Lesley Joyce Borowitzka B.Sc. (Hons), Ph.D., BA (Theol)
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THE HERALDRY OF THE MACLEAYS AND THEIR KIN: THE ARMS OF WILLIAM MACLEAY, HIS SONS, AND THEIR MALE DESCENDANTS Stephen Michael Szabo Heraldic Consultant, Sydney INTRODUCTION In an earlier article1 I gave a brief account of the life of Alexander Macleay following his arrival in Sydney in 1826 and up to his death twenty-two years later. I noted that there had been little or no scholarly examination of the use of coats of arms and similar heraldic identifiers by Alexander Macleay and his kin by either blood or marriage, and ventured that such an examination, which I hoped to carry out, might reveal something about identity, aspiration and kinship in the Scottish diaspora in colonial New South Wales. The present article narrows its focus to look at the ancestry of Alexander Macleay, how his father acquired legitimately granted arms, and what use of these arms was made by various male family members to declare their social status. ANCESTRY The Australian Dictionary of Biography (ADB) tells us that Alexander Macleay was: the son of William Macleay, provost of Wick and deputy-lieutenant of Caithness. He was descended from an ancient family which came from Ulster; at the Reformation the family had substantial landholdings in Scotland, but by loyalty to the Stuarts suffered severe losses after the battle of Culloden.2 The ADB entry for Alexander’s son George claims that “the McLeays [were] an old Caithness landed family.”3 The latter is not entirely true, for it seems that the Macleays were newly settled in the late eighteenth century in Caithness, but they had indeed 1 Stephen Michael Szabo, ‘The Heraldry of The Macleays and Their Kin: Scottish Heraldry and Its Australian Context’, Journal of the Sydney Society for Scottish History, Vol. -
ESSEX RECORD OFFICE Reels M838-40
AUSTRALIAN JOINT COPYING PROJECT ESSEX RECORD OFFICE Reels M838-40 Essex Record Office County Hall Chelmsford CM1 1LX National Library of Australia State Library of New South Wales Filmed: 1972 CONTENTS Page 3 Quarter Sessions records, 1782-1853 5 Papers of John Vaughan, 1885-97 5 Papers of the Perry Family, 1841-62 6 Letter of J.S.T. Dowbiggin, 1844 6 Letter of Edward Hawkins, 1830 6 Papers of the Petre Family, 1839-60 7 Papers of James Brogden, 1810-16 7 Papers of the Tabor Family, 1876 7 Papers of Rose Robertson, 1866-1903 8 Papers of Alexander Wallace, 1897-99 9 Papers of George Warburton, 1898 9 Papers of the Bullock Family, 1850 9 Papers of Col. Benjamin Branfill, 1882-98 10 Thesis of M.H. Dunwell, 1966 2 ESSEX RECORD OFFICE Reel M838 QUARTER SESSIONS RECORDS Q/AMz Minor functions 5 Drafts of orders for transportation, May 1845 – June 1853 The orders, signed by the Clerk of the Peace, give the name, age, crime and sentence of each convict. Q/CR Clerk of the Peace 9/5 Returns of transportation orders, 1844-53. The returns were prepared by the Clerk of the Peace for the Home Office. They give the names of convicts sentenced to transportation at the General Quarter Sessions at Chelmsford, together with their ages, crimes, and the length of the sentence. 9/7 Returns of transportation orders for each Sessions, 1835-39 Drafts of returns showing amounts paid by County of Essex for conveyance of prisoners under sentence of transportation to depots, 1835 -1837. -
Unley Heritage Research Study
UNLEY HERITAGE RESEARCH STUDY FOR THE CITY OF UNLEY VOLUME 1 2006 McDougall & Vines Conservation and Heritage Consultants 27 Sydenham Road, Norwood, South Australia 5067 Ph (08) 8362 6399 Fax (08) 8363 0121 Email: [email protected] CONTENTS UNLEY HERITAGE RESEARCH STUDY Page No 1.0 INTRODUCTION 1 1.1 Background 1.2 Study Area 1.3 Objectives of Study 2.0 OVERVIEW HISTORY OF THE UNLEY DISTRICT 3 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Brief Thematic History of the City of Unley 2.2.1 Land and Settlement 2.2.2 Primary Production 2.2.3 Transport and Communications 2.2.4 People, Social Life and Organisations 2.2.5 Government 2.2.6 Work, Secondary Production and Service Industries 2.3.6 Inter War and Post War Housing Styles (1950s plus) 2.3 Subdivision and Development of Areas 2.3.1 Background 2.3.2 Subdivision Layout 2.3.3 Subdivision History 2.3.4 Sequence of Subdivision of Unley 2.3.5 Specific Historic Subdivisions and Areas 2.4 Housing Periods, Types and Styles 2.4.1 Background 2.4.2 Early Victorian Houses (1840s to 1860s) 2.4.3 Victorian House Styles (1870s to 1890s) 2.4.4 Edwardian House Styles (1900 to 1920s) 2.4.5 Inter War Residential Housing Styles (1920s to 1942) 3.0 SUMMARY OF RECOMMENDATIONS OF STUDY 35 3.1 Planning Recommendations 3.1.1 Places of State Heritage Value 3.1.2 Places of Local Heritage Value 3.2 Further Survey Work 3.2.1 Historic Conservation Zones 3.2.2 Royal Agricultural Society Showgrounds 3.3 Conservation and Management Recommendations 3.3.1 Heritage Advisory Service 3.3.2 Preparation of Conservation Guidelines for Building Types and Materials 3.3.3 Tree Planting 3.3.4 History Centre and Council Archives 3.3.5 Heritage Incentives 4.0 HERITAGE ASSESSMENT REPORTS: STATE HERITAGE PLACES 51 4.1 Existing State Heritage Places 4.2 Proposed Additional State Heritage Places 5.0 HERITAGE ASSESSMENT REPORTS: PLACES OF LOCAL HERITAGE VALUE 170 [See Volume 2 of this Report] McDougall & Vines CONTENTS UNLEY HERITAGE RESEARCH STUDY (cont) Page No Appendices 171 1. -
Wellington's Men in Australia
Wellington’s Men in Australia Peninsular War Veterans and the Making of Empire c. 1820–40 Christine Wright War, Culture and Society, 1750 –1850 War, Culture and Society, 1750–1850 Series Editors: Rafe Blaufarb (Tallahassee, USA), Alan Forrest (York, UK), and Karen Hagemann (Chapel Hill, USA) Editorial Board: Michael Broers (Oxford UK), Christopher Bayly (Cambridge, UK), Richard Bessel (York, UK), Sarah Chambers (Minneapolis, USA), Laurent Dubois (Durham, USA), Etienne François (Berlin, Germany), Janet Hartley (London, UK), Wayne Lee (Chapel Hill, USA), Jane Rendall (York, UK), Reinhard Stauber (Klagenfurt, Austria) Titles include: Richard Bessel, Nicholas Guyatt and Jane Rendall (editors) WAR, EMPIRE AND SLAVERY, 1770–1830 Alan Forrest and Peter H. Wilson (editors) THE BEE AND THE EAGLE Napoleonic France and the End of the Holy Roman Empire, 1806 Alan Forrest, Karen Hagemann and Jane Rendall (editors) SOLDIERS, CITIZENS AND CIVILIANS Experiences and Perceptions of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, 1790–1820 Karen Hagemann, Gisela Mettele and Jane Rendall (editors) GENDER, WAR AND POLITICS Transatlantic Perspectives, 1755–1830 Marie-Cécile Thoral FROM VALMY TO WATERLOO France at War, 1792–1815 Forthcoming Michael Broers, Agustin Guimera and Peter Hick (editors) THE NAPOLEONIC EMPIRE AND THE NEW EUROPEAN POLITICAL CULTURE Alan Forrest, Etienne François and Karen Hagemann (editors) WAR MEMORIES The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Europe Leighton S. James WITNESSING WAR Experience, Narrative and Identity in German Central Europe, 1792–1815 Catriona Kennedy NARRATIVES OF WAR Military and Civilian Experience in Britain and Ireland, 1793–1815 Kevin Linch BRITAIN AND WELLINGTON’S ARMY Recruitment, Society and Tradition, 1807–1815 War, Culture and Society, 1750–1850 Series Standing Order ISBN 978–0–230–54532–8 hardback 978–0–230–54533–5 paperback (outside North America only) You can receive future titles in this series as they are published by placing a standing order. -
Anglican Church of Australia SRG 94/107 Diocese of Adelaide Series List Bishops of Adelaide
___________________________________________________________________ Anglican Church of Australia SRG 94/107 Diocese of Adelaide Series List Bishops of Adelaide Bishop Augustus Short was consecrated ‘Lord Bishop of Adelaide’ at Westminster Abbey on 29 June 1847. His See enbraced the colonies of South Australia and Western Australia. He was enthroned as the first Bishop of Adelaide on 30 December 1847 at Trinity Church, Adelaide. Bishops of Adelaide : Augustus Short 1847-1881 George Wyndham Kennion 1882 -1894 John Reginald Harmer 1895 -1905 Arthur Nutter Thomas 1906 -1940 Bryan Percival Robin 1941-1956 Thomas Thornton Reed 1957-1974 Keith Rayner 1975-1990 Ian George 1991-2004 Jeffrey Driver 2005- The Province of South Australia came into being in 1973 after a third diocese, The Murray was approved in 1969. The Diocese of Willochra was formed in 1915. Bishop T. T. Reed of Adelaide became its first Archbishop. ___________________________________________________________________ ACCESS: Access to entries in baptismal registers after 1974 restricted for 75 years; access to entries in marriage registers after 1974 restricted for 60 years; access to entries in burial registers after 1974 restricted for 25 years. Access to later entries is restricted to the individuals named in the records or their authorised representative, and requires written permission from the Anglican Church Archivist or the Executive Officer, Anglican Church Office, Adelaide. COPYING: 1. Published and publicly available records (scrapbooks, programs, newsletters, pew sheets, histories and photographs) may be copied for private research and study. 2. Records more than 30 years old, and not subject to a specific restriction may be copied for private research and study. 3. Records less than 30 years old, and not subject to a specific restriction can be copied only with written permission from the Anglican Church Archivist or the Executive Officer, Anglican Church Office, Adelaide. -
Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria
Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria William Westgarth Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria Table of Contents Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria.....................................................................................1 William Westgarth.........................................................................................................................................2 AN INTRODUCTORY MEDLEY................................................................................................................4 MR. FROUDE'S "OCEANA.".......................................................................................................................6 NEW ZEALAND...........................................................................................................................................7 UNITY OF THE EMPIRE.............................................................................................................................8 EARLY PORT PHILLIP...............................................................................................................................9 MY FIRST NIGHT ASHORE.....................................................................................................................10 INDIGENOUS FEATURES AROUND MELBOURNE............................................................................11 THE ABORIGINAL NATIVES IN AND ABOUT TOWN.......................................................................12 EARLY CIVILIZING DIFFICULTIES......................................................................................................13 -
Secular Failure—A History from Two Australian States
CHAPTER EIGHT SECULAR FAILURE—A HISTORY FROM TWO AUSTRALIAN STATES Australian difficulties with religion in public education have been present since its first school halls were built. Current controversies echo similar, and as yet, unresolved disputes from colonial times—about the meaning of the secular principle and the power of some Christian churches. Prolonged, ambiguous applications of the principle continue to create confusion and division today, but these debates have been part of Australian political life since British settlement. Australia’s two earliest settled and now most pop- ulated states, New South Wales and Victoria, undermined the secular prin- ciple. New South Wales did so through ambiguous interpretations of legislation and Victoria did so by granting local exceptions to legislation. This chapter compares the politically pragmatic approach of Henry Parkes’s faux secularism in New South Wales, with the more inclusive view taken by George Higinbotham in Victoria.1 The next chapter looks at the erosion of secular intent in the state of Queensland. A Radical Idea Meets Anglican Dominance In many nations, the nineteenth century radically transformed education from a church function to a state duty. During the 1800s, Australian legisla- tors debated the foundations of education for their new society. Decades of acrimonious argument, and sustained (but failed) attempts to create a workable denominational system led the colonies to explore more radical options. To minimise religious division, Australia’s proposal was for public education to be ‘free, compulsory and secular.’ New South Wales legislated for these then politically progressive principles in the Public Instruction Act 1880, following Victoria in 1872 (and Queensland and South Australia in 1875). -
Vagrancy and the Victorians : the Social Construction of the Vagrant In
VAGRANCY AND THE VICTORIANS: THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF THE VAGRANT IN MELBOURNE, 1880-1907 SUSANNE ELIZABETH DAVIES RID THESiS, HISTORY DEPARTMENT, UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE, 1990 (This thesis does not exceed 100,000 words,) In Memory of my Father CONTENTS Page List of Figures 4 List of Illustrations 6 List of Abbreviations 9 Acknowledgements 10 Abstract 12 Introduction 15 Chapter One: A World of Difference 42 Chapter Two: The Evolution of the Vagrancy Laws 115 Chapter Three: Policing the Victorian Vagrancy Law 145 Chapter Four: Trial and Error 216 Chapter Five: Punishing and Reforming 274 Chapter Six: A System in Crisis $43 Chapter Seven: New Solutions for an Old Problem 397 Conclusion 450 Appendix One: Statistical Method 455 Appendix Two: Statistics relating to the Arrest and Imprisonment of Vagrants in Victoria, 1888-1907. 461 Appendix Three: Statistics relating to Vagrancy Cases heard by the Melbourne Court of Petty Sessions, 1 May 1888 - 30 April 1901. 468 Bibliography 478 4 FIGURES Page Figure 3.1: Vagrancy Arrests in Victoria, 1880-1907 161 Figure 3.2: Most Common Types of Arrests in Victoria, 1880-1905 162 Figure 3.3: Vagrancy Arrests as a Percentage of Total Arrests in Victoria, 1880-1907 163 Figure 3.4: '1 in 10' Sample - Vagrancy Cases heard by the MCPS, 1888-1901 167 Figure 3.5: '1 In 10' Sample - NVLMS/ILMS Cases as a Percentage of Total Vagrancy Cases, MCPS, 1888-1901 170 Figure 3.6: '1 in 10' Sample - Sex of Defendants in Vagrancy Cases, MCPS, 1888-1901 173 Figure 3.7: '1 in 10' Sample - Sex of Defendants in NVLMS/ILMS -
Acta Theologica 2005: 1 RESENSIES/REVIEWS Trouble in the Colonies Review of Melbourne University Press 1998
Acta Theologica 2005: 1 RESENSIES/REVIEWS Trouble in the Colonies Review of D.W.A. BAKER, PREACHER, POLITICIAN, PATRIOT: A LIFE OF JOHN DUNMORE LANG Melbourne University Press 1998; ISBN 0 522 84822 2. Some people write biographies of great men they admire for their par- ticular virtues or achievements. Mr. Don Baker has a refreshing ap- proach. He wrote a biography on the life of John Dunmore Lang not because he liked him, but because he did not. The preface introduces the reader to the kind of person he is: “A man to whom truth and falsehood come alike as he can best adapt them to his unmanly pur- poses.” The author uses this quote from one of Lang’s opponents at the time to characterise the subject of his biography. Preacher, Politician and Patriot is a shortened version of the original biography Days of Wrath, published by the Melbourne University Press in 1985. At that time Mr. Baker was still reading history at the Australian National University. Politically correct? The author shows a keen interest in the Aborigines of Australia not only in this book, but also in The civilised surveyor: Thomas Mitchell and the Australian Aborigines (Melbourne, 1997). The epilogue of Preacher, Politician and Patriot reveals a similar link. For this purpose it even extends the Lang-biography to the description of the son of his sis- ter’s offspring, and a subsequent marriage of a far cousin to a lady from the Ngalia tribe ninety years after Dunmore’s death, followed by the birth of three children of mixed descent, in particular. -
Chaffey Brothers Irrigation Works in Australia
Engineers Australia Engineering Heritage Victoria Nomination Engineering Heritage Australia Heritage Recognition Program CHAFFEY BROTHERS IRRIGATION WORKS IN AUSTRALIA February 2017 Front Cover Photograph Caption The triple expansion steam engine designed by George Chaffey and built by Tangye Brothers, Birmingham which provided the first stage of pumping from the Murray River to Kings Billabong until replaced by electric pumps. The engine has been restored and is cared for and run by a group of Mildura volunteers. The use of marine type triple expansion steam engines direct driving to multiple centrifugal pumps was extremely innovative when George Chaffey designed the engine in the late 1880s however the date of the order on Tangye Brothers is not known. Image: Heritage Victoria. Chaffey Brothers Irrigation Works in Australia Nomination for Heritage Recognition page 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE Table of Contents 3 1 Introduction 5 2 Heritage Nomination Letter 7 3 Heritage Assessment 8 3.1 Basic Data 8 3.2 Historical Notes 9 3.3 Heritage Listings 9 4 Assessment of Significance 10 4.1 Historical significance 10 4.2 Historic Individuals or Association 10 4.3 Creative or Technical Achievement 10 4.4 Research Potential 10 4.5 Social 11 4.6 Rarity 11 4.7 Representativeness 12 4.8 Integrity/Intactness 12 4.9 Statement of Significance 12 4.10 Area of Significance 15 5 Interpretation Plan 16 5.1 General Approach 16 5.2 The Interpretation Panel 5.3 Possible Interpretation themes for Interpretation Panels 17 8 References 18 9 Acknowledgments, Authors -
The India-Australia Relationship, 1858-1901
Introduction: India, Australia and Empire This thesis studies the ways in which the colonial governments of India and Australia were connected between 1857 and 1901. The thesis examines the ways in which the governments communicated, the functioning of the power relationship between them, and the ways in which they cooperated with and aided one another. Numerous examples of disagreements and tension are discussed. Throughout, I examine the perceptions that underpinned the relationship between the two colonial governments, which were reflected in language, symbolism and culture. By performing an analysis of discourse, a far deeper understanding of the relationship can be achieved than by solely examining events or results. This study is the first to examine the relationship between India and Australia in this way. Considering these questions enables us to test the extent and nature of India‟s power in the British empire and to understand both Australia‟s position within the empire and the relationship between the two colonies. As there was a vast traffic of communication and goods travelling between Britain, India and Australia, I will focus solely on interactions between governments and government departments. There are many examples of familial and financial connections between India and Australia, but they are too numerous to cover in any appropriate amount of detail.1 Analysis of governmental sources from India and the Australian colonies enables examination of the specific power relationship between India and the Australian colonies in a way that has not yet been done. Re-Centring Empire The perspective of this thesis borrows from some recent works on India‟s role in the British empire. -
A Glorious and Salutiferous Œconomy...?
A Glorious and Salutiferous Œconomy...? An ecclesiological enquiry into metropolitical authority and provincial polity in the Anglican Communion Alexander John Ross Emmanuel College A dissertation submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Divinity Faculty University of Cambridge April 2018 This dissertation is the result of my own work and includes nothing which is the outcome of work done in collaboration except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. It is not substantially the same as any that I have submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted for a degree or diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. I further state that no substantial part of my dissertation has already been submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted for any such degree, diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. It does not exceed the prescribed word limit for the Faculty of Divinity Degree Committee. 2 Alexander John Ross A Glorious and Salutiferous Œconomy…? An ecclesiological enquiry into metropolitical authority and provincial polity in the Anglican Communion. Abstract For at least the past two decades, international Anglicanism has been gripped by a crisis of identity: what is to be the dynamic between autonomy and interdependence? Where is authority to be located? How might the local relate to the international? How are the variously diverse national churches to be held together ‘in communion’? These questions have prompted an explosion of interest in Anglican ecclesiology within both the church and academy, with particular emphasis exploring the nature of episcopacy, synodical government, liturgy and belief, and common principles of canon law.