Christened 5 Mar 1697, St Lawrence Jewry And St Mary Magdalene Milk Str Lon, London |
Occupation: credit financier (banking) Successful at school, clever with hands, creative. Uncle Tompie wantedto put him into engineering but family wanted banking. (Ngairi) Ran Red Cross during WWII Ended banking and went on own as an Inventor. Animals that glowed in dark, venetion blinds, clothes line. But poor at 'poor entrepenure'. Rotton at marketing. (Ngairi) Passion for vegetable garden Left Nevis street home and family in approx. 1950, So went poultry farming. Moved to Monbulk, gardened. Retirement village in Benalla. Died 92. Occupation: credit financier (banking) Successful at school, clever with hands, creative. Uncle Tompie wanted to put him into engineering but family wanted banking. (Ngairi) Ran Red Cross during WWII Ended banking and went on own as an Inventor. Animals that glowed in dark, venetion blinds, clothes line. But poor at 'poor entrepenure'. Rotton at marketing. (Ngairi) |
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came out as minister ended up on goldfields |
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Transported on First fleet, 1788. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bluegum/humphries1_2.htm The HUMPHRIES Family: A First Fleet convict, Edward HUMPHRIES/HUMPHREYS and his wife, Mary WILLIAMS, a Second Fleet convict started their lives and family in Sydney from 1788 and produced over a thousand descendants all over Australia now. Edward's parents were identified, by a cousin, to be William HUMPHRIES and Elizabeth HOLMES - the record shown them to be married at Chislehurst, Kent in England on 19th July 1764. However, any children of theirs, apart from our Edward, have not been traced to this date. Only the earliest five generations are shown. Crime details: Edward was caught on 8 November 1784 carrying out a pair of leather boots and a great cloth coat from the house of Martin Bird. The trial at Old Bailey, on 8 December 1784, where he was sentenced to 7 years transportation. After the trial he was transferred to "Censor" hulk on Thames River from Newgate Prison on 23rd May 1785, and then he was transferred from "Censor" hulk to Portsmouth on 24 February 1787. There Edward embarked on the "Scarborough" on 27 February 1787 after three days journey on foot through many villages, endured abuses, etc. Being forced into exile, Edward left Portsmouth with the First Fleet on ? 1787 and arrived at Port Jackson, after Botany Bay stint, on 26 January 1788 to serve his sentence. Edward did not live much, however he was a constable in The Rocks area and had several children with Mary WILLIAMS. |
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christened 1806 26 jan married 13 may 1822, parish of parramatta (nathanial signed with 'x' mark) |
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