), 2021
Record of Native Tiger skins presented for payment to the Minister of Land Tasmania 1888-1912
Julie Gough transcribed from a ledger the names and locations of those who sought payment for 2055 kaparunina (thylacines) murdered in Tasmania between 1888-1909 as part of her art-research project into the genocidal impulse of colonists in Lutruwita (Tasmania).
https://youtu.be/OGWY_IvOMzI

National Museum of Australia
The National Museum of Australia holds a wide range of thylacine material, encompassing a diversity of anatomical preparations, historical artefacts, images and artworks.
Conservator Jennifer Brian on caring for a rare thylacine specimen
https://youtu.be/eS48Nm0sG8s

Isaac Dove
‘SEEING STRIPES’ 2022
Presenter Isaac Dove goes on a journey around Tasmania investigating the tale of Wilfred Batty, the man who shot what is said to be the last wild Thylacine
https://youtu.be/lycOs0zxyvI

Newspapers 1874
THE MERCURY. (1874, March 12). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 2.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8928693
AN INTERESTING PASSENGER. - The Tasmanian tiger, caught in the New Norfolk district by Mr. William Clarke, of Dry Creek, and which has, since its arrival in town, been accommodated with quarters at the Museum, was a passenger by the steamship Southern Cross that sailed for Melbourne yesterday. It is forwarded to the Zoological and Acclimatisation Society of Victoria, who intend placing it in the Zoological Gardens, Melbourne.
NEWS OF THE DAY. (1874, March 18). The Age (Melbourne, Vic. : 1854 - 1954), p. 2.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199381255
A fine specimen of the Tasmanian marsupial wolf, or native tiger, has just been received from Mr. Morton Allport, of Hobart Town, and added to the zoological collection

RELATED POSTS main weblog

Indigenous elder Truganini and poet Ann Kearney, 1875

For NAIDOC WEEK July 2022

Genocide and the European aesthetic
It was only two decades ago that the Archives Office of Tasmania displayed online scratchy black and white photographs of Tasmanian Aborigines with the catalogue tag "Flora and Fauna" in the same category as the extinct thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus), known as the "Tasmanian Tiger".

The confections of the 19th century colonists of lutruwita/Van Diemen's Land/Tasmania displayed in public archives and museums of photographic images, sculptures and literary texts that represent Aboriginal people continue causing distress to viewers, whether proferred by these institutions as the antique artefact memorializing the reality of historic genocide, or as benchmarks in a progressive national narrative moving forward the Western reformation of indigenous peoples. The most frequently reproduced images since the 1860s have featured Tasmanian Aboriginal elder and leader Truganini, a Nuenonne woman from Bruny Island also known as Trucaninni, Lallah Rookh and Trugernanner (1812-1876).

This plaster bust representing Truganani was cast in 1836 by Benjamin Law. It was purchased at the time by Jewish merchant and former convict Judah Solomon. Law's sculptural aesthetic was simple: dressing down Truganini's right breast to reveal a naked nipple was only to dress up her femininity better in the neo-Classical tradition of beauty, the European ideal.



Cast plaster bust of "Trucaninny" [NPG, sic] 1836 by Benjamin Law (1807-1890)
Purchased by the National Portrait Gallery, 2010.
Photo taken at the National Portrait Gallery 2021
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint & KLW NFC Group Private Collection 2021



Information re bust of Truganini by Benjamin Law, National Portrait Gallery, Canberra 2021.
Photo copyright © KLW NFC Imprint & KLW NFC Group Private Collection 2021.



Cast plaster bust of Woureddy, companion to bust of Truganini by Benjamin Law, 1835
Photo taken at the National Portrait Gallery July 2022
Copyright © KLW NFC Imprint & KLW NFC Group Private Collection 2022

The poem below titled simply "Lines", written by Ann Elizabeth Kearney in June 1875, is another representation of Truganini confronting to 21st century sensitivities, though the author might not have had the least inkling of the degree of racism she was parlaying with her celebration of the fair skin and rosy lips of 10 year old non-indigenous Trucannini Graves - the "TASMANIAN BELLE" - over and against the "dusky" darkness of the race believed soon to become extinct, represented by Truganini whose name John and Jessie Graves had appropriated for their daughter at birth in 1864.

The Kearney and Graves families
John Woodcock Graves the elder (1795-1886), famous for his composition of the song "D'ye ken John Peel", was a family friend and frequent visitor of Thomas Kearney's father, William Keaney (1795–1870) of Laburnam Park, Richmond, Tasmania. His son, lawyer and townsman John Woodcock Graves the younger (1829-1876), defended Thomas Kearney (1824-1889) in a dispute in 1875 over the conveyancing of a lease five years earlier, in 1870, to neighbour William Searle for use of a road on his property. The defense was Kearney's state of intoxication and severe delirium tremens prevented him from knowing what he was doing. Thomas Kearney's wife, Ann Elizabeth Keaney nee Lovell, showed her gratitude to John Woodcock Graves for his defense of the case in June 1875 by writing a poem praising his pretty youngest daughter Trucaninni Graves.

Though not indigenous, two of the four daughters born to solicitor John Woodcock Graves the younger and Jessie Graves nee Montgomerie were named after the two notable Tasmanian Aboriginal women who survived the colony's history of genocide, Truganini (1812-1876) and Mathinna (1835–1852). When Anne Elizabeth Kearney published this poem titled "Lines" in June 1875, Trucaninni Graves was ten years old, named at birth (with the variant spelling) to honour Truganini who was thought to be "the last one of a doomed race" by many, if not most, including Ann Elizabeth Kearney in this poem. The role John Woodcock Graves the younger played in Truganini's life was to provide comfort or "succour" in her last years, the poem suggests, and a promise of protection of her remains in death. She died aged 73 yrs, on 8th May 1876. He died six months later, aged 47 yrs, on 30th October 1876. The poem as displayed here from a private collection, was printed on silk.
Lines written on seeing the beautiful daughter of Mr. Graves, who is named after the last Tasmanian Native, and afterwards meeting Queen Trucaninni at the corner of Elizabeth and Macquarie Streets by Kearney, Anne Elizabeth, author.
Date 1875.


TRANSCRIPT

Lines
Written on seeing the Beautiful Daughter of MR.
GRAVES, who is named after the last Tasmanian
Native, and afterwards meeting Queen Trucaninni
at the corner of Elizabeth and Macquarie Streets.

I SAW thy dusky namesake, gentle child,
And still more fair by contrast did'st thou seem,
With rosy lips that on me sweetly smiled,
And eyes more lovely than a poet's dream.

I gazed upon poor Trucaninni's face,
And thought how sad her heart at times must be,
To think she was the last of all her race
Who once had wandered through the forests free.

I looked upon her, and I wondered not
That Trucaninni now is known to fame -
The last Tasmanian may not be forgot
While thou, fair girl, inheritest her name.

Thy noble Father, with a generous hand,
Succoured the last one of a doomed race -
Made her be happy in her native land,
And reign a Queen, if only for a space.

In after years, when I have passed away,
And other lips than mine the tale may tell;
Thou shalt be known in every poet's lay,
As "TRUCANINNI - THE TASMANIAN BELLE!"

ANN ELIZABETH KEARNEY.
June 19th, 1875.

Source: Extract from "THE AUSTRALIAN CHURCHMAN"
Published in the Jeanneret family files (p.75)
Link: https://ianjeanneretphoto.files.wordpress.com/2019/06/jeanneret_book-1.pdf



[Above]: Truganini (1812-1876) and John Woodcock Graves jnr (1829-1876)
Tasmanian Archives and Heritage Office. https://stors.tas.gov.au/NS407-1-54
Photo copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2015 ARR

Above: An unattributed photograph of Tasmanian Aboriginal woman Truganini seated, with John Woodcock Graves the younger standing over her, taken shortly before her death, aged 73 yrs, on 8th May 1876. He died six months later, aged 47 yrs, on 30th October 1876 of congestion of the lungs and pneumonia.

Ann Elizabeth Kearney née Lovell (1827-1898)
When Ann Elizabeth Lovell married Thomas Kearney on 30th March 1848 according to the rites and ceremonies of the Wesleyan Church at the private house of her father, Esh Lovell of Carrington, Richmond (Tasmania), she was 20 years old. Her sister Margaret Rachel Lovell, 18 years old, married William Kearney the younger, Thomas Kearney's brother, on the same day.

Ann Elizabeth's husband Thomas Kearney (1824-1889) was a farmer, 24 years old, living on his grant of 32 acres at Richmond (Tasmania) at the time of their marriage. Thomas Kearney's father, William Kearney, ran a horse stud at Laburnam Park, Richmond until his death in 1870. The 1851 census registered nine people at Thomas Kearney's property, identified as Colebrook, Lower Jerusalem in the district of Richmond. Two daughters, Catherine who died at 10 days from convulsions in 1850, and Clara who died of "atrophy" (genetic disease causing spinal muscular weakness and wasting) also at 10 days in 1851 were born before their son William Kearney (named after his father's father) was born on 29th March 1852 . Their births were all registered by their father, Thos. Kearney, whose addresses varied from "Colebrook", Coal River, to "Colebrook Dale", Lower Jerusalem in the district of Richmond. The birth of William was countersigned by medical registrar Dr John Coverdale whose own wife Ann Harbroe had given birth at Richmond three days earlier to a son, William Percy Coverdale. More births followed, registered by their mother at various addresses either on the same property or in the same district: "Spring Hill Bottom", Coal River, and Enfield where her death was registered in 1898. In all, eleven births were registered to Ann Elizabeth Kearney between 1849 and 1866. For details, see Resources below and visit this wiki: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kearney-1237

The circumstance of these addresses given by Thomas Kearney of his property at Richmond assumed critical importance in 1870 when he was approached by William Searle from a neighbouring property to sign a lease over an area of land which was later disputed as to whether it was a public or private road. The case brought by the plaintiff, Searle's trustees, before a jury five years later, in 1875 called on the defendant's wife Ann Elizabeth Kearney as a witness, who identified herself straight up as a poetess. Under cross-examination by the Attorney-General for the plaintiff, she told how she now regretted having written lines in thanks to Mr Searle when he had paid her husband Thomas for the lease in 1870 at a time he was heavily in debt and desperately ill from alcoholism because she thought Searle had saved her husband from committing suicide, but by 1875, she thought Searle's singular objective was to get hold of the Kearney's property by fraudulent means.

The Case, 17th June 1875
The plaintiffs are the trustees of the late William Searle, of Richmond, and they claimed to recover from the defendant the sum of £100 damages for the wrongful obstruction of a certain high road and right-of-way on the Laburnum Park estate at Richmond.



1974. Animals - Horses - Neptune Stud, Colebrook, Tasmania.
Copyright © National Archives of Australia 2022

The Case 1875
LAW INTELLIGENCE.The Mercury (Hobart, Tas) 17 June 1875: page 2.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8937970.
LAW INTELLIGENCE.
SUPREME COURT.
CIVIL SITTINGS. WEDNESDAY, 16TH JUNE, 1875.
Before His Honor Mr Justice Dobson, and juries of seven.
SIMMONS AND OTHERS v. KEARNEY.,

The hearing of this case was resumed.

The plaintiffs are the trustees of the late William Searle, of Richmond, and they claimed to recover from the defendant the sum of £100 damages for the wrongful obstruction of a certain high road and right-of-way on the Laburnum Park estate at Richmond. Defendant pleaded six pleas. (1.) That the plaintiffs were not possessed of the messuage or land as alleged. (2.) That they were not entitled to the said right-of-way. (3.) That plaintiffs claim to the said alleged right-of-way was made by virtue of a deed of agreement in writing made with William Searle, which agreement he (defendant) was induced to make by fraud, and had repudiated and abandoned. (4. ) That he was so intoxicated when he made the agreement as to be incapable of executing it. (5.) That the road was a public highway. (6. ) A general plea of not guilty. On these pleas issue was joined.

The ATTORNEY-GENERAL, instructed by Mr C. Butler, appeared for plaintiff ; and Mr BROMBY, instructed by Messrs Graves and Crisp, for the defendant.

Frederick James Windsor deposed : I am the chief draftsman in the Lands and Works department, and have the charge of charts and plans. I produce the original volume of diagrams of surveys in 1848, from which the grants were made. That contains the diagram of 32A acres of land granted to Thomas Kearney. It shows that the land was intersected by the main road from Richmond to Jerusalem, and it also shows the road from the main road to the road claimed. The road was surveyed by Mr Shaw, then contract surveyor, and now in New Zealand.

To Mr BROMBY : That plan merely shows the survey of the land in 1848. Of my own knowledge, of course, I know nothing about it.

Charles Searle deposed : I am the second son of the late William Searle, and the present tenant of Laburnum Park, under the trustees of my father's will. The plan produced represents the three roads near Laburnum Park. The road " B " is the road in general use by the public. Road " C " is a private road which leads from the main road to Laburnum Park. We have used that private road a little more than ten years. For some years before the lease was made, the road was in actual use. At the point where that private road joins the main road, my father had a large painted gate put up, upwards of ten years ago. That was the road always used by my father and family going to Richmond ; it was the carriage-way to the house. At the other end of the road, a ford was made at considerable expense. Kearney, frequently, before the lease in 1870, used the private road, and therefore knew of it and the gate and ford. We used the road up to July, 1874. Kearney asked me to use the old public road marked "A," saying at the same time that we had a right-of-way through the sixty acres called "The Park." I told him I would consult with my mother, and did so, after which I told Kearney that I would agree to his proposal. The old public road had been practically unused for years, it had a post-and-rail fence on one side and a hedge on the other. The private road was, however, a little nearer Richmond, and we seldom, if ever, therefore, used the old public road. Kearney's proposal to me was this - I met him in March, 1874, and he asked me whether mother would mind using the old public road, as he wanted to cultivate the sixty acre paddock. I said I did not think she would mind using it if he would make it good, and he then said that we had a right of way through the paddock. Between March and July, however, Kearney did not make the road good. In July I spoke to the defendant about the road. I asked him why his sons had ploughed it up, and he said that as soon as they had time they would make the old public road good. After that the gate was locked at the Jerusalem end. At the latter end of July, Kearney told me that he had had a fence put up across both the private and the old public roads. I formally told him that I should require him to open the road. He said he would not do so. The next morning I went to him and asked him for the key, and he said he would not give it. I then told one of my men to draw the fastening of the gate, and with that Kearney threatened to knock either of us off our horses if we threatened to touch the gate. That was the gate on the private road "C". We have never used the road since. The gate had been locked some months before, Kearney telling me it was to prevent other people going through. Kearney's house is just opposite the gate ; the key was kept there, and for some months the gate was always unlocked when we wanted to pass through. The fence across both roads " A" and " C" is still there and they are both ploughed up. We have now to come to Richmond by the road "B," and to cross by a different ford. The difference is half-a-mile. Besides the distance, the ford affects the value of the Laburnum Park property. The ford at the junction of reads "A" and "C" is a much better one ; it is the one made by my father, and is not so steep as the one on road "B." The closing of the road would make a difference in the value of the property of £10 a year. On the white gate, at the end of road " C," there was written " Private entrance to Laburnum Park."

To Mr BROMBY : I have been in possession of Laburnum Park for two years. I am 23 years of age. My father had the painting put on the gate more than ten years ago.

To His HONOUR : My mother has the house and garden, and I have the rest of the estate. I pay her £150 a year for it, under a verbal agreement.

Alexander Goldie deposed : I reside in Victoria, and was formerly the owner of Laburnum Park. I have known the old public road "A" since 1826. "B" was the public road from 1826 to 1846. Kearney is a very old resident. His father was one of a committee with me in 1833 to fix the roads in the neighbourhood: I made the road " B " in order to avoid the inconvenience of people passing just past my house along road "A," and I also made a good bridge. The road " B " was then used by the public, who ceased to use road " A," but I continued to use it. Neither the defendant nor anybody else ever interrupted me using that road. The Enfield people always used that road during the time I was there. It was a decided loss to the estate to have the road closed, a loss, I should say, of quite £10 a year. I knew the late Mr William Searle well ; he was as thoroughly honest as any man that ever lived.

John Gitters deposed :-I was last year in the employ of Mr Chas. Searle, of Laburnum Park. In August last I went, with Mr Searle to the gate at the entrance of the private road. Kearney was there. Mr Searle asked him for the key of the gate, but he refused to give it, and he took a panel out of the fence, and threatened to knock us both down if we attempted to go through.

Winston Churchill Simmons : I am a farmer at Richmond, and one of the plaintiffs in this action. I am well acquainted with the three roads "A," "B," "C." I consider the road "A," the old public road, to be of permanent advantage to Laburnum Park property, and I don't think the previous witnesses have over-estimated the loss to the estate by the closing of the road. The private road, " C," was a better road than "A"; it is more direct, and not so steep. Mrs Searle's lease has about two years to run, the unexpired term of a seven years lease.

That was the case for the plaintiffs.

Mr Bromby submitted that the plaintiffs should be non-suited on two grounds- (1) that they were reversioners of the property, and not in possession according to the first count of the declaration, and that therefore they could not bring the action ; (2) that the old public highway had not been a public highway, for more than 20 years.

The ATTORNEY-GENERAL contended that the reversioners, and not the persons who had transitory possession of the property, were the proper persons to sue ; and with regard to the second point, if a public way was once established, no amount of non-use by the public could extinguish that way. The learned counsel applied to be allowed to amend the declaration on the first count.

His HONOUR overruled both objections, and permitted the declaration to be amended.

Mr BROMBY addressed the jury for the defendant, resting his defence mainly on the allegation that the defendant was in a state of intoxication, and therefore did not know what he was doing when he signed the agreement in question. He called Thomas Kearney, who deposed : I am the defendant in this case, I remember the month of August, 1870, when I was asked to sign a lease by Mr Searle. Bills came in from Richmond, and I went to Mr Searle and asked him to advance me some money to pay them. He had previously advanced money on my wife's property, at eight per cent, and he said he would advance money on my property at the same rate. Just before the lease was signed Mr Searle asked me if I would allow him a right of road through the land. I said " no," but I told him he could use the road he was then using until I wanted to cultivate the land. I got the money from him on the 3rd of August. I had been drinking for some days before that, and when I got up that morning I told my wife that I would turn over a new leaf and not drink any more. I felt delirium tremens, however, coming on me, and I went to Richmond to get some more drink. When I got back at three o'clock, my wife told me that Mr Searle wanted me to go over to his house. I went there, I have an indistinct recollection of signing a lease then. I don't remember how many times I signed my name. Some cheques were given to me. I was anxious to get the money to pay the bills I owed, and the cheques were made out in the names of the various parties, and one also in my wife's name. The sixty acres are nearly all cultivated now. If there was a road through that land, it would greatly diminish its value, I was born on the property, 51 years ago. I remember the public road " B" being made by Mr Goldie. My father made the old public road " A " through my property ; but after Mr Goldie made his road " B," the public used it. The public used the other road, but only on sufferance. Mr Searle asked me to sell him the sixty acre piece ; he offered me £450, but I refused it.

To the ATTORNEY-GENERAL : The sixty acre paddock had not been in cultivation till last year. I never promised to make good the old public road, nor did I first make a proposal to young Searle about the road. He first came to me. I have now ploughed up both roads. I knew long before 1870 that Mr Searle was using the private road " C," and I knew it was a great convenience to him. I have been of intemperate habits for 35 years; I began young. Mr Searle on many occasions tried to induce me to give up drinking. In 1865, he got me to sign the pledge, and had been very kind to me in a variety of ways ; in fact he was so all the time I knew him, except on this one occasion. I think he cheated me then, because I was not in a fit state to sign an agreement. There are three signatures, and they are written in a firm hand. Mrs Searle and Sarah Roberts are mistaken in saying I was sober when I signed the lease. I went to Mr Searle's for the express purpose of signing the lease and obtaining money. I don't remember whether the lease was read to me or not. When my wife told me what I had done in signing the lease, I thought I had been tricked ; but I said nothing about it, nor should I have said anything, had not this action been brought.

John Woodcock Graves deposed : I am the attorney to the defendant. I have known the defendant a long time, and knew his father before him. During the time I have known the defendant, he has been frequently intoxicated. His property was being damaged by his intemperate habits, and I drew up a settlement of some property on Mrs Kearney. By that document I made Mr Searle the trustee. At that time Mr Searle had not made a claim of the right-of-way.

Ann Elizabeth Kearney, examined by Mr BROMBY : I am the wife of defendant, and have been married to him 27 years. I have lived a great many years in Richmond. My husband was given to intemperate habits, very much so five years ago. In 1870, in the month of July, my husband was suffering from delirium tremens, and continued drinking to the 2nd of August. On that day Mr Searle asked me where he was, that he had the lease ready for him to sign. I told him I was afraid he was not in a fit state to sign it. On the 3rd of August he was ill in bed, and begged of me for God's sake to get up and give him a drink. He went out while I was getting his breakfast ready, and did not return home till the afternoon. Mr Searle came to the house after, and I had a conversation with him about the lease of the land. I arranged with him about the rent to be paid for the 60 acres, and how it was to be paid in advance. Mr Searle spoke to me about the condition of my husband, saying that he was on the verge of insanity, and that if something was not done at once he would surely go mad. When my husband came home in the afternoon with the cheques he was very much agitated, and when I hesitated to sign the cheque drawn in my favour, he become so excited that I thought he would have murdered me. After Mr Searle died I saw Mrs Searle in reference to the document containing the right-of-way, and subsequently saw it at the office of Mr C. Butler. I remember the disturbance in reference to the fences of the public road being destroyed, but I have never seen that road used by the public since.

Cross-examined by the ATTORNEY-GENERAL : I fix upon the period the 3rd August from the violence of my husband, which was unusual, and from the date of the cheques which he brought, home, the reason the cheque I have spoken of was made payable to me was that he should not have the money, and he became violent because I refused to sign it, and he wanted to have it cashed. When he went to sign the lease he did so with the one idea of getting the cheques to pay his debts, and he did pay them. I cannot tell if the public road was used by the Enfield people for taking cattle to water. Mr Searle at one time I thought was very kind to us ; but I think differently now. I am a poetess. I wrote the lines produced in thanks to Mr Searle because he had saved my husband from committing suicide. I think now the object Mr Searle had was to get hold of our property.

Annie Kearney, daughter of defendant, gave evidence corroborative of the last witness as to the condition of her father on the 3rd of August.

Cross-examined : He was very tipsy before he went to Mr Searle. He had been drinking for three or four days before then. It was his custom, when he went to Richmond to return home drunk. I fix the date the 3rd of August, from the way in which he behaved to my mother on that date. The first I knew of the deed about the road was when my mother came from Mr Butler's, and said that Mr Butler had produced the paper, but that it was illegal. I cannot tell if she said that the paper was signed on the 3rd of August, 1870.

Ada Kearney, another daughter of the defendant, also testified that her father was tipsy on the 3rd of August, 1870. She fixed upon the date from the violent behaviour of her father towards her mother.

Alexander Gibbons, storekeeper, examined by Mr BROMBY : I have known defendant for 35 years. I have lived in the neighbourhood of Richmond a great length of time. I remember in August, 1870, meeting Kearney in the paddock coming from Mr Searle. He said he had been signing articles at Mr Searle's, and seeing that he was under the influence of drink, I made the observation, " I hope you knew what you were signing." Defendant had a piece of paper in his hand. I had frequently seen defendant tipsy before.

Cross-examined : It was Kearney who remembered our meeting in the first instance I remembered it afterwards.

S.B. Fookes, rector of Richmond, examined by Mr BROMBY, deposed to knowing defendant for many years as a very intemperate man. He did not know of the road in dispute ever having been used as a public road.

John Stonehouse, examined by Mr BROMBY, deposed that he knew Kearney's property. Knew it for 42 years. The road used to go to the Falls from the public road leading from Richmond to Jerusalem was abandoned in 1840, and the road called the public road, and now known as such, was adopted.

Richard Cook corroborated the last witness.

This concluded the case for the defendant, and Mr BROMBY summed up the same, contending that the evidence established beyond a doubt that the defendant when he made the agreement conveying the road to the late Mr Searle, was not in a fit state to execute such a document, and that therefore it was null and void, and ought to be so declared. As to the question that the road was a public road, he submitted that there was no evidence of that, and, further that if it was a public road it had been abandoned.

His HONOR : Do you contend, Mr Bromby, that a public road can be abandoned ?
Mr BROMBY ; Yes.
His HONOR : Have you any authority ?
Mr BROMBY : I have but I have not the books with me.

His HONOR said that the authorities laid down that a public road, even though it might have been fenced across, could not be abandoned, excepting by Act of Parliament. The principle was that " Once a highway, always a highway."

Mr BROMBY, (after some discussion) said he would confine his contention to the allegation that the road never was a public road.

The ATTORNEY-GENERAL replied on the whole case pointing out that the non-use of a public road did not amount to a cession of it as such, and in support of his view quoted Shelford on Real Property. He then proceeded at length to deal with the allegation contained in the defendant's plea that he was so drunk at the time he made the agreement as to be incapable of executing it, submitting that it was monstrous to suppose that a man having entered into a legal contract should be allowed to turn round and say - when the person with whom that contract was, laid in his grave, and was unable to confront him-that he was induced to enter into the agreement while under the influence of drink. It must be shown that he was so far drunk as to be wholly incapable of comprehending the meaning of the contract, and that Mr Searle must have known that he was in that state. He submitted that the evidence for the plaintiffs was entitled to belief, and if so, then the jury must find their verdict in their favour.

His HONOUR then summed up the whole case to the jury, telling them that if the defendant was so drunk when he signed the deed as not to know what he was doing and that Searle knew he was so drunk, there could be no doubt whatever that the deed would not hold water. He then reviewed the evidence on either side on that point, and left the case in the hands of the jury ; directing them if they found the road was a highway still it could not be abandoned by non-user, and plaintiff would be entitled to compensation for any damages they had sustained from the obstruction of that highway.

Mr BROMBY asked His Honour, to direct the jury in finding on the plea of drunkenness, to say whether the defendant when he executed the deed was drunk only, or whether he was drunk to the knowledge of Mr Searle.

HIS HONOUR assented, and desired the jury to decide on the plea as suggested by the learned counsel.

The jury retired at 5 p.m., and at 6 o'clock they came into Court with a question on which they desired His Honour's ruling. The question was whether, if the defendant was drunk, but not drunk within the knowledge of Searle, that would invalidate the deed.

His HONOUR replied that it would. That was how he had directed the jury in his summing up, and he had been fortified in his opinion by other authorities than that mentioned in the case, since the jury had retired. If the jury found simply that defendant was drunk, but that he was not drunk within the knowledge of Searle, then the bargain would stand good so far as Searle was concerned.

The jury again retired, and after twenty minutes deliberation, they sent to ask for information as to what damages would carry costs.

The ATTORNEY-GENERAL offered no objection, and the reply was forwarded that anything above £7 would carry costs.

Shortly after, the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on the first count, with 40s. damages. On the second count they found that defendant was drunk when he signed the deed, but not to the knowledge of Mr and Mrs Searle; and on the third count that the road marked "A" was a public highway, but that it had ceased to be used ai a highway since 1863.

The ATTORNEY-GENERAL asked what damage was assessed on the second count. The jury were bound to state some damages.

The Foreman : One shilling.

Mr BROMBY asked His Honour to take a note of his objection as to whether drunkenness with or without the knowledge of either was a good defence or not. If he could maintain that it was, then he should submit, on the finding of the jury on that count, that plaintiffs were not entitled to a verdict.

His HONOUR said he would do so.

The Court then adjourned until 10 o'clock next (this) morning.
Source: LAW INTELLIGENCE. The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954) 17 June 1875:page 2.
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/8937970
SUPREME COURT - TERM SITTTNGS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20.
Before their Honors the Judges. SIMMONS AND OTHERS V. KEARNEY.
A rule nisi had been granted last week for arrest of judgment and nonsuit in this case, the right to a road being in question. The rule was enlarged for a week, and the Court strongly recommended that the parties should come to terms.
Source: SUPREME COURT—TERM SITTINGS. (1875, July 1). Launceston Examiner (Tas. : 1842 - 1899), p. 3.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article52900123

The final decision in this case was published on 10th July 1875. Thomas Kearney as the defendant was fined 40 shillings for obstructing the road which he had signed over to the plaintiff Searle in 1870, but since the jury believed that Searle claimed that Kearney to his knowledge was not intoxicated at the signing of the deed, the accusation that Searle had acted fraudulently was dismissed.
Simmons and Others v. Kearney was a suit in which the plaintiffs sought to recover damages, assessed at £100, for the obstruction by the defendant of a certain private road and public highway in the Richmond district. The defendant pleaded several pleas, but that on which the greatest reliance was placed was that wherein he alleged that the deed of agreement, by which he had parted with his right to the plaintiff to use the private road, he being to the knowledge of the late Mr. Searle (whose trustees the plaintiffs are), intoxicated at the time it was executed, and therefore, unable to comprehend its meaning. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs on the first count alleging the obstruction, and awarded them 40s. costs. On the defendant's plea of drunkenness, they found that he was drunk when he executed the deed, but not to the knowledge of Mr. Searle ; and as to the obstruction of the highway, they stated that the highway was a public road, but that it ceased to be used as such in 1873. The verdict substantially is therefore for the plaintiff.
Source: LEGAL. Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), Saturday 10 July 1875, page 1
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8938453



https://stors.tas.gov.au/LPIC13-1-88_35
Photograph - Colebrook Mansion
Item Number:LPIC13/1/60
Start Date:01 Jan 1880 End Date: 31 Jan 1880
Location:Launceston 34 1 4
Creating Agency: Anson Brothers, Photographers (NG143)
Archives Office Tasmania
Link: https://stors.tas.gov.au/LPIC13-1-88_35

The four Graves sisters
It was during these court proceedings in June 1875, in which her husband Thomas Kearney was defended by solicitor John Woodcock Graves' instructions (to Mr. Bromby) that Ann Elizabeth Kearney wrote her poem about meeting Aboriginal elder Truganini (1812-1876)) on a street corner, prompting her to celebrate her namesake, the non-Aboriginal daughter of solicitor John Woodcock Graves, Trucannini Graves. The first-born of these four sisters, Jean Porthouse Graves, was photographed by Thomas J. Nevin in 1872:



Jean Porthouse Graves, 14 yrs old,
Detail of photograph (below) printed as both a stereograph and carte-de-visite
Stereograph in double oval buff mount with T. Nevin blindstamp impress in centre
Photo copyright © KLW NFC 2014 ARR
Taken at the TMAG November 2014 (TMAG Collection Ref:Q1994.56.5)

Jean Porthouse Graves, born 20th January 1858 at Hobart to John Woodcock Graves, solicitor, Upper Bathurst St Hobart, and Jessie Graves formerly Montgomerie. She was unnamed at birth. Jean Porthouse Graves married solicitor Francis Knowles Miller at Melbourne, Victoria in 1885. She died at her residence, Rembrandt Square London, aged 91 yrs, on 30th July 1951.

Mathinna Isabella Graves, born 1st August 1859 at Hobart to John Woodcock Graves, solicitor, Bathurst St Hobart, and Jessie Graves formerly Montgomerie. Mathinna Isabella Graves died at her residence, Orrong Rd, St Kilda Victoria, aged 88 yrs, on 29th June 1948.

Mimi Graves was born on 20th November 1862 at Hobart to John Woodcock Graves, solicitor and Jessie Graves formerly Montgomerie. Her birth was registered by a friend - H J D Baily (?) Argyle St.

Trucaninni Graves was born on 2nd November 1864 at Hobart to John Woodcock Graves, solicitor, Bathurst St Hobart, and Jessie Graves formerly Montgomerie. Her birth was registered by her mother Jessie Graves, Princess St. Hobart.

The eldest, Jean Porthouse Graves (1858-1951) was an admirer in her teens of photographer Thomas J. Nevin. She made his acquaintance in January 1872 when he was assigned official photographer of VIP's on a day trip to Adventure Bay, Tasmania, a trip organised by her father John Woodcock Graves the younger. In her album of photographs and newspaper clippings, some documenting the history of her grandfather's fame as the composer of the English folk song "D'ye ken John Peel", John Woodcock Graves the elder, she kept a half dozen photos by Thomas J. Nevin of that trip in 1872, plus a few taken later of all four daughters at the family home, Caldew, in West Hobart, after her father's death in 1876.



One of four extant photographs taken on 31st January 1872 and printed in various formats from Thomas J. Nevin's series advertised in the Mercury, 2nd February, 1872, as the Colonists' Trip to Adventure Bay (Bruny Island).
[From lower left]: John Woodcock Graves jnr, solicitor; his daughter Jean Porthouse Graves; above her, R. Byron Miller, barrister; on her left, Sir John O'Shanassy, former Premier of Victoria;
[Centre top]: Lukin Boyes, son of auditor and artist G. T. W. Boyes, leaning on stone structure
[Extreme lower right]: James Erskine Calder, former Surveyor-General, Tasmania

Single unmounted carte-de-visite photograph of large group at Advenure Bay 1872
From the Miller and Graves family album
Photos recto and verso: copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2015 Private Collection



Verso of above: One of four extant photographs taken on 31st January 1872 and printed in various formats from Thomas J. Nevin's series advertised in the Mercury, 2nd February, 1872, as the Colonists' Trip to Adventure Bay (Bruny Island).
Verso with T. Nevin late A. Bock , 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart Town commercial stamp
Verso inscriptions include these identifiable figures at the "Picnic":
Father = John Woodcock Graves jnr,
Sir John O'Shanassy = former Premier of Victoria,
Self = Jean Porthouse Graves, daughter of John W. Graves,
L. Boyes = Lukin Boyes (?), son of G.T. W. Boyes
From an album compiled by the families of John Woodcock Graves jnr and R. Byron Miller
Private Collection © KLW NFC Imprint 2015

Truca Graves
A lion sculpture greeted visitors on the steps of Caldew, West Hobart, home of the family of solicitor John Woodcock Graves the younger, first photographed by Thomas J. Nevin ca. 1870 as a stereograph with Byron Miller, Lukin Boyes, Frederick Boyes, and sisters Jean, Matte, and Truca Graves.



Above: Group portrait of two male adults, one boy and three girls, members of the Graves, Miller and Boyes family taken by Thomas Nevin ca. 1870 at Caldew, West Hobart.
Stereograph in arched mount on yellow card
TMAG Ref: Q16826.10


Possible identification as follows:
Frederick Lukin Boyes: the boy seated on the grass who died in 1881, aged 16 yrs, son of Lukin Boyes.
Lukin Boyes, Customs Officer: the man seated on right in light clothing who is patting a goat or deer.
Jean Porthouse Graves (born 1858): the teenage girl sitting next to Lukin Boyes, daughter of John Woodcock Graves jnr (not pictured here).
Robert Byron Miller, barrister: sitting on the same bench, whose son Francis Knowles Miller later married Jean Porthouse Graves.
Two more of John Woodcock Graves four daughters: the two other girls, one sitting on a chair at extreme left, and the other seated on the grass, were possibly Mimi (born 1862), Trucaninni as Truca (1864) or Mathinna as Matte (born 1859). The latter two were given Aboriginal names at birth.

This photograph (below) was taken of Jean Porthouse Graves about seven years later, noted as "self" along the edge of the page on which it was pasted in her family album. She stood in the doorway of Caldew ca. 1877, gazing directly at the photographer. Her father, solicitor John Woodcock Graves jnr by this time was deceased. He had died suddenly in 1876 of congestion of the lungs and pneumonia, leaving a widow, pictured here seated in the doorway and four daughters. Listed as present here by Jean are two of her sisters, Trucaninni (Truca) and Mathinna (Matte), with their father's former colleagues R. Byron Miller standing next to Jean, and Lukin Boyes, seated with one of the Graves' daughters. Lukin Boyes was a witness at the marriage of John Woodcock Graves to Jessie Montgomerie in 1857.

Inscribed on page: "Caldew, Hobart, Mother, Matte, Mister Miller, Lukin Boyes, Truca, self"



Inscribed on page: "Caldew, Hobart, Mother, Matte, Mister Miller, Lukin Boyes, Truca, self"
From the Graves and Miller family album, complete page below
Photos copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2015 Private Collection



Inscribed on page: "Caldew, Hobart, Mother, Matte, Mister Miller, Lukin Boyes, Truca, self"
From the Graves and Miller family album
Photos copyright © KLW NFC Imprint 2015 Private Collection

Earlier poetry by Ann Elizabeth Kearney née Lovell
The first, published in 1849 was penned a year or so prior to Ann Lovell's marriage to Thomas Kearney in 1848. Written in the voice of an unnamed widow who is at that moment relinquishing her child Agnes to death, the poem may have been based on real events in Ann Lovell's family. Then again, it may be little more than a generic poem expressing grief at death in the Romantic tradition, produced by a young poet practicising her art.

1848: "A Widowed Mother’s Lament on the Death of Her Only Child"



Source: Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957), Friday 17 August 1849, page 4 Original Poetry

TRANSCRIPT
A WIDOWED MOTHER'S LAMENT ON THE
DEATH OF HER ONLY CHILD

And must I give thee up, my child ?
A fair young mother weeping said -
Long, long was this sad heart beguiled,
With hope, but that at last is fled.

Yes, death is stamped upon thy brow,
The clammy drops are gathering there,
And thou wilt leave thy mother now,
A pray to anguish and despair.

No more, no more, thy gentle smile
Shall wake this heart to hope again
No more, no more, wilt thou beguile,
With soothing words, thy mother's pain.

Thy lip hath lost its roseate hue,
Thy cheek 's deprived of healthful bloom,
And thy soft eyes, of heavenly blue,
Must soon be closed within the tomb.

Thou wert the only solace left,
Thy mother's widowed heart to cheer;
Death, cruel death, has me bereft
Of all, save thee, my Agnes dear.

I know 'tis useless to repine,
And murmur thus, 'gainst Heaven's decree
I must my only hope resign,
Yes, Agnes, I must part from thee.

I yield thee, though this bleeding heart
Can scarcely bear to let thee go,
Oh, Agnes ! thus from thee to part,
It is, indeed, excessive woe.

Forgive, dear child, my selfish love,
That would thy gentle soul retain,
That will not let it mount above
To that bright world, released from pain.

She wept in silence, as she gazed
Upon the corpse of that fair girl,
As, with her hand, she gently raised,
And parted back the clustering curl.

Then said - I will no more repine,
or murmur, 'neath the chastening rod,
Freely, my all I will resign,
And yield thee, Agnes, up to God.

A. E. Lovell.
Source: Original Poetry. (1849, August 17). The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957), p. 4.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article4769272

This second poem, written in 1872 can be taken as autobiographical in some part, written in the years when Ann Elizabeth Kearney suffered verbal and physical violence from her husband Thomas Kearney, details of which were stated before judge and jury in 1875 in the case SIMMONS v. KEARNEY (see transcript above of The Case). She told the court then of his alcoholism, his "intemperate habits" and her fear "he would have murdered me" when hesitating to give him money to buy more alcohol. His daughters Ada and Annie Kearney also testified to the violent behaviour of their father towards their mother. Richmond residents too remembered him as a "very intemperate man". Thomas Kearney's neighbour Mr. Searle thought " he was on the verge of insanity, and that if something was not done at once he would surely go mad". By his own admission Thomas Kearney said his intemperate habits began young, 35 years ago. His friend and lawyer John Woodcock Graves saw him frequently intoxicated and said in court that the damage he was causing to the property resolved his decision to draw up a settlement to sequester some portion for Ann Kearney. For her part, as this poem testifies, her life was a "harsh battlefield". She had grown old prematurely, without hope, her heart "stern and cold," betrayed by the inconstancy of "Man's love, ah!"

1872: "A Life's History: Sad but True"



Source: ORIGINAL POETRY. (1872, May 4). The Tasmanian (Launceston, Tas.), p. 2.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article201344718

TRANSCRIPT
ORIGINAL POETRY

A LIFE'S HISTORY: SAD BUT TRUE

Life was once a scene of gladness,
All I look'd on bright and true;
Grief came not with brow of sadness
To mar the picture fancy drew.

The future seemed a landscape fair,
Deck'd with bright flowers that could not fade,
And loving friends were smiling there,
Who now are in the dark grave laid.

Yet even in childhood's happy day,
Too soon I learnt earth's joys are brief;
Death snatch'd my dearest friend away,
'Twas then I knew my first great grief.

But childhood's tears, though for a while,
In bitterness and sorrow flow,
Are quickly followed by the smile
Of roseate hope's delightful glow.

Then came a time, when at my feet,
One knelt my trusting heart to woo;
The words he spoke were passing sweet,
He fondly vowed he e'er be true.

Ah! then my girlish fancy dream'd
Of man's enduring love and worth,
And he I worshippped only seemed
A being all too bright for earth.

Alas! to see mine Idol fall,
To find he was indeed but clay,
Has strewn a dark funereal pall
O'er all that once was bright and gay.

Man's love, ah! 'tis a thing of change -
The fleeting passion of the hour;
Inconstant still he loves to range.
And gather sweets from every flower.

There was a time I sadly wept
O'er each harsh word, each broken vow;
Then hope its cheering beacon kept
To guide where all is darkness now.

Now o'er my soul the waveless calm
Of cold despair is darkly spread;
The future cannot bring alarm
Or gladness for all hope has fled.

Ah! years of weary care and strife
Have made me prematurely old;
In the harsh battle-field of life
This heart has now grown stern and cold.

Well, let that pass, 'tis mine to yield
Submission to the Almighty's will;
He knows my lot, and He can shield
The sorrowing heart that trusts Him still.

A.E. KEARNEY

Ann Elizabeth Kearney's Will
The final apportionment of the combined properties of Ann Elizabeth Kearney's inheritance from her father's estate, Carrington, and the residue of her husband's estate at Laburnam, including her own portion at Enfield, Richmond, Tasmania, was finalised by her executor, her son Albert Kearney, at her death from influenza in 1898. This copy of her original will is held at the Archives Office of Tasmania.

TRANSCRIPT
In the Supreme Court of Tasmania
Ecclesiastical Division

Be it known unto all men by these present that on the fifth day of November in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety eight the last Will and Testament of Ann Elizabeth Kearney late of Richmond in Tasmania deceased (widow of the late Thomas Kearney) deceased who died at Enfield Richmond aforesaid at or on about the thirteenth day of June one thousand eight hundred and ninety eight (a true copy of which Will is hereunto amended) was exhibited and proved before this Honorable Court and that administration of all and singular the goods chattels rights credits and effects of the said deceased proven [?] the Island of Tasmania and the Dependencies thereof was and is hereby committed to Albert Edward Kearney of Richmond aforesaid farmer one of the executors in the said will named (Reserving nevertheless to Thomas George Kearney William Kearney and Ernest Charles Kearney all of Richmond aforesaid the other executors in the said Will named full power and authority at any time hereafter to apply for and obtain Probate of the said Will and administration of the goods chattels rights credits and effects of the said deceased either jointly with the said Albert Edward Kearney or otherwise as the case may require). The said Albert Edward Kearney having been first sworn well and truly to perform the said Will by paying first all debts of the said deceased and then the Legacies therein bequeathed so far as the estate shall therein to extend and the law finds him and to make and exhibit unto this Honorable Court a true and perfect inventory of all and every the goods and chattels rights and credits and effects of the said deceased on or before the fifth day of May ?? ensuing and to render a just and true account of his executorship when he shall be lawfully called thereunto And further that he believes the goods chattels rights credits and effects of the said deceased at the time of her death did not exceed in value the sum of Fifty pounds in Tasmania and the Dependencies thereof.

Given under my hand and seal of the Supreme Court of Tasmania on the fifteenth day of November in the year of the Lord one thousand and eighthundred and ninety eight. By the Court - Philip Seager - Registrar

This is the last Will and Testament of me Ann Elizabeth Kearney Widow of the late Thomas Kearney of Richmond Tasmania in the County of Monmouth Tasmania shall this twenty seventh day of September in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety three hereby revoke all wills made by me at any time heretofore. I appoint Thomas George Kearney William Kearney Ernest Charles Kearney and Albert Edward Kearney all of Richmond Tasmania to be my Executors and direct that all my Debts and Funeral Expenses shall be paid as soon as conveniently may be after my decease. I give and bequeath unto my son Thomas George Kearney the cottage where he now resides together with Ten acres of land including half the orchard the other half of the orchard I leave in trust to my son Albert Edward Kearney for the use of the house and to assist in the maintenance of my daughter Annie Lousia Kearney the cottage I now reside in known as Enfield Cottage together with the household furniture and all my personal effects also twenty acres of land adjoining house also eight cows and all young cattle I may be possessed of at the time of my decease. I bequeath to my daughter Florence Susanna ten acres of land adjoining Ada Emily's portion. I bequeath to my son Ernest Charles ten acres of land together with one horse iron harrows and D. F. plough. I bequeath to my son Albert Edward nine acres and one half of land with stables also one acre at present rented by P. Keady in the town of Richmond together with remainder of farming implements including winnowing machine plough dray etc I bequeath to my son William and my daughter Eva Alice thirty two and half acres adjoining the above properties to be equally divided between them I bequeath all my share and interest under the will of my father Esh Lovell deceased to my sisters to use or convert into money as they shall deem fit and expedient for the benefit of all my children share and share alike. Any sown [?] or growing crop on the property at the time of my decease to be left in trust to Albert Edward Kearney to divide as he may deem fit -

Signed by the said testator A. E. Kearney in the presence of us present at the same time who at her request in her presence and in the presence of each other have subscribed our names as witnesses - Samuel Skemp - Myrtle Bank - Rowland Skemp -
Last Will and Testament of Ann Elizabeth Kearney 1893
Archives Office of Tasmania
https://stors.tas.gov.au/AD960-1-23-5357_1.

Resources: external links

1. University of Tasmania papers donated from the estate of John Rowland SKEMP
Skemp, John Rowland (ed.), Letters to Anne: The story of a Tasmanian family told in letters written to Anne Elizabeth Lovell (Mrs Thomas Kearney) by her brothers, sister and other relatives during the years 1846-1872, (Melbourne, Melbourne University Press, 1956).
https://millennium.lib.utas.edu.au/record=b1318234~S67

Reference to the index of John Rowland Skemp (1900-1967), who was the son of Rowland Skemp
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/11065/1/skemp-S12_John_Rowland_Skemp.pdf

2. Australian Dictionary of Biography, entries on Keanery and Lovell
Kearney, William (1795–1870)
https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/kearney-william-2290

Lovell, Esh (1796–1865)
https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/lovell-esh-2374

3. Archives Office of Tasmania, BDM documents
Ann Elizabeth KEARNEY
Marriage 1848
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD37-1-7p206j2k

Birth of child Thomas George Kearney
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD33-1-28-p691j2k
Death of child Catherine Kearney 1850
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD35-1-19p120j2k

Death of child Clara Kearney 1851
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD35-1-20p55j2k

Census 1851 Richmond
https://stors.tas.gov.au/CEN1-1-115-119A

Death of child Catherine Kearney 1850
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD35-1-19p120j2k

Birth of child William Kearney 1852
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD33-1-30p094j2k

Births of twins of Annie Louisa and Ada Emily Kearney 1858
Registered by her mother, address given "Spring Hill Bottom"
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD33-1-37p581j2k

Birth of child Florence Susannah Kearney 1858
Registered by her mother, address Coal River.
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD33-1-38p042j2k

Birth of child Ernest Clark Kearney 1864
Birth registered by mother at Lower Jerusalem
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD33-1-42p222j2k

Birth of child Albert Kearney 1866
Birth registered by mother, address "Enfield"
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD33-1-44p709j2k

Death of Thomas Kearney 1889
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD35-1-58p193j2k

Death of Ann Elizabeth Kearney 1898
https://stors.tas.gov.au/RGD35-1-67p231j2k

Will of Ann Elizabeth Kearney
https://stors.tas.gov.au/AD960-1-23-5357_1

Thomas Kearney suffered severely from alcoholism in the 1870s, yet he survived to the age of 65, his death registered from "natural causes" in the district of Richmond. His wife Ann Elizabeth Kearney died nine years later of influenza. Her address given by her son Albert Kearney to the registrar as informant was "Enfield".

4. Newspaper publications of poetry and law reports re Anne Elizabeth Kearney nee Lovell
ORIGINAL POETRY. (1872, May 4). The Tasmanian (Launceston, Tas.), p. 2.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article201344718

Original Poetry. (1849, August 17). The Argus (Melbourne, Vic.), p. 4.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article4769272

LAW INTELLIGENCE. The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954) 17 June 1875:page 2.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8937970.

LEGAL. Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), Saturday 10 July 1875, page 1
https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8938453

5. Descendant families
Thomas Kearney (1824 - 1889)
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kearney-1237
KEARNEY.— Died suddenly on December 26th, 1889, at his residence Enfield, Campania, Thomas, eldest son of the late William Kearney, aged 65 years.
Family Notices (1890, January 4). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 4.

Poem "Lines" addressed to Trucannini Graves 1875
Jeanneret family files (p.75)
https://ianjeanneretphoto.files.wordpress.com/2019/06/jeanneret_book-1.pdf



1966. Carrington House, Richmond, Tasmania, home of Esh Lovell, father of Ann Elizabeth Kearney nee Lovell
Photographs of Tasmanian Buildings and Individuals Taken by Sir Ralph Whishaw (NS165)
Archives Office Tasmania: https://stors.tas.gov.au/NS165-1-363


RELATED POSTS main weblog