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The Wise Family of Avoca, Victoria

The Wise branch of the family was amongst my earliest research endeavours. My paternal grandmother was Mabel Wise who was married to William Elliott Veitch Robson. Mabel died at Waverley Nursing home on 18 Sep 1971. I can clearly remember a phone call from my dad, Reginald George Robson, telling me that Granny Mabel had passed away. My sister, Lavinia Chrystal and I were at a skiing camp called Valhalla, down at Perisher Valley during the September school holidays, and by the time we returned to Sydney, Mabel’s funeral had already occurred.

Mabel Wise holding my brother Bill Robson, circa 1948, Sydney, Australia

I didn’t know Mabel well, as she was very old and frail even when I was a small child. I can remember that she always used a walking stick. She had a lovely smile, a twinkle in her eye, was kind and very proper. Funnily enough one of my earliest memories was when Granny Mabel took my sister, Lavinia and me to the Australian Museum in College Street, Sydney on 4 September 1961. We caught the bus into the city and I can remember seeing an enormous dinosaur suspended from the roof. We attended a film at the museum and when we got up to leave, I promptly walked the wrong way and got lost. I burst into tears and can remember a feeling of absolute terror for the few minutes before being found by Granny and my less than impressed elder sister. I was only four years old and was turning five the next day and I can remember telling Granny how excited I was about my forthcoming birthday. I can’t remember my fifth birthday, but I can remember getting lost! In her last years Granny was confined to a chair on her enclosed verandah at her apartment at The Chilterns, 593 New South Head Road, Rose Bay, where Dad used to take my sister and me to visit her on weekends. She lived opposite The Pier, more famously known later as Doyles and had a pretty view across Rose Bay.

Our Dad had always told us that the Wises were from Waterford and Cork, Ireland and that his grandpa George Wise was a bit of a raconteur who was his favourite Grandpa. Dad used to tell us the story about his grandfather’s clock, which he was expecting to inherit from his Aunt Ruby. Ruby Wise was a sister to his mother, Mabel Robson. Ruby died on 3 May 1980 and I can remember coming home from work one day in late May 1980 to find dad in our dining room at Routala, 64 Wunulla Road, Point Piper, holding an envelope and an open letter. He looked really disappointed and I asked him what was wrong and he explained that he was informed by the executors of Ruby’s will that he had been left $100 by his aunt and that the clock was not to be his. I felt his disappointment as we walked to the front hall where he pointed to the spot where he had always imagined the clock would stand. In an extraordinary twist of fate, my dad was dead within another month, dying on 30 June 1980, after a sudden three week illness from lung cancer. It was a shattering time for our family and really tragic for our mother Vena, as theirs had been a truly happy marriage. My mum was devastated and it would take many years for her to adjust to widowhood. Only now, when I have become interested in the family tree, do I perceive how much history has been lost and how important it is to write up our family stories. I sometimes find an original document and despair with how little was recorded, when there were so many opportunities for our ancestors to give us just a little bit more information about themselves.

It was quite a surprise when I collected Mabel’s birth record to find that she was born in Avoca, Victoria and I could see that some of her younger siblings were born in Percydale. I can remember going to Google maps and looking down on the tiny towns of Avoca and Percydale where she had spent her childhood, wondering how and why her family were living in that desolate part of the Australian outback.

Australian Birth Index 1788-1922:

Name: Mabel Jackson Wise
Father’s Name: George Wise
Mother’s name: Agtess Amelia Kilpatrick
Birth Place: Avoca, Victoria
Registration Year: 1878
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 13011

I was so excited to find this birth index because for the first time, I was finding my way back one further generation, with the surname Kilpatrick for Mabel’s mother being listed on her birth record; this was a key to opening my way to find the past. I was also interested in the name George, as this was my father’s middle name. Clearly he had been named in honour of his maternal grandfather. Researchers always look to the next generation with excitement when a mother’s surname is included and I was quickly learning this thirst for these new clues. I spent quite a deal of time searching for the birth of Agnes Amelia Kilpatrick in the Australian birth records and finding nothing, I gave up to concentrate on the Wises. A further chapter the Kilpatricks and Cranwills of Dublin will expand this part of our family history.

Australian Birth Index 1788-1922:

Name: Cyril Raymond Wise
Birth Date: 1883
Father’s Name: George E Wise
Mother’s name: Agnes
Birth Place: Victoria
Registration Year: 1883
Registration Place: Percydale, Victoria
Registration Number: 27348

I captured the birth record for Mabel’s brother Cyril Raymond Wise, known to the family as Kelly Wise, who was born in Percydale, a short distance from Avoca. It was interesting to see the birth of Ethel Wise, the youngest daughter of George and Agnes Wise being born in Paddington, Sydney. This was my latest clue, finding out when the Wises had moved from Percydale to Sydney. I now know that they must have gone via Wellington, New South Wales, where George started the Western Stores. I also noted the middle initial “E” for George now.

Australian Birth Index 1788-1922:

Name: Ethel I Wise
Birth Date: 1890
Father’s Name: George E Wise
Mother’s name: Agnes
Birth Place: New South Wales
Registration Year: 1890
Registration Place: Paddington, New South Wales
Registration Number: 27348

My next search was to find the death record for George Wise and this record I very nearly rejected because of the listed death place as Queensland. However a search through old Australian newspapers resulted in finding George Wise’s obituary and funeral notice, which mentioned George Wise’s sudden death in Townsville, Queensland.

It was exciting to find George’s parents listed as William Macaboy Wise and Ellen Murray on his death record. I had never heard of these names before and little did I realise that I was on the verge of unearthing the most amazing and exciting area of my family research which would take me back to Cork, Kerry, Limerick and Dublin in Ireland. It was to be a challenge, as Irish records are scant and mostly unavailable, or destroyed as a result of the tumultuous and turbulent history of this fascinating country. See below for reports of George Wise’s death from the Sydney Morning Herald 4 September 1933, including a photograph of George and also of his funeral on  6 September 1933, which my dad attended. This photograph in the newspaper showed an incredible likeness to Dad, even down to his white moustache!

George Edwin Wise’s story will be expanded in George Edwin Wise and the Western Stores and a further chapter on the Wise Merchants of Cork will take the Wise family back to Ireland and place them into their Wise branch in Blarney Lane, now Street, in Cork City. For the very first time I realised that the oval portraits that had hung in our dining room at our family home Routala, 64 Wunulla Road, Point Piper, were of George Wise and his wife Agnes Amelia Kilpatrick. After my mother’s move from our family home in 1996, they went missing, and in 2011, just after I began my family research, Ann Loveridge nee Drury, my first cousin, very kindly gave me another photo portrait of George Edwin Wise, which I absolutely treasure. Ann’s mum Kathleen Drury nee Robson, was Dad’s sister.

George Edwin Wise (1850-1933) married Agnes Amelia Kilpatrick (1851-1924) in 1873 and they had eight children, Lillie Cranwill Wise (18744-1927), Ellen Murray Wilse (1875-1961), Edna Kilpatrick Wise (1876-1951), Mabel Jackson Wise (1878-1971), Cyril Raymond Wise MC, (1883-1968), Irene Evangeline Wise (1885-1982), Alice Ruby Wise (1887-1980) and Ethel Isabel Wise (1890-1981)

Australian Death Index 1787-1985:

Name: George Edwin Wise
Death Date: 28 Aug 1933
Death Place: Queensland
Father’s Name: William Macaboy
Mother’s name: Ellen Murray
Registration Year: 1933
Registration Place: Queensland
Registration Number: 003688
Page Number: 1802

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Dropbox\VR\Ancestry Stuff\Wise\George Edwin and the Western Stores\Waterford-mention-of-GE-Wise-3.pngSydney Morning Herald, 4 September 1933 -note the mention of Waterford

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The Sydney Morning Herald, 6 September 1933, page 17

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George Edwin Wise, courtesy of Peter Drury son of Kathleen Drury nee Robson

I was proceeding at a fast pace now. I had collected all of the birth records of Mabel’s siblings, as a result of seeing so many sisters in George Wise’s funeral announcement. I always knew about Aunt Irene, Ethel and Ruby and about Uncle Kelly, MC, our famous war hero, however I did not know about Edna, Lily or Ellen Wise and as such, did not really understand beforehand how the Hoskins and Richards’ families fitted into the Wise family. The collecting of these birth records for the family quickly extended my Ancestry family tree with each successive generation. It gave me a more complete understanding of the Wise family in Australia. I then concentrated on Avoca and the surrounding areas of Percydale and came up with a nest of Wise records that were quite overwhelming. It took a great deal of time to work out the brothers and sister of George Edwin Wise, not to mention the brothers and sisters of William McOboy Wise, George’s father. I spent days pouring over these records trying to make sense of the names, particularly middle names and dates, together with other records with similar parents listed. This collection of records that I added, enlarged the Wise family tree enormously and led for the first time for me to see on Ancestry.com other Wise family researchers collecting similar records. However, no one had attempted to place the Wise family back to Cork or Waterford in Ireland.

After finding the death records for some of the brothers of George Edwin Wise, I had a sense of empowerment and understanding of my past. In particular I was intrigued and most pleased when I collected the death record for George’s brother Michael Murray Wise, realising that I was on the right track in concentrating my research on Victoria. It was also confirmation that this was a large family. What did come as a surprise was the fact that there was a bit of a hillbilly thing going on with Michael Murray Wise marrying his first cousin Kate Wise, the daughter of George Henry Wise, who was the brother to William McOboy Wise. See the death and marriage records listed below, and also the death record for Catherine “Kate” Wise, the daughter of George Henry Wise, confirming how it came about that two Wise first cousins married in the isolated outback of northern Victoria.

Australian Death Record 1787-1985:

Name: Michl Murray Wise
Death Place: Avoca, Victoria
Age: 59
Father’s Name: Wise Wm McOboy
Mother’s name: Ellen Fran Murray
Registration Year: 1903
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 128
Estimated birth year: abt 1844

Australian Marriage Index 1988-1950:

Name: Michael Murray Wise
Spouse Name: Catherine Wise
Marriage Place: Victoria
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Year: 1870
Registration Number: 9

Australia Death Index 1788-1985:

Name: Kate Wise
Death Place: Avoca, Victoria
Age: 43
Father’s Name: George Henry
Mother’s name: Elizabeth Humphries
Registration Year: 1888
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 4433
Estimated birth year: abt 1845

I collected other newspaper clippings regarding the Wise family of Avoca, I could see that another brother Michael Murray Wise  had been a successful business man and citizen in Avoca. The wonderfully descriptive articles that I was collecting was giving me an incredible idea about the life of our Wise family in country Victoria.

Jerilderie Herald, 23 February 1903

Wellington Times, 23 February  1903

Avoca Mail, 5 February 1870

Michael Murray Wise J.P. (1843-1903) married Catherine Wise in 1870 and they had twelve children, Elizabeth Kate Wise (1870-1940), William McOboy Wise (1872-1932), Ellen Alice Wise (1874-1875), Frank George Wise (1874-1930), Horace Murray Wise (1876-1880), Thomas Norman Wise (1878-1958), Thomas Norman Wise (1878-1958), Ellen Alice Wise (1880-1883), Marian Wise (1882-1909), Terence Murray Wise (1884-1961), Kate Wise (1885-1953) and Michael Murray Wise (1888-1888)

Avoca Mail,12 April 1878

Michael Murray Wise was a grocer who ran a Wise General Store at Percydale and then later at Avoca, after the death of his father, William McOboy Wise he had his own business called M. M. Wise & Co which later became known as Beehive Stores, Avoca.

Beehive Stores Receipt 28 September 1896, image courtesy of ADHS, Avoca

Below are listed two Australian Death records that confirmed George Henry Wise as a brother to William Mcoboy Wise:

Australian Death Index 1787-1985:

Name: William Mcoboy Wise
Death Place: Victoria
Age: 58
Father’s Name: Henry George
Mother’s name: Mary Mcoboy
Registration Year: 1873
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 5973
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1815
Name: George Henry Wise
Death Place: Victoria
Age: 63
Father’s Name: Henry George
Mother’s name: Mary Mcoroy
Registration Year: 1875
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 9486
Estimated birth year: abt 1812

Whilst collecting the records for the Wise brothers, I came across Ellen Wise’s death record, and was saddened and intrigued regarding the early death of my great great grandmother.

Australian Death Index 1787-1985:

Name: Ellen Frances Matilda Wise
Death Place: Victoria
Age: 36
Father’s Name: Murray Michael
Mother’s name: Elllen
Registration Year: 1855
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 5035
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1819

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The Argus, 7 June 1855

One can only imagine what caused Ellen’s untimely and tragic death at the age of thirty six, leaving six young children to be bought up by her husband William McOboy Wise, a property manager, in the tiny country town of Avoca, Victoria. William never married again.

William McOboy Wise (1815-1873) and Ellen Frances Matilda Murray (1817-1855) married in Clare, Ireland in 1840 and had six children, Henry Wise (1841-1900), Michael Murray Wise (1843-1903), James Wise (1845-1894), Ellen Alice Wise (1847-1930), William Wise (1848-1924) and George Edwin Wise (1850-1933)

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Note: For some reason the chart from ancestry.com does not list children eldest to youngest.

 

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Photo of William McOboy Wise circa 1870, courtesy of Ann Loveridge

The photo above is of William McOboy Wise, and I believe it must have been taken just a few years before his death. At about the same time that I saw the Borthwicks, I also saw Ann Loveridge, my first cousin, daughter of Kathleen Drury nee Robson, the elder sister to my Reginald George Robson. Ann had some fascinating memorabilia, which included early photographs, which she very kindly shared with me.

William McOboy Wise’s employment is described below in this excerpt from the Lamplough Name Index at the Avoca District Historical Society (ADHS), which I discovered online and found a most helpful resource.

“Manager of John O’Halloran’s timber yard on site of Old Tattersall’s, or Theatre Royal. Went to Woodstock Station as supervisor, leased Lamplough run. (Sutherland, P 226.)” Alexander Sutherland. “Victoria and Its Metropolis. Past and Present”. Vol 2. 1888.

On a visit to the ADHS I was told that William McOboy Wise’s huge profile in the Lamplough Name Index was a testament to his active and outstanding involvement in his local community. William McOboy Wise’s obituary recorded that over 500 people gathered to mourn him at his funeral, after he received fatal head injuries, when thrown from his horse on 22 July 1873, at Coffey’s Hotel near Avoca. William’s profile in the Lamplough Name Index is included at the end of this article, however information about his early life in Cork, Ireland, are included in a further chapter, Wise Merchants of Cork.

The Lamplough Name Index allowed me to discover the extent of William’s involvement in Avoca and was relevant in suggesting articles and records to further my research. William was involved in the community as a property manager, auctioneer, gold assayer, Land Assessor, Voting Returning Officer for Avoca, Master of the Hounds, President of the Avoca Turf Club, Post Master, Volunteer Fireman, Steward at the Avoca Annual Races and local butcher and grocer, when he partnered James Kilpatrick, father to Agnes, to found the Kilpatrick Wise General Stores in Avoca and Percydale.

The Argus, 28 January 1853

This newspaper clipping from the Argus, a Melbourne newspaper is clearly naming the two properties, Woodstock Station and Lamplough Station from William McOboy Wise’s employment near Avoca.

Bendigo Advertiser, 31 October 1856

Ballarat Star 23 October 1863

Avoca Mail, 19 September 1868

Australasian, 8 April 1871

Avoca Mail, 28 March 1873

It was from this website, Trove Digitised Newspapers, that I began to get a real understanding of Avoca, Lamplough, which is about three kilometres out of the town Avoca and easy to miss, as there is no town to see on the main road and of Percydale, a ghost town another twenty minutes away and the history of this gold mining area during the late 1850’s. There were several references to newspaper clippings regarding gold being found at Wise’s Paddock at Lamplough. The following Trove Digitised Newspaper clipping is from The Argus, Monday 30 January 1860 and whilst lengthy, it does explain much about William McOboy Wise and the conditions he and his family faced during the gold rush. Its social commentary regarding the township of Lamplough is fascinating, particularly today as, on a side road, a ramshackle home, purported to have been William McOboy Wise’s old homestead and an old school house are all that is left to show any remnants of this incredible time of the Victorian goldrush.

The Argus, 30 January 1860 Page 5

Keen readers who have read my other Wise chapter, Wise Merchants of Cork, will have seen the reference to the Wise’s connections with Napoleion Bonaparte, when Thomas Wyse of the Manor St John, Waterford, Ireland, a lawyer and Irish diplomat to Austria, eloped with Napoleon Bonaparte’s niece, the Princess Letitia Bonaparte. Thus “the willow tree planted in Wise’s Garden” being the only plant that survived the frantic push of the gold diggers, their spades, axes and shovels, is miraculous in itself, but also most intriguingly, is the mention of a willow tree which was purportedly a cutting from a willow which “waves over the grave of Napoleon Bonaparte on St Helena”. I almost fell out of my tree to see this reference to Napoleon, knowing that some of the Wise family of Waterford in Ireland also share the same lineage. Is it possible that William McOboy Wise farewelled his own extended family on the Cork docks, and that as a talisman for his safe passage and for prosperity in a new land he was gifted the willow tree to plant in his own garden in Victoria? It is possibly however, in reality, that it may just be a romantic notion.

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The South Australian Advertiser, 21 January 1860

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The Star (Ballarat, Victoria) Friday 23 October 1864

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William McOboy Wise’s homestead at Lamplough

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The Avoca Meat Market was founded and run by William McOboy Wise in 1854. Beside this shop was the Kilpatrick Wise General Store and apparently to the left hand side of this building William ran his auctioneer business. Main Street, Avoca. These photos were taken by Virginia Rundle during a visit to Avoca, Victoria in 2011.

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Avoca Court House, Avoca, Victoria

It must have been a great shock when William McOboy Wise was thrown from his horse and severely injured on 22 July 1873, as can be seen from the next newspaper clipping, this telegraphic despatch was rather like a modern newsflash stating the fear that that his injuries may prove fatal.

The Argus 22 July 1873

The Argus, 24 July 1873

Avoca Mail 25 July 1873, Obituary and funeral report for William McOboy Wise which took place on 23 July 1873.

It was incredible and quite overwhelming to read this article and see how well loved William was in his community. I am so proud to be his Great Great Granddaughter.

In Memorium,  Avoca Mail, 22 July 1873 by J.C.

I have no idea who the author of this poem might be and apart from his initials, it is such a touching and wonderful tribute to my great great grandfather. This description of his kindnesses and his gentle spirit allows one’s heart to soar with pride.

It was with a most profound pride that I read the account of William McOboy Wise’s death, his obituary and the report of his funeral. William was indeed a remarkable man and he obviously had a magnetic personality, becoming involved with so many people and their community enterprises. I am sure he was a competent horse rider and it must have been a terrible shock to the community that this was the way he met his death, when he was thrown from his horse. William was obviously not expecting to die any time soon and as such was ill prepared for his death when he died intestate.

The documentation which I obtained from the Public Record Office of Victoria is a lengthy but interesting legal document of his intestate will which was managed by William Wise Jnr, William’s McOboy Wise’s fourth son, who gave his occupation as a butcher. It is a valuable family history record, which helped me place William firmly in his family.

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William Wise (1848-1924) married Annie Wilson McDonell (1867-1901) in 1897 and they had one daughter Dorothy Alice Wise, MBE, (1898-1984)

Annie Wilson Wise is buried in a lovely grave at Avoca in another row adjacent to other members of the Wise family; she was only 33 years old. Her husband William Wise (1848-1924) was a butcher in Avoca for many years before moving to Gilgandra, New South Wales, managing one of the Western Stores for his brother George Edwin Wise.

His sister Ellen Alice Wise (1847-1930) never married; she was the only daughter of William McOboy Wise and Ellen Frances Matilda Murray, who also settled in Gilgandra, New South Wales. 

Grave of Annie Wilson Wise, Avoca Cemetery, Victoria

The Argus, 4 November 1873

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Excerpt from the Avoca Mail printed in the Argus Newspaper, 13 February 1874

This article appeared in the Avoca Mail and the Argus newspapers after William McOboy Wise’s death and presumably the store was taken over by his sons who were active in the business. An interesting fact is that in the same year of William’s death in 1873, two sons of William McOboy Wise married two of the daughters of James Kilpatrick. George Edwin Wise married Agnes Amelia Kilpatrick and Henry Wise, George Edwin Wise’s eldest brother married Jane Isabella Kilpatrick, an elder sister of Agnes Amelia. At this stage I do not have the exact dates of their marriages, and do not know if they were married before William’s untimely death. Another son Michael Murray Wise was active in both the stores in Avoca and Percydale and he married his first cousin Kate Wise in 1870, the daughter of George Henry Wise, William’s elder brother. At the time of William McOboy Wise’s death he was grandfather to two of Michael and Kate Wise’s children, Elizabeth Kate and his namesake, William McOboy Wise.

Henry Wise (1841-1900) married Jane Isabella Kilpatrick (1848-1906) married in 1873 and had one child, Frederick William Kilpatrick Wise (1874-1960)

Henry and Jane Wise moved from Avoca shortly after their son Frederick William Kilpatrick Wise was born in Percydale and they lived in Wellington, where Henry was appointed Postmaster and later at Bodangora where they ran a general store. Henry Wise was appointed a New South Wales Magistrate in 1899. He also helped his parents-in-law James and Eliza Kilpatrick run their Post Office and General Store in Mile End, Adelaide, after they also moved out of the Avoca area after the death of his business partner William McOboy Wise.

Earlier I had found records for another son of William and Ellen Wise living at Avoca, this was James Wise, who married Mahala Reed on 10 Aug 1872. I found their marriage record, which was registered in Maryborough, a township about 20km from Avoca. It was about this time that I linked into another ancestry tree online and received a message from John Lee, whose Wise family tree concentrates on George Henry Wise (William McOboy Wise’s elder brother) and his wife Elizabeth Humphries and their large family. We corresponded and John informed me that his ancestors were part of the Wise Flour Mill branch of the family. More regarding the Wise Flour Mills will be dealt with in the chapter on George Edwin Wise and the Western Stores. It was John Lee who kindly gave me a photo he had from his album of James Wise and his wife Mahala Reed, which came from the photograph collection of Felicity Gabrielli, and an old photo of the grave of George Henry and Elizabeth Wise from Avoca cemetery. John Lee is a direct ancestor to George Henry Wise and Elizabeth Humphrys through their son Thomas Walter Wise, see their Family View Report listed later in this chapter.

James Wise and Mahala Reed

.James Wise and Mahala Wise nee Reed, courtesy of John Lee, from the photo collection of Felicity Gabbrielli, who is a descendant of the Reed family of Avoca

James Wise (1845-1894) married Mahala Reed (1854-1896) in 1872 at Maryborough, Victoria and they had five children, Mary Wise (1874-1967), Bertram Reed Wise (1876-1876), Herbert Stanley Wise (1878-1933), Ada Louisa Wise (1880-1966) and Murray Reed Wise (1886-1952) 

Argus, 21 August 1894

Avoca Mail, 4 May 1894

 I found this notice about James Wise and could see that sadly he must have succumbed to his injuries.

Avoca Mail, 23 June 1896

I have searched extensively for the grave for James and Mahala Wise and I am convinced that the large space next to William McOboy and Ellen Wise’s grave at Avoca is that of their unmarked grave.

Australian Death Index 1787-1985:

Name: Jas Wise
Death Place: Avoca, Victoria
Age: 49
Father’s Name: Wm Mcoboy
Mother’s name: Ellen Murray
Registration Year: 1894
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 8132
Estimated birth year: abt 1845

It was quite by chance that I came across the Wise Family Tree, a detailed unsigned document which dates to the early 1980’s. I caught up with my second cousin Peter Borthwick and his wife Helen in 2011 at a family gathering and when I explained that I was researching the family tree, they told me they had a Wise family tree which was authored by Peter’s grandmother, Irene Borthwick. Aunt Irene was my great aunt, and sister to my grandmother Mabel Robson, both being the daughters of George Edwin and Agnes Wise. The contemporary Australian content is a testament to the diligence of Irene Borthwick, as she lived in England, and I think she used the tree as a way of keeping in touch with the Wise family back in Australia, jotting down each branch and adding in new names as the Wise family descendants grew. It remains a valuable family document, and whilst not complete or entirely accurate, it is an amazing piece of family history at a time when communication was by letter, and the purchase of BDM (Birth, Death & Marriage) records would have been expensive and difficult to obtain.

One of the other sources that I have used to help place our family into the correct Wise line was a book published in 1930 called Leaske’s Genealogical Guide to some Australian Families. Leaske prefaces his book by explaining that he relied mostly on family members to provide his information. It is a masterpiece of its time, and was a very helpful and interesting document, that also has its inaccuracies. What piece of family research doesn’t? It is not possible to be one hundred percent correct with family history and information that is handed down verbally by family members will quite understandably leave out anything that could put the family into a bad light. Leaske’s book is out of print, however it is held in several public libraries. I firstly tried to obtain it at the NSW State Library, where they had two copies of the book listed in their collection and found them both missing. Likewise, on a trip to Newcastle Library, I was unsuccessful and my last avenue of opportunity in New South Wales was at NSW University and knowing how difficult it is to park, I enlisted my sister Lavinia for the journey. After a quick search we found a dusty and untouched book on a back shelf and it was with great excitement we discovered that our Wise family of Victoria was listed in great genealogical detail over several pages.

It is sad that this out of print book is being pilfered by reseachers from our Libraries. Leaske based his family reporting in the style of Burke’s peerage and at first glance it seems a complicated method, however with practice it is happily conquered. It is a simple way of showing several generations in a concise style starting with one ancestor, much the same way that genealogists create a descendant chart.

Leaske claimed that William McOboy Wise married his first cousin Ellen Murray. This statement I find difficult to accept, for the reason that Ellen came from Prospect Hall in Limerick, a fact recorded in the Wise Family Tree. The Borthwick Family Tree also noted on the tree that Ellen Murray was a Roman Catholic and an understanding upon her marriage, was that her children to William McOboy Wise would be bought up in the Church of England faith. I think Leaske confused the marriage of their son Michael Murray Wise who married his first cousin Kate Wise, the daughter of George Henry Wise and Elizabeth Humphries, with William McOboy and Ellen Wise. Another interesting comment on the Wise Family Tree was the fact that William McOboy Wise had a falling out with his father over his marriage to a Catholic girl and after his migration to Australia, he lost touch with the family. I think the falling out may have been the result of his business enterprises going badly in Ireland, more than anything else, as I now have information that Henry George Wise actually died on 23 June 1835, well before William’s marriage to Ellen Murray in 1840. The marriage of William and Ellen Wise and the family of Henry George Wise are dealt with in other chapters, Wise Merchants of Cork and the Murray Family of Limerick, Ireland.

William McOboy Wise is regarded by the extended family as our founder here in Australia, having arrived in Australia with his wife and children in about December 1851, after leaving Cork in September 1851. Exhaustive searches have not found a definitive shipping record for their immigration. I believe that they were unassisted migrants and as such these records are rarely found. Sometimes early Australian newspaper reports of ‘Shipping Intelligence’ list families arriving into Australian ports. Convict and assisted migrations are almost always available, as was the case for George Henry Wise and his family in 1861. The Wise Family Tree states that the Wise family arrived into the port of Sydney, and I have collected a newspaper clipping listing a Mr Wise and his three sons arriving in Sydney on the Roman Emperor on 6 January 1851.

Sydney Morning Herald, 6 January 1851

Recently I found a newspaper advertisement which gives the first information confirming William McOboy Wise’s approximate arrival in Australia. It is by no means a record or even correct, but it is an interesting article and at this stage I don’t know anything about Jeremiah Clifford. I can only presume that Jeremiah was from Ireland himself and that he obviously knew William and his family before his migration and had information or a letter from Ireland for him, or he recently arrived in Australia and wished to renew his acquaintance with William.

The Argus Saturday 27 January 1855

A quick search yielded the following newspaper transcription from May 1904 confirming that Jeremiah Clifford was indeed an Irishman and his association was probably from William’s time in Kerry, Ireland, although it was no other help.

The Advocate, 18 June 1904

The Wise Family Tree claimed that George Edwin Wise was born on board ship during the Wises voyage to Australia. This is interesting information, although I believe it to be incorrect. George Edwin Wise’s obituary claims he was a native of Waterford, Ireland. I have no record which supports this claim from the newspaper article either, other than presuming that his wife and children gave the newspaper the information regarding the origins of the Wise/Wyse family in Ireland. However, I have collected a birth/baptism record from Ireland which I believe is correct, although as yet this record does not confirm the names of his parents. In the future I would like to access this record to see if there is further information naming his parents and their address, as I believe this is possibly George’s birth just before the family migrated to Australia. This more correct date then negates the arrival of the Wises in Sydney in January 1851, due to the length of time of voyages from Ireland to Australia.

Private Sources at the National Archives Ireland – Small Private Accessions – 1972–1997

999/1–999/850: 999/565

EXTRACTS FROM PARISH REGISTERS:

“No 81., 22 Oct. 1850  George E. Wise, Cork”

George’s birthdate from this parish register is corroborated in the Wise family bible, which is owned by Geoff and Anne Wise of Dubbo. Geoff Wise being the great grandson of Henry Wise, William McOboy’s eldest son. I found Geoff Wise and his Dubbo address listed in the Wise Family Tree as the son of Allan Frederick Wise. Ann Wise very kindly emailed photographs of the family bible, a pipe and stand, tie pin and ring, which belonged to William McOboy Wise, after I chatted with them on the telephone. It was so exciting to speak to them and they had great knowledge of William McOboy Wise, George Edwin Wise and Kelly Wise. Later Ann Wise came to Sydney and my sister Lavinia Chrystal and I met with her for coffee and we enjoyed chatting about our early Australian ancestors.

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\Wise Photos\Wise Treasures.JPG

Wise Family Bible showing family tree page, owned by Geoff and Anne Wise of Dubbo.

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\More Wise Photos\Wise Treasures - Bible.jpgWise family Bible and Prayer Book, courtesy of Geoff and Anne Wise

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\Wise Photos\Wise Treasures (2).JPGWilliam McOboy Wise’s pipe and stand, above, and tie pin, below, courtesy of Geoff and Anne WiseC:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\More Wise Photos\DSC01541 William M Wise Tie Pin.jpg

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\More Wise Photos\DSC01537 William M Wise Ring.jpg

William McOboy Wise’s Dress Ring, courtesy of Geoff and Anne Wise

I now had several pieces of information at hand to help me try and determine the ship that the Wise family arrived on from Cork, Ireland and I felt I was now closer than ever to this quest. After finding no assisted migration records for the Wises, I was sure my only hope of finding their ship was through shipping arrivals in old Australian newspapers and so I turned to Trove Digitised Newspapers again. Trove is a wonderful online resource from the Australian National Library and I narrowed down my parameters to the end of 1851 and the early months of 1852 to see if I could find a ship arriving in Sydney or Melbourne that mentioned the Wise family. It was exciting to find this newspaper clipping showing William Wise and family arriving in Melbourne aboard the Athenian.

Arrival of the Athenian, Argus 1 March 1852

I am now almost certain that this mention in the Argus newspaper is correct for “William Wise and family” arriving in Melbourne. Clearly the Athenian left London for Melbourne, via Cape Town. I wondered if it stopped at Cork on the journey, as so many ships did, to pick up supplies before the long journey to Cape Town and if so, this was where the Wise family joined the ship. Keen readers will also have noted that Margaret Murray was also listed onboard. Margaret Murray being a sister to Ellen Wise, William’s wife. It is possible that Margaret was supporting William and Ellen Wise, helping to look after their young family.

Athenian arrived 26 February 1852, from London via Cape of Good Hope, Captain Case Launceston Examiner, 10 March 1852

 

Maitland Mercury, 10 March 1852

Argus, 12 March 1852

Through Leaske’s book Genealogical Guide to some Australian Families I was able to discover the existence of William McOboy’s sister Mary “Maria” Wise, who had married her first cousin, George James Spratt Wise, “the son of James George Wise and ? Spratt of Pencil Hill, Co Cork, Ireland”. James George Wise being a younger brother of Henry George Wise (William McOboy Wise’s father). I spent a great deal of time placing the family information from Leaske into my Ancestry online family tree in an effort to take the Wises back to Ireland and place the family into their correct place in Irish social history. The Australian Death Index for William McOboy Wise, which I had found earlier was helpful in identifying William’s father’s full name and his mother’s maiden name. As a novice genealogist, it was also comforting that Leaske also confirmed these names in his book. I collected many records to confirm Leaske’s information. One of them that was pleasing was the death record of George James Spratt Wise confirming his Irish parents from Cork. It was Leaske who indicated the maiden name of James’s mother as Spratt, and the record below that gave me Martha as her Christian name.

Australian Death Index 1787-1985:

Name: George James Wise
Death Place: Victoria
Age: 50
Father’s Name: James George
Mother’s name: Martha
Registration Year: 1865
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 63
Estimated birth year: abt 1815

Irish naming patterns traditionally mean that the eldest son is named after the paternal grandfather, and the second son will be named after the maternal grandfather, thereafter a son will be a namesake of his father and the fourth son will usually be named after a favourite brother or uncle, thus keeping familial names repeating down the generations. Naming patterns for the female side follow the same traditions. James and Maria Wise’s family demonstrates this tradition extremely well. As you will see below from the Family Report View, George James Spratt Wise was the elder son of James George Wise. George James Spratt Wise then named his son James George Wise in honour of his father, his second son was named Henry George Wise in honour of his wife Maria’s father and their third son was named Harmer Spratt Wise after his maternal grandfather. Their daughters were also given significant middle names. Their elder daughter Mary McOboy Wise was named in honour of her maternal grandmother and their younger daughter Martha Spratt Wise was named in honour of her paternal grandmother.

George James Spratt Wise (1812-1865) and Maria Wise (1810-1890) married in Cork, Ireland in 1836 and they had five children, James George Wise (1836-1911), Henry George Wise (1840-1898), Mary McOboy Wise (1842-1931), Martha Spratt Wise (1846-1913) and Harmer Spratt Wise (1852-1936)

Australian Death Index 1787-1985:

Name: Mary Maria Wise
Death Place: Avoca, Victoria
Age: 80
Father’s Name: Hy. George
Mother’s name: Mary McCoby
Registration Year: 1890
Registration Place: Victoria
Registration Number: 10383
Estimated birth year: abt 1810

Avoca Mail, 11 July 1890

It was wonderful to see information about the Wise’s home Fair Hill in County Cork, another key to unlocking the past.

I have included below the family group sheet for George James and Maria Wise showing George James Wise’s most interesting lineage from several very distinguished Protestant Irish families. His line can be taken back centuries thanks to other family history book, documents and charts. For some reason the ancestry.com chart does not list the children from eldest to youngest. George James Spratt Wise married his first cousin Maria Wise, the sister of William McOboy Wise and George Henry Wise; siblings who all migrated to Avoca, Victoria.

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Dropbox\VR\Ancestry Stuff\Wise\Wise Family of Avoca\Family View Report for George James Spratt Wise.bmp

George James Wise and his wife Maria Wise, migrated to Melbourne, Australia to join William and his wife Ellen Wise in Avoca aboard the small migrant ship the Hannah Maria, which stopped in Adelaide to drop off passengers, before continuing on to Melbourne. On this last leg of the journey disaster struck the ship, which was wrecked off what is now known as Ninety Mile Beach in South Australia. All passengers and crew survived however, sadly, all possessions aboard the ship were lost.

South Australian Register, 4 October 1853

South Australian Register, 14 October 1853

The Wise family are not mentioned in the shipwreck individually, however they are mentioned in other literature and newspapers in regard to the shipwreck and their arrival in Avoca with historic reflections about early Australian settlers.

It must have been such a blow to George and Maria Wise to lose all their belongings, to add to their previous woes in Ireland when George was imprisoned for a short time for his debts. Then the brave decision to migrate to join Maria’s brother William McOboy Wise in Avoca, Victoria, must have been a huge strain on the family and now coupled with the shipwreck, they must have wondered what star was guiding their lives.

Whilst the article is not entirely accurate it is wonderful to see this short history of the Wise family in an account of the three Wise siblings who migrated from Ireland, namely William McOboy Wise, Maria Wise and George Henry Wise.

Melbourne Weekly Times, 4 April 1931

William McOboy Wise’s elder brother was named George Henry Wise and his father was Henry George Wise. William McOboy Wise was Henry George Wise’s second son and he was given his maternal grandfather William McOboy’s name as his first and second names. Another name that was impressive was William and Ellen Wise’s second born son, who was given his maternal grandfather’s name, Michael Murray Wise. It is these names that allow the genealogist to take a considered guess as to the names of parents of the previous generation. I was therefore fairly confident that Henry George and James George Wise’s father was George Wise – a simple deduction, however it needed confirmation. This also applied to women and very often they will be given a mother’s maiden surname as their middle name, often linking them back to the maiden name of their grandmother. In particular, it has been our Irish heritage that has been traced back to further generations by using these naming patterns. Records in Ireland are scarce and hard to come by, coupled with hundreds of years of unrest, a terrible famine and a depression, a less than diligent tradition for record keeping and the fact that in 1922 the Dublin Public Record Office (PRO) burnt to the ground by an English offensive against the newly formed Irish Republican Army (IRA), taking with it precious records of our past ancestors. The English had decided that deep within the building the IRA was hiding their ammunition, and apparently there was a great blaze. It has therefore been a struggle to find any surviving parish church or registry records for our Wise and Murray families.

The record below belongs to George Henry Wise, who was William and Maria Wise’s elder brother who travelled to Australia in 1861 on the Great Tasmanian and started up the Wise Flour Mills of Victoria. He migrated with his wife Elizabeth Humphries and their large family of nine children. Migrant and shipping records were more readily available after 1860 and the immigration of George Henry Wise and his family was easily picked up.

Victoria, Assisted and Unassisted Passenger Lists 1839 – 1923:

Name: George Wise
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1814
Age: 47
Arrival Date: 16 Oct 1861
Arrival Port: Melbourne, Australia
Departure Port: Liverpool
Ship: Great Tasmania
Nationality: Irish

George Henry Wise (1814-1875) married Elizabeth Humphries (1823-1893) in 1842 in Cork and they had twelve children, Henry George Wise (1843-1926), Catherine Wise (1845-1888), William Wise (1847-1876), James Wise (1848-1924), Thomas Walter Wise (1851-1922), Marie Wise (1852-1945), George Wise (1854-1922), John Wise (1857-1938),  Walter Wise (1859-1896), Elizabeth Wise (1861-), Francis Laurence Wise (1863-1865) and Alfred Wise (1867-1868)

It was wonderful to see this newspaper clipping which confirmed our Wise family’s origins as Cork and not Clare, Ireland and it was even more exciting to have an address. I could see from maps of Cork that Killeens House was just out of Cork on the road to Blarney Castle.

The Avoca Mail 31 August 1875

Wise Family Reunion November 2013, Narrandera organised by John Lee

Sally Wise, Virginia Rundle and John Lee, Wise Family Reunion, Narrandera, 2013

The reunion was held at Narrandera in November 2013, a tour of the Wise Flour Mills, a trip to the old Wise family home The Willowsat Jerilderie and an evening meal included talks, information and an opportunity to add your family tree to a large wall chart was greatly enjoyed by many Wise descendants.

The Willow, Jerilderie, 2013, above and circa 1880, below

The Willows was the family home of Thomas Walter Wise, a son of George Wise and Elizabeth Humphries, who was the founder of Wises Flour Mills at Narrandera. He was also Mayor of Jerilderie in 1892.

Thomas Walter Wise (1851-1922) and Mary Ellen Degraves (1860-1926) married in Gunning, New South Wales in 1879 and they had ten children, Lucy Wise (1880-), Kate Wise (1882-1948), Thomas Wise (1883-1885), John Wise (1884-1937), Alice Wise (1886-), Herbert Humphrey Wise (1889-1962), Dorothy Wise (1890-), Molly Wise (1892-), Reginald George Wise (1895-) and Edith Wise (1899-)

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\More Wise Photos\021.jpg

Grave of Henry George Wise, son of George Henry Wise, Gore Hill Cemetery, N. Syd. Note the mention of Killeens, Co Cork, Ireland on the grave monument.

The above gravestone I discovered online whilst doing a Google search for Henry George Wise. I must admit it came as quite a shock to see this photo, which was found amongst “Irish headstones of note from Gore Hill Cemetery, North Sydney”. This information led to a visit to Gore Hill one fine morning shortly thereafter, together with my sister Lavinia and armed with nothing more than this gravestone image. Upon arrival we found a most wonderful, although very neglected cemetery hidden away beside the Pacific Highway, much of it in dense undergrowth. The main road through the cemetery is still in good condition and the layout is described in various maps, dividing the cemetery into religious denominations. A fruitless search found my sister and I talking with a groundsman, who gave us the phone number of a volunteer group, and within minutes we had phoned, received co-ordinates and were standing in front of this most impressive monument.

Henry George Wise (1843-1926) married Emily Lyttleton Hutchinson (1862-1933) married in Victoria in 1882 and they had two children, Harold Walter Wise (1884-1908) and Ellen Mary Wise (1886-1900)

After searching the online ADHS site again, I came across some information about a website managed by a volunteer husband and wife team, George and Carol Judkins, keen cyclists, who have combined their sport with photography and have recorded and transcribed graveyards throughout country Victoria. Luckily, on their list was Avoca Cemetery, which they had photographed with an offer to send photographs for free, if any were of interest. I immediately found listed the gravestones of William McOboy and Ellen Wise, their son, Michael Murray and Kate Wise, and William’s siblings Maria and George James Spratt Wise and Henry George Wise and Elizabeth Humphries, amongst a long list of other Wise graves, that I was still unsure about placing. I emailed Carol for photos and she replied within a day. It was tragic to read the gravestone of Michael Murray and Kate Wise, where so many of their children had died in infancy and see that in 1888 Kate Wise died and her youngest child, also Michael Murray Wise died a short time later. It would seem that Kate had died shortly after childbirth.

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Dropbox\VR\Ancestry Stuff\Wise\Wise Family of Avoca\Death-of-Kate-Wise-3-columns.png

The Argus, 14 April 1888, Birth of Michael Murray Wise Jnr and Death of Kate Wise are listed in this newspaper clipping.

George and Carol Judkins very kindly sent several photos of the Wise graves, four of which are all in a long row at Avoca cemetery. I have placed in that same order, also see below for the link to their website:

http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ausvsac/Avoca.htm

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\Family Tree\WISE William Macoby, Ellen.jpgHeadstone of William Macoby and Ellen Wise, Avoca Cemetery

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\Family Tree\WISE Kate Ellen Alice Horace Murray Ellen Alice Michael Murray Michael Murray Marian.jpg

Headstone for Michael Murray and Kate Wise and some of their children.

Michael and Kate were first cousins, Michael was the son of William McOboy Wise and Kate was the daughter of George Henry Wise.

 

George Henry and Elizabeth Wise headstone also listing the deaths of their infant sons Alfred and Frank, Avoca Cemetery

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Pictures\Family Tree\WISE George James Maria.jpg

Fallen marble headstone of George James and Maria Wise, Avoca Cemetery

Upon receiving the photos above I decided my next venture was to visit Avoca and see for myself the towns, visit the ADHS rooms in the Old Courthouse in the main street of Avoca and visit the Avoca Cemetery and Lamplough and Percydale townships.

Geoff and I, together with my sister Lavinia Chrystal went on a journey to Avoca, Lamplough and Percydale in Victoria in August 2011. Percydale being the tiny gold mining town – and now a ghost town, where my grandmother Mabel Jackson Wise (1878-1971) lived as a small child. Her younger brother Cyril Raymond “Kelly” Wise and sisters Irene and Ruby were all born in Percydale between the years 1883 and 1887. Their parents, George Edwin and Agnes Amelia Wise, helped to run the Kilpatrick Wise General Stores with his brothers and their wives, in Avoca and Percydale. The stores provided every provision needed for everyday life in the outback, including groceries such as flours, grains and cereals and dairy, fresh fruits and vegetables, gold mining equipment, linens and draperies, pots and pans. They ran a butchery, an assayer’s office and post office. William McOboy even set up an auctioneer’s house next door in the main street of Avoca, his partner James Kilpatrick was a linen draper from Dublin. All their children were employed in the business, however, it was George Edwin Wise who took the general stores to the New South Wales outback and set up department stores from Wellington to Dubbo, creating a huge money making venture for the family that became known as the Western Stores.

Virginia Rundle

BA Sydney University 1979

Certificate Diploma in Genealogical Research, Society of Australian Genealogy (SAG) 2013

Wise Family of Avoca, Victoria article written, 31 March 2012, updated 21 February 2019

 

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Documents\img120.jpg

C:\Users\Virginia Rundle\Documents\img119.jpg

Maps on the previous pages are courtesy of ADHS Library.

Bibliography and Acknowledgments:

*Leaske’s Genealogical Guide to some Australian Families, Wise Family Extract

Avoca and Districts Historical Society Library, Maps and Files (ADHS), also grateful thanks to their volunteer researchers including their president, Tony O’Shea.

*Lamplough Diggers Name Index (ADHS)

*William McOboy’s Intestate Will Documents, courtesy of the Public Records Offices of Victoria (PROV)

Trove Digitised Newspapers

Public Records Office of Victoria (PROV)

Ancestry.com.au

Shipping Intelligence, NSW State Archives

*Wise Family Tree, courtesy of Peter and Helen Borthwick

Grave Photos courtesy of George and Carol Judkins

Photos from Geoff and Ann Wise of William McOboy’s Treasures and Family Bible

Flicker photograph website, grave of Henry George Wise, Gore Hill Cemetery

Family Search Website

Photographs from Ann Loveridge and Peter Drury

Photographs from John Lee and Felicity Gabbrielli

National Archives of Ireland

*will email if anyone is interested

LAMPLOUGH NAME INDEX (courtesy of ADHS)

WILLIAM MACOBOY WISE: W.M. WISE: WISE’S PADDOCK: Miner Avoca 1856 (ER). Manager of John O’Halloran’s timber yard on site of Old Tattersall’s, or Theatre Royal. Went to Woodstock Station as supervisor, leased Lamplough run. (Sutherland, P 226.) Tulla Co. Clare. Arrived Melbourne early 1852. Married his cousin, Ellen Murray. (Leask’s. P 638.) Land lease. (VGG 1848 p 310.) Manager of Clough & Co before the rush. Moved to Avoca. Auctioneer and general agent. (HH letter). Of Lamplough, Avoca. Appointed returning officer for electoral district of

Avoca. (CSO 22/10/1855. VGG No 106, 24/10/1855, Vol III, p 2712. Repeated with correction spelling, No 112, 9/11/1855.) Two horses stolen from Lamplough Station (VPG 29/11/1855.) Advert. W.M. Wise. general Auctioneer land and Stock Commission Agent. Sale Yard: Lexton Hotel, Burn Bank and Avoca Hotel, Avoca. (MADA 22/6/1858.) Auction notice. Avoca. (MADA 27/6/1859.) Auctioneer, Lamplough. Missing horse notice. (VGG No 23 p 356, 21/2/1860). Mr Wise scrutineer for Mr Vogel. (MADA. 7/8/1861). Gold struck at Wise’s paddock yesterday morning (22/1?) (BA 26/1/1860.) About a mile and a half on the Avoca side of the business centre. Half still crown land. (Arg. Correspondent. 30/1/1860.) Centre of attraction. (BA 2/2/1860.) Partly Government and partly private land. (Arg. via BA 2/2/1860.) “A revival has taken place beyond Wise’s paddock, and in the direction of the Avoca. ” (MADA 6/2/1860. ) Diggers took possession of a fine garden in the middle of it. (MAA 7/2/1860.) Wise’s garden rushed. Frightened out of his wits. (BS 7/2/1860. MH 9/2/1860. See also his obituary AM 25/7/1873 for description of garden.) “Continual fluctuations of the pursued course …” (MADA 10/2/1860.) 13 or 20 holes are in active operation. (MADA 15/2/1860.) “Has received instructions from the proprietors, Messrs J.H. Clough and Co., Wool~brokers, Melbourne, to sell …” (MADA 17/2/1860.) One of the stewards, Avoca Annual races. (MADA 6/4/1860). Prospecting claim on Lamplough Flat near Wise’s Paddock. (MADA 24/10/1860). Auctioneers licence. Avoca. (VGG No 12, p 153, 25/1/1861.) James Bodell stayed with him for three months in 1863. House on 300 acres of land about 2 miles from Avoca. (Bodell. P 124.) Death 22/7/1873. Died at Coffey’s Hotel, Moonambel Rd. Compression of the brain. Fell from horse. Age 58 years. Born Cork 1815. Emigrated 1851. President of Avoca Turf Club. Master of Avoca Hounds. 500 at funeral. Buried at Avoca Cemetery. (AM 22, 25/7/1873.) Place of abode Lamplough. House and land 1856 (ER). Wife Ellen Francis Matilda died 1/6 age 36 years at Lamplough (Argus 7/6/1855). Racing at Avoca. Wise’s horses (BL via MAM 20/4/1857). To auction on 20/8/1864 full share in one and all crushing machine (AM?).

10 comments On The Wise Family of Avoca, Victoria

  • Felicity Gabbrielli

    Photo of Mahala (Reed) and James Wise actually courtesy of me, Felicity Gabbrielli. I supplied it to John Lee. I am a descendant of the Reed family and my family looked after Ada Wise when her parents died prematurely.

    • Hi Felicity,

      Dr Robert Peers here! MLC boarders’ dance 1962, and we’re both still kicking. How did the Reeds get mixed up with the Chenus of Moulamein? I used to go through Avoca a lot years ago, on my way up to Murrayville, in the Mallee, to see my parents. I had no idea your forebear Mahala Wise [nee Reed] on that side once lived there, as I downed my beer and played the piano at the Avoca Hotel, or ordered a fabulous home-made meat pie over the road. Drop me a line!

      • Hello Robert Peers.
        Just caught your question.
        I am Mahala Wise nee Reed’s Great great nephewThe Children of Jonathan REED and Mary Anne Warne
        Child B and D Spouse +Details Children B, M, D.
        REED, Mahala M 1872 Avoca Wise, Mary B 1874 Avoca M 27.10.1903 Alfred Wyse, Avoca D 1967 Preston, Vic
        B 31.7.1854 Avoca Wise, James George Wise, Bertram REED B 13.3.1876 Avoca D 29.3.1876 Avoca, Vic. (16 d)
        D 22.6.1896 Avoca, Vic B 1845 Wise, Herbert Stanley B 1878 Avoca M Vonna V Brinkley D 1933 Parkes, N.S.W.
        D 16.8.1894 Avoca, Vic Wise, Ada B 23.5.1880 Avoca M 21.1.1917 Angus Mc Naughton D 1967 Preston, Vic
        Wise, Murray REED B 18.2.1886 Avoca M 12.8.1925 Mary Walker D 1952 St Kilda, Vic
        REED, Joseph “Henry” M 1883 REED, Alfred Norman B 1883 Bung Bung M 1908 Ellen Mary Tyrell Vic D16.6. 1948 Collingwood, Vic
        B 14.06.1857 Avoca Edwards, Margaret REED, Herbert Thornton B 1886 Brunswick D 1914 Melbourne, Vic
        D 16.8.1921 Brunswick, Vic Jane REED, Hilda “Lillian” B 1889 Brunswick M 1913 Percy Lord D 8.5.1942 Katoomba N.S.W.
        B 1861 D 17.5.1938 Melbourne REED, Leslie “Charles” Jonathan B 1892 Morwell M 1919 Elsie Amelia Hawkins D 9.1955 Malvern, Vic
        REED, Louisa ‘Louie” M 9.9.1896 Avoca Langtry, Mary “Nilla” B 13.7.1887 Nhill M 1911 Percy Frederick Chenu, Benalla D 7.6.1976 Melbourne, Vic (88y)
        B 13.10.1858, Avoca Langtry, Samuel B 21.4.1854 Langtry, Annie Melville “Melva” B 13.5.1889 Nhill M 1929 Horace Burkett Faulkner D 31.5.1967 Sydney, N.S.W.
        D 10.3 1939 D 1939 Camberwell, Vic Langtry, Leslie REED B 1891 Nhill D 4.12.1917 Passchendale, Ypres, Belgium
        Camberwell, Vic Langtry, Ronald “Roy” B 6.7.1893 Nhill M1 1922 Alma Morrish M 2 1955 Marianne Neale D 7.02.1985 Young, N.S.W.
        Langtry, Samuel “Norman” B 3.9.1894 Nhill D 3.9.1927 Deniliquin, N.S.W.
        Langtry, Winton Merlin B 0.3.1898 Nhill D 4.10.1917 Passchendale, Ypres, Belgium AIF
        Langtry, Louie “Marjorie” B 02.3.1900 Nhill D 2.6.1978 Sydney N.S.W.
        Langtry, Laura Hamilton B 02.12.1902 M 7.10. 1933 Roy Desmond Moodie D 11.2.1988 Narromine
        Langtry, Mabel “Joyce” B 12.1.1904 D 30.10.1987 Sydney N.S.W.
        REED, Jane“ Jennie” M 18.4.1884 Avoca Vic Tonkin, Ruby Maud B 1885 Donald, M McLennan Vic D 1879? Perth
        B 4.08.1860 Avoca, Vic Tonkin, John Snell, Tonkin, John Charles REED B 1889 Donald M Violet Crystal Dunstan, Vic D 11.12.1954 Donald Vic
        D 10.06.1893 Donald, Vic B 14.6.1840 Breage, Eng Tonkin, Francis Hugh B 3.7.1891 Donald, Vic M Arthur Jeremy Bloomfield D 14.6.1969 Ballarat
        D 16.7.1898 Donald, Vic Tonkin, Jane REED B 1893- M 1925 Arthur Henry Morrow 1972 Stawell Vic (78 y)
        REED, Laura M 1886 Crabbe, John “Bernard “ B 1889 M Mabel Ellen? D 1960 Williamtown, Vic
        B 29.08.1862 Avoca D 21.08.1939 Adelaide S.A. Crabbe, John Sydney B 13.6.1854 Crabbe, Thomas “Basil” “Roy” B 1890 Elsternwick M 3.11.1920 Dorothy Viner D 26.11.1968, S.A. ex AIF
        D 22.10.1904 Subiaco, W.A. Crabbe, Laura “Doris” B 1897 M 1927 Raymond Coker Div 1936 Living 1949 Leederville, W.A.
        REED, Alfred Ernest M 9.11.1899 Parkside REED, Robert Ernest B 13.8.1900 Eastwood, S.A. M 1937 Nancy Ivens Sach D 1984 Adelaide
        B 4.7.1864 Avoca
        D 22.5.1903 Manly, N.S.W Wells, Clara B 23.8.1876 Parkside, S.A. D 30.07.1949 S.A. REED, Tom Thornton B 9.9.1902 Eastwood, S.A. M 31.12.1922 Audrey Balfour Ogilvy D 19.8.1995 (92y)
        REED, Edith Mary B 5.06.1867 Avoca D 22.5.1947 Adelaide, S.A. N.B. Did not marry
        REED, Alice Maud M 1902, Avoca Coghlan, Elizabeth Alice B 1904 Avoca M Richard Frank Jolly, Avoca D 1985 Avoca Jolly (86y)
        B 25.1.1869 Avoca, Vic Coghlan, John B 1865 Ireland Coghlan, Mary Nilla “May” B 12.1.1903 Avoca M 5.12.1925 Avoca, Percy Robert Hawkins D 4.10.1989 Ballarat
        D 15.9.1946 Avoca, Vic D July 1932 Avoca, Vic Coghlan, John REED “Jack” B 18.11.1911 Avoca M 1934 Bertha Wardlaw D 7.6.1981 Heathcote, Vic
        REED, William M 28.6.1899 REED, Thomas Frank B 29.6.1899 M 28.9.1937 Bessie Watts D 1.10.1955 Beverly, S.A.
        Jonathan “Willie” Cannell, Phoebe REED, Edith May B 28.4.1901 Adelaide M 21.8.1924 Percy Edward Chapman D
        B 3.3.1870 Avoca, Vic B 17.4.1872 Allens Ck, S.A. REED, Howard William B 07.12.1903Port Adelaide D 28.6.1989 Woodville
        D 13.3.1922 D 30.3.1965 Woodville REED, Enid Mary B 16.10.1906 M 07 10 1929 Wilfred Henry Carter D 6 Nov 1990 – Aldgate, S.A.
        Adelaide, SA Adelaide, S.A. REED, Phoebe Blanche B 11.6.1909 M 5.3.1938 M Robert Keith Ossenton D 1997
        REED, Alice Maud B 1911 M Frederick Arthur Partington D 11.12.2005 (94y)
        REED, James
        B 19.2.1872 Avoca Vic,
        D 18.5.1946 East Malvern Melbourne, Vic M 1896 Flood, Eliza
        REED, Melva Maude
        B 1898 Prahran M? Frederick Georgeson D 1949 South Melbourne
        REED, Arthur
        B 19.09.1873 Avoca D 20.4.1940 Essendon, Vic M 1 1906 Nutbean, Laura Annie B 1873 D 1911 M 2 1912 Benallach, Kate B 1862 D 1944
        REED, Frank Thornton M 7.11.1908 Nth Adelaide, S.A. REED, Cecil Thornton B 22.8.1909 Adelaide M 1935 Elenor Nicholas Tweedie Melbourne D 2005 Adelaide
        B 13.11.1875 Avoca, Vic HARRIS Ethel May B 6.5.1881 Kadina, REED, Maxwell Lloyd Frank B 30.3.1911 Adelaide M 1940 Audrey Mary Enid Cusack Randwick, Sydney D 22.4.1995 Richmond, N.S.W.
        D 15.8.1938 Adelaide, S.A. D 28.5.1977, Adelaide, S.A. REED, Frank Basil B 5.2.1916 Adelaide M 1941 Lorna Deere D 11.11.2007 Adelaide
        REED, Aubrey Alfred B 6.6.1917 Adelaide Died 3.8.2018 Sydney, aged 101
        REED, John Leslie Winton B 5.8.1919 Adelaide M Betty Nola Reed 19.2.1947 Griffith N.S.W D 28.5.2010 Griffith N.S.W.
        If you email your details I can add this and more in a PDF.
        Cheers Geoff Reed gftr.gr@gmail.com

  • Felicity Gabbrielli

    Photo of Mahala (Reed) and James Wise actually courtesy of me, Felicity Gabbrielli. I supplied it to John Lee. I am a descendant of the Reed family and my family looked after Ada Wise when her parents died prematurely. Thank you for this complete record Virginia.

  • Hello Virginia
    We met at the Wise reunion in Narrandra, I am Philippa Wise, (Pampel) daughter of Henry George and Margaret Elsie Wise and have just been reading all the above. I would love it if you could please email me all the above information.
    Kind regards Philippa

  • Hello Virginia,
    Martha Spratt Wise (daughter of cousins George James Wise and Mary Maria Wise) was my 2xGr Grandmother who married Jno (john) Wardlaw in Ballarat in 1878 and died in Avoca in 1913. I enjoyed your extensive research on the Wise family, well done! I have also spent a lot of time researching my family history and can add some additional information (such as there were 2 more children of George & Maria, namely Georgina and Bessie). Regards Paul Taylor

  • Thanks to you Virginia I now know a lot more about my family. I am rather ashamed to admit that I am rather late in finding out some pretty basic things. My faster [Roy Thomas Wise] and grandfather [John Wise] are both buried in the Elmhurst [Victoria] cemetery. I lived in Elmhurst until the early 1990s, when I was in my mid 30s. Yet in all that time, I was completely unaware that my great grandfather [George Henry Wise] and quite a few other Wises were buried in the Avoca cemetery just 20 kms away. I would have passed through Avoca literally hundreds of times – although not passed the cemetery which is north of the town on the Sunraysia Hwy.

    I was only vaguely aware that my family had come from Avoca, and before that Cork. For whatever reasons, my father never mentioned his grandfather George or anything about how he came to migrate to Australia. Or maybe Dad detected that I was not very interested at that time. Better late than never I suppose.

    I am still unsure as to why and when John Wise left Avoca and went to Elmhurst. I’m guessing it was in the 1870s. I know he set up a store there, which must have been quite successful because he [and his brother James I think] both became farmers with quite significant landholdings in the Elmhurst district early in the 20th century.

    If anyone can give me any more details on the backstory of John [and James] Wise of Elmhurst, I’d really appreciate it.

    Rod Wise.

  • Felicity Gabbrielli

    Hi Virginia
    I have come across another Wise photo that you might be interested in – I was thinking it is William McOboy Wise but am not sure when I look at the photo you have in your very extensive history above. On back is written in old script “gran father Wise”. Happy to send it to you via email as not sure how to attach to this. Also have a coloured photo of the Wise memorial church window but not sure where it is, assuming some church in Avoca? I have not exhaustively read the above history so hope I am not repeating something you already know. Are you still adding to the above?
    Felicity

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  • Hi Virginia,
    Just a small correction on the death date of James George Wise (son of George James Spratt Wise and Maria Wise). It should be 1911 (24 Nov, 1911), as revealed in the in memoriam his sisters and brother put in The Age 25 Nov 1912.

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