Mary Sophia Day (m. Axup), Thomas Nevin's sister-in-law

DESCENDANTS of Mary Sophia DAY and Hector Charles AXUP, Australia
NEVIN family daughters and their AXUP cousins 1930s



From left to right:
Minnie Drew (nee Mary Ann Nevin) Thomas & Elizabeth Nevin's youngest daughter
Mary Sophia Axup nee Day, sister of Elizabeth Rachel Nevin nee Day and aunt of Minnie and May
Eva Baldwin nee Axup,Mary Sophia Axup's eldest daughter
and May (Mary Florence Elizabeth) Nevin, Thomas and Elizabeth's Nevin's eldest daughter
Taken ca. 1939. Copyright © KLW NFC Private Collections 2009 and 2020 ARR.



Verso inscribed by a grand niece of Mary Sophia Axup, who was always called simply Auntie Axup, by the children of her Nevin nieces and nephews, rather than the technically correct "Great Aunt Axup";

"NEVIN, DREW
Auntie Minnie youngest
Auntie Axup, [sic, she was the great aunt Mary Sophia Axup
Auntie Eva, Uncle Sid's wife
Auntie May, eldest NEVIN"

This much-handled photograph shows Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin's youngest daughter, Minnie Drew nee Nevin on left (b. 1884, so she would have been 55 yrs old here ), and their eldest daughter May Nevin on right (b.1872, so she would have 67 yrs old here) - a difference of twelve years separated their births. Their cousin Eva Baldwin nee Axup second from right was six years younger than May Nevin (b. 1878, so she would have been 61 yrs old here) and six years older than Minnie Nevin. Their aunt Mary Sophia Axup was born in 1853 and died in 1942, shortly after this photograph was taken. She would have been 86 yrs old on this occasion, which was possibly the wedding of Eva Baldwin's daughter Ella to Glynn Davis (1939). The Nevin sisters, who would have attended the wedding, posed here with their cousin Eva Baldwin and "Aunt Axup" as she was known, at the railway station on their way back to Hobart from Launceston.

Parents, sister and paternal uncle
Mary Sophia Day was born on 9th March 1853 at Hobart, Tasmania to mariner Captain James Day and Rachel Pocock. She was the younger sister of Elizabeth Rachel Day who married Thomas Nevin on 11th July 1871, and the youngest daughter of Rachel Pocock and master mariner Captain James Day who were married at St. David's Church, Hobart on 6th January 1841, witnessed by James Day's brother-in-law Captain Edward Goldsmith. She died in Melbourne on 18th June 1942, aged 89 years. Unnamed at birth, she was later registered as Sophia Mary Day on April 11th, 1853, and known thereafter as Mary Sophia Day:



1853 Births in the District of Hobart
Detail: Reg: 2187 March 9th - birth of female to James Day Master Mariner and Rachael Day formerly Pocock. registered by James Day, father Brisbane Street [Hobart] April 11th . Remarks: Sophia Mary.
Archives Office of Tasmania
Names Index: Ref: RGD33-1-4-P551

Although Mary Sophia Day's elder sister Elizabeth Rachel Day was born and baptised at Rotherhithe, London UK in 1847, she was born in Hobart in 1853. The address of their parents by 1854 was listed in the General Directory for Hobart, as "DAY, James, mariner, Bathurst Street" (NLA Ref: MCN 872). Their father, Captain James Day (1804-1882), was brother-in-law to Captain Edward Goldsmith (1804-1869), also a master mariner, with whom he served as First Mate and Navigator on early voyages to the Australian colonies. Captain James Day's sister, Elizabeth Day (1802-1875) after whom her niece Elizabeth Rachel Day was named, married Captain Edward Goldsmith at Liverpool, England in 1829.



Marriage: Edward Goldsmith mater mariner to Elizabeth Day 24 June 1829, Liverpool UK
Source: Marriages at St George Derby Square in the City of Liverpool
Marriages recorded in the Register for the years 1813 - 1837
https://www.lan-opc.org.uk/Liverpool/Liverpool-Central/stgeorge/marriages_1813-1837.html

Captain Edward Goldsmith was a signatory witness to the marriage of his brother-in-law Captain James Day to Rachel Pocock (ca. 1812-1857) at St David's Church Hobart on January 6, 1841:



St David's Hobarton
6th January 1841
James Day, 34yrs, Master Mariner
Rachel Pocock, 29 years, Spinster
Married in the Parish Church according to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Uniting Church of England and Ireland, William Bedford, Senior Chaplain,
In the presence of Edward Goldsmith and Margaret Fuller

Day v. Goldsmith in Chancery 1872
On the death of Mary Sophia and Elizabeth Rachel Day's paternal uncle Captain Edward Goldsmith in 1869 at Gadshill, Kent, UK, his son Edward Goldsmith jnr contested the will in 1871 in a Chancery suit against his mother Elizabeth Goldsmith, widow, and his father's executors, William Bell Bentley and Alfred Bentley. He also contested his father's legacy as the plaintiff against his Tasmanian cousins, annuants and legatees Mary Sophia Day and Elizabeth Rachel Day. But in a cruel twist, in 1872 both Elizabeth Nevin and her husband, photographer Thomas Nevin, were named in a Chancery suit as defendants, along with Edward jnr and his mother, this time lodged in the name of Elizabeth's younger sister, Mary Sophia Day as the plaintiff (Ref: National Archives UK C16/781 C546012). Captain Goldsmith had wished to leave to his two Tasmanian nieces a row of eleven cottages in Higham, Kent, per this statement on page 4 of his will:

... the said will should convey and assure the testator's eleven cottages and hereditaments known as Vicarage Row Higham in the county of Kent unto the said Elizabeth Rachel Nevin and the plaintiff Mary Sophia Day their respective heirs and assigns as tenants in common ...

Page 4:
Cause number: 1872 D50. Ref:C 16/781/D50
Short title: Day v Goldsmith. Documents: Bill only. Plaintiffs:…
Reference:C 16/781/D50 Description:
Cause number: 1872 D50.
Source: National Archives UK

Was Mary Sophia Day successful in her claim against the will of Captain Edward Goldsmith? It appears not, at least in terms of the original will, since Page 12 was stuck through. Two factors mitigated against her claim proceeding further: first, she turned 21 years old in 1874, and second, she married Captain Hector Axup in 1878. By law she was no longer an "infant" - the term applied to a woman under 21 years old - and as a married woman she was precluded from claiming the annuity under the terms of Captain Goldsmith's will. The same two exclusions had already precluded her sister Elizabeth Rachel Nevin nee Day from filing a claim as a plaintiff.

The eleven houses at Vicarage Row which Captain Edward Goldsmith had specifically requested be set apart as a benefit for these two nieces, the daughters of his wife's brother Captain James Day, were on offer at the auction of the estate in 1870, and presumably were sold, the proceeds to pay funeral expenses and testamentary debts (Page 10 of the Will), the residue to be apportioned between the two nieces which would have been neglible by the time a dozen more claimants filed as defendants in the matter of the estate after the untimely death of the primary beneficiary (apart from his mother who died in 1875), his only son Edward Goldsmith jnr who died young in 1883.

Marriage and children 1878
Captain James Day's younger daughter Mary Sophia Day married Captain Hector Charles James Horatio Axup (1843-1927) on May 1st, 1878 at the Wesleyan Church, Kangaroo Valley (renamed Lenah Valley in 1922) where John Nevin snr had settled his family on property in trust to the Wesleyan Church adjacent to the Lady Franklin Museum in 1854 and established a school. He taught night class to adult males there in 1875 and his daughter Mary Ann Nevin taught local children at the schoolhouse before her marriage (1877). As father-in-law to Captain James Day's eldest daughter Elizabeth Rachel Nevin nee Day, John Nevin snr gave witness at her sister Mary Sophia Day's marriage to Captain Hector Axup alongside Captain James Day.

It was Hector Axup's second marriage. Born on 7th March 1843, at Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England, he arrived in Tasmania in 1876. He was registered on their marriage certificate as a widower and mariner, 34 years old. Mary Sophia Day was registered as a mariner's daughter and spinster, 25 years old. Witnesses were her father Captain James Day, her sister's father-in-law John Nevin snr, and Margaret McGuigan (the spelling of her name is not clear nor her role in Mary Sophia's life). They were married by the officiating minister Nathaniel Bennett according to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Wesleyan Curch by virtue of Act 23 Vict No. 11.



Australia, Tasmania, Civil Registration, 1803-1933, RGD 37/37.
Marriages, 1878, image 9 of 224; Archives Office of Tasmania, Hobart.

By 1885, Hector and Mary Axup had moved to northern Tasmania and were based at the Pilot Station, Low Head. Hector Axup was a harbour pilot and leading tower assistant at George Town, Tasmania. Shortly before he died in Launceston in 1927, he published a "unique booklet" titled "The Reminiscences of an 'Old Salt' of 83 Years by H. C. Axup," (Launceston, ca. 1926). The unattributed photograph below appears on the front cover.



Hector Charles Horatio Axup ca. 1880s

Read more about Hector Axup's background and career here on this site.

Hector and Mary Sophia Axup had five children between 1878 and 1891. The names by which they were commonly known are indicated in heavy type.

1. Rachel Frances Eva Axup b. 1878 at Hobart, Tasmania
2. Sidney James Vernon Axup b.1882 at Hobart, Tasmania
3. Edward Harold Leslie Axup b.1885 at Georgetown, Tasmania
4. Patience Ella Mary Axup b.1889 at Georgetown, Tasmania
5. Olive Lilian Ethel Axup b.1891 at Georgetown, Tasmania

First cousins of the Axup family, children of Elizabeth Rachel and Thomas Nevin:

1. Mary Florence Elizabeth (May) Nevin (1872-1955)
2. Thomas James (Sonny) Nevin (1874-1948)
3. Sydney John Nevin (1876-1877)
4. William John Nevin (1878-1927)
5. George Ernest Nevin (1880-1957)
6. Mary Ann (Minnie) Nevin (1884-1974)
7. Albert Edward Nevin (1888-1955)

First Cousins
All five children born to Mary Sophia and Hector Axup shared family life events with their first cousins, the six surviving children of Elizabeth and Thomas Nevin. The Axups were frequent visitors to the Nevin property at 23-29 Newdate St. North Hobart from the 1920s. When Mary Sophia's fourth child Patience Ella Mary Axup, known as Ella, died of tuberculosis in 1913, her aunt Elizabeth Rachel Nevin and her Nevin cousins would have attended the funeral. This rare photograph of Ella, taken at the Vandyck Studios in Launcestion, Tasmania possibly on her 21st birthday (ca, 1911), was recently recovered from a deceased Nevin family estate (now held in the KLW NFC Private Collections):



Studio portrait of Ella Axup (Patience Ella Mary Axup, 1889 -1913)
Taken at the VANDYCK Studios, Launceston, Tasmania ca. 1911.
Postcard format. Verso inscribed: "Cousin Ella Axup"
Copyright © KLW NFC Group Private Collections 2020



Verso: Studio portrait of Ella Axup (Patience Ella Mary Axup, 1889 -1913)
Taken at the VANDYCK Studios, Launceston, Tasmania ca. 1911.
Postcard format. Verso inscribed: "Cousin Ella Axup"
Copyright © KLW NFC Group Private Collections 2020

When Ella Axup was born at George Town in 1889, her father's occupation was recorded as boatman employed by the Marine Board.



1889 Births in the District of George Town [Tasmania]
Reg. 447. 19 June 1889.  Patience Ella Mary. Female. Father's name Hector Axup. Mother's name Mary Axup formerly Day. Father's occupation Marine Board boatman. Registered by Herbet K. Harris Storekeeper, George Town, 26 July 1889.
Source: Archives Office of Tasmania Ref:  RGD33-1-4-P551

Ella Axup had passed the Commonwealth Public Service exam to take a job as a telephonist in 1912 but died suddenly on 24th June, 1913. The notice of Ella's success in passing the exam was gazetted on 7th September 1912:

1912 COMMONWEALTH PUBLIC SERVICE.
Commonwealth of Australia Gazette (National : 1901 - 1973), 7 September, p. 1912.
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/232445784

Ella's death was published in the Examiner on 26 June 1913:

1913 'Family Notices',
Examiner (Launceston, Tas. : 1900 - 1954), 26 June, p. 1. (DAILY),
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/50712606



Death of Patience Ella Mary Axup
Source: Examiner (Launceston, Tas. : 1900 - 1954) Thu 26 Jun 1913 Page 1 Family Notices

TRANSCRIPT
DEATHS
AXUP. - on the 25th June, at her brother's residence, 54 Elizabeth-street. Patience Ella Mary, beloved second daughter of Hector and Mary Axup, aged 24 years.
So loved, so mourned.
Within a few months of her daughter Ella's death in June 1913, Mary Sophia Axup chaired a meeting of the Tasmanian Workers' Political League, the forerunner of the Australian Labor Party, seeking nominations for Labor candidates to stand for the seat of Bass in the forthcoming Federal election:



The Mercury 22 August 1913

TRANSCRIPT
Bass Divisional Council of the T.W.P.L. [Tasmanian Workers' Political League] met last week at the A.W.C. office, Launceston, Mrs Axup being in the chair. It was decided to invite nominations for Bass of those willing to stand in the Labour interests in the Federal campaign which may shortly be entered upon. The secretary Mr. J. Mooney was also instructed to advise all country branches to be in readiness for the campaign.

The late 1930s to 1942
May Nevin (second from right in fur jacket) was photographed on the steps of St John's on the occasion of the wedding of Eva Baldwin's daughter Ella Baldwin to Glynn Davis on 15th July 1939. Her aunt Mary Sophia Axup is second from left, her cousin Eva Baldwin on extreme right, her cousin Sidney Axup on extreme left and his wife Emily Axup nee Tyson in background.



From left: Mary Sophia Axup's son Sidney Axup; behind him is his wife Emily Axup nee Tyson; in front of her is Sidney's mother Mary Sophia Axup nee Day; next in the fur is Mary Sophia Axup's niece May Nevin, (Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin's eldest daughter),and extreme right is Eva Baldwin nee Axup, Mary Sophia Axup's eldest daughter.
Taken on the steps of St. John's 15.07.1939 at the wedding of Ella Baldwin to Glynn (David) Davis.



Above: Four generations, photographed in 1940
Top left: Eva Baldwin nee Axup, daughter of Mary Sophia Axup
Top right; Ella Davis nee Baldwin, daughter of Eva Baldwin nee Axup
Lower right: baby Barbara Davis, daughter of Ella Davis nee Baldwin
Centre: mother of Eva Baldwin, grandmother of Ella Davis and great grandmother of Barbara,Davis, matriarch Mary Sophia Axup nee Day (1853-1942).
Copyright © Private Collections of Davis and Axup descendants 2007 ARR.



Extreme left: Rev. Percy Baldwin, son-in-law of Mary Sophia Axup nee Day, married to her daughter Eva Baldwin nee Axup
Middle: Emily Axup nee Tyson her daughter-in-law, married to Sid Axup
Extreme right: Sidney Axup, husband of Emily Axup, brother-in-law of the Rev. Percy Baldwin
Photos courtesy © John Davis and Axup descendants 2007 ARR.



Great grandmother Mary Sophia Axup nee Day: four generations at the beach ca. 1940
Two daughters, one daughter-in-law, one granddaughter and one great grandchild
Photos courtesy of © John Davis and © Axup descendants 2007 ARR.

Obituary 1942
Mary Sophia Axup (nee Day) died in Melbourne on 18th June 1942, aged 89 years. Elizabeth Rachel Day, her elder sister by five years who married Thomas Nevin in 1871, died in Hobart on 29 June, 1914, aged just 67.



Obituary, Mrs M.S. Axup, The Mercury 30 June 1942
Courtesy Narelle Ogden © KLW NFC 2011

TRANSCRIPT
MRS M. S. AXUP
An old Hobart resident, Mrs. M. S. Axup, died in Northcote, Victoria, recently while on a visit to her son. She was in her 90th year, having been born at Lenah Valley in 1853. A daughter of the late Capt. James Day who sailed his own vessel, trading between Hobart and the Mainland before the advent of steam, she married a seafaring man, Capt. H. C. Axup, well known in shipping circles and the Launceston pilot until his death some years ago.
The deceased was interested in church and charity organisations until a few months ago. She left two sons and two daughters, and a great number of grandchildren and great-grandchildren. A feature of the funeral service was that the coffin was carried by four of her grandsons, all in uniform, representing the three services. The services at the church and graveside were conducted by her son-in-law, the Rev. P.W Baldwin. Toc H padre.



Mary Sophia Axup (nee Day) outside the Bank of NSW (Sydney?) ca. 1939
Photograph strip cut from the original, now lost.
Copyright © KLW NFC Private Collections 2020 ARR.

PLEASE NOTE:
Descendants of the Nevin, Axup and Davis families have kindly supplied these photographs. Copyright on all these images must be strictly observed to protect works in progress.

RELATED POSTS main weblog

W. R. Giblin, Judge, Attorney-General and Premier

THE W.R. GIBLIN PORTRAIT

" ... an exquisite likeness of Mr. Giblin..."

William Robert Giblin was a neighbour of the Nevin family in Augusta, the village at Kangaroo Valley and he was the Nevin family solicitor. When the business partnership between Thomas Nevin and Robert Smith was dissolved in 1868, Giblin underwrote the liabilities of their firm Nevin & Smith, photographers, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart Town and ensured that Nevin could continue to operate as a commercial photographer by offering him the commission of prisons and police photographer under tender for the Colonial government.

A photograph taken by Thomas Nevin of  Giblin ca. 1872  is held at the Archives Office of Tasmania. It carries an early Nevin studio stamp commonly used until the beginning of 1873. This photograph was retained by Giblin amongst his government documents in the Treasury during his terms as Attorney-General and Premier.



W.R. Giblin ca. 1872
Photo by T.Nevin
AOT Ref: NS1013-1-1971w800

When William Robert Giblin died in 1887, a search was conducted for a suitable photograph to use as the basis for a portrait in oils, to be executed preferably by a London artist. The following letter to the editor appeared in The Mercury [July ?]1887 from someone calling himself "Mechanic" who knew where a suitable photograph could be found: in TREASURY, i.e. this photograph, which was the only one taken by a commercial photographer for government records. The article clearly was written by the photographer himself, so it can be assumed that "Mechanic" was no other than Thomas Nevin.



TRANSCRIPT

MR. GIBLIN'S PORTRAIT
SIR,- Now that Mr. Giblin has passed away, it is to be more deeply regretted that the many attempts to obtain a perfect enlarged photo. of him failed. The Imperial Co., of Melbourne, did its best; an artist of this city tried; and also Mr. Baily, of Liverpool-street; but the results unsatisfactory followed. It is fortunate, however, that Mr. Castray, the present treasurer, has in his possession an exquisite likeness of Mr. Giblin, and which could be copied in oils if entrusted to some artists, perhaps, in London. The cost would be about ₤80, and this, perhaps, might be obtained if two or three well-known citizens were to enter into the project. A series of concerts given at the Davey-street Church schoolroom would help the funds. The native population should also be proud of one of their number as to urge them on. In fact, there is hardly a class but what enjoys the benefits of Mr Giblin's past acts, either as a moralist, a social reformer, or a political legislator. -
Yours, etc.,
MECHANIC





Courtesy of the Archives Office of Tasmania
NS1013/1971

BIOGRAPHY
Notes from DOMA
In 1864, William Giblin joined the law firm which was called, for a while, Dobson & Giblin. Giblin entered politics in 1870, and became Premier in 1878 until 1884. John Mitchell joined the firm in 1875 and it became Dobson and Mitchell. The law firm's name took on its final appearance in 1886, when Cecil Allport entered the partnership. He became a keen collector of books, manuscripts and pictures which later formed the nucleus of the Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts. This connection continues to the present day through the firm's role in administering the Allport Bequest and representation on the Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts Management Committee.
Courtesy © 2004 Dobson Mitchell & Allport

W. R. Giblin was Tasmanian Administrator for a month during 1886. He was also Attorney-General in August 1873, and Premier in 1878, and 1879 to 1884.  Thomas Nevin's commission to photograph prisoners at the Port Arthur and Hobart Gaols was underwritten by W. R. Giblin in August 1873 on gaining the portfolio of Attorney-General  in the government changeover. These documents, and a bundle of vignettes and glass negatives by Nevin of convicts (i.e. Tasmanian prisoners) were among the materials in the Allport Bequest until relocated to the Archives Office of Tasmania*.

*Sources: [protected] Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit, sed diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut laoreet dolore magna aliquam erat volutpat. Ut wisi enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exerci tatio.

Thomas J. Nevin and W.R. Giblin were also members of the Loyal United Brothers Lodge. Nevin was a committee member for the Lodge's annual ball, and may have taken this informal group photograph at one of the Lodge's important functions.W.R Giblin is second from viewer's left, back row, his left hand resting on the shoulder of Parliament librarian Hugh Munro Hull.The group included Messrs Allport and Dobson (seated on floor), Walker, Backhouse, Meredith et al.The photograph, held at the State Library of Tasmania, is unattributed.



W.R Giblin is second from viewer's left, back row

State Library of Tasmania catalogue (2005)
Title: Group of men, including W. R. Giblin, Morton Allport, J. B. Walker and Henry Dobson
Creator(s):Unknown
Date: 18--
Description: 1 photograph : sepia toned ; 15 X 18 cm.
Notes: Exact size: 147 X 173 mm.,
Names of subjects inscribed in pencil on border in unknown hand., Back row standing, middle row seated on chairs and front row seated on the floor.
Subjects:Giblin, William Robert - 1840-1887 Dobson, Henry - 1841-1918 Allport, Morton - 1830-1878 Walker, James Backhouse - 1841-1899 Allport family Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Australia Lawyers - Tasmania
Location: Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts ADRI: AUTAS001125881557

Biographical details of W.R. Giblin
Hon William Robert Giblin MHA,
Premier of Tasmania
5 March 1878 - 20 December 1878
30 October 1879 - 15 August 1884
Born : 4 November 1840, Hobart;
Occupation : Lawyer: Judge
Marriage : - 5 January 1856, Hobart - Emily Jean Perkins
Family : 4 sons, 3 daughters
Death : 17 January 1887, Hobart
Party : -
Electorate : (1) Hobart Town (2) Central Hobart (3) Wellington
Elected : MHA -
(1) 13 March 1869 (Unopposed) -August 1871
(2) 1 September 1871 (Unopposed) - 22 June 1877
(3) 22 August 1877 (Unopposed) - 11 February
1885 (Resignation)
Opposition Leader : November 1872- June 1873
July 1876 - June 1877
January 1879 - October 1879

John Watt Beattie reprinted this 1880 photograph, head and shoulders, of William Giblin ca. 1895 for his series Members of the Parliament of Tasmania. As Giblin had died in 1887, the original photograph was not taken by Beattie but an earlier photographer, and reprinted without due attribution. Many of the earlier photographs of parliamentarians who were deceased by 1895 were reprinted by Beattie for this series without attribution.



W.R. Giblin ca. 1880

State Library of Tasmania
Title: William Robert Giblin
Creator(s):Beattie, J. W. 1859-1930
Date: 19--
Description: 1 photograph : sepia toning ; 14 x 10 cm.
Notes: Exact measurements 140 x 98 mm,
Title inscribed in pencil beneath image in unknown hand., In: Members of the Parliaments of Tasmania - no. 138 / photographed by J.W. Beattie.
Subjects:Giblin, William Robert - 1840-1887 Politicians - Tasmania Premiers - Tasmania Attorneys general - Tasmania
Other titles: Members of the Parliaments of Tasmania
Location: Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts
ADRI: AUTAS001125880




W. R. Giblin (1840-1887) , portrait by Thomas Nevin ca. 1872
Archives Office of Tasmania Ref: NS1013/1971

Key contractual documents:
Item Number: TRE28/1/1
Start Date: 24 Feb 1858
End Date: 30 Jun 1951
Access: Open
Location: HOB
Copy Number:
Series: • TRE28 REGISTERS OF SPECIAL AUTHORITIES RECEIVED FOR THE EXPENDITURE OF PUBLIC MONIES, WITH PARTICULARS OF GOODS AND SERVICES.