This blog provides information, stories, links and events relating to and promoting the history of the Wimmera district.
Any additional information, via Comments, is welcomed.



Monday, 4 July 2022

Gymbowen Cemetery re-discovered

Congratulations to all involved in having a sign erected at the Gymbowen Cemetery. Few people today were aware of its existence, and even fewer knew where it was located.

Gymbowen Cemetery, the row of pines are on the fenceline between Allotments 90B & 90C
The Gymbowen Cemetery was established on the east side of Marsh & Lowes Rd, south of Hennesseys Rd, in the Goroke Parish, alongside its boundary with the Gymbowen Parish.


5 acres 0 roods 16 perches of Allotment 90C were reserved for a Cemetery in June 1883. 

A further Extension to the north alongside Hennessey's Road, of 3 acres 3 roods 38 perches of Allotment 90C was gazetted in July 1911. 

In 1918 10 perches were excised from the Extension to create the sweeping bend into Marsh & Lowes Rd.


The sign is more than a sign, it details the record of the only known burials at the Cemetery. These and possibly others are in unmarked graves.

The earliest record is for Annie Bertram Byrne. Annie lived for 1 day in 1883. Both the Byrne & Bertram families lived in the district. Members of both families left in the migration to the Riverina in 1900s. Denis married Lucy in 1870. Their other children were Denis born in 1871, George 1873, Michael 1875, Mary Anne 1877. Edmund Bertram 1878, Alecia Jane 1879, William Bertram 1880, James Henry 1882-1883, Evelinne Stewart 1886, Bertram Roach 1888, John Blain 1890, Lucy Emily 1893. Both Annie Bertram & James Henry died in 1883, James' death place is recorded as Harrow.

Mary Frances Mottram also died in 1883, aged 10 months. Her father George Somerset took up land at Gymbowen in 1882 & 1883, but by 1890 was declared insolvent. He stated the causes were crop failures, family sickness & the pressure of his creditors. A son Peter had lived for 1 day when they lived at Mullagh in 1874.

Hugh Knight & his mother Janet, both died in the typhoid outbreak of 1889. William Henry lost his wife Janet, son Hugh, brothers Thomas & Alfred to typhoid fever. Bill too, was admitted to hospital, but recovered. (Cemetery Trustee David Houston's son also died of typhoid in 1888).

On 26th February 1895, 14 year-old William John Lear helped milk the cows but began vomiting blood and complaining of chest pain. After he was put to bed his mother found him lying on the floor dead. The doctor diagnosed syncope due to heart disease & accelerated by vomiting.

John Norman Frederick Scott was another childhood death at Gymbowen. Both his birth & death were registered in 1913. His siblings were Leila Annie born in 1904, Alexander Henry 1905, Peter 1907. Hugh Andrew 1908, Maurice 1911.

More than most the Gymbowen Cemetery shows the hardships & tribulations faced by young families in the district.

Monday, 11 April 2022

It’s stuff you can’t replace

Experts fear priceless local history will be thrown out in NSW floods cleanup
Weeks after catastrophic flooding devastated Lismore, hundreds of photographs and postcards line the floor of Simon Robinson’s destroyed home on Union Street in the town’s south. They are the only personal possessions he has left.

Many of them are stuck in pairs, soaked together by the flood waters and mud they were submerged in for days. The 64-year-old antiques dealer is patiently waiting for them to dry, so he can attempt to brush off the remaining dirt and salvage what he can.
Having shunned computers and scanning digital backups, the roughly 40 family pictures and scores of postcards from disjointed collections are some of Robinson’s few remaining keepsakes.
Now, in the aftermath of the floods in the New South Wales northern rivers region, Robinson is using a smartphone for the first time, after his previous phone was ruined when he dropped it in water trying to break through a fibro gable above his living room.

Initially, Robinson considered himself lucky when, after believing he was destined to drown as waters rose beyond his ceiling, he was rescued almost 18 hours later from the roof of his late 19th century house.

However, a fortnight on, he is dealing with a new loss. As he sifts through the remains of his life, it is not the roughly $500,000 of antiques lost from his home and his shop in Lismore that are of most concern.
It’s the realisation he now has no photographs of his late father. “I had the album of Dad’s 21st birthday in there, and I haven’t even seen that wash up, it’s just gone,” Robinson said.
Robinson has been collecting antiques for 50 years. The floods ruined historic photos, books and newspaper clippings of noteworthy events from as far back as the 1910s, as well as architectural, military and art pieces of global significance.
Among his collection was a rare album of photos taken shortly after Sir Charles Kingsford Smith crashed one of his planes near Old Bonalbo – a small town about 70km west of Lismore – in 1930. Few photos of the event are known to exist, and Robinson said his album was washed away in the floods.
“The Lismore-related things, I had always planned to donate them to the local museum. There were also hats and parasols from the Victorian era, it’s stuff you can’t replace,” he said.
Robinson, like thousands of other residents of Lismore and the northern rivers, is only now comprehending the enormity of the flood’s long-term damage on the region’s history.
The loss to the area’s art and cultural assets has also been profound. The Lismore regional gallery has reportedly suffered 'sickening' damage, according to its director, Ashleigh Ralph. The NSW government quickly organised a convoy of freezer trucks – essential to stop mould forming – to move damaged pieces to Brisbane to attempt a mass salvage operation.
But not all collections were able to access this assistance.
Mountains of books have formed outside Lismore library, destined to be incorporated into the year's worth of landfill created by the floods.
The Lismore Library pictured during the recent floods (left) and during the clean-up, after the waters receded (right). Photo: Parkway Drive/Facebook.
Millions of dollars of collectibles owned by local antiques stores have also been thrown into garbage piles as owners assess the damage.
However, archivists and historians are now asking flood-affected residents and business owners to reconsider what they believe is unsalvageable to “prevent communities losing their heritage and their cultural identity”.
Jennifer Gall, a curator from the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia, grew up in Lismore, and is concerned at what the loss of historical artefacts and family memories will mean for the region.
“It’s a well-documented fact that in the initial cleanout, people throw out everything without sorting – the enormity of the damage is too momentous to cope with. Then people wake up in a month’s time and realise that they threw out their entire family history, or their valuable historic shop stock and regret this,” Gall said.
“This loss of identity and personal treasures is doubly devastating after losing a house and other important possessions.”
Gall is urging flood-affected residents and businesses to consult professional advice about how to salvage flood-damaged items. This includes freezing individual items in bags as soon as possible to prevent moulding.
“Please pause and think before you throw out photos, films, documents, wedding dresses, musical instruments and so on,” she said.
She is also concerned about the loss of town records.
“These are the memory of working class people, who have lived as farmers, and there are huge Indigenous collections too. These are the records of the common person.
“Most of us are not mentioned in history books, but our lives make up the fabric of society. When these records are damaged, we’re in danger of being left with just published books about those with money and education.”
One of the most significant repositories of this local history is the Lismore museum. Robert Smith, the president of the Richmond River Historical Society that runs the museum, said a plan to store its holdings on the top level of the building had largely spared the collection from damage.
However, cabinets containing original maps and plans for Lismore, and several boxes of archival film that were in the process of being digitised were water damaged.
Smith said he was thankful that these items were also collected by the government-organised freezer trucks and was hopeful they could be salvaged.
However, Smith, who is also a professor at the local Southern Cross University and a longtime researcher on the culture and history of the north coast of NSW, acknowledges just how important the loss of individual and family possessions will be for the region.
“Possessions are so much more than an object, they hold stories that someone in the family is yet to hear, that they maybe weren’t yet ready to hear. Those stories help one make sense of one’s place in their family and in this region,” Smith said.
Back at Robinson’s store in Lismore, he thinks he will be able to salvage some plaster religious statues. However, looking around the floors of his house and surveying the damaged photographs, he is overwhelmed.
“It’s hard to think straight at the moment,” Robinson said.
From 'The Guardian' by Elias Visontay

The floods in New South Wales, Queensland and anywhere really, serve to remind us all about preserving and saving the valuable, the priceless, the unique and the every-day. Before a disaster, flood or fire - take the time to think and plan about what you can do now to copy, store and save what you consider to be irreplaceable, eg. copy your photos, documents or certificates to a Cloud service or give a copy to a family member who lives in another district. Place items that you value in any of a variety of sealable storage containers not cardboard boxes. Planning now is preferrable to panicking as the waters rise around you or the flames roar down on you. And hope that despite the work you undertake now, that the situation never arises.

Friday, 25 February 2022

Family history conferencing at home

RootsTech 2022 will be held March 3rd - 5th, 2022.

It is entirely virtual and completely free (though you do need to register) You can join the world's largest family history conference from their website: www.rootstech.org .

RootsTech welcomes millions of people worldwide to learn & to celebrate family at the family history conference and year-long learning platform. With thousands of classes, inspiring speakers, meaningful activities and joyful connections.

All the major family history search are represented, including: FamilySearch, Ancestry, My Heritage, FamilyTreeDNA, Family Tree Maker, Photomyne, TheGenealogist, The Family History Guide Association, National Genealogical Society (US)…

The Schedule starts streaming at 8:00am in Salt Lake City, (2:00 am [Thursday] in Sydney/Melbourne) and continues for the next 72 hours. You can join in at any time and watch what is playing on the main stage, watch one of over 900 class sessions, visit the virtual expo hall, and connect with other attendees, & your Relatives at RootsTech (an online experience that shows if (and how) you are related to other RootsTech attendees). Classes begin at any time that you are ready to begin, it is all about your schedule and individual needs (Sessions are available at the website via streaming – no downloading is available).

To create a personalised schedule - Click the plus button at the bottom of each preview tile for a class session or on the session page to add that class to your playlist. In the top navigation you will see a play button icon where you can access everything you have added to your list.

RootsTech is hosted by the FamilySearch people, and aimed at the American & international audience, but as family history research is about the whole wide world, and with over 1,500 sessions, you can find something of relevance & interest to you. Check out the Innovators Portal for some of the new & emerging tech!