First son and second child, Thomas 'Sonny' Nevin

Thomas James NEVIN jnr (1874-1948) or 'Tom', known to descendants as 'Uncle Sonny' Nevin was born at his father's photographic studio and residence, 138-140 Elizabeth St. Hobart, Tasmania.

Thomas Sonny Nevin, son of Thomas J. Nevin

Thomas James Nevin jnr, his wife Gertrude Nevin nee Tennyson Bates, and their son Athol Nevin travelled to and from California on board the steamers, S.S. Ventura and S.S. Sonoma, in the years 1920-1922.



Source: Huntington Digital Library
S. S. Ventura for Honolulu, Pago Pago, and Sydney. Front cover

THOMAS JAMES NEVIN Jnr
Known to the family as 'Sonny', when Thomas James Nevin jnr was born in Hobart on 16 April, 1874 (d. Hobart 17 January 1948), he was given the same first and second names as his father, photographer Thomas James Nevin (1842-1923). He was born at his father's photographic studio, The City Photographic Establishment, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart Town, the second child born to be born there after his elder sister May (Mary Florence, d. Hobart 1955) in 1872.

May Nevin and younger brother Tom, who had just turned 18 yrs old, won prizes at the Union Chapel flower show, reported in the Mercury, 4 May 1892,Tom a prize for six chrysanthemums, and May a prize for collection of flowers.

Although Tom's father, Thomas James Nevin, was born in Northern Ireland in 1842 and had arrived in Tasmania as a ten year old child from Plymouth in July 1852 with his mother Mary, father John Nevin, a former Royal Scots 1st Regiment soldier, Chelsea out-pensioner and guard on board the convict transport Fairlie 1852) with three younger siblings as free settlers, Thomas or Tom or 'Sonny' Nevin was locally-born or "native-born" in Tasmania 22 years after their arrival. He was technically, therefore, an Australian national by the time he sought travel documents to leave Australia in the 1920s. His mother Elizabeth Rachel Day, who married his father Thomas James Nevin senior in July 1871, was born and baptised at St Marys (the 'Mayflower' church), Rotherhithe, London in 1847; her father, and Tom or Sonny's maternal grandfather, master mariner Captain James Day, was born in Yorkshire in 1806 and died in Hobart in 1882.



Above: Thomas James Nevin jnr (1874-1948), first-born son of Thomas James and Elizabeth Rachel Nevin nee Day, known to descendants as 'Sonny', pictured here shortly before his death in 1948 in Salvation Army uniform.
Taken by a Nevin family member at 23 Newdegate St. North Hobart Tasmania
Copyright © KLW NFC 2009-2014 ARR.


Thomas or 'Tom', known to descendants as 'Sonny' Nevin (1874-1948) married Gertrude Jane Tennyson Bates (1883-1958) at the Wesleyan Church, Hobart, on February 6th, 1907. Her father, Walter Tennyson Bates, a renowned bandmaster, had died in 1905. By July 1907, Gertrude's mother, Elizabeth Jane Bates nee Jones, had left Hobart and arrived in Sydney with six of her seven children - Gertrude remaining in Hobart with husband Thomas or Tom or 'Sonny' Nevin. Her mother and siblings migrated first to Vancouver, and eventually to California in 1910.

ATHOL NEVIN
Thomas or Tom or 'Sonny' Nevin and Gertrude Nevin nee Gertrude Tennyson Bates had a son ca. 1911 named Athol Clarence Nevin. On enlistment into the armed forces during WWII, Athol changed his middle name from "Clarence" to "Tennyson", his maternal grandfather's middle name.

On the 20th November, 1920, Athol Clarence Nevin, student, aged 9, left Sydney on board the SS Ventura bound for California, accompanied by his parents, Thomas James Nevin jnr, furniture carrier, aged 46 yrs, and mother, Gertrude T. Nevin, domestic duties, aged 31 yrs. They arrived at their destination, Oakland, California, on 14th December, 1920. Their friend (USA contact) was R. Brown. The USA Alien Entry documentation listed them as citizens of England, ethnicity as "English", and Athol's birthplace as Hobart, Tasmania.



Source: Huntington Digital Library
Plan of the S.S. Sonoma, S.S. Ventura.
ephJHK_00381_002

They returned to Sydney from San Francisco on board the S.S. Sonoma, on 5th September 1922.

1922 shipping record SS Sonoma

Above: Immigration Act 1901-1912 Report of Passengers, detail (see full page below).
Thomas, wife Gurtrude [sic] and son Athol Nevin were listed as British nationals travelling to Sydney 1922 from San Francisco.


The decision to retain British nationality may have been a personal choice when Thomas James 'Sonny' Nevin jnr travelled to and from California in the 1920s with his wife and son Athol, or an official requirement for children born of British-born parents, since both his parents - Elizabeth Rachel Day and Thomas James Nevin snr were born in England and Northern Ireland respectively. The USA and Australian (i.e. Commonwealth) Immigration authorities listed Sonny's nationality as "British". His wife Gertrude and son Athol accompanying him were also listed as "British" nationals despite the fact that Gertrude was born in Fitzroy, Melbourne in 1883. Two other passengers, however, on the same ship returning to Sydney from San Franscisco in 1922 were listed as "Australian", so it would seem that the Nevin family descendants of the original immigrant families (Day-Nevin, 1850s) to Tasmania retained their "British" nationality as recently as the 1920s due to official perceptions of patrilineage, unless of course, there was some sort of government legislation which specifically precluded Tasmanian-born citizens from easily obtaining "Australian" passports as Australian nationals (US descendants' research of the Bates family shows that they did enter the US with passports).

shipping record SS Sonoma 1922

Click on images for large view
Above: Immigration Act 1901-1912 Report of Passengers:Thomas, wife Gurtrude [sic] and son Athol Nevin were listed as British nationals travelling to Sydney 1922 from San Francisco.yet Hilda S. Williams, actress, also on board, and Arthur Stanley, steam fitter, were listed as "Australian" nationals.




Source: Huntington Digital Library
Plan of the S.S. Sonoma, S.S. Ventura.
ephJHK_00381_002

The Electoral Roll for Denison (Southern Tasmania) in 1936 listed Athol Clarence Nevin as a pastry cook and resident of 85 Queen St. Queensborough (Sandy Bay), together with his mother Gertrude T. Nevin, domestic duties. He was about 25 years old in 1936. By 1940, he was already married and had enlisted with the 2/8 Field Regiment, serving in the Middle East and Borneo. He had changed his middle name to "Tennyson", his mother's father's middle name, as in Athol Tennyson Nevin on enlistment. On his return, Athol and his wife Winifred moved to Melbourne (Electoral Rolls 1949-54).



Above: The Electoral Roll for Mitcham, Victoria 1949
Athol Tennyson Nevin, storeman
Winifred Aird Nevin, home duties

Athol's parents may have separated by the late 1930s. His father Thomas 'Sonny' Nevin's address in 1948, the date of his death, was 23 Newdegate St. North Hobart where three of the five other adult children of parents Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin were resident (May, George, and Albert: William, who also lived there, had died in an accident in 1927). Thomas 'Sonny' Nevin wore the uniform of the Salvation Army from the 1930s until his death, shown in this earlier photograph taken in the mid 1930s at Newdegate St. North Hobart.



Above: Mid 1930s: first-born son Thomas James 'Sonny' Nevin (1874 - 1948) of Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin.
Taken by a Nevin family member at 23 Newdegate St. North Hobart
Copyright © KLW NFC 2009-2014 ARR




When Thomas James Nevin jnr, known as Tom or 'Sonny,' died in January 1948 (born 1874), he was officially Sergeant T. Nevin of the Salvation Army. A service was held for him, per this notice in the Mercury, dated 24 January 24, 1948.

TRANSCRIPT
Salvation Army
THE CITADEL Liverpool St., Tonight at 8. Open Air Meeting, Collins St. Sunday, 11 a.m., Holiness unto the Lord, 3 p.m. Praise Meeting., 7 p.m. Memorial Service to the late Sergeant T. Nevin ...

This photograph was probably the last taken of Tom Nevin just before he died in 1948.



Thomas James Nevin jnr, taken by a family member ca. 1947
Photo copyright © KLW NFC 2020 Private Collection

Thomas J. Nevin's big tabletop stereograph viewer

THE TABLE TOP STEREOGRAPH VIEWER at Nevin's studio
STUDIO PORTRAITS clients posing with the viewer

Thomas Nevin standing next to stereoviewer

Thomas J. Nevin, self-portrait with table top stereograph viewer, ca. 1875
Copyright © KLW NFC imprint & Private Collection 2007

Although this image is faint - it is a scan of a print pasted into the scrapbook of his son George Ernest Nevin (1880-1957) which is held by Thomas and Elizabeth Nevin's descendants in the Shelverton family - it shows clearly enough that George's father, photographer Thomas J. Nevin, was rather fond of his big box table top stereograph viewer. It provided clientele with a ready amusement, a novel experience of 3D. The Victorian fascination with this "advanced" photography is quite understandable. Viewing a static stereograph, three images can be seen, not just one: the central image appears in deep perspective, with the image split into halves on either side. A double lens stereograph viewer of this size could hold a large number of stereograph cards; turning the wooden handle changed the card being viewed, providing a motion picture effect. In Nevin's self-portrait - not a selfie in the strict sense, of course, taken probably by his younger brother Jack Nevin - a frame holder on top is propped up. In the two portraits below, the holder is flat. An earlier portrait of Thomas Nevin, taken ca. 1868, shows him wearing white gloves, posing with a smaller portable stereoscopic viewer, similar in size to a stereoscope camera.

Woman with red ribbon and bustle
From the Liam Peters Collection, this photograph of an unidentified woman with her hand resting on a book placed on top of Thomas Nevin’s big box table top stereograph viewer is undoubtedly a fine pose and capture of both the client and the City Photographic Establishment studio decor, including the distinctive table, carpet and painted backsheet.





[Above]: Full length cdv on plain mount
Subject: A young pregnant (?) woman [unidentified] wearing a head band (tinted red), and a dark dress with frilled bodice, bustle and hem, her hand resting on a book atop the big box stereoscopic viewer and table with the griffin-shaped legs. Her gaze is directed beyond the camera, slightly off-centre.
Verso bears Nevin's most common commercial studio stamp "T. Nevin late A. Bock, City Photographic Establishment 140 Elizabeth Street Hobart Town" etc etc and dates to ca. 1871-1874.
Copyright © The Liam Peters Collection 2010. All rights reserved.

In every carte-de-visite photograph featuring this apparatus taken by Thomas J. Nevin at his Elizabeth St. Hobart studio, it sits on the very distinctive occasional table with griffin-shaped legs pictured in many of his family portraits and portraits of private clients. The two photographs (below) in which each man has assumed an almost identical pose, may have been commissioned by members of the Hobart City Council; or by Colonial government officials; or by members of the Loyal United Brothers' Lodge, of which Thomas Nevin was a committee member, anniversary ball organiser, advertiser soliciting specialist services to members, as well as their official photographer.

Young man with dreamy eyes
This unidentified young man with dreamy eyes rested his hand lightly on the wooden handle for the capture. The verso carries T.J. Nevin's government contractor stamp with the Royal colonial warrant insignia. The hand-tinting in this instance was not the work of Thomas Nevin or his assistants; it was coloured by subsequent owners and shares provenance with similarly daubed cartes sourced from Northern Tasmania.

Nevin's carte of young man with stereo viewerVerso of young man with stereo viewer

Subject: young man with T. J. Nevin's big box table top stereograph viewer
Photographer: Thomas J. Nevin (1842-1923)
Location and date: 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart, Tasmania, ca. 1874
Details: man's bow tie is tinted violet, drape is tinted burgundy, poor condition.
Verso: T.J. Nevin's government contractor stamp incorporating the Royal insignia.
Copyright © The Private Collection of John and Robyn McCullagh 2006 -2009. ARR.

The young man pictured here may have been a camera worker, one of Nevin's studio assistants working with both Samuel Clifford and Thomas Nevin who produced between them a thousand or more scenic stereographs during the late 1860s and early 1870s. They also produced views of Hobart buildings on government tender. Several of their stereographs held at the Narryna Heritage Museum, Battery Point, Hobart depict an exterior view of Government House in Campbell St.; the Queens Orphan School at New Town; and the Hobart Gaol viewed from Bathurst St. Hobart.

Narryna stereosNarryna stereos

Hand held stereograph viewer and stereographs by Clifford and Nevin at Narryna Museum, Battery Point, Hobart.
Photos copyright © KLW NFC Imprint & Private Collection 2007

The visitor from Brisbane 1870
This older man's pose is very similar to the young man's pose next to the stereograph viewer. However, there is a subtle difference: in the photograph of the young man, the wooden handle is under his right hand. In this photograph of the older man, the wooden handle is on the other side of the apparatus, and underneath this older man's right hand is a big white knob. The white knob, rather than the handle, appears to be under Nevin's hand too in his self-portrait standing next to the apparatus.

The bright red and blue tinting on the apron and medal ribbon in this photograph may signify more than a desire for heightened refrangibility, a depth of field effect which red and blue produced in 1860s stereography: it may signify the wearer to be a former soldier affiliated with a British Regiment, and/or member of one of several Provident and Benevolent organisations affiliated to English Freemasons (rather than Scottish or Irish) who became established in Hobart from the 1840s. Although the apron is not tasselled or embroidered with motifs, as some are, the gold medal this member wears is very imposing and may testify to his seniority and long service. He may have been Mr. Wright from Brisbane, visiting the Loyal United Brothers' Lodge in 1870 for their anniversary celebrations. See this article for more details.



Subject: A Loyal United Lodge member in ceremonial apron with a gold medal on lapel, perhaps Mr. Wright visiting from Brisbane, 1870 for the Lodge anniversary
posed with hand resting on Nevin's table top stereograph viewer
Photographer: Thomas J. Nevin, 140 Elizabeth St; Hobart
Details: hand tinted carte-de-visite placed inside an album leaf frame
Copyright © The Lucy Batchelor Collection 2009 (scans courtesy of the Bishop family)

This carte-de-visite remains in its original album belonging to Lucy Batchelor, still framed within the decorative cut-out borders of a cardboard album page, exactly as it was positioned there 150 years ago.

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