Using New Feeds

As I want to blog about more than genealogy I’m going to be using feeds which point to specific categories.  If you only want to receive blog posts about a specific subject then you may want to change the feed you’re receiving.

 

Genealogy Feed

https://blog.kyliesgenes.com/category/genealogy/feed

Open Source Crafting Feed

https://blog.kyliesgenes.com/category/open-source-crafting/feed

Technology Feed

https://blog.kyliesgenes.com/category/tech/feed

Genealogists For Families Meet The Team Blog Post

I’m today’s team member on the Genealogists For Families Meet The Team blog.  http://genfamilies.blogspot.com.au/2012/02/meet-team-kylie-willison.html

This week’s guest post is by Genealogists for Families team member Kylie Willison from South Australia.

Tell us a bit about yourself.
Genealogy is my main obsession. I also do volunteer work, run an art group, and am a beginner textile artist.

Majorca and McCallum’s Creek

Charles Robert and Eleanor Wigley lived in McCallum’s Creek circa 1865 to circa 1872.  Charles was a mining engine driver and their children Elizabeth Jane, Robert, Charles Noah, Henry, Joseph, Jessie, Frederick and Charles George were born in the area.

Unfortunately Henry and Charles George also died there.

These photos are from my January visit to the area.  It wasn’t until I went to Maryborough that I found out that the name of the township McCallum’s Creek was changed to Craigie.  The only remaining buildings in Craigie are the church and the school.

McCallum's Creek

McCallum's Creek/Craigie Church

McCallum's Creek/Craigie Church

 

McCallum's Creek

McCallum's Creek/Craigie School

McCallum's Creek/Craigie School

McCallum's Creek/Craigie School

Just down the road is the township of Majorca.  This was once a booming goldfields town which is now a virtual ghost town.

Majorca Store

Information Board Majorca

Information Board Majorca

Building in Majorca

Building in Majorca

Majorca Town Hall

Majorca Town Hall

Majorca Church

Majorca Church

Henry and Charles George Wigley are buried in the Majorca cemetery.  Unfortunately they didn’t have headstones however I spoke to a gentleman who was mowing the cemetery and he said that a new cemeteries trust had been established and that grave markers would soon be put in.

Majorca Cemetery

Majorca Cemetery

Oral History Digitised By National Library – Crews Family

I found an interview with Clarence Victor Crews on the Trove website.  I bought a copy of the interview which was then digitised and sent to me on a cd in mp3 format.  This is some of my notes I took while listening to the interview and some newspaper articles I’ve found.

Clarence was my second cousin three times removed.  He was born in Littlehampton, South Australia in 1881.  Clarence’s father Frederick Albert Crews was a Cobb & Co and John Hill & Co driver.

Frederick Albert Crews

Clarence was 88 years old when this interview was recorded in 1969 in Canberra. This is what it says on the Trove website about the interview.

“Mr Crews, talks about his father Fred Crews, a reinsman with Cobb & Co. and John Hill & Co. in South Australia. He discusses each photo and tells something of his father’s life history.”

This recording is really more of a conversation than an interview.  Clarence reminisces as he goes through some photos with Carol Kiss the interviewer.  He doesn’t speak much at all about himself it’s almost all about his father, people they knew and the properties they owned.

He recalls that his mother Louisa Wigzell ran the Littlehampton Post Office and this is where his parents met when Frederick was the mail coach driver.  Louisa’s parents Jesse and Jane Wigzell had a general store/grocer in Littlehampton also.

Some of the other mail routes Frederick Albert Crews drove were Terowie to Broken Hill, Adelaide to Kadina and Adelaide to Kingston however specific dates weren’t mentioned in the interview.

The Crews family went to Western Australia circa 1894 where Frederick ran a carting business with a partner before buying his first station Outalpa.

As far as I can tell Clarence worked on his father’s sheep properties for most of his life.  He made it to 91 years old passing away in 1973 shortly before his 92nd birthday.

Frederick Albert Crews

It was well worth buying this recording as it hadn’t been previously digitised.  Now I have a copy and it’s available for others to obtain also.  I’m not sure what the charges would be as I paid for the digitisation as well as the cd.  If anyone can give me any further information about the Crews family please leave me a comment!!

Bendigo

I thought I’d write my blog posts by what I found out in each particular town. The Bendigo Family History Group are located in the upper level of the Bendigo library and are extremely helpful to everyone coming in to ask questions.  As I was the only one asking for help (that day) I received help from several volunteers!

I’ve got lots of notes and records to compile when I get home.

Here is a picture which shows the Mining Engine Drivers 1884 to 1886.  My ancestors listed in this book are; Charles Robert Wigley, his son in law Thomas Tregear,  and Thomas’ brother John Tregear.  This information shows that Charles, Thomas and John were educated men and that they were mine engine drivers in the Bendigo area.  This confirms previous information I had about Charles and Thomas but is a completely new piece of information about John.

Mine Engine Drivers

I met a lady named Norma who told me that Charles Noah Wigley was her Sunday School teacher at Buckley St Methodist Church.  She also knew Ida May Tregear who also attended that church.