The first Trustees for the Boroondara Cemetery were appointed in December 1858. They were Henry Box (2), Thomas Judd (3), John Charles Lloyd (4), Thomas Johnson (5), Jabez Bunting Chambers (6), John Sharp Denbigh (7), Christian Finger (sen.) (8), Thomas Cubitt Balmain (9) and Michael O'Grady (10).
Trustees appointed to the Boroondara Cemetery
The Boroondara Cemetery website (11) notes that the Cemetery was surveyed in 1859 and that the first burial was that of Ellen Quick, who was buried on March 12, 1859. Ellen was only 36 years old when she died on March 9 from Phthisis (Tuberculosis). Ellen had been born in Mangotsfield, Gloucestershire, England to Thomas and Patience (nee Petherham) Derrick. She married John Quick, a stonemason, in Bristol in 1848, at the age of 25. The couple arrived in Melbourne on the Duke of Northumberland in January 1849. Their four children listed on her death certificate were - Samuel William aged 9; Marianne aged 5; Lucy Ellen aged 3 and Edward John aged one year (12). A very sad situation, though sadly not uncommon in those times, for the family to lose their mother, when she was so young and when the children were so young. Ellen was buried in the Baptist Section, her funeral bring conducted by the Baptist Minister, Mr Foy (13). The death certificate lists two witnesses to the burial - her brother Samuel Derrick (who was also the Informant) and Uriah Whidycombe, whose name you might expect to find in a Charles Dickens novel. John Quick died August 22, 1899, aged 83 and is buried in the same grave (14).
The Age published this interesting letter in 1936, in response to a query about the ship, the John Bunyan. The letter is from William Bevan about his grand-parents, Thomas and Patience Derrick and their two daughters who arrived in Melbourne in 1852; no doubt to join their other daughter, Ellen Quick. The letter states that one of the daughters married Uriah Whidycombe, who was a crew member on the John Bunyan. So that explains the connection to Ellen Quick, he was her brother-in-law.
Letter to The Age from Ellen Quick's nephew, William Bevan.
Postcard of the entrance to the Kew Cemetery
As I said, I have two postcards of the Kew Cemetery. This one shows the Caretaker's Lodge and Administrative Office, built in 1860 and designed by Charles Vickers (1820-1883)
(15). There were various later additions, designed by Albert Purchas (1825-1909)
(16), an Architect and member of the Cemetery Trust, including the clock tower which was erected in 1899. The Booroondara Cemetery is heritage listed, you can read the Victorian Heritage citation,
here.
The erection of a handsome tower, in which will be a large clock....
A Temple Tomb, Boroondara
Image has been cropped. Produced by Godfrey B. Roberts, 143 Glenferrie Road, Glenferrie (17)
My other postcard is the Springthorpe Memorial, erected in 1897 by Dr John Springthorpe (1855-1933) (18) for his wife, Annie. The Victorian Heritage database notes that It was designed by Harold Desbrowe Annear and includes Bertram Mackennal sculptures. It contains twelve columns of deep green granite from Scotland supporting a Harcourt granite superstructure, and a glass dome roof of lead lighting (19).
John William Springthorpe had married Annie Constance Maria Ingles in 1887. She was the daughter of John and Maria (nee Hale) Ingles of Vaucluse, Richmond. They had four children - daughter Dorothy who lived for 22 days in December 1887; daughter, Enid, in January 1889; a son in November 1890 and another baby boy who was born prematurely on January 23, 1897, the same day that Annie died aged 30. His death notice lists his children as Enid Totton, Lance and Guy (20).
The Ballarat Star in July 1898 had this report on the monument and gives all the credit to Bertram Mackennal -
A Splendid Monument
One of the most sumptuous and artistic pieces of monumental sculpture ever seen in Melbourne will shortly be erected in the cemetery here. It has been designed and is being erected by Mr Bertram Mackennel, a native of this city, at his studio in London. It takes the form of a circular Greek temple, with columns of black and an entablature and plinth of white marble. The dome is composed of rose-tinted glass, through which soft and tender light fails upon the recumbent figure of a beautiful young female, the size of life, carved in the purest Carrara marble, and to which a faint flash of life will be given by the illumination from above. This figure rests on a sarcophagus, and at its head will stand a small statue of Love and at its foot one of Grief. The latter, by the way, is exhibited in the Royal Academy this year. When completed the whole work will have cost £2000, the munificent commission of Dr Springthorpe, of Collins street east. This pathetic and beautiful tribute to the memory of a wife, taken out of this life in the bloom of youth, will be unique of its kind in the Melbourne Cemetery, and will mark a new departure in art as applied to mortuary purposes, Mr Mackennal is also busily at work preparing the model of the statue of the Queen which is to be erected in marble in front of the
Town Hall in Ballarat West (21).
Two different women - Ellen Quick and Annie Springthorpe - both died young and left young children behind, and both found eternal rest at the Boorondara Cemetery.
Footnotes
(1) Richmond was created a Municipality on April 24, 1855; proclaimed a Town, September 28, 1872 and a City, February 17, 1882. (Victorian Municipal Directory and Gazetteer, 1940)
(2) Henry Box - Died February 1882, aged 82. Buried in the Church of England section. I believe this is Henry Box as listed in the 1860 Sands, Kenny & Co.'s commercial and general Melbourne directory as a Merchant and a Saddlers' and Coachmakers' Ironmonger of Little Collins Street.
(3) Thomas Judd - Died May 1915, aged 93. Buried in the Presbyterian Section. A officer of the Customs Department; read his short obituary in
The Australasian of June 5, 1915,
here.
(4) John Charles Lloyd - Died November 1887, aged 64. Buried in the Presbyterian Section. His death notice has his address as Bella Vista, Alma Road, Caulfield.
(5) Thomas Johnson - Possibly the Thomas Johnson who died May 1907, aged 86 and is buried in the Wesleyan Section.
(6) Jabez Bunting Chambers - Commission Agent, declared Insolvent in 1855 (
The Argus, November 18, 1854, see
here;
The Argus, February 15, 1855, see
here). Appeared as a witness in a case at the Kyneton Court in 1883 (see report in
Kyneton Observer of May 10, 1883,
here). Died in Lancefield in 1888 aged 71. I have no information as to his connection to the Kew area.
(7) John Sharp Denbigh - Died February 1875, aged 48. Buried in the Baptist Section. An officer of Mining Department. There was a hearing into Mr Denbigh's death in 1876 where it was alleged that it was caused by
tyrannical treatment and overwork by the Secretary of mines, Mr Brough Smyth.
Reports in
The Age, February 16, 1876, see
here;
The Argus, May 2 1876, see
here and a brief follow-up article in
The Argus of August 16, 1876, see
here. There any other articles on
Trove about the hearing into Brough Smyth's conduct.
(8) Christian Finger - Died August 1884, aged 85. Buried in the Lutheran Section. In the 1870s he was the Trustee of land in East Melbourne reserved for a Lutheran Church and School; he was listed as a farmer of Boroondara (
The Argus, November 1, 1872, see
here)
(9) Thomas Cubitt Balmain, of Thornton Lodge, Kew. - Died aged 36, 1864.Buried in the Unitarian Section. Chief Clerk in the Public Works Department. Death notice
The Argus, January 19, 1864, see
here ; information about a compensation claim for his wife in
The Argus, May 12, 1866, see
here. Information about the sub-division of the Thornton Estate,
here.
(10) Michael O'Grady - Died January 1876, aged 51. Buried in the Catholic section. The Hon. Michael O'Grady, M.L.A. Obituary in
The Herald of January 8, 1876, see
here; Obituary and the report of his funeral in
The Advocate of January 8, 1876, see
here. Public subscriptions were invited for a memorial to Mr O'Grady and there is an illustration of it in
The Advocate of January 5, 1878,
here.
(12) Information from Ellen's Death Certificate; England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1837-1915 and Victoria, Australia, Assisted and Unassisted Passenger Lists, 1839-1923 - both from Ancestry.com
Reverend Foy, died on May 3, 1879 aged 69 and is buried at the Boroondara Cemetery.
(14) Boroondara Cemetery website; Ellen's Death certificate and John's death notice.
(20) Various Family notices in the newspapers; Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriage.
Life and death in two notices.