Showing posts with label Cheltenham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cheltenham. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Hilda Emery (nee Penny) of Cheltenham and Cora Lynn

The Koo Wee Rup Sun in July 1932 had the following short obituary of Mrs Hilda Emery of Cora Lynn. Mrs Emery was buried at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery, where generations of her family and her husband's family are also buried.


Hilda Emery's obituary
Koo Wee Rup Sun, July 14 1932. p.1

Hilda Eleanor Emery was born in Cheltenham on March 22, 1888 to Edwin Thomas Penny and his wife Sarah Ann (nee Coleman). (1) Sarah's father, William, built the Bridge Hotel, in Mordialloc in the early 1860s. William Coleman, who died in 1878 and  his wife Mary Ann (nee Chapman) who died in 1872 are buried at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery (2)  

Edwin's parents, Thomas and Henrietta Penny, had taken up land in Cheltenham in 1852. As noted by local historian Graham Whitehead, they had settled on ten acres of land on Bay Road (later the address was noted as Jack Road) Cheltenham. There Thomas set about clearing the land of scrub, wattle and gum trees to create an orchard and engage in market gardening. Three acres of the land was devoted to fruit trees with the remaining arable land being given over to vegetables. After the death of his father on May 26, 1866 Edwin took over the 10 acres of freehold land on the east side of Jack Road. He was about 17 years of age. Later he purchased or leased more land. Shire of Moorabbin Rate Records reveal an additional seven acres in Jack Road, the ownership of 5 acres in Barkly Street Mentone (later renamed Rogers Street) and the lease from the Mercantile Bank of 18 ½ acres in Tulip Road (later renamed Park Road) He also purchased land in Coape Street Cheltenham. When in 1915 presenting as a witness to a Royal Commission into fruit and vegetable growing Penny was asked by the chairman how much land he worked. He replied ‘about 25 acres’. (3)

Edwin and Sarah had married on September 7, 1876 and Hilda was their seventh and last child and their only  daughter - her brothers, as listed on her birth certificate, were Albert Edwin, aged 9; Percival Thomas, dec.; Lytton William aged 7; Reubin Ernest, aged 6; Edwin Clarence, aged 4 and Clifford Frederick, aged 2. (4)  Sadly for the family,  Sarah died on July 17, 1890 aged only 35 and is buried at Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery. (5)


Penny Family, dated as c. 1900 - Hilda and her father and brothers. Standing, from left -  Clifford,  Reubin and Edwin. Seated, from left -  Herbert, Edwin Thomas Penny, Hilda and Lytton. 
I believe this photo is more like 1906 onwards, when Hilda would have been eighteen.
Image: Kingston Heritage collection, City of Kingston, Victorian Collections

Edwin remarried the next year to Emily Haselgrove and they had two sons, Leslie and Robert, so Hilda was still the only girl in the family. (6)  Edwin was very involved in the community including the  Cheltenham Church of Christ and the Sons of Temperance Friendly Society. He was also a Shire of  Moorabbin Councillor and the Shire President from 1898 until 1900. (7)  Edwin died on December 9, 1916 and is buried in the same grave as Sarah, their infant son Percival and his second wife, Emily. Edwin's parents - Thomas who had died in 1866 and Henrietta on June 3, 1888 - are also buried in the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery. (8)  As a matter of interest, the area known as Pennydale in Cheltenham is named for Edwin Penny. (9)

In November 1897, Hilda had a narrow escape from death and this graphic report is from the Caulfield and Elsternwick Leader -
A daughter of Cr. E. T. Penny, the popular South riding representative in the shire of Moorabbin, narrowly escaped a horrible death by burning about a week ago. It appears that Cr Penny, who resides at Cheltenham, told one of his boys to burn the handle out of an axe, and in order to do so the little fellow lit a fire in the yard. The girl, who is about ten years of age, must have approached too close to the flames, when her clothes caught fire. Hearing a scream Cr Penny rushed in the direction from which it came, and was horrified to see his daughter almost enveloped in a mass of flames. There was nothing at hand to wrap around her and the father at once set to work to beat the flames out with his hands, the girl meanwhile guarding her face with her hands. With commendable presence of mind the young lad ran into the house and brought out a tablecloth which he wrapped around his sister and his father's hands. By this means the flames were extinguished, but Cr Penny had sustained terrible injuries to his hands, the palms being literally roasted, the only portions which escaped being the tips of two or three fingers.

Assistance was obtained and the girl was taken into the house and attended to. It was found that beyond a few burns on the hands and arms she had escaped serious injury, and is now, we are happy to say, on the road to recovery. Cr Penny's injuries, however, were of a much more serious nature, and it will be a long time before he is able to use his hands again. He asserts that he could feel his flesh roasting and his sufferings afterwards were simply intense.....Singular to say, Cr Penny had intended going into a paddock some distance away to effect some repairs, but sat down and decided to wait for dinner. But for this fortunate circumstance his daughter must have been burnt to death because there was no one else handy to render assistance.
(10)

When Hilda was 24, she married 26 year old Robert John 'Jack' Emery, a market gardener of Warren Road, Mordialloc. The wedding took place on October 5, 1912 at the Christian Chapel in Cheltenham. Jack, born on May 19, 1886, was the third and last child of  Charles Joseph Hicklin Emery and his wife Esther Eliza (nee Nunn) - his brother Charles was born in 1880 and his sister Esther in 1883 - all in Ballarat. His father Charles, was a compositor and worked for the Ballarat Courier.  However, at some time and certainly by 1903 the Emery family moved from Ballarat to Keys Road, South Brighton (Moorabbin), where Charles had a career change and became a  market gardener.  This move was no doubt influenced by the fact that Esther had came from South Brighton, in fact she had married Charles at St Matthews Church of England at Cheltenham in 1879 and her parents, James and Sarah Nunn operated a market garden in Cheltenham Road, South Brighton. James and Sarah Nunn, who both died in 1904, are buried at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery. (11)

Hilda and Jack began their married life in Mitchell Street in Mentone, but sometime around 1920 they moved to Lower Dandenong Road in Mentone. By then, they had two children - Charles, born August 15, 1915 and Nancy, born March 14, 1917. (12)  In 1922, Robert and Hilda purchased 95 acres on Eight Mile Road, Cora Lynn, on the Koo Wee Rup Swamp. The children, who had been at Mordialloc North State School, transferred to Cora Lynn State School (13).  Jack's parents, Charles and Esther also moved to the Eight Mile Road property, which they named Agricola. Agricola was sheep farm (14)  and their sales of lambs were listed in newspaper reports of livestock sales at Newmarket. Sheep farming was unusual for the Koo Wee Rup Swamp; most of the neighbouring farms would have been dairy farms.

I assume that after young Charles left school in 1929, he worked on the family farm with his father and grandfather. Nancy, who finished school in 1931, worked for a few years as the sewing mistress at Cora Lynn State School from April 1936 until May 1938. The Inspector's report described her as conscientious. A sewing mistress did teach sewing, but in small one-teacher schools such as Cora Lynn, they would often give lessons to the younger children. Nancy's time at school as a sewing mistress overlapped with the time that my aunts Nancy and Dorothy Rouse and my uncle Jim Rouse were at the school, so she would have likely have taught Dorothy and Jim, but possibly not my aunty Nancy, who left in 1937 (15) 

I wondered what involvement the Emery family had with the local community - young Charles is mentioned in the playing list for the Bayles Football team (Bayles is the town next to Cora Lynn). Nancy was the Honorary Secretary of the Cora Lynn Red Cross when they held a ball to raise money for the victims of the 1939 Bush Fires. (16)


Nancy Emery, Secretary of the Cora Lynn Red Cross
Koo Wee Rup Sun February 23, 1939 p. 1

Whilst they were living at Cora Lynn, Esther died on October 16, 1928 at Pakenham, aged 75;  and then Hilda passed away on July 10, 1932, aged only 44; and finally Charles (Esther's husband) died on August 17, 1939 at the Melbourne Benevolent Asylum at Cheltenham, aged 83. Esther and Charles are buried together at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery, with their daughter Esther who had died in 1899 at 15 years of age old. Hilda is in a separate grave at the same cemetery. (17) 


Cora Lynn in the October 1937 flood. This flood would definitely have impacted the Emery property on Eight Mile Road, as would had the more devastating December 1934 flood.  
The flooded Main Drain  (or the Bunyip River is on the right.) The Hall is the building on the top left; the road to the left, which looks like a river, is  the Nine Mile Road. The small building on the corner is the old E.S. & A Bank, the next building is the General Store  store, then there is a house. The  Cora Lynn Cheese Factory, is over the drain, on the right of the photo. The Cora Lynn State School where Charles and Nancy Emery went to school and where Nancy was sewing mistress at the time of the flood is on the left, behind the group of trees, at the back of the store. 
The Australasian October 23, 1937 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article141810942

Two happy events took place in 1939  - the marriage of Jack and Hilda's two children - Charles and Nancy. Nancy was married  on August 19 (two days after her grandfather died) to local Cora Lynn man, Leonard Leslie Donnelly, at St George's Church of England in Koo Wee Rup. They initially lived in Bayles, but later moved to Maffra. (18)  Ten days  after Nancy married,  Charles was married on August 29, his bride was Beryl Muriel Green of Yallock, and the marriage took place at the Church of Christ in Oakleigh. (19)

In 1940, Jack Emery sold the Eight Mile property and moved to Main Road, Clematis. Jack was living there with his wife Kathleen (whom he married in 1934), and Charles and Beryl. Jack and Charles are listed in the Electoral Roll as market gardeners.  They were still in Clematis in 1949, but in the 1954 Electoral rolls, Charles and Beryl had a market garden in Heatherton Road in Clayton. (20)

When Jack died on November 19, 1953 at the age of 67, he was living at 24 Gadd Street in South Oakleigh. (21) He was cremated at Springvale Crematorium and for some reason not buried with Hilda in her unmarked grave at Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery.

I realise there are many names and dates in this post, but just to summarise the Cheltenham Cemetery burials - Hilda Emery (nee Penny) is buried there, as are her parents Edwin and Sarah (nee Coleman) Penny and both sets of grandparents - Thomas and Henrietta Penny and William and Mary Ann Coleman.  Hilda's husband, Jack Emery is not at Cheltenham but his parents, Charles and Esther (nee Nunn) Emery are, as are his maternal grandparents - James and Sarah Nunn. 

The Penny family and the Emery family represent a time when families, through intensive market gardening, could make a living on what would now be considered very small farms. They also represent a time when Cheltenham, Mordialloc and surrounding areas were close-knit communities of farmers, intermarrying with other local families; it is almost hard to imagine this landscape now as these farms are covered in houses, shops and other businesses. 

Footnotes
(1) Hilda's Birth certificate.
(2) Whitehead, Graham William Coleman: Publican and Councillor  https://localhistory.kingston.vic.gov.au/articles/680  and Friends of Cheltenham and Regional cemeteries database -  https://www.focrc.org/
(3) Whitehead, Graham Edwin Thomas Penny: Councillor, Orchardist and Pioneer https://localhistory.kingston.vic.gov.au/articles/653
(4) Marriage notice in The Argus, September 9, 1876, see here;  Hilda's birth certificate. 
(5) Friends of Cheltenham and Regional cemeteries database -  https://www.focrc.org/
(6) Whitehead, Graham Edwin Thomas Penny: Councillor, Orchardist and Pioneer   https://localhistory.kingston.vic.gov.au/articles/653
(7) Ibid.
(8) Friends of Cheltenham and Regional cemeteries database -  https://www.focrc.org/
(9) Beazley, Sue Cr Edwin Thomas Penny J.P (1849 – 1916) The Tale of Pennydale, published in Raves from the Graves August 2020.     
(10) Caulfield and Elsternwick Leader, November 20, 1897, see here. I found out about this incident from The Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery: Where History Rests by Travis M. Sellers (Friend of Cheltenham Regional Cemeteries, 2015) pp. 96-97.                             
(11) Penny/Emery marriage certificate; Emery/Nunn marriage certificate; Robert John Emery birth certificate;  Index to Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com. Charles Joseph Hicklin Emery's death notice notes that he worked for the Ballarat Courier


(12) Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com; Birth certificates
(13) Shire of Berwick Rate Books; Cora Lynn State School pupil list.
(14) Reports of sheep and lamb sales from the Emery farm - The Argus, February 3, 1927, see here; The Age, June 5, 1935, see here.
(15) Cora Lynn State School pupil list; Public Records Office of Victoria Teacher Record Books  VPRS13579.
(16) Football - Bunyip and Garfield Express, June 24, 1938, see here; Bunyip and Garfield Express, June 16, 1939, see here.
(17) Friends of Cheltenham and Regional cemeteries database -  https://www.focrc.org/  Esther's death notice - The Argus, October 17, 1928, see here; Hilda's death notice - The Age, July 12, 1932, see here; Charles' death notice - The Age, September 9, 1939, see here. Charles is listed in The Melbourne Benevolent Asylum: Haven of Rest by Travis Sellars  (Friend of Cheltenham Regional Cemeteries, 2012).


Esther Emery's death notice
The Argus, October 17, 1928 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article3963260

(18) Reports of Nancy's wedding in Bairnsdale Advertiser, August 25, 1939, see here. The Donnellys had previously lived at Bruthren. There was also a wedding report in The Herald of August 19, 1939, see here and the Dandenong Journal, August 30, 1939, see here. Addresses from Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com
(19) Reports of Charles' marriage in The Argus, October 10, 1939, see hereDandenong Journal, October 11, 1939, see here Charles died in Dingley  in 1962, aged 47, and was cremated at Springvale.
(20) Shire of Berwick Rate Books; Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com
(21) Friends of Cheltenham and Regional cemeteries database -  https://www.focrc.org/ Jack's death notice was in The Argus, December 21, 1953, see here.

Monday, January 6, 2025

1909 in Cheltenham - the year of the Whirlwinds - part 1

In 1909 Cheltenham was hit by two whirlwinds - the first one was on January 27 and the other one on November 19. This post looks at the January whirlwind and I have written about the November whirlwind, here. In 1909, Cheltenham and neighbouring Highett were still very much country towns surrounded by market gardens. In fact, in 1906, The Australasian could report -
From the Highett railway station a lovely panorama of the highly cultivated gardens is to be obtained, and so perfect is the ploughing and sowing that to the casual observer the country looks as though it had been divided by parallel rulers. (1)


This is Cheltenham, dated 1928-1930, and you can see the extent of the market gardens. The building in the centre is the Methodist Livingstone Home for Children, it faces the Nepean Highway, the curved street to the right is Jamieson Street and the road at the back is Chesterville Road. The Children's Home site is now occupied by Southland. 
Photographer: Charles Daniel Pratt/Airspy. State Library of Victoria image H91.160/389. 
Click here for a high-res version http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/21085
The avenue of trees are part of the Avenue of Honor - read about it here https://localhistory.kingston.vic.gov.au/articles/348 and here https://localhistory.kingston.vic.gov.au/articles/659


The Brighton Southern Cross published this interesting report on the January whirlwind -
A phenomenal whirlwind swept through the Highett and Cheltenham districts on Wednesday afternoon. It was about 10 feet wide and travelled at a furious rate, carrying dust and all sorts of debris up out of sight. It was first noticed in Wickham-road, and travelled west, skirting Mr. Stayner's property, and going round Mr. Williams's house. A big pine tree in its course did not break it, and it continued on through Messrs. Allen, Brough and Davies' gardens. It made a track through Mr. Brough's tomato patch, scattering the fruit about, and dust, paper leaves, grass and debris of all kinds went up hundreds of feet high, and tea-tree boughs, kerosene tins and heavier materials were also caught up. It swept through Mr. Phillips's and struck the billiard-room of the Mechanics'-institute. This home of big breaks was too much for the cyclone, the building breaking up the wind in its course, and diffusing it down the Main-road. (2)

I have identified the people mentioned in the article through the Electoral Rolls - Messrs Stayner, Williams, Allen, Brough, Davie and Phillips. What follows, is a look at their lives as well as a short history of the Cheltenham Mechanics' Institute. 

Mr Stayner
George Alexander Stayner lived on Wickham Road, South Brighton and his occupation was a gardener, by which they meant a market gardener. He was married to Winifred Ann, whose address was Wickham Road, Moorabbin, so it appears there was some fluidity of place names at that time. George was the son of George and Flora (nee McLeod) Stayner, listed in the Electoral Roll at Nepean Road, South Brighton. George and Flora, the daughter of Alexander McLeod of Cheltenham, had married at the Presbyterian Manse in Brighton on December 14, 1870. (3) George Alexander was the third George Stayner living in the area as his grandfather George Christopher Stayner (1822-1895) first settled in Brighton in 1849.  

In 1894 the Oakleigh Leader wrote -
The patronymic of Stayner is among the historical ones of this district. Mr. George C. Stayner, sen.,
came to Brighton in 1849 from the old country, and although he did a little gardening his chief avocation was in the carting and carrying line. Like almost every one else he departed for the goldfields when the gold fever was on, but returned to this locality, and in 1854 took up land in South Brighton on the Highett road. (4)  The article continues with a detailed description of his orchard, and you can read it here.  

George Christopher Stayner died on August 14, 1895; 36 years after his wife Dinah (nee Wedmore) who died on August 16, 1859. They are buried at the Brighton Cemetery. (5)


George Stayner  (1847-1922)
Brighton Southern Cross, April 4, 1908  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article164349902

George (the middle George) was also a market gardener and he died on May 30, 1922. His Probate papers show that he owned 12 acres of land on the triangle bounded by the Nepean Highway (also called Main Road or Point Nepean Road), Worthing Road and Wickham Road, in what was called Highett. This was where his market garden was located along with his house, Beaumont, which fronted the Nepean Highway.  The property also had 5 other cottages, constructed in 1888 and a Blacksmiths shop. (6)


George Stayner builds five cottages


George also owned ten acres of land in Keys Road, Moorabbin; two acres in Highett Road, Moorabbin; ten acres in Wickham Road East, Moorabbin and a small block adjoining the Wickham Road property on Sandford Street. His Will shows that his wife, Flora, was left £400; that the Beaumont property was left to his son George; and that the remaining property was to be sold and divided amongst his eight daughters - Mary Friday, Letitia Jane Allen, Flora Isabella Andrews, Ethel May Stayner, Lydia Grace Andrews, Lavinia Ivy Mills, Clarice Evelyn Hore and Christina Dinah Allen. (7)

The youngest George had married local girl, Winifred, in February 1903 at the Presbyterian Church in Cheltenham; she was the daughter of Sidney and Sarah Clayton of Wickham Road, Moorabbin. They had two children, Nancy and Sid. (8)  

George was also a Boer War veteran; he had served in the First Victorian Mounted Infantry Company. 
he was "welcomed home" at a function in December 1900 with three other local men and they were presented with a gold medal suitably inscribed, by the Shire President, Cr Bent, M.L.A. (who later became the Premier of Victoria). The Oakleigh Leader began their report with - 
Privates Matson (East Brighton), Stayner and Daff (South Brighton), and Rigg (Mordialloc) received a most enthusiastic welcome home from the South African war at the Shire Hall South Brighton on Monday evening last. As the result of a public meeting the demonstration was made a shire affair and arranged and carried out under the supervision of the shire officers and a large committee of rate-payers. The hall being too small for the large gathering that was expected a marquee was erected, and the exertions of a section of the committee made it a comfortable rendezvous for some 700 people. (9)

This wasn't his only military service, both George and his father were members of G Company of the Victorian Rangers, part of the Colonial Military Forces.  G Company was formed in July 1889 and its headquarters were at Cheltenham and in 1891 it became part of the 3rd Battalion, also based in Cheltenham. George (the father) retired from service in 1895 with the rank of lieutenant
and quartermaster. (10)


George Stayner (1878-1953)
The caption that accompanied the photo noted that George was well-known in athletic circles having twice won the Market Gardeners  Cup
Brighton Southern Cross, October 28, 1899 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article165307065 


George died May 30, 1922 and Flora on August 28, 1919;  the youngest George died on December 10, 1953 and  his wife, Winifred, a year later on November 7, 1954.  They are buried together in a double grave at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery. (11)  Not long after the deaths of George and Winifred, Beaumont, on that triangle of land bounded by the Nepean Highway, Worthing Road and Wickham Road was subdivided into 67 superb residential sites, with two internal roads Stayner Grove  and Florida Court. (12)


The sub-division of the Stayner property, Beaumont.
The Argus February 23, 1956 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article72537545


Mr Williams
The whirlwind was heading south as it ended up at the Mechanics' Institute which was on the intersection of Charman Road and the Nepean Highway, and it went around Mr Williams' house. This is likely to be Joseph and Hannah (nee Westlake) Williams who lived on Highett Road, Highett, as did their son Ernest Joseph. Ernest and his father Joseph were market gardeners, although  a few years later their occupations had changed to orchardist and their address to Highett Road, Moorabbin.

In 1942, Joseph and Hannah celebrated their Diamond Wedding anniversary (60 years) and The Argus reported on the occasion -
Mr and Mrs Joseph Williams of Mayfield Highett rd, Moorabbin will celebrate their diamond wedding anniversary tomorrow and members of their family will gather for the occasion. Mr Williams who is 85 came to Victoria from England when he was one year old and has always lived in the Moorabbin district. Mrs Williams was born in Victoria 79 years ago. They have spent all their lives on the land and still conduct an orchard market garden and dairying herd. Both are in excellent health.  (13)

Joseph, who died on April 21, 1946 and Hannah who died on May 2, 1943, are both buried at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery.  Their son Ernest married Adela Constance Swan in 1931. Her brother, Dr E.F. W Swan, a Minister of the Congregational Church, was appointed the Chairman of the Congregational Union in May 1945; her sister Miss Florence Annie Swan was the Principal of Box Hill Girls' Technical School. Ernest died in January 1961 and Adela in March 1976 and they are buried at the Cheltenham Memorial Park. They had no children.  (14)


Hannah Williams' death notice


Mr Allan
The whirlwind continued through Messrs Allen, Brough and Davies' gardens. 
The Electoral Rolls list five members of the Allan family (incorrectly spelt Allen in the article) -   Bertha Rosina, Edith Alice, Louis John, Percy Albert and William Leonard Allan at Highett Road, Highett.  Percy was a labourer, but Louis and Leonard, as he was known, were market gardeners. The three men were the sons of Charles and Emma Elizabeth (nee Blencowe) Allan.  Louis had married Edith Alice Hall in 1894 and Leonard had married Bertha Nelder in 1906 (15). I have no confirmed information about Percy.

The Allan family were long term settlers in the area. Charles' father, also called Charles, came to  Highett Road in the 1860s, perhaps earlier. His farming enterprise was profiled in The Leader in December 1891 -
Many of the first settlers planted orchards, which after a few years proved very profitable, the ground in the meantime having yielded a considerable profit in vegetables. Among these were Mr. Charles Allan, who planted an orchard, which was gradually increased to 20 acres, on the Highett-road, about a quarter of a mile westwards of that of Mr. Stayner, mentioned last week. Mr. Allan having some stalwart sons, was able to make the business so successful that in course of time he gave it up to them; about 20 years ago one of them, Mr. Charles Allen, jun., planted an orchard of 8 acres half a mile to the southward; and when his father retired about 15 years ago, and planted a small orchard further west chiefly for his own amusement, his other son was given possession of the original orchard, but left it after a few years, and Mr. Charles Allan became occupier, so that he now holds the two orchards, comprising 28 acres, and, not satisfied with that, has broken up a paddock of 5 acres alongside, and is gradually filling it with fruit trees of various kinds. (16) You can read the rest of the article here. The Leader's article about George Stayner, can be read here

It was Charles Allan, junior, who was the father of Percy, Louis and Leonard.  Sadly he died January 1896 at the age of 53 and The Leader had the following obituary -
The decease of Mr. Charles Allan, of Brighton, will be noted with much sorrow by a very large number of friends. Mr. Allan has been a representative man in Victorian horticultural circles for a very lengthened period, and the loss of his able and energetic association with all movements connected with the advancement of the gardening and fruit growing industry will be very much felt. (17)

There are at least three generations of the Allan family buried at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery. Charles Allan, the original settler who died January 29, 1901 is buried with his wife Ann (nee Anderson)  who died October 23, 1893. Charles junior, died January 17, 1896 and is buried in a double unmarked grave with his wife Emma, who died July 17, 1891, along with their daughter Lucy who died in 1910. Of the next generation - Louis who died July 15, 1930 and Edith on February 10, 1939 are also buried there. Leonard who died October 6, 1941 and Bertha on September 2, 1962 are buried at the Cheltenham Memorial Park, with their daughter Lily, who died in 1998. (18)


The death notice of Louis John Allan


The death notice of Leonard Allan


Mr Brough
The Brough family were also impacted by the whirlwind, especially Mr Brough's tomato patch. The Electoral Rolls of the time have Ellen Mary, Elsie Lillian and Horace Walter at Bay Road, Cheltenham. On Point Nepean Road, Cheltenham we have  Charles, Charles Richard, Florence Elizabeth, George John  and Mary. All the men were market gardeners and the women, no matter what they actually did, had home duties as their occupation. This is the family - Charles Brough married Mary Evans on December 25, 1875 at Ballarat; the service was conducted by the Congregational Minister at the residence of the parents of the bride. Charles and Mary had nine children - Florence, Ada, Clara, George, Charles, Horace, Ellen, Stanley and Amy. All the Broughs from the Electoral Roll are from this family and Elsie (nee Crittenden) is the wife of the eldest son George. It seems likely then, that as George and Elsie had a different address that the Broughs had two properties one on Point Nepean Road and the other on Bay Road, and this is confirmed by Charles' Probate papers - he had two farms one of 20 acres and the other 28 acres.  I cannot tell you at which property the damage to the tomato patch occurred. (19)


Death notice of Charles Brough

Charles, who died on May 15, 1920 and Mary on July 11, 1923 are buried at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery in a double grave with Charles' parents John and Sarah (nee Morton) Brough. John, a stonemason, died on November 14, 1892 and Sarah on December 31, 1902. John's death notice noted that he was from Whitby Cottage, Bay Road, Cheltenham and that he was one of the Eight Hours Pioneers. This was movement by stone masons and other building trades to gain the eight hour working day, with eight hours rest and eight hours recreation, which they did in 1856. (20)


Death notice of  John Brough


Death notice of Sarah Brough
The Argus, January 1, 1903 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9822161


Mr Davie
The whirlwind then moved on to the Davie property. The Electoral Roll lists George and Beatrice Davie at Point Nepean Road, Cheltenham; and George, Robert Alexander and Jane Davie, of Bay Road, Cheltenham. The men were all market gardeners. George and Jane (nee Bain) were the parents of George junior and Robert Alexander. Beatrice (nee Roberts) was the wife of George junior. (21)

The Moorabbin News obituary of George, the elder, tells the story of the family -
Death of Mr Geo. Davie, senr. Another of our very early pioneers of the district, Mr George Davie, 
passed away at his home "Fern Hill," Bay Road, quietly, yet suddenly, on Wednesday morning. He was a man who possessed some of the finest qualities of the true pioneering Scot of the type of men to whom Australia owes so much. The sympathy of all is extended to Mrs Davie, and her family in their loss. There are two sons, Messrs George Davie and R. A. Davie, and two daughters, Mrs A. R. Judd and Mrs L. M. Penny. Miss G. Judd also lived with her grand parents, and there are twelve other grandchildren. Mr George Davie was a native of Aberdeen Scotland, arriving in Tasmania in 1852, and two months afterwards came to Melbourne and started for Bendigo, where in one month he secured 11lbs weight of gold. After a short pleasure trip to Tasmania, he went back to the diggings for three months, but not being successful, decided to return to Melbourne, which he did, and purchased 25 acres of land in Cheltenham which he held up to the time of his decease, and for which he paid £12 per acre. He first started wood carting to Melbourne, and after a time turned his attention to carrying to the diggings, in which he was engaged for eight years. He then left for New Zealand, but being unsuccessful there, returned to Victoria and subsequently went to Lachlan, N.S.W., New Zealand, Sydney and Queensland. In the latter State he worked as a carrier to and from the Peak Down Copper Mines for four years, clearing £1000 profit. He afterwards sold out, and went again to the goldfields of New Zealand, was unsuccessful and took a trip to the old country where he married. Returning to Victoria, he settled on his land at Cheltenham, where ever since he has continued in the market gardening industry. (22)

George, the father, died on June 2, 1915 and Jane on September 29, 1924, they are buried together at the Cheltenham Pioneer Cemetery.  Their son Robert died April 16, 1958 and is buried in the same Cemetery, with his wife, Constance (nee Curtis), who died  eleven days  later on April 27. Robert and Constance had married at the Brighton Congregational Church on September 30, 1914. (23)


Robert was still growing vegetables as a hobby in 1937 and entering his produce into the Royal Melbourne Show, where the judge was fellow Cheltenham resident, George Alexander Stayner. 
(It's a bit hard to read, but is transcribed in footnote 24.)
Sun News-Pictorial September 25, 1937 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article278276672

The other son George, died January 4, 1935 and his wife Beatrice on November 25, 1955. They are also buried at the Pioneer Cemetery, in the same grave as Beatrice's parents James Neilson and Bridget Elizabeth (nee Devereaux) Roberts. James' 1899 death notice notes that he had been a Colonist of 60 years and a resident of Mordialloc for over 40 years. He was 62 at the time of his death, so had come to Victoria as a 2 year-old around 1839, quite an early arrival to the Colony. He was the son of James and Sophia (nee Neilson) Roberts, who are buried at St Kilda Cemetery (25)


Death notice of  James Roberts, the father-in-law of George Davie
The Argus, August 14, 1899 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9528439


Mr Phillips
From the Davie property the whirlwind then swept through Mr Phillips, who I believe is Mark Phillips, a market gardener, of Charman Road, Cheltenham. He lived with his mother, Mary (nee Comerford), whose husband Henry Phillips had died on April 24, 1872, when young Mark was only 5 years old, and his sister Sophia just one year old. At the time of his death, Henry's two children from his first marriage 18-year-old Caroline and 11-year old Henry Edwin were also living with the family.   

Henry was a market gardener and left assets of £181, including seven acres of land at Cheltenham. His Grant of Administration file at the Public Records Office of Victoria shows that one of the listed executors in his Will was Alexander McLeod, the father-in-law of George Stayner, who renounced this role in favour of Mary Phillips. As well,  James Roberts, the father-in-law of George Davie, signed an affidavit confirming the truth of Mary Phillip's affidavit regarding her husband's estate. These documents demonstrate how inter-connected these early residents of Cheltenham were.  (26)


Henry Phillips' assets at the time of his death.
PROV - VPRS 28/P0002, 11/679

Mary died on February 14, 1913 and is buried with her husband at the Pioneer Cemetery.  Mark died on September 10, 1926 and is buried at the same cemetery with his sister Sophia, her husband James Gregory and their son Norman. Also in the grave is Miss Alice Izett Bale, who died in July 1955, aged 85, I don't know what the connection is, and a matter of interest (but irrelevant to this story) in February the same year, another Miss Alice Bale died - 79-year old Alice Marion Ellen Bale, who was an artist (27)


Death notice of Mary Phillips
The Age, February 17, 1913 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article201132082 


The Cheltenham Mechanics' Institute


Cheltenham Mechanics' Institute and Temperance Hall, c. 1910
Two Acre Village: A Cheltenham History by Graham Whiteside (City of Kingston, 2012), p. 33

Which brings us to the Mechanics' Institute on  the corner of Charman Road and the Nepean Highway, where the whirlwind struck the Billiards room. The Cheltenham Mechanics' Institute and Temperance Hall site was reserved in July 1864 and the Trustees appointed in February 1865. The original Trustees were James McKnight, William Ruse, Henry Wells, Norman McSwain and Jonathan Stanway Parker. (28)


Original Trustees of the Cheltenham Mechanics' Institute
Victoria Government Gazette Tuesday February 7, 1865, p.291.  

I don't have an exact opening date, however in January 1865, it was reported that a lecture was held at the re-opening of the Cheltenham Mechanics' Institute, would imply that it had already been opened and then closed for some reason. (29)


The re-opening of the Mechanics' Institute
The Leader, January 14, 1865 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197035672

Either way, early 1865 would seem to be a reasonable date to list as the opening of the building. In the late 1880s the building was expanded (30) and in 1906 the Billiard room and other works were undertaken, as the Brighton Southern Cross reported in the July -  
The usual monthly meeting of the Mechanics'-institute, Cheltenham, was held on Wednesday last; a full attendance of committeemen being present. The sub-committee recommended the erection of two ante rooms at the rear of the hall; a new fire-proof proscenium; alterations in accordance with the requirements of the Central Board of Health; extension of library, with necessary improvements; and the building of a billiard-room. The recommendations were adopted by the full committee with little discussion. Plans are to be prepared at once by the architect, Mr. Schreiber. (31)

As the whirlwind article noted This home of big breaks was too much for the cyclone, the building breaking up the wind in its course, and diffusing it down the Main-road, so there was no damage to the building. In March 1909, the Mechanics' Institute committee accepted a tender to extend the Billiard room and and in June they purchased a second billiard table. (32) In the late 1950s the Trustees made the decision to surrender the title of  the building to the Moorabbin Council and the original building was demolished in 1958 and replaced with the hall  which stands there today. However, the Billiard Room was relocated  to Highett for use a Scout Hall. (33). I have no information if it is still in use.

So this is the story of the January 1909 whirlwind which hit Cheltenham. To read about the November 1909 whirlwind, click here.

Footnotes
(1) The Australasian, August 25, 1906, see here
(2) Brighton Southern Cross,  January 30, 1909, see here.
(3) Electoral Rolls from Ancestry.com; Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; George and Flora's 25th wedding anniversary - The Age, December 16, 1895, see here.
(4) Oakleigh Leader, November 3, 1894, see here. This wasn't the first account of  George's farming enterprise, The Leader wrote about him on  December 19, 1891, see here and earlier still in 1884 - The Leader, February 23, 1884, see here. There was also another story in the Brighton Southern Cross, April 4, 1908, see here
(5) George's death notice Weekly Times, August 24, 1895, see here; Information from the Brighton Cemetorians database - https://www.brightoncemetorians.org.au/
The Age, November 14, 1888, see here.
(8) Wedding report - Brighton Southern Cross, March 28, 1903, see here; George - death notice - The Age, December 11, 1953, see here
Oakleigh Leader, December 22, 1900, see here.
(10) Whiteside, Graham Two Acre Village: A Cheltenham History (City of Kingston, 2012). pp 93-97 and  Brighton Southern Cross, April 4, 1908, see here
(11) Death notices - George, can't find one, date death is from his Probate papers (see Footnote 6). Death notices - Flora - The Argus, August 30, 1919, see here; George - The Argus, December 11, 1953, see here; Winifred - The Argus, November 8, 1954, see here
(12) Land sub-division - The Argus February 23, 1956, see here.  
(13) The Argus, February 14, 1942, see here.
(14) Death notices - Joseph - The Argus, April 24, 1946, see here; Hannah - The Age, May 4, 1943, see here ; Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; Dr Swan - Suns News-Pictorial, May 1, 1945, see here; Florence Swan - Box Hill Reporter, August 11, 1950, see here. Friends of Cheltenham Regional Cemeteries https://www.focrc.org/
(15) Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages
(16) The Leader, December 26, 1891, see here.
(17) The Leader, February 8, 1896, see here.
(18) Death notices - Charles - The Argus, January 30, 1901, see here; Ann - The Argus, October 24, 1893, see here; Charles - The Age, January 21, 1896, see here; Emma - The Herald, July 18, 1891, see here; Louis - The Age July 16, 1930, see hereEdith - The Age, February 13, 1939, see here;  Leonard - The Age, October 7, 1941, see here Bertha - The Age, September 3, 1962 (from newspapers.com)
(19) Marriage notice Brough/Evans - Ballarat Courier, December 29, 1875, see here; Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; Public Records Office of Victoria - Probate papers - https://prov.vic.gov.au/archive/EE7244A1-F1ED-11E9-AE98-81591BA3CA23?image=1
(20) Death notices - Charles - The Argus, May 17, 1920, see here; Mary - The Argus, July 12, 1923, see hereJohn - The Age, November 15, 1892, see here;  Sarah - The Argus, January 1, 1903, see here.
(21) Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages
(22) Moorabbin News, June 5, 1915, see here.
(23) Death notices - George - The Argus, June 3, 1915, see here;  Jane - The Argus, September 30, 1924, see here;  Robert  and Constance - dates from headstone photograph  https://www.focrc.org/   Report of the wedding of Robert Davie to Constance Curtis - Brighton Southern Cross, October 17, 1917, see here.
(24) Giant Pumpkins article - 
Giant Pumpkins and Cabbages of Rich Green. Vegetable Quality There, But Quantity Disappoints Judge
There was no Good Fairy to turn the pumpkin into a Cinderella carriage at the Royal Show yesterday - but there should have been. Giant pumpkins, ruby red rhubarb and a new type of curled silver beet brought praise from the judge of table vegetables. The expert vegetable grower must have the artists' striving for perfect formation and color. For instance, rich green defeats the lighter green in cabbage judging. The carrot is not completely judged until it is sliced through the centre to reveal formation. Mr. R. A. Davie, of Cheltenham, who adopted vegetable growing as a hobby on his retirement, won the coveted prize for the best collection of 12 vegetables. Mr. Davie has won this prize for several years. Praising the high quality of the exhibits from a seasonal viewpoint, the judge Mr. G.A. Stayner) expressed regret at the small number of entries. The collection exhibits, he said, were well staged and everything they contained was of high quality. Cabbages won many points for their excellent formation, color and size. Cauliflowers were up to standard, but their centres showed faint yellow tinges front the effects of warm weather. Mrs. R. Brinsmead, of Leopold, Geelong, won the first prize with an outstanding lettuce exhibit. Almost perfect in formation and color, it dominated other lettuce entries. (Sun News-Pictorial September 25, 1937, see here.) 
(25) Death notices - George - The Age, January 7, 1935, see here; Beatrice - The Argus, November 28, 1955, see here; James Roberts - The Argus, August 14, 1899, see here; James and Sophia Roberts - James died December 17, 1893 and Sophia on April 14, 1874 - St Kilda Cemetery transcriptions on Ancestry.com. 
(26) Public Records Office of Victoria - Henry's Probate papers and Grant of Administration papers -- https://prov.vic.gov.au/archive/E84C29ED-F1DE-11E9-AE98-CDFCF1B0D6DA?image=1 and https://prov.vic.gov.au/archive/5CC8ABBA-F1CF-11E9-AE98-6F095347710E?image=1
(27) Henry, Mary and Mark- dates from headstone photographs https://www.focrc.org/;  Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages
(28) Victoria Government Gazette, Tuesday February 7, 1865, p. 291.    https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1865/V/general/15.pdf
(29) The Leader, January 14, 1865, see here
(30) Whiteside, Graham, op. cit.,pp. 31-41.
(31) Brighton Southern Cross, July 7 1906, see here.
(32) Brighton Southern Cross, March 6, 1909, see here; Brighton Southern Cross, June 19, 1909, see here.
(33) Whiteside, Graham, op. cit., p.39.

1909 in Cheltenham - the year of the Whirlwinds - part 2

In 1909, Cheltenham was hit by two whirlwinds - one on January 27 and the other on November 19. I have written about the January whirlwind, here, and this post shows the impact of the November whirlwind on the partially constructed Benevolent Asylum and provides a short history of the building at Cheltenham.

On November 27, The Advocate reported on the whirlwind-
Much damage was done by the storm on Friday of last week. The new Benevolent Asylum in course of erection in the Cheltenham district was struck by a gale, and damage to the extent of £500 was done. At Brighton a yacht worth £50 was sunk and broke up. The wind attained a velocity of 50 miles an hour.  (1)

The Leader newspaper had the following photographs of the damage - under the heading -
THE WHIRLWIND AT CHELTENHAM - NEW BENEVOLENT ASYLUM UNROOFED.


1. Wing of Building From Which Roof Was Carried Away.
Photographer: Fraser and Vallance. The Leader, November 27, 1909 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197072796


2. Ruins Caused by Debris Falling Through Roof of Buildings, 100 Yards Away. 3. Damage to Roof on Which Debris Fell.
Photographer: Fraser and Vallance. The Leader, November 27, 1909 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197072796


4. Rafters of Roof That Was Carried Away.
Photographer: Fraser and Vallance. The Leader, November 27, 1909 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197072796


Short History of the Benevolent Asylum at Cheltenham
In November 1849 the Victoria Benevolent Society was established with the aim to relieve the aged, infirm, disabled, or destitute, poor of all creeds and nations; and to minister to them the comforts of religion. (2) To this end a Benevolent Asylum was erected in the area bounded by Abbotsford, Elm, Curzon and Miller Streets in West and North Melbourne. (3)

It opened on November 27, 1851 and  in its first year of operation it afforded shelter to 107 infirm and destitute individuals unable to earn a subsistence. This Society support their asylum chiefly by means of voluntary subscriptions, aided by a grant from the Government, added to which, they receive a portion of the fines daily imposed upon the drunkards at our city and district police-courts (4)  


The Benevolent Asylum in North Melbourne, 1870s.
State Library of Victoria image H11782

The Society continued to provide services at its original site in what was a very grand looking building, however by the start of the new Century the building was inadequate and had  long ago excited the disapproval of the Board of Public Health on account of their sanitary shortcomings, while the chief of the Metropolitan Fire Brigade has condemned it as an unsafe fire risk. (5) 

As well in 1902, the Benevolent Society received a bequest from Mr James Hingston of around £26,000, and he stipulated that it was "to be applied towards the purpose of rebuilding that institution on a ground-floor plan only, the present many-floored and stair-cased building being, in his experience as a committee-man of that charity, very troublesome to its old and rheumatic residents and patients." (6)

For these reasons, and as it was not possible to rebuild a one floor facility on the small inner Melbourne site, a new site off Warrigal Road in Cheltenham was acquired in 1904 (7)


The site of the  Benevolent Asylum, situated on 180 acres at Cheltenham, in 1913.
  Moorabbin Road is now known as Warrigal Road
Sketch map of Country around Oakleigh, including Mordialloc, Dandenong and Ringwood
Public Records Office of Victoria VPRS 8168


The foundation stone of the new building was was laid on March 31, 1909, The Argus reported - 
A special tram that left Flinders-street yesterday afternoon at 20 minutes to 2 o'clock was crowded with visitors to Cheltenham to witness the laying of the foundation stone of the new Melbourne Benevolent Asylum. The ceremony was performed by His Excellency the Governor (Sir Thomas Gibson- Carmichael) The new asylum grounds are situated about two miles from Cheltenham railway station. They cover 180 acres of which 15 to 20 acres will be used for building purposes and the rest for farming. It is expected that the asylum when completed will accommodate 1,000 persons it is intended to shift the inmates of the present building at North Melbourne went to Cheltenham and it is further proposed to do the same with those living at the Immigrants Home on the St Kilda road.  The total cost of the new asylum is estimated at £100,000. Of this £20,000 has been found by the state and £30,000 has been received from the Hingston estate.  A large sum will also be obtained by the sale of the present grounds at North Melbourne but it is expected that in appeal will have to be made to the Government for a further contribution. (8) 

The new building was designed by Architect Charles Abraham D'Ebro and the builders were  C.Wadey & Co. Charles D'Ebro was born in London in 1850 and after he arrived in Melbourne, via Adelaide, he went into partnership with the late Mr. J. H. Grainger. Later he was a senior partner in the firm of D'Ebro, Mackenzie, and Meldrum. He became well known as an architect and engineer, and many large buildings and residences in Victoria were designed by him. Amongst them were the Masonic Hall, in Collins street; the M.C.C. pavilion, the offices of Dalgety and Co., in Bourke street and some of the same firm's wool stores; the Premier Permanent Buildings, in Collins street; Georges' Pty. Ltd., State Government House (built for Mr. John Wagner and formerly known as "Stonnington"), "Moora Kyne," at Toorak (built for Sir John Grice, and now the home of Mr. Bowes Kelly), and "Carngham," near Skipton (built for Mr. George Russell).  He died by suicide on June 23, 1920, having been in ill health for some time, and had suffered periods of despondency.  (9)

The Governor returned  to Cheltenham in 1911 for the official opening on April 11th. This is the beginning of The Argus report on the event - 
A great pile of red brick buildings, covering 10 acres of ground away out on the healthy heath land near Cheltenham, is the new home of the Melbourne Benevolent Asylum. The old quarters at North
Melbourne have been vacated and all the inmates officers furniture and equipment of the institution have been transferred to Cheltenham.  The North Melbourne building is to be sold in sections for demolition and removed, then Victoria street is to be continued through the block, and the land
sold in residential sites. Although the asylum has been in occupation of its new home for some time, the premises were, not officially opened until yesterday. (10) 


The New Benevolent Asylum at Cheltenham. 
Left: The arrivals by Ambulance. Right: Old inmates in their new home. 
Photographer: Fraser and Vallance. Punch, April 6, 1911 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article175611695


The New Benevolent Asylum at Cheltenham. 
General view of the new buildings
Photographer: Fraser and Vallance. Punch, April 6, 1911 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article175611695

Historian Graham Whitehead writes - The asylum was renamed the Kingston Centre in 21 October 1970 and the focus on its service dramatically changed. No longer was its prime attaetion given to catering for the long-term stay of the disabled, blind, infirm and elderly patients. It's more recent history had seen services focussed on rehabilitation. You can read Graham's article - The Melbourne Benevolent Asylum Comes to Cheltenham - on the Kingston Local History website, here https://localhistory.kingston.vic.gov.au/articles/302


Footnotes
(1) The Advocate, November 27, 1909, see here
(2) The Argus, November 17, 1849, see here
(4) The Argus, January 21, 1853, see here.  
(5) The Argus, September 16, 1907, see here
(6) The Argus, December 19, 1902, see here. Also - The Argus, May 14, 1902, see here.
(7) The Argus, May 6, 1904, see here; Brighton Southern Cross, August 13, 1904, see here; Brighton Southern Cross, November 19, 1904, see here; Brighton Southern Cross, November 26, 1904, see here
(8) The Argus, April 1, 1909, see here.
(9) The Argus, June 24, 1920, see here.  
(10) The Argus, April 12, 1911, see here