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Messages - KathrynK

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Fermanagh / Re: EMERSON / BLAIR - Enniskillen - Co. Fermanagh
« on: Tuesday 31 December 13 10:53 GMT (UK)  »
Hi Lois,
I'm not sure where my Grandma's Aunt Margaret Patrick lived, but it was somewhere in Sydney area because the families appear to have kept in fairly frequent contact.
Francis and his wife Henrietta owned an orchard at Epping in Boundary Road where they grew peaches, and kept chooks and a cow. This is where my grandmother and her brothers and sisters grew up.
I wish I could tell you more about "Aunty Mag Patrick". She was known by this name because Henrietta also had a sister called Margaret who was "Aunty Mag Catt".
If you wish to send an email address I could send some photos and stories of the family.

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Fermanagh / Re: EMERSON / BLAIR - Enniskillen - Co. Fermanagh
« on: Sunday 29 December 13 11:38 GMT (UK)  »
Hi Lois,
I have sent an invitation to our tree on Ancestry. I sent it to your user name LoisW on Ancestry. Please let me know if you cannot access it.
Kath

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Fermanagh / Re: EMERSON / BLAIR - Enniskillen - Co. Fermanagh
« on: Friday 27 December 13 11:59 GMT (UK)  »
Hi Kathryn,
I really appreciated the information about William Emerson.  I am descended from his daughter Margaret, and the information you provided backs up what we know of her difficult childhood.  She went into service at an early age.  Later she married Walter Patrick and had 5 children. 
I would love to have further information about your Emerson family connection.
Thanks!
Lois

Hi Lois,
Glad this was of some help to you. My grandmother spoke of her "Aunty Mag Patrick" when I was a child. I have an old snapshot taken at the Sydney Easter Show which was of my great grandmother
(wife of Francis Emerson) with one of her sisters-in-law, either "Aunt Susie" or Aunty Mag Patrick" - I will check it and see if I have a note of the name.
My grandmother remembered them both very fondly. Someone else on this forum had the incorrect impression that the parents, William and Eliza, were uncaring and that their children were placed in a home because their parents were insolvent.
This was not the case. The children's mother died when they were very young, and the father, William, could not care for them and work also. People forget how much harder life was in those days. Washing by hand, clothes home-sewn and mended by hand, no convenience foods and a man's working hours from daylight to dark. How could a man do hard long hours of work and care properly for a young family in those times? A single working mother today has child-care, after school care, eight hour working days, washing machines and dryers, etc., and they find it difficult!
The fact that the children and their father remained in contact as adults and cared for each other into old age, despite the family being torn apart when their mother died, is an indication of the warmth and love they shared.
My grandmother was raised as the eldest of Francis Emerson's children, though in fact she was born to a single mother who later married Frank. There were seven younger children, and Frank and his wife also raised a grand-daughter as their own. Francis Emerson was a very good and hard-working father who made no distinction between his adopted daughter and his own children. He died before I was born, but I remember his children well. They were my great aunts and uncles, but because I was raised by my grandmother I was as close to them as if they were aunts and uncles. They were all kind and loving people with a love of the bush and great sense of humour.
If you are interested, I would be happy to send an invitation to my family tree on Ancestry - "Richardson Family Tree' - which has stories of each of them and photographs.
Regards
Kathryn

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Fermanagh / Re: EMERSON / BLAIR - Enniskillen - Co. Fermanagh
« on: Monday 30 May 11 11:46 BST (UK)  »
Hello Keith,
I see you are descended from Eliza Emerson, daughter of Francis Emerson and Susan (Susannah?) Curry.  I am descended from her brother William.  My grandmother remembered her grandfather William had a sister Helen who lived in NSW.
William married Eliza Coulter in Sydney 1864 and they had 7 children. Three of the girls aged 7, 9, and 10 were placed in Randwick Children’s Asylum in 1880, not because the parents were insolvent, but because Eliza died in June 1880. A man would not be able to care for so many  young children while working the long hours men worked in those days.. He paid 7/6 a week to their keep, which was probably a fair part of a man’s wage at that time. The eldest son Frank, from whom I descend, found work with a place to sleep in  a loft and cared for himself from the age of 15, while the younger brothers stayed with their father. I don’t know what became of the youngest girl Sarah Ann who was only 4 when Eliza died. She may have gone to her aunt Helen
William lived with Frank and his wife in his old age, and the brothers and sisters stayed in contact into old age. My grandmother said William was a lay preacher in the Methodist Church and very strictly against drinking, gambling, and dancing!
I don’t have the records of Francis Emerson and Susannah Curry, but Williams’s marriage certificate shows their names, and also that William was a storekeeper from Patterson NSW and his father Francis a farmer in 1864. Eliza Coulter, born in Enniskillen Co.Fermanagh, arrived 3/3/1859 in Sydney alone at the age of 21. Records show her parents David and Jane were dead but she had a cousin in the colony in Kent Street Sydney.
Hope some of this may be helpful.
Regards
Kathryn

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