Bygones and Byways focuses on South African family history, genealogy, heritage and history. Copyright: Anne Lehmkuhl. Email me for your family history research or general history enquiries.
07 August 2011
OLD PHARMACY STILL EXISTS
Johan and Ursula BRESLER bought the Robb & McLees Pharmacy in Middelburg, Mpumalanga, in 1998. They have kept many old pharmacy items, including a 101-year-old prescription book. The first prescription filled at the pharmacy is dated 1903, the year the pharmacy was started by two Scots, David Wallace ROBB and John Prentice MCLEES. They are both listed as Chemists and Druggists in the Government Gazette dated 29 January 1915, both qualifying in the UK in 1900. David's address is given as 414 Paisley Road West, Ibrox, Glasgow, Scotland; whilst John's is Middelburg, Transvaal. John registered as a Chemist in South Africa in 1903 and David in 1905. John was married to Edith Ann MITCHELL. She passed away in 1928. John died in 1962, and had married three times - first to Edith, then Harriet Helen TRACEY (died 1958), and lastly to Magdalena Petronella DU TOIT. David died in the Cape Province in 1931. Bottles containing various old remedies, are still to be seen in the pharmacy. The prescription book lists each prescription filled, along with the person's name. Most of the early prescriptions were for stomach ailments and skin problems. The Scots kept two large glass bottles, one red and one green. When there was a contagious disease in town, the red bottle stood in the window to warn the residents. Once the disease had passed, the green bottle was placed in the window.
06 August 2011
EAST LONDON SEAMEN IN WWII
Alan HARRIS is trying to create the most comprehensive record of Est London servicemen who died in World War II, something he started working on 11 years ago. He has photographed war memorials in the Border area for a number of years. He would like to make contact with all living relatives of the 44 East London seamen who served on-board Royal Navy ships in the war. He hopes to build a history of the servicemen with pictures and biographical information. He also wants to include information about the engagements in which they lost their lives, the area where they were stationed, the ships they were on or the regiments they belonged to. As an example, the ship HMS Neptune, a cruiser based in Simon’s Town, went down in the Mediterranean, north of Tripoli, on a mission to intercept transporters carrying Panza tanks. They sailed into a minefield and struck a mine. They then tried to reverse out of the minefield and struck another mine. The ship went down quickly, and of the 764 crew on-board, only 30 survived the initial sinking. However, by the time an Italian cruiser rescued them, only one man was still alive. None of the six seamen from East London who were on-board survived. The incident in 1941 was also New Zealand’s biggest loss of servicemen in any single engagement in WW2. They lost 150 personnel. One of the East London servicemen on-board was Signalman Cecil RANKIN, who attended Cambridge High School before enlisting in the Royal Navy. His father, Freddy, was a typesetter at the Daily Dispatch and the first president of the Typos Bowling Green. One of the bowling greens is named after Cecil.
Alan, whose father served in WWII, still needs information and pictures on the following seamen:
Roy AINSLIE, son of George and Kate, on HMS Cornwall, buried in Simon’s Town. John Robinson AUSTIN-SMITH on HMS Gloucester.
Cecil BOARD, son of William and Annie, buried in Simon’s Town.
Herbert Charles GERAGHTY, son of Christopher and Florence, on HMS Gloucester. Raymond HARRIS, son of Frederick and Lily, buried in East London.
Cedric KRETSCHMER, son of Edward and Rosanna, on HMS Duchess.
Douglas Edward MORROW, son of Thomas and Agnes, on HMS Dorsetshire.
John George MOSCOS on SS Ceramic.
Clifford SCOTT, son of William and Edith, on HMS Jaguar.
Jack VORSTER, son of Mrs M.E. VORSTER of Cambridge West, on HMS Hermes.
Anyone who can help Alan can call him on 043-7343092 or 0760408398 or e-mail: alanandirene@telkomsa.net
Alan, whose father served in WWII, still needs information and pictures on the following seamen:
Roy AINSLIE, son of George and Kate, on HMS Cornwall, buried in Simon’s Town. John Robinson AUSTIN-SMITH on HMS Gloucester.
Cecil BOARD, son of William and Annie, buried in Simon’s Town.
Herbert Charles GERAGHTY, son of Christopher and Florence, on HMS Gloucester. Raymond HARRIS, son of Frederick and Lily, buried in East London.
Cedric KRETSCHMER, son of Edward and Rosanna, on HMS Duchess.
Douglas Edward MORROW, son of Thomas and Agnes, on HMS Dorsetshire.
John George MOSCOS on SS Ceramic.
Clifford SCOTT, son of William and Edith, on HMS Jaguar.
Jack VORSTER, son of Mrs M.E. VORSTER of Cambridge West, on HMS Hermes.
Anyone who can help Alan can call him on 043-7343092 or 0760408398 or e-mail: alanandirene@telkomsa.net
KOOS SAS' POSTCARD
Tertius ARCHER, of the farm Pedroskloof in Kamieskroon, is a fundi on Namaqualand history. He has collected old books and other items and photos from days gone by. He owns an original postcard with a photo of Koos SAS' lifeless body - which was sold by the then Namaqualand ACVV to raise funds. The photo was mass printed as postcards and sold to raise money for the ACVV, a Christian women’s organisation.
Koos, a Khoisan, lived a nomadic life in the Montagu area in the early 1900s, allegedly stole sheep and was often caught by the local constable Tonie SWANEPOEL. After Koos murdered his employer Danie (Boetatjie) BOTHA, the son of a Stellenbosch church minister, he was arrested in Touwsrivier. Danie ran a farm stall on the farm Hoek-van-die-berg near Montagu. Before his day in court in Worcester, Koos escaped and hid in Namaqualand. On 06 February 1922, Koos was in Droodaap, about 45 km north of Pedroskloof, where a policeman, Jurie DREYER, recognised him from a police file photo. When he approached Koos, he ran away. Jurie tracked him and shot him on 08 February. His body was taken to Springbok, where a posed photo was taken of Koos by the local church minister Willem STEENKAMP's son. This photo was used by the minister for the ACVV postcard. Steenkamp later exhumed the body and took the skull to America where he went for studies. When he returned to the Cape, he gave the skull to Prof. Hercules BRINK of the University of Stellenbosch. It eventually ended up on display in the Montagu Museum, where David KRAMER saw it, prompting him to write a song Ballade van Koos Sas in 1983.
Koos, a Khoisan, lived a nomadic life in the Montagu area in the early 1900s, allegedly stole sheep and was often caught by the local constable Tonie SWANEPOEL. After Koos murdered his employer Danie (Boetatjie) BOTHA, the son of a Stellenbosch church minister, he was arrested in Touwsrivier. Danie ran a farm stall on the farm Hoek-van-die-berg near Montagu. Before his day in court in Worcester, Koos escaped and hid in Namaqualand. On 06 February 1922, Koos was in Droodaap, about 45 km north of Pedroskloof, where a policeman, Jurie DREYER, recognised him from a police file photo. When he approached Koos, he ran away. Jurie tracked him and shot him on 08 February. His body was taken to Springbok, where a posed photo was taken of Koos by the local church minister Willem STEENKAMP's son. This photo was used by the minister for the ACVV postcard. Steenkamp later exhumed the body and took the skull to America where he went for studies. When he returned to the Cape, he gave the skull to Prof. Hercules BRINK of the University of Stellenbosch. It eventually ended up on display in the Montagu Museum, where David KRAMER saw it, prompting him to write a song Ballade van Koos Sas in 1983.
HISTORIC ROUND HOUSE IN CAMPS BAY
The Round House restaurant in The Glen, between Cape Town and Camps Bay, is the oldest surviving building in Camps Bay, possibly built in 1786. It was originally built as a small round guards house that served to protect against enemies entering Cape Town from the Camps Bay side. Since the 1840s it has been used as a lodge, tea room or restaurant. The historic double-storey building suffered fires twice - one in 1860 and one in 1923 - and was left forsaken for many years. In the centre of the building, you can still see the gun cupboards where Lord Charles SOMERSET kept his firearms when he used the building as his hunting lodge. The restaurant was used as a ballroom in the 19th century. One of the outbuildings, a flat roofed house, was converted into a dwelling about 1860, it was used as an annexe to the Round House Hotel. In 1957 this became a youth hostel called Stan’s Halt, named after Stanley SENNEY who lost his life climbing Table Mountain. His father helped restore the building in his son’s memory.
From 1814 to 1817 it was owned by Jan Carel HORAK who used it as a livestock farm. He was the grandson of Jan Andries HORAK, a magistrate in Swellendam. Lord Charles SOMERSET, Cape Governor from 1814 to 1826, used it from 1817 until 1823 as a hunting lodge to shoot lion, leopard and buck on the slopes of Lions Head. He changed the rondawel to a double-storey. In 1837 it is believed that HORAK had to sell after which the building was used as a restaurant, tearoom and hotel. It was very popular in Victorian times and had two large ballrooms. With the new road (Lady Smith’s Pass, later renamed to Kloof Road), the Round House was turned into an hotel offering skittles, quoits and pigeons for sportsmen at 1s 6d a pair. The hotel with dance hall and amusement resort was run from 1849 by Mr. M. DONALDSON. A fire in 1860 destroyed the thatched roof, leaving the walls intact. The owner of the tearoom at the time was Thomas William Langley TITMUS but the proprietor was Edmund TILLEY, who had insured it for £300, and opened an hotel in Stellenbosch instead. Thomas was in the Royal Field Artillery. Edmund married Sophia Dorothea EXTER on 14 Nov 1849 in Cape Town. By 1863 the Round House was back in business under a new owner, Mr BRAZIER. Edmund TILLEY was back again in 1895 and on 23 December had been granted the land above the Round House. By 1901 H. TILLEY was the owner of the Round House Hotel, possibly Edmund's son as Edmund died in 1901. Two years later John KELLY took over. In 1904 the Cape Town City Council bought the property and leased it out. Mr D.J. WATSON was the proprietor of the tea room. In 1923 Thomas William Langley TITMUS again leased the property. After the second fire, the building had to be rebuilt - only the original walls and gun cupboards remaining. A plan of the area known as The Glen was found in the National Archives in Cape Town and dates back to 1881. In June 2008 The Round House Restaurant re-opened and is now one of Cape Town’s most exclusive restaurants.
From 1814 to 1817 it was owned by Jan Carel HORAK who used it as a livestock farm. He was the grandson of Jan Andries HORAK, a magistrate in Swellendam. Lord Charles SOMERSET, Cape Governor from 1814 to 1826, used it from 1817 until 1823 as a hunting lodge to shoot lion, leopard and buck on the slopes of Lions Head. He changed the rondawel to a double-storey. In 1837 it is believed that HORAK had to sell after which the building was used as a restaurant, tearoom and hotel. It was very popular in Victorian times and had two large ballrooms. With the new road (Lady Smith’s Pass, later renamed to Kloof Road), the Round House was turned into an hotel offering skittles, quoits and pigeons for sportsmen at 1s 6d a pair. The hotel with dance hall and amusement resort was run from 1849 by Mr. M. DONALDSON. A fire in 1860 destroyed the thatched roof, leaving the walls intact. The owner of the tearoom at the time was Thomas William Langley TITMUS but the proprietor was Edmund TILLEY, who had insured it for £300, and opened an hotel in Stellenbosch instead. Thomas was in the Royal Field Artillery. Edmund married Sophia Dorothea EXTER on 14 Nov 1849 in Cape Town. By 1863 the Round House was back in business under a new owner, Mr BRAZIER. Edmund TILLEY was back again in 1895 and on 23 December had been granted the land above the Round House. By 1901 H. TILLEY was the owner of the Round House Hotel, possibly Edmund's son as Edmund died in 1901. Two years later John KELLY took over. In 1904 the Cape Town City Council bought the property and leased it out. Mr D.J. WATSON was the proprietor of the tea room. In 1923 Thomas William Langley TITMUS again leased the property. After the second fire, the building had to be rebuilt - only the original walls and gun cupboards remaining. A plan of the area known as The Glen was found in the National Archives in Cape Town and dates back to 1881. In June 2008 The Round House Restaurant re-opened and is now one of Cape Town’s most exclusive restaurants.
PORT ELIZABETH'S FIRST TRAMLINE FOUND
In June 2010, a piece of Port Elizabeth’s original tramline was unearthed next to an old condemned bridge at the bottom of Brickmakerskloof by an excavator digging a channel for a new sewer line. An undamaged 2m long piece was donated to the Bayworld Museum. The tramline was part of the link between the Brickmakerskloof tram sheds and the main shed near the mouth of the Baakens River. The piece was found about one metre below the surface. Possibly after the 1968 flood, the level of the roadway was raised by about half a metre to keep vehicles safe and dry. As trams were no longer in use, the rails were tarred over. James BRISTER, who owned a furniture business and later became Mayor of Port Elizabeth, was involved in starting the public transport system in early Port Elizabeth.
The Port Elizabeth Tramway Company Act was passed by the Colonial government on 11 September 1878. Five horse-drawn tram cars were brought in from the United States of America and the service started operating on 14 May 1881. The first line ran from Market Square to Adderley Street, and took 25 minutes. A ticket cost sixpence first-class and threepence second-class. On 22 February 1888, the line was extended to Prince Alfred’s Park (the present-day Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium). In 1895, Parliament passed an Act allowing the municipality to construct an electric tramway and the Port Elizabeth Electric Tramway Company was registered on 09 May 1896. Ten trams were ordered from the JG Brill Company of Philadelphia, USA. Electricity to power the trams was provided by a power station. The first electric tram in Port Elizabeth was driven on 16 June 1897 from Market Square to Prince Alfred’s Park. Two weeks later the company put their 26 horses, stables, smithy and residences in North End up for sale/rent. On 04 July 1897 a double-decker tram was tested up Russell Road. A new single-decker tram was also successfully tested. The journey started at the power station, to Walmer Road, then to Prince Alfred’s Park in North End. The route was opened to the public on Tuesday, 20 July 1897 and the trams Port Elizabethans until the last car returned to the tramways building on 17 December 1948.
Source: Port Elizabeth - A social chronicle to the end of 1945, by Margaret Harradine.
The Port Elizabeth Tramway Company Act was passed by the Colonial government on 11 September 1878. Five horse-drawn tram cars were brought in from the United States of America and the service started operating on 14 May 1881. The first line ran from Market Square to Adderley Street, and took 25 minutes. A ticket cost sixpence first-class and threepence second-class. On 22 February 1888, the line was extended to Prince Alfred’s Park (the present-day Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium). In 1895, Parliament passed an Act allowing the municipality to construct an electric tramway and the Port Elizabeth Electric Tramway Company was registered on 09 May 1896. Ten trams were ordered from the JG Brill Company of Philadelphia, USA. Electricity to power the trams was provided by a power station. The first electric tram in Port Elizabeth was driven on 16 June 1897 from Market Square to Prince Alfred’s Park. Two weeks later the company put their 26 horses, stables, smithy and residences in North End up for sale/rent. On 04 July 1897 a double-decker tram was tested up Russell Road. A new single-decker tram was also successfully tested. The journey started at the power station, to Walmer Road, then to Prince Alfred’s Park in North End. The route was opened to the public on Tuesday, 20 July 1897 and the trams Port Elizabethans until the last car returned to the tramways building on 17 December 1948.
Source: Port Elizabeth - A social chronicle to the end of 1945, by Margaret Harradine.
LARGEST RUGBY MEMORABILIA COLLECTION IN SOUTH AFRICA
Barry NAUDE has built up a rugby museum on his farm, Driekoppen, in Hanover, Free State. It is South Africa's largest collection of rugby memorabilia, including books, jerseys, ties, photographs and badges. In 1974, at the age of 10 years, he started collecting rugby memorabilia and making scrapbooks from articles in newspapers and magazines. He has more than 1000 rugby books. More than 200 rugby jerseys, 200 ties and 30 jackets are also on display. In 1995 the North-Eastern Cape Rugby Union closed down and Barry became the keeper of its memorabilia. Most of the items on display have been donated. Barry and a friend, Hannes KOTZE, are working on making the Test Programmes from 1891 to 2009 available in book form. They also want photos and/or signatures of all the 814 Springbok players for the book. Visitors are welcomed by appointment (this is a working farm). The farm is just off the N1 south of Hanover. Contact details: Mobile No. 0823177655 / 0832348779 or barrynaude@webmail.co.za or jmk@intekom.co.za
21 August 2010
TITANIC MEMORIAL CRUISE
Relatives of passengers on the Titanic will re-trace the ocean liner's fateful journey across the Atlantic on a memorial cruise to mark 100 years since it sank in 1912. The Balmoral will leave Southampton 08 April 2012, bound for New York. A special ceremony will be held at wreck site the exact time the Titanic sank on 15 April 1912. The cruise is organised by British firm Miles Morgan Travel.
The last survivor of the Titanic, Elizabeth Gladys "Millvina" DEAN, died in May last year, aged 97. She was nine weeks old when the Titanic hit an iceberg on its maiden voyage, drowning 1,517 of its passengers and crew.
TITANIC AND ITS SA CONNECTIONS
The recent on-line access to the Titanic's passenger list has revived interest in this tragic event. Some of the Titanic's passengers had connections to South Africa. The following are a few of them. There may be other passengers with South African connections, as yet undiscovered.
Thomas William Solomon BROWN (60), his wife Elizabeth Catherine (née FORD) and their daughter, Edith Eileen, were from Worcester. Thomas was the son of Thomas William BROWN and was baptised in Cape Town on the 25th August 1851. Thomas registered various mortgage bonds at the Cape between 1884 and 1904, while Elizabeth registered one in 1904. Thomas was a successful hotel owner (Masonic Hotel in Worcester) but business had declined, so he decided to start again in Seattle, USA, where Elizabeth's sister, Josephine, lived with her husband Edward ACTON. Elizabeth was much younger than Thomas, and was his second wife. His first wife, Isabella Gracilla/Greceilda (née WILLOUGHBy) died at the Cape in 1889. Elizabeth was born in 1872 at the Cape. Thomas's first marriage produced 4 children - Lilian Henrietta (later married to WOOLF), Harriet (later married to BOSMAN), Thomas Ralph and Ernest. The second marriage produced two daughters, but one, Dorothy Beatrice, died at the age of eight, from diphtheria. Edith was born on the 27th October 1896. The family were 2nd Class passengers. Elizabeth and Edith were rescued by the Carpathia. They stayed in New York for a few days before going to stay with Josephine in Seattle. Soon afterwards, mother and daughter returned to South Africa. Elizabeth married a Mr PARROTT and moved to Rhodesia, where she died on the 29th June 1925.
Edith married Frederick Thankful HAISMAN, an architectural engineer, on the 30th June 1917 in Johannesburg and lived in Simon's Town. A move to Australia followed and then to Southampton. They had 10 children, including Dorothy (married to KENDALL) and David. David later served as a lookout on the White Star Lines and wrote a book, I'll See You in New York: Titanic - the Courage of a Survivor. Edith was an honorary member of the Titanic Society of South Africa and the oldest Titanic survivor until her death on the 20th January 1997 at the age of 100 at a nursing home in Southampton. She appeared in the 1994 TV movie, Titanic: The Legend Lives On, as herself, as well as in Titanic: Secrets Revealed (1998). In 1993 Edith was presented with the gold watch that her father was wearing when the ship went down. RMS Titanic Inc of New York City, a salvaging company, found the blackened watch. Her life story was published as A lifetime on the Titanic - the biography of Edith Haisman.
Charles Henry CHAPMAN was born in Cape Town. He was the son of James CHAPMAN (explorer) and Catherine Cecelia ROOME (daughter of Capt. William ROOME and Catherine Cecelia BUSHNELL). Catherine was born in Virginia, USA, and her father was a sea captain who settled in Nova Scotia, Canada. Charles was an exporter and lived in the Bronx, New York. He was 52 years old when he died on the Titanic, as a 2nd Class passenger. He had the Bushnell family Bible with him. His body was recovered and in his suit pockets, the following were found: silver cigarette case, garnet tie-pin, garnet ring, papers, gold mounted cuff-links, $200, gold studs, fountain pen, knife and pipe. J.J. GRIFFIN of New York City claimed his body. Charles was buried at the Woodlawn Cemetery, in the Bronx.
Nathan GOLDSMITH was a boot maker in Cape Town (possibly also Johannesburg) before the Anglo-Boer War. He was originally from Russia. After the war, he moved to Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, USA. He was married and had two children. Nathan was 41 years old and a 3rd Class passenger when he died on the Titanic. At the time of his death, his family was living in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
In 1902 Sydney Samuel JACOBSOHN was an attorney in Cape Town, living at 16 Wale Street. He registered mortgage bonds in 1898 and 1906. His brother, Charles, lived in Rversdal. Sydney later moved to London. He married Amy Frances Christy COHEN on 6th September 1910. She was born in London. They boarded the Titanic as 2nd Class passengers, on their way to Montreal, Canada. Sydney (42) did not survive. Amy (24) was rescued by the Carpathia. She returned to England onboard the Meganti. Frans van Wyk, author of Riversdal 150 Jaar, notes this death in the book.
Samuel Beard RISIEN and his wife Emma, from Texas, USA, were on their way home, after spending about 14 months in Durban, visiting relatives. They were 3rd Class passengers and did not survive. After the death of his first wife, Mary Louise LELLYET, Samuel married her sister Emma, of Durban, South Africa. There were no children of the second marriage.
Austin Blyler VAN BILLIARD (35) and his sons, James William (10) and Walter John (9), were 3rd Class passengers on their way to South Wales, Pennsylvania, USA. None survived. Austin was a part owner of a diamond mine. He left Cape Town for England, with his wife Maude and children - James William (born 20th Aug 1901 in France), Walter John (born 28 Feb 1903 in France), Dorothy Jane and Donald. He had several diamonds cut in Amsterdam and decided to go to New York where he might get a better price. His father and brother, Monroe, lived in South Wales, Pennsylvania. Maude became ill and it was decided that she remain in England with the youngest children, until she was well enough to travel. Austin's body (found with 12 diamonds in the pockets) and Walter's body were found and buried at Union Cemetery, Zion Lutheran Church, Flourtown, Pennsylvania.
Austin was born on the 9th February 1877, the only son of James V VAN BILLIARD, a successful marble merchant. He moved to England where he met Maude Ellen MURRAY and married her on the 3rd November 1900. The family spent 10 years in South Africa. In 1906, Austin applied for letters of patent at the Cape, for his invention - a mechanical suspension conveyancer. In 1912, he decided to return to the USA. Maude eventually moved to South Wales, Pennsylvania, with her two remaining children. She never remarried and died in a nursing home on the 17 January 1968, aged 94.
Henry (aka Harry) SUTEHALL was born on the 23rd July 1883 in England. He started a round-the-world trip on the 1st January 1910 and purposefully waited to return home to the USA on the Titanic's maiden voyage. His family had immigrated to the USA in 1895 where they settled in Buffalo, New York. Henry became a trimmer, installing and repairing upholstery in carriages and early cars. He met Howard IRWIN at work and they decided to do a world tour, while working wherever they could find employment. During 1910, they travelled all over the USA. In mid-1911, they left for Australia. While in Sydney, Henry won a sweepstakes that helped fund the rest of their trip. The two friends wanted to visit different places and at this stage, they each went their own way. They met up again in Durban and made plans to meet in England early in 1912 to conclude the voyage home together. While in Durban, they entered a talent contest and won a trip. Henry played the violin and Howard played the clarinet. Howard most likely used the prize to fund his travels, arriving in England a week before Henry. On the day of their departure from Southampton, Howard did not show up. Henry had already put Howard's steamer trunk on-board the ship, but Howard never showed up. Henry did not survive the voyage. In 1993, during recovery efforts at the wreck site by RMS Titanic, Inc. Howard's steamer trunk was found. Among the contents was a diary that Howard kept for 1910. The diary and several of Howard's possessions can be seen in museums in St. Petersburg and Boston. Howard Irwin died in 1953.
Henry Forbes JULIAN was born on the 9th May 1861 in Cork, Co Cork, Ireland. He became a metallurgical engineer and in October 1886 travelled to Natal. He became a consulting engineer and mine manager in Natal, Barberton, Johannesburg and Kimberley. Henry stayed in South Africa for seven years, during which time he invented and patented an extracting apparatus for the mines. In 1893 he moved to Germany. By 1902, he was living in Torquay. He was booked to travel to the USA on another ship but because of the coal strike he was transferred to the Titanic. Henry was to attend a meeting in San Francisco. His wife, Hester PENGALLY, stayed home as she had influenza. He did not survive.
Herbert Gifford HARVEY was born on the 3rd February1878 in Belfast, Ireland. He volunteered to serve in the Anglo-Boer War and joined the 46th Company Imperial Yeomanry. He earned the Queen's Medal with three clasps and the King's Medal with one clasp. After his return, he joined Harland & Wolff and later went to sea as an engineer with Lowther, Latta & Co before leaving to join the White Star Line. He lived in Southampton. Junior Assistant Second Engineer Harvey did not survive.
William Jeffery WARE was born in 1889 in Gunnislake, Cornwall, to Samuel WARE and Ann / Annie Louisa (formerly WITHERIDGE). Samuel was a blacksmith at one of the copper mines near Gunnislake. William became a blacksmith and married Cecilia. Six weeks prior to sailing on the Titanic, he had been in South Africa visiting his father. He was a 2nd Class passenger on his way to Butte, Montana, but did not survive.
Francesco CELOTTI was a sailor from Cape Town. He was a 3rd Class passenger and did not survive. He applied for a passport at the Cape and was granted one on the 16th February 1911. He was originally from Italy and was age 24 when he boarded the Titanic at Southampton.
Robert HICHENS was born in Newlyn, Cownwall, on the 16th September 1882, son of Philip HICHENS and Rebecca WOOD. On the 23rd October 1906, he married Florence MORTIMORE in Manaton, Devon. He worked aboard mail boats and liners of the Union Castle line. Prior to sailing on the Titanic, he was living in Southampton with his wife and two children. He was one of six Quartermasters on the ship. Robert was at the wheel when the warning came from the lookout that an iceberg had been spotted ahead. He swung the wheel as far as possible. Later that night he was relieved by another Quartermaster and he was put in charge of Lifeboat 6. He testified at the US inquiry into the accident. Afterwards, he returned to England and testified in the English inquiry.
It is claimed that he became a harbour master in Cape Town, according to one Henry BLUM in a letter to a Thomas GARVEY. Henry was an acquaintance of Robert, and was a Quartermaster on a British ship that docked in Cape Town in 1914. According to him, the harbour master who met the ship was Robert HICHENS. Henry claimed that he and Robert had a talk in which he was told that Robert had been set up in South Africa in return for his secrecy regarding the Titanic. So far, no research has found this part of the story to be true. His family members stated that he did spend some time in Durban and Johannesburg. Robert's brother, William, lived in Johannesburg in 1915. William returned to England in 1918 and married Penelope Rouffignac COTTON in Newlyn. They had 2 children, Penelope and William, in South Africa. Penelope died in Johannesburg in 1959.
Robert served in the Royal Naval Reserve in the First World War In 1919 he was working as a Third Officer on a small vessel out of Hull. In the late 1920s, he was living in Torquay, Devon, where he did boat chartering. In 1931, the family moved to Southampton. Robert had a run-in with the law and was released from prison in 1937. He died on the 23rd September 1940 aboard a cargo ship. His wife lived in Southampton until her death in the early 1960s. The couple had six children - Edna Florence, Frances, Phyllis May, Robert, Ivy Doreen and Fred.
Lamp trimmer Samuel Ernest HEMMING lived in Southampton. He was married to Elizabeth Emily BROWNING on the 4th June 1903, and they had several children. He was picked up by Lifeboat 4. He died in Southampton on 12 April 1928, age 59, at the Blighmont Nursing Home, of cancer. Two or three of Samuel's brothers had immigrated to South Africa, where they started a law firm.
Mary GRIFFIN (née WEBBER) is buried at Braamfontein Cemetery in Johannesburg. She was from Kea, Cornwall. Mary was 33 years old when she married the widower, James GRIFFIN on the 5th November 1863. They moved to South Africa. Mary died on the 17th June 1897 in Johannesburg. Her brother, James was on the Titanic on his way back to his home in San Francisco, to the USA. He was 62 years old and did not survive. In 1914 a Mr J. GRIFFIN of Kynevin Cottage in Port Elizabeth purchased the private rights to Mary's grave and a stone was erected commemorating Mary and James. James' estate was left to Harriet JULIAN, wife of Edmund JULIAN.
Margaret CHARLESWORTH of Lyndhurst, Johannesburg, found that her grandfather, William BULL (37), worked in the Titanic's kitchens. He did not survive. William was born in Hampshire. He married Margaret's grandmother, Edith, and is commemorated on her grave stone. Edith later married a Mr SKEATS. She died in 1937. In 1912, William was living in Southampton.
The rescue ship, Carpathia,also had a South African connection. Herbert (Pops) JOHNSTON was an apprentice on the ship, at age 15. He later immigrated to South Africa and lived in Margate. He died aged 104 of pneumonia on 28 May 2002, a day after going into a coma at the Mbango Frail Care Home in Port Shepstone. British-born JOHNSTON and the rest of the Carpathia rescuers helped save 711 people. He recalled a nine-week-old baby being lifted into his arms. That baby, then an 84-year-old Englishwoman, sent him a thank you note. JOHNSTON jumped ship when the Carpathia arrived in South Africa. He served in World War I as a dispatch rider and in World War II as a navy diver repairing damaged ships. He lived on the South Coast for 40 years and retired as dockmaster of Durban Harbour in 1957. He joined the Memorable Order of Tin Hats in 1946, and until his death was the MOTHs' oldest member. He was a life member of the Combined Operations Shellhole in Margate. On his 100th birthday in 1997, British-born Johnston received congratulatory telegrams from Queen Elizabeth and former president Nelson MANDELA. He was interviewed in 2000 by SABC TV. He is survived by 3 children, 6 grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and 7 great-great-grandchildren. His children Ruth PRICE (81 years old in 2002) and Norman said his ashes were scattered at sea over the annual sardine run, as he requested in his will. He had flown over the sardines with Margate pilot Willem MANTIE for years.
The following South African connections have not been proven:
A man, who became the Bishop of George circa 1950s/1960s, spent his honeymoon on the Titanic. Different lifeboats picked up the newly-wed couple and they were separated for three weeks, neither knowing that the other was alive.
W.H. WELCH was an assistant cook on the Titanic. He had a brother who settled in South Africa.
The last survivor of the Titanic, Elizabeth Gladys "Millvina" DEAN, died in May last year, aged 97. She was nine weeks old when the Titanic hit an iceberg on its maiden voyage, drowning 1,517 of its passengers and crew.
TITANIC AND ITS SA CONNECTIONS
The recent on-line access to the Titanic's passenger list has revived interest in this tragic event. Some of the Titanic's passengers had connections to South Africa. The following are a few of them. There may be other passengers with South African connections, as yet undiscovered.
Thomas William Solomon BROWN (60), his wife Elizabeth Catherine (née FORD) and their daughter, Edith Eileen, were from Worcester. Thomas was the son of Thomas William BROWN and was baptised in Cape Town on the 25th August 1851. Thomas registered various mortgage bonds at the Cape between 1884 and 1904, while Elizabeth registered one in 1904. Thomas was a successful hotel owner (Masonic Hotel in Worcester) but business had declined, so he decided to start again in Seattle, USA, where Elizabeth's sister, Josephine, lived with her husband Edward ACTON. Elizabeth was much younger than Thomas, and was his second wife. His first wife, Isabella Gracilla/Greceilda (née WILLOUGHBy) died at the Cape in 1889. Elizabeth was born in 1872 at the Cape. Thomas's first marriage produced 4 children - Lilian Henrietta (later married to WOOLF), Harriet (later married to BOSMAN), Thomas Ralph and Ernest. The second marriage produced two daughters, but one, Dorothy Beatrice, died at the age of eight, from diphtheria. Edith was born on the 27th October 1896. The family were 2nd Class passengers. Elizabeth and Edith were rescued by the Carpathia. They stayed in New York for a few days before going to stay with Josephine in Seattle. Soon afterwards, mother and daughter returned to South Africa. Elizabeth married a Mr PARROTT and moved to Rhodesia, where she died on the 29th June 1925.
Edith married Frederick Thankful HAISMAN, an architectural engineer, on the 30th June 1917 in Johannesburg and lived in Simon's Town. A move to Australia followed and then to Southampton. They had 10 children, including Dorothy (married to KENDALL) and David. David later served as a lookout on the White Star Lines and wrote a book, I'll See You in New York: Titanic - the Courage of a Survivor. Edith was an honorary member of the Titanic Society of South Africa and the oldest Titanic survivor until her death on the 20th January 1997 at the age of 100 at a nursing home in Southampton. She appeared in the 1994 TV movie, Titanic: The Legend Lives On, as herself, as well as in Titanic: Secrets Revealed (1998). In 1993 Edith was presented with the gold watch that her father was wearing when the ship went down. RMS Titanic Inc of New York City, a salvaging company, found the blackened watch. Her life story was published as A lifetime on the Titanic - the biography of Edith Haisman.
Charles Henry CHAPMAN was born in Cape Town. He was the son of James CHAPMAN (explorer) and Catherine Cecelia ROOME (daughter of Capt. William ROOME and Catherine Cecelia BUSHNELL). Catherine was born in Virginia, USA, and her father was a sea captain who settled in Nova Scotia, Canada. Charles was an exporter and lived in the Bronx, New York. He was 52 years old when he died on the Titanic, as a 2nd Class passenger. He had the Bushnell family Bible with him. His body was recovered and in his suit pockets, the following were found: silver cigarette case, garnet tie-pin, garnet ring, papers, gold mounted cuff-links, $200, gold studs, fountain pen, knife and pipe. J.J. GRIFFIN of New York City claimed his body. Charles was buried at the Woodlawn Cemetery, in the Bronx.
Nathan GOLDSMITH was a boot maker in Cape Town (possibly also Johannesburg) before the Anglo-Boer War. He was originally from Russia. After the war, he moved to Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, USA. He was married and had two children. Nathan was 41 years old and a 3rd Class passenger when he died on the Titanic. At the time of his death, his family was living in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
In 1902 Sydney Samuel JACOBSOHN was an attorney in Cape Town, living at 16 Wale Street. He registered mortgage bonds in 1898 and 1906. His brother, Charles, lived in Rversdal. Sydney later moved to London. He married Amy Frances Christy COHEN on 6th September 1910. She was born in London. They boarded the Titanic as 2nd Class passengers, on their way to Montreal, Canada. Sydney (42) did not survive. Amy (24) was rescued by the Carpathia. She returned to England onboard the Meganti. Frans van Wyk, author of Riversdal 150 Jaar, notes this death in the book.
Samuel Beard RISIEN and his wife Emma, from Texas, USA, were on their way home, after spending about 14 months in Durban, visiting relatives. They were 3rd Class passengers and did not survive. After the death of his first wife, Mary Louise LELLYET, Samuel married her sister Emma, of Durban, South Africa. There were no children of the second marriage.
Austin Blyler VAN BILLIARD (35) and his sons, James William (10) and Walter John (9), were 3rd Class passengers on their way to South Wales, Pennsylvania, USA. None survived. Austin was a part owner of a diamond mine. He left Cape Town for England, with his wife Maude and children - James William (born 20th Aug 1901 in France), Walter John (born 28 Feb 1903 in France), Dorothy Jane and Donald. He had several diamonds cut in Amsterdam and decided to go to New York where he might get a better price. His father and brother, Monroe, lived in South Wales, Pennsylvania. Maude became ill and it was decided that she remain in England with the youngest children, until she was well enough to travel. Austin's body (found with 12 diamonds in the pockets) and Walter's body were found and buried at Union Cemetery, Zion Lutheran Church, Flourtown, Pennsylvania.
Austin was born on the 9th February 1877, the only son of James V VAN BILLIARD, a successful marble merchant. He moved to England where he met Maude Ellen MURRAY and married her on the 3rd November 1900. The family spent 10 years in South Africa. In 1906, Austin applied for letters of patent at the Cape, for his invention - a mechanical suspension conveyancer. In 1912, he decided to return to the USA. Maude eventually moved to South Wales, Pennsylvania, with her two remaining children. She never remarried and died in a nursing home on the 17 January 1968, aged 94.
Henry (aka Harry) SUTEHALL was born on the 23rd July 1883 in England. He started a round-the-world trip on the 1st January 1910 and purposefully waited to return home to the USA on the Titanic's maiden voyage. His family had immigrated to the USA in 1895 where they settled in Buffalo, New York. Henry became a trimmer, installing and repairing upholstery in carriages and early cars. He met Howard IRWIN at work and they decided to do a world tour, while working wherever they could find employment. During 1910, they travelled all over the USA. In mid-1911, they left for Australia. While in Sydney, Henry won a sweepstakes that helped fund the rest of their trip. The two friends wanted to visit different places and at this stage, they each went their own way. They met up again in Durban and made plans to meet in England early in 1912 to conclude the voyage home together. While in Durban, they entered a talent contest and won a trip. Henry played the violin and Howard played the clarinet. Howard most likely used the prize to fund his travels, arriving in England a week before Henry. On the day of their departure from Southampton, Howard did not show up. Henry had already put Howard's steamer trunk on-board the ship, but Howard never showed up. Henry did not survive the voyage. In 1993, during recovery efforts at the wreck site by RMS Titanic, Inc. Howard's steamer trunk was found. Among the contents was a diary that Howard kept for 1910. The diary and several of Howard's possessions can be seen in museums in St. Petersburg and Boston. Howard Irwin died in 1953.
Henry Forbes JULIAN was born on the 9th May 1861 in Cork, Co Cork, Ireland. He became a metallurgical engineer and in October 1886 travelled to Natal. He became a consulting engineer and mine manager in Natal, Barberton, Johannesburg and Kimberley. Henry stayed in South Africa for seven years, during which time he invented and patented an extracting apparatus for the mines. In 1893 he moved to Germany. By 1902, he was living in Torquay. He was booked to travel to the USA on another ship but because of the coal strike he was transferred to the Titanic. Henry was to attend a meeting in San Francisco. His wife, Hester PENGALLY, stayed home as she had influenza. He did not survive.
Herbert Gifford HARVEY was born on the 3rd February1878 in Belfast, Ireland. He volunteered to serve in the Anglo-Boer War and joined the 46th Company Imperial Yeomanry. He earned the Queen's Medal with three clasps and the King's Medal with one clasp. After his return, he joined Harland & Wolff and later went to sea as an engineer with Lowther, Latta & Co before leaving to join the White Star Line. He lived in Southampton. Junior Assistant Second Engineer Harvey did not survive.
William Jeffery WARE was born in 1889 in Gunnislake, Cornwall, to Samuel WARE and Ann / Annie Louisa (formerly WITHERIDGE). Samuel was a blacksmith at one of the copper mines near Gunnislake. William became a blacksmith and married Cecilia. Six weeks prior to sailing on the Titanic, he had been in South Africa visiting his father. He was a 2nd Class passenger on his way to Butte, Montana, but did not survive.
Francesco CELOTTI was a sailor from Cape Town. He was a 3rd Class passenger and did not survive. He applied for a passport at the Cape and was granted one on the 16th February 1911. He was originally from Italy and was age 24 when he boarded the Titanic at Southampton.
Robert HICHENS was born in Newlyn, Cownwall, on the 16th September 1882, son of Philip HICHENS and Rebecca WOOD. On the 23rd October 1906, he married Florence MORTIMORE in Manaton, Devon. He worked aboard mail boats and liners of the Union Castle line. Prior to sailing on the Titanic, he was living in Southampton with his wife and two children. He was one of six Quartermasters on the ship. Robert was at the wheel when the warning came from the lookout that an iceberg had been spotted ahead. He swung the wheel as far as possible. Later that night he was relieved by another Quartermaster and he was put in charge of Lifeboat 6. He testified at the US inquiry into the accident. Afterwards, he returned to England and testified in the English inquiry.
It is claimed that he became a harbour master in Cape Town, according to one Henry BLUM in a letter to a Thomas GARVEY. Henry was an acquaintance of Robert, and was a Quartermaster on a British ship that docked in Cape Town in 1914. According to him, the harbour master who met the ship was Robert HICHENS. Henry claimed that he and Robert had a talk in which he was told that Robert had been set up in South Africa in return for his secrecy regarding the Titanic. So far, no research has found this part of the story to be true. His family members stated that he did spend some time in Durban and Johannesburg. Robert's brother, William, lived in Johannesburg in 1915. William returned to England in 1918 and married Penelope Rouffignac COTTON in Newlyn. They had 2 children, Penelope and William, in South Africa. Penelope died in Johannesburg in 1959.
Robert served in the Royal Naval Reserve in the First World War In 1919 he was working as a Third Officer on a small vessel out of Hull. In the late 1920s, he was living in Torquay, Devon, where he did boat chartering. In 1931, the family moved to Southampton. Robert had a run-in with the law and was released from prison in 1937. He died on the 23rd September 1940 aboard a cargo ship. His wife lived in Southampton until her death in the early 1960s. The couple had six children - Edna Florence, Frances, Phyllis May, Robert, Ivy Doreen and Fred.
Lamp trimmer Samuel Ernest HEMMING lived in Southampton. He was married to Elizabeth Emily BROWNING on the 4th June 1903, and they had several children. He was picked up by Lifeboat 4. He died in Southampton on 12 April 1928, age 59, at the Blighmont Nursing Home, of cancer. Two or three of Samuel's brothers had immigrated to South Africa, where they started a law firm.
Mary GRIFFIN (née WEBBER) is buried at Braamfontein Cemetery in Johannesburg. She was from Kea, Cornwall. Mary was 33 years old when she married the widower, James GRIFFIN on the 5th November 1863. They moved to South Africa. Mary died on the 17th June 1897 in Johannesburg. Her brother, James was on the Titanic on his way back to his home in San Francisco, to the USA. He was 62 years old and did not survive. In 1914 a Mr J. GRIFFIN of Kynevin Cottage in Port Elizabeth purchased the private rights to Mary's grave and a stone was erected commemorating Mary and James. James' estate was left to Harriet JULIAN, wife of Edmund JULIAN.
Margaret CHARLESWORTH of Lyndhurst, Johannesburg, found that her grandfather, William BULL (37), worked in the Titanic's kitchens. He did not survive. William was born in Hampshire. He married Margaret's grandmother, Edith, and is commemorated on her grave stone. Edith later married a Mr SKEATS. She died in 1937. In 1912, William was living in Southampton.
The rescue ship, Carpathia,also had a South African connection. Herbert (Pops) JOHNSTON was an apprentice on the ship, at age 15. He later immigrated to South Africa and lived in Margate. He died aged 104 of pneumonia on 28 May 2002, a day after going into a coma at the Mbango Frail Care Home in Port Shepstone. British-born JOHNSTON and the rest of the Carpathia rescuers helped save 711 people. He recalled a nine-week-old baby being lifted into his arms. That baby, then an 84-year-old Englishwoman, sent him a thank you note. JOHNSTON jumped ship when the Carpathia arrived in South Africa. He served in World War I as a dispatch rider and in World War II as a navy diver repairing damaged ships. He lived on the South Coast for 40 years and retired as dockmaster of Durban Harbour in 1957. He joined the Memorable Order of Tin Hats in 1946, and until his death was the MOTHs' oldest member. He was a life member of the Combined Operations Shellhole in Margate. On his 100th birthday in 1997, British-born Johnston received congratulatory telegrams from Queen Elizabeth and former president Nelson MANDELA. He was interviewed in 2000 by SABC TV. He is survived by 3 children, 6 grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and 7 great-great-grandchildren. His children Ruth PRICE (81 years old in 2002) and Norman said his ashes were scattered at sea over the annual sardine run, as he requested in his will. He had flown over the sardines with Margate pilot Willem MANTIE for years.
The following South African connections have not been proven:
A man, who became the Bishop of George circa 1950s/1960s, spent his honeymoon on the Titanic. Different lifeboats picked up the newly-wed couple and they were separated for three weeks, neither knowing that the other was alive.
W.H. WELCH was an assistant cook on the Titanic. He had a brother who settled in South Africa.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)