The Kippax and Howell Family of Sydney

My early family research had uncovered that William Robson, my great grandfather had married Annie Robertson Kippax, and this quickly led to the discovery of Annie’s parents as William Henry Kippax born on 29 March 1827 in Windsor, New South Wales and Elizabeth Whitton Robertson born about 1833 in Dundee, Scotland. The Robson Family of Wollongong are another family chapter that I have written up previously. Another chapter will deal with The Robertson Family of Dundee.

The name Kippax was familiar to me, and some of my earliest remembrances of my father, Reginald George Robson was when he would tell family stories about our earliest Australians. He was very proud of his Kippax ancestry, and explained that Kippax Street in the city was named in honour of his great grandfather William Kippax, who had served on the City of Sydney Council for many years. He had also told me that I was a sixth generation born Australian. I had assumed this was from my Robson line, however it soon became clear that the Robson family had not arrived in Australia early enough for this fact to be correct. Then, late on a hot January night in 2011, and unable to sleep, I resumed my research and reached in the dark for my lap top, and decided to explore my Kippax line.

William Henry Kippax 1878

Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950

Name: William Kippax
Spouse Name: Elizabeth Robertson
Marriage Date: 1849
Marriage Place: New South Wales
Registration Place: Sydney, New South Wales
Registration Year: 1849
Volume Number: V B

William Kippax and Elizabeth Robertson married in 1849 and had eleven children. Two children, Elizabeth and Frank, died as infants, and Walter and Kate, were barely adults before they were struck down by illness. Only their eldest Annie (Robson), and youngest Elsie (Neave) married, and produced families. Two sons William Henry Jnr. and Edwin married but had no children. Eliza, Lizzie and Norman never married. Archives at Sydney City Council state that William Kippax was Alderman for Cook Ward from 1 December 1863 to 30 November 1898.

Five Generation Pedigree Chart for Annie Robertson Kippax

Photograph by Charles Percy Pickering of The Sydney Baptist Church, The Lyceum School and St Andrews Presbyterian Church (far right), circa 1879-72 This image courtesy of State Library of New South Wales – the Pickering collection is lodged with the Mitchell Library.

“In 1832 McGarvie accepted an invitation to start a second Presbyterian congregation in Sydney and held services in the courthouse until St Andrew’s Scots Church was built at Kent Street near Bathurst Street. The church opened for divine service on 13 September 1835 and he remained as its minister until his death in 1853.” Wikipedia

“Second Presbyterian Church in Sydney built near the Old Burial Ground on Bathurst Street. The foundation stone was laid in 1833 though it was several years before funds were raised for the construction.” Sydney of Sydney Archives

St Andrew’s Presbyterian Church is no longer existing, and it would seem it was built adjacent to St Andrews Cathedral which is on the corner of George and Bathurst Streets. The Old Sydney Burial Ground is now the site of the Sydney Town Hall after the land was resumed and the main burial in Sydney was moved to Devonshire Street in the city. Today this is the site of Central Railway. A few years ago, the Sydney Town Hall was renovating an area underneath the south side of the building, when an excavators discovered the remains of part of the Old Sydney Burial Ground, today this area can be accessed during guided tours of the building.

Whilst researching old Sydney newspapers on Trove, the Australian National Library website I found a clipping from the Sydney Morning Herald celebrating the golden wedding anniversary of William and Elizabeth Kippax, stating that they were married at St Andrews Presbyterian Church, Sydney, by Rev. Dr. McGarvie (image is reproduced later in this chapter). However, it most confusingly states the date as 26 March 1898, which is clearly a year different to the Australian Marriage Index I collected.

Purchase of a poultry business Sydney Morning Herald 22 January 1849

An Artful Swindle, Sydney Morning Herald 25 February 1856

The same year that William and Elizabeth married, William established a poultry business at the Sydney Markets, hence Market Street in the city. The site for the old markets is now the site of the Queen Victoria Building which takes up an entire block in the city. William and his brother Samuel soon set up a poultry business together and some interesting reading in old newspapers and police reports show that there was a continual need for them to be street wise about some of the activities happening around the markets. William and Samuel both became civil minded and their activities, which included business and political representations and religious activity, Samuel even won medals for showing his flowers at the Royal Horticultural Society, marking them as respected and model citizens of their community.

Religious, Sydney Mail, 25 March 1865

Sydney Morning Herald 1 November 1876

Municipal Elections Empire, 24 November 1869

Sydney Municipal Council 1876, Mayor B Palmer, centre and Alderman W Kippax

Letter to the Editor, Evening News, 23 April 1881

Kippax and Robertson Family Tree – author unknown from State Library of NSW

In 2012 I connected through ancestry.com messages with Nicola Paul, and we decided to meet together at the State Library of New South Wales for a day of Kippax family research. During that day I ordered this family tree which has been lodged at the Library and unfortunately it is unsigned which is so disappointing. It mentions so many of my extended family including my parents Reg Robson, the son of W.E.V Robson and my mother Vena Fuller and includes my brother William “Bill” Robson. I can only suggest that since my brother was nine years older than me, that this family tree was authored in the early 1950’s.

It was during this visit that Nicola and I accessed Commissioner Bigge’s Report of 1822, a report about the Colony of New South Wales to access the verbal transcription of our ancestor in common, Richard Kippax, the father of William Kippax who heads up the family tree together with his wife Elizabeth Robertson.

Nicola Paul is an extremely talented researcher and I am grateful to her for her very kind generosity in sharing many of her records with me.

On a visit to Rookwood Cemetery with my sister Lavinia Chrystal we photographed many of the Kippax and Robson family graves and when Nicola explained that she was related to Richard Kippax, a brother to William Henry Kippax, I told her that there was a lovely grave at Rookwood dedicated to her family. Nicola told me she already knew about it and I was able to tell her about a tree that was growing alarmingly beside the grave and would soon start to topple it, as it was a camphor laurel tree. I told her that I had approached the Anglican Office and filled in a report about the grave, and had engaged and paid their gardeners to cut the tree out. I know how pleased she was when I told her this news. A visit the following Spring allowed me to photograph all the grave panels and shields that had previously been covered by the tree.

William Kippax signed this document (2nd page) along with some most famous figures in Australian History including the signatures of Sir Henry Parkes and Sir Edmund Barton.

 

 

Loyal Citizens Agreement, Town Hall, Sydney, Archives, 10 June 1887, page 2

Image kindly supplied by Nicola Paul

Municipal Contests Sydney Morning Herald, 30 November 1889

Australian Star 13 July 1894

Golden Wedding Anniversary of William and Elizabeth Kippax, Sydney Morning Herald, 26 March 1898.

William and Elizabeth were married at St Andrews Presbyterian Church on 26 March 1848 by Rev. Dr McGarvie.

Marriage of Elsie May Kippax, Kippax Mountaineer, 27 May 1904

Kippax Lake, Moore Park, opposite The Sydney Cricket Ground, Driver Ave

This Sydney, The Sun, 7 April 1940

I found this snippet from The Sun Newspaper and it is regarding the error often made that Lake Kippax, opposite the Sydney Cricket Ground was named after the famous cricketer, Allan Kippax, and compounding another error, as William Kippax was actually Allan’s great uncle.

Letters to the Editor Daily Telegraph 25 Dec 1903

Moving a Mountain Sydney Morning Herald 4 April 1951

Kippax Lake Daily Telegraph 23 February 1905

Kippax Fountain, Moore Park, adjacent to Kippax Lake

Fact Sheet for William Henry Kippax 1825-1910

Funeral of Elizabeth Kippax, Sydney Morning Herald, 16 April 1910

Funeral of William Henry Kippax, Sydney Morning Herald, 2 May 1910

Death Notices for William and Elizabeth Kippax, Sydney Morning Herald, 2 May 1910

Evening News 2 May 1910

Freeman’s Journal 12 May 1910

Star Newspaper, 2 May 1910

Sydney Morning Herald 2 May 1910

Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985:

Name William H Kippax

Death Date 1910

Death Place New South Wales

Father’s Name Richard

Mother’s Name Hannah

Registration Year 1910

Registration Place Chatswood, New South Wales

Registration Number 4991

William and Elizabeth Kippax Headstone, Old Methodist Section, Rookwood Cemetery

It was touching to see and photograph this headstone and realise that William and Elizabeth died within a few weeks of one another in April 1910. William and Elizabeth had a large family of eleven children, and it is a surprising fact that only two of their children were to give them any grandchildren. These two children were their eldest daughter Annie Robertson was born in 1850, who married William Robson Jnr, and their youngest daughter, Elsie who was born in 1874, who married Norton Joseph Neave. An incredible fact was that in 1869, when Elizabeth Kippax was pregnant with Kate Kippax, her daughter Annie Robson was pregnant with my grandfather W.E.V. Robson. Elizabeth Kippax went on to have two further children Norman 1871 and Elsie 1874, and Annie had two further children, Ethel 1872 and Reginald 1878. My grandfather W.E.V. Robson was a close friend of Norton Neave and his son Reginald Claydon Neave, both sat on the board of Larke Hoskins with W.E.V. Robson.

Fact sheet for Samuel Kippax 1829-1885, brother to William Henry Kippax

Samuel was named in honour of his maternal grandfather Samuel Howell and he was also the grandfather of the famous cricketer Alan Falconer Kippax who was the son of Arthur Percival Howell Kippax. It was nice to see that Samuel was naming his children after his ancestors.

William Speer for Brisbane Ward, Sydney Morning Herald 4 September 1858

Sydney Morning Herald 2 December 1862

Samuel Kippax, sits on a jury, The Empire, 19 November 1872

Protestant Alliance Friendly Society, Protestant Standard 13 June 1874

The Flower Show, Sydney Morning Herald, 27 February 1875

Many newspapers reported the sudden death of Samuel Kippax on 5 December 1885

Adelaide Telegraph, 5 December 1885

Sydney Morning Herald, 5 December 1885

Newcastle Morning Herald, 5 December 1885

Australian Cricket Team 1932, Cartoon showing The Fighting Kangaroos with Alan F. Kippax. Alan was the grandson of Samuel Kippax, and the son of Percy Kippax

Alan Falconer Kippax, Australian Test Cricketer, Sydney Cricket Ground circa 1930

Alan was given the middle name Falconer in honour of his Scottish grandmother’s maiden name, Jane Duncan Falconer, who married Robert Robertson. The Robertson’s migrated to Sydney, Australia, aboard the Scottish migrant ship, The Lady Kennaway. The Robertson’s daughter Eliza Waugh Robertson was born on 1 May 1938 in the Bay of Biscay, on the vogage, and her middle name Waugh was given in honour of the ship’s surgeon, Dr Waugh who delivered Eliza. Brothers William Henry Kippax and Samuel Kippax married two Robertson sisters, Elizabeth and Eliza Robertson, and The Robertson Family of Dundee will be another family chapter in my family history as I endeavour to take the family back to Scotland.

Grave of Samuel Kippax and his wife Mary and several young children, Rookwood Cemetery. It was surprising to find Samuel’s grave unmarked by a headstone and the headstone in the photograph marks another grave behind.

Richard Kippax Jnr 1832-1903 Fact Sheet, brother to William Henry Kippax.

Marriage Certificate for Richard Kippax and Mary Elizabeth Walpole who married on 30 July 1858 according to the rites of the Wesleyan Church, Witnessed by William Kippax, Richard’s elder brother, and Ann Walpole.

Certificate kindly provided by Nicola Paul.

Burial monument for Richard Kippax and his family, Rookwood Cemetery

Headstone shield telling the heartbreaking and poignant story of the loss of Richard and Mary Kippax’s son Horace in a boating accident aboard the Irene on Sydney Harbour in October 1889.

Boating Casualties in Port Jackson, Maitland Mercury 10 October 1889

Harbour Fatality, Sydney Morning Herald, 9 October 1889

Death notice for Horace Kippax, Sydney Morning Herald, 25 December 1889

It is such a heat rending death notice and one can only image what a sad Christmas that Richard and Mary Kippax must have spent mourning the loss of their 21-year-old son.

In Memoriam notice for Fred Kippax Sydney Morning Herald 22 September 1900

Another heartbreaking poem from Richard and Mary mourning a beloved son, Fred.

Kippax Monument, Headstone of Frederick Henry Kippax, son of Richard and Mary Kippax, Rookwood Cemetery

A few weeks earlier I had joined ancestry.com in a quest to discover more about my ancestors. I was dubious at first that I would be very successful, however not even in my imagination could I have envisaged the new world that was about to open before me. When I keyed in the names Hannah and Richard as the parents of William Henry Kippax, I immediately discovered that a family story already existed about William’s mother Hannah Howell on the ancestry.com website. I collected the information to my tree determined to find out more.

“The death of Mary Ann Howell M’Grath identifies the relationship to Hannah Howell (Dean Kippax Thorogood) and Samuel Howell.

Sydney Morning Herald Friday 29 December 1876

M’GRATH.-December 27, at her residence, Wellington-street,Kingston, Newtown, the beloved mother of Joseph M’Grath,   hairdresser, and daughter of the late Samuel Howell, also step-sister to the late Mrs. Kippax, of this city, aged 56. Requicscat in pace.”

Nicpaulc family tree provided this story on ancestry.com on 9 July 2010  

I was then determined to find the original newspaper clipping of this entry, and searched Trove Digitised Newspapers for it, and found a similar entry from the Evening News.

Death of Mrs McGrath Evening News 29 December 1876

No birth record for William Kippax was available for me to collect however I studied several family trees with great interest before accepting any records to my tree. Another interesting document placed on ancestry was the death certificate for Hannah giving her age at 76 years.

Death Certificate for Hannah Thorogood kindly provided by Sue Adams Ancestry Family Tree

No information here was forthcoming regarding her previous marriage to Richard Kippax, but I then found Hannah’s death notice, after a quick search on Trove Digitised Newspapers, which confirmed her as the mother of William Kippax and gave me the names of his two brothers, Samuel and Richard.

Death Notice for Hannah Thorogood, Empire, 15 February 1871

Coroner’s Inquest into the death of Hannah, Sydney Morning Herald 15 February 1871

I noted the discrepancies in the given ages of Hannah on her death certificate and her death notice, and without a birth record for her, I accepted her approximate age, and that she was either 76 or 72. Some quick maths placed her birth at either 1795 or 1799. How excitingly close that was to the establishment of our nation, only ten years earlier. What must it have been like to live in Sydney town in 1799? I was also fascinated to discover that at Hannah’s Inquest into her Death, the Coroner recorded that Hannah was “a native to this colony”. It occurred to me that Hannah must have been my earliest born Australian ancestor and, being my 3 x great grandmother – this accounted for my being a sixth generation born Australian.

Hannah Howell (1795 – 1871)
3rd great-grandmother

William Henry Kippax (1826 – 1910)
son of Hannah Howell

Anne “Annie” Robertson Kippax (1850 – 1920)
daughter of William Henry Kippax

William Elliott Veitch Robson MLA (1869 – 1951)
son of Anne “Annie” Robertson Kippax

Reginald George Robson (1915 – 1980)
son of William Elliott Veitch Robson MLA

Virginia Irene Robson
daughter of Reginald George Robson

The Coroner also recorded that Hannah was the mother of seven children. I had a lot of work in front of me to find the other siblings of William, Samuel and Richard Kippax.

I accessed several ancestry trees that hot January night, and found many trees had a lot of information regarding Richard Kippax, and suddenly before my eyes I was completely shocked to discover that many trees had convict transportation records attached to them and they named Richard Kippax with aliases such as John Kippas from the convict ship Indefatigable. I can remember clearly that I hesitated over the “press” to show the convict record, with a mixture of excitement and disbelief making my fingers shake as I pressed the button to reveal my convict, John/Richard Kippax/Kippas. I opened a document which was titled England and Wales Criminal Register dated 1814 and unbelievably it showed that John/Richard had been convicted of highway robbery and had been sentenced to death. I was in shock, I wanted to scream out about my discovery, but in some stupid and proud way I was secretly ashamed. Oh, I had to come to terms with this.

No one in my family had ever mentioned the “C” word, no one had said there were convicts in our family, my father was adamant that our Australian family were proud free settlers, that had helped form our nation. This was something I wasn’t prepared for, and I instinctively knew that this information had been hushed up and forgotten. No one had told my father about Richard Kippax and his convict past. No one ever imagined that the world-wide web and computer age would deliver into my home at the press of a button the convict transportation record of my 3 x great grandfather. I thought about my dad’s family and his Irish mother Mabel Robson nee Wise and wondered if anyone had ever told her about a convict in the Robson/Kippax line. Having only vague memories of a fine and proper woman, I imagined if she had known, she would have never told anyone. I then started to think about what my sister was going to say tomorrow morning, when I told her what I had discovered!

I can remember having a sleepless night looking at records and finding confusing and conflicting information that some ancestry.com trees had collected. then in the morning ringing my sister and telling her I was coming over, and to put the kettle on because we needed to have a cup of tea and a “chat”! I sat my sister Lavinia Chrystal down and told her what I had found the night before, and hilariously, after absorbing my information and seeing the records she famously said to me “does anyone really need to know about this?”

England and Wales Criminal Register 1814

I was eager to only accept correct records, and it was confusing to discover that many trees had conflicting information and variously collected records for two ships, the Mariner and the Indefatigable. It was clear that there were two men named Richard Kippax and earlier one had been named John, and had most confusingly changed his name from John to Richard. Even today many trees have merged the two men and complications occur when family researchers are not diligent enough to read the records carefully. The 1822 New South Wales and Tasmanian Census was most helpful to me because for the first time I could see the two Richards listed together with their ships and quite clearly “my” Richard from the Indefatigable was the wheelwright, who had been placed into work at Windsor. The Richard Kippax from the Mariner had been placed in work at Appin as a tree lopper. Most confusingly both had arrived at about the same time.

To help other ancestry family trees I placed a story into my tree on 23 May 2011, explaining the confusion regarding the two men named Richard Kippax.

Indefatigable or Mariner?

“Richard Kippas, one of 145 convicts transported on the Mariner, May 1816

Known aliases:
none

Convicted at:
Convicted at London Gaol Delivery for a term of 14 years on 25 October 1815

Sentence term:
14 years

Ship name:
Mariner

Departure date:
May, 1816

Place of arrival:
New South Wales

 

The information regarding Richard Kippas of the Mariner conflicted with other records I found on ancestry.com showing that Richard Kippas arrived in Sydney on board the Indefatiguable, and, at around the same time frame. However, other records showed a John Kippas arrived aboard the Indefatiguable. During my early research, I collected both sets of records in an effort to find out which Richard was my ancestor.

I later determined that my ancestor was in fact John Kippas from the Indefatiguable, who for some unknown reason changed his name to Richard. 

On the same web site – www.convictrecords.com.au – I discovered this information below about John Kippas.

 

John Kippas, one of 200 convicts transported on the Indefatigable, October 1814

Known aliases:
none

Convicted at:
Convicted at York Assizes for a term of life on 19 March 1814

Sentence term:
Life

Ship name:
Indefatigable

Departure date:

October, 1814

Place of arrival:
New South Wales

 

The name change is evident in the hand-written information from the General Muster of 1822, whereby Richard Kippas is recorded twice in the book, one aboard the Indefatigable and one aboard the Mariner. However, it now becomes clear that sometime around 1820, John “Richard” Kippas changed his name, from John to Richard, a fact that has caused much confusion amongst researchers.

John “Richard” Kippas was a highway man from Yorkshire, and after his convictions and transportation on the Indefatigable, he was stationed at Windsor.

Richard Kippas was convicted in London for 14 years, and transported aboard the Mariner and was assigned to a Mr J Jenkins at Appin.”

New South Wales and Tasmania 1822 Census

This record shows both Richard Kippas (sic), side by side, one listed as arriving on the Indefatigable and one aboard the Mariner.

Absolute Pardon for John Kippas of the Indefatigable, 1820

This record is so interesting for many reasons, firstly it is just before he changed his name from John to Richard, secondly it is Richard Kippax’s absolute pardon, just five years after his transportation. It also gives information that John “Richard” Kippax hailed from Stockpool, Chester, aboard the Indefatigable but there is most interesting information about his appearance and height, at 5ft 10 in, with a florid complexion, flaxen hair and hazel eyes. It also gave information about the date of his trial in March 1814 and his 1815 departure from England.

1828 NSW and Tasmania Convict Muster (1788-1849)

The record above is very precious because it records for the first time the solid relationship of Richard Kippax and Hannah Howell and listed is their baby son William Henry Kippax, my 2 x great grandfather on the record. It is certain that this “marriage” was a common-law marriage and that Richard and Hannah had set up not only a relationship together but were a family group.

I then found two other very significant records for Hannah. One was a marriage record for Hannah including a transcription of her first marriage to Thomas Dean, and the other an early, NSW Census from 1822.

Australian Marriage Index 1788-1950:

Name: Hannah Howell
Spouse Name: Thomas Dean
Marriage Date: 1820
Marriage Place: New South Wales
Registration Place: Windsor, New South Wales
Registration Year: 1820
Volume Number: V A

NSW MARRIAGE TRANSCRIPTION

(EARLY CHURCH RECORDS)

REGISTER -CHURCH OF ENGLAND MARRIAGES 1788-1831 CHRONOLOGICAL REGISTER AND INDEX
DATE OF MARRIAGE -22 MAY 1820
PLACE OF MARRIAGE -ST MATTHEW WINDSOR
GROOM -THOMAS DEAN
STATUS
OCCUPATION
USUAL RESIDENCE
BRIDE -HANNAH HOWELL
STATUS
USUAL RESIDENCE
WITNESSES
MINISTER
RELIGION -CHURCH OF ENGLAND
NOTES -REGISTERED ST M WINDSOR D

The second record was the NSW Convict Muster of 1822 which listed Hannah as Ann Dean, the wife of Thomas Dean who was also listed as transported aboard the Admiral Gambier.

1822 NSW Convict Muster (1788-1849)

Sydney Gazette, 29 November 1826

It was quite eye popping to read a newspaper article about Hannah Dean and the breakdown of her marriage and the harsh judgement given to her of two months in the Parramatta Women’s Factory. I have been able to find no records of her admittance, and wonder like other researchers whether she was pardoned from this sentence, especially as it would seem that she was five months pregnant at the time with her first child to Richard Kippax. This child would have been my 2x Great grandfather William Henry Kippax. At this stage I have been unable to find any marriage record for Hannah and Richard Kippax and assume that in 1826 they were living together in a de facto relationship. It was also sad to read that Thomas and Hannah Dean’s small son had drowned through neglect. It comes now as no surprise that I can find no record for the birth of William Henry Kippax. The family records William’s birthdate as 29 March 1827, which fits in with this newspaper article above, family folk law and William and Elizabeth Kippax’ headstone which is in the Old Methodist Section at Rookwood Cemetery. The following page show that this information from the Sydney Gazette is correct and I was able to find both the birth and death records of James, the baby son of Thomas and Hannah Dean.

An excellent source of information came from a website I discovered quite by accident when I keyed in Hannah Howell into Google search.

http://tolharndor.org/bilton/howell.html#1._Hannah_Howell4235236_born

The website outlined the ancestry of the Kippax family and the Howell family and even mentioned my descent line down to my father, Reginald George Robson. It was also thoroughly supported by good references.

Following the mention of a husband and child I was able to collect these two records below listing the birth and death of Hannah Howell’s first born baby.

Australia, Birth Index, 1788-1922
Name James Dean
Birth Date 1824
Birth Place New South Wales
Registration Year 1824
Registration Place Windsor, New South Wales, Australia
Father Thomas Dean
Mother Hannah
Volume Number V18246924 1B

Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985

Name James Dean
Death Date 1826
Death Place New South Wales
Registration Year 1826
Registration Place Windsor New South Wales
Volume Number V18266981 2C

Parramatta Female Factory, Augustus Earle

Parramatta Female Factory ground plan

“The Parramatta Female Factory is the largest and oldest surviving convict women’s site in Australia. Built by convict men to serve the New South Wales colony between 1821 and 1847, it had many uses: as a refuge for women, children, elderly and sick women; a marriage bureau; a place of assignment and moral reform; a penitentiary; a women’s hospital for the convicted as well as the free; and a workhouse all rolled into one.”

https://dictionaryofsydney.org/entry/parramatta_female_factory

I started looking for the children of Hannah Howell/Dean/Kippax, and while William Henry Kippax’s birth record has not been found, I found several other records for William’s brothers.

Australian Births and Baptisms 1792-1981:

Name: Samuel Howel
Gender: Male
Baptism Date: 25 Dec 1829
Baptism Place: St Mathews Windsor, New South Wales, Australia
Mother: Hannah Howel
FHL Film Number: 993950

Australian Birth Indexes 1788-1922:

Name: Richard Dean
Birth Date: 1832
Birth Place: New South Wales
Registration Year: 1832
Registration Place: Pitt Town, New South Wales, Australia
Father: Dean
Mother: Hannah
Volume Number: V1832610 16
Name: Henry Kippax
Birth Date: 1834
Birth Place: New South Wales
Registration Year: 1834
Registration Place: Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Father: Richard Kippax
Mother: Hannah
Volume Number: V1834334 18
Name: Matthew Kippax
Birth Date: 1837
Birth Place: New South Wales
Registration Year: 1837
Registration Place: Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Father: Richard Kippax
Mother: Ann
Volume Number: V1837405 21

I was careful in collecting these records for the children of Hannah Howell, and it took me several years to confirm these as correct. What was so interesting was that with each record the information provided was so different. I then resolved to order a few records from a transcription agent and picked out Henry Kippax because the details were closest to the facts.

I was probably disappointed with the information provided on this record, however Richard Kippax’s occupation as a wheelwright seemed to be correct.

I was beginning to get a good idea about Hannah’s personality and had decided that she was one of life’s amazing survivors. Life hadn’t handed Hannah a silver spoon, and she had to work for everything she received in life, and I can see that she was going to make the best of her predicament. Her first marriage had been a complete failure, and it would seem she was glad to be rid of Deane in her life, then her affair with Richard Kippax was tenuous, as she had no marriage with the man. It is recorded that Samuel was born under the name Howell, and for some inexplicable reason her next son Richard was born under her former husband’s name Dean. Two further sons Henry and Matthew are born under the name Kippax. The naming of Richard Kippax as the father of Henry and Matthew is possibly supported by the apparent but yet unconfirmed marriage of Richard and Hannah Kippax on 6 May 1832 at St James’ Church, Pitt Town, New South Wales. I will endeavour to find this record to support this claim, which came from the Howell Identity website that I have previously mentioned, and on which I have checked much of the history and found it to be thorough.

In 2013, I collaborated with Nicola Paul who is a descendant of Richard Kippax, and we compared and shared certificates and our research. On one occasion, we met at the State Library of New South Wales to further our research and to access The Bigge Report, this was written by Commissioner Bigge in 1822, who was commissioned by the English Government to write a report on the state of the Colony of New South Wales. Bigge was free to interview convicts and settlers about their experiences, opportunities and views on living in New South Wales. Some Colony officials were sceptical about Bigge to the point of hostility, fearing that his report had the power to close the penal colony, if the report showed lax governance and failure. Governor Macquarie and Commissioner Bigge quarrelled over his interference with his building plan, and the use of the architect Greenway. Bigge labelled Greenways style too embellished and elaborate for a penal colony. However, to the contrary, Bigge findings, which were presented to the House of Commons in London, were positive about the success of the penal experiment in Australia, and it supported the continuance of the penal colony. Nicola and I had discovered that Richard Kippax was amongst the convicts that had been interviewed by Bigge and we were eager to access the story.

Commissioner Bigge’s work in Australia comprised both inspection and interviews. His style was to use a scribe to record all interviews for later consideration. We are lucky that his thorough investigative style has afforded our family an amazing and historic account of our early ancestor living in Windsor and Bathurst in New South Wales. Even more amazing was his account of an escape with several other convicts in an attempt to flee New South Wales and walk to Java. The fact that they were severely under equipped was an understatement, but the idea that a few hundred miles would find them on the other side of the country was seriously ill informed and totally ignorant about the size of the continent!

Commissioner Bigge, The Bigge Report on the Colony of New South Wales 1822

Commissioner Bigge, The Bigge Report on the Colony of New South Wales 1822

Commissioner Bigge, The Bigge Report on the Colony of New South Wales 1822

Commissioner Bigge, The Bigge Report on the Colony of New South Wales 1822

Indeed, Richard Kippax was chosen to become a member of John Oxley’s attempt to cross the Blue Mountains. I found an interesting article which gave a wonderful account of Oxley, and was written by a descendant, Gregory Keith Oxley, and called Surveying New South Wales – The Pathfinders. I have included a few excerpts from this document below.

“With the land west of the Great Divide opened forever with the crossing of the Blue Mountains, the mystery to be solved was “Where do all the rivers run?” It was thought by many early settlers that the land beyond the Blue Mountains led to an inland sea, or to the western coast, that was possibly only a few hundred miles away.

To solve these riddles John Oxley proposed a series of expeditions to follow these inland river systems.

Members of Oxleys 1818 Macquarie River Expedition

As requested by John Oxley (Colonial Secretary Index Jan 1818 Reel 6065 , 4/1798 Pp 106)

1. John Oxley esq Surveyor General

2. Mr Evans Assistant

3. C.Fraser Botanist

4. P.Burne Huntsman

5. James Williams Smith

6. William Meggs Butcher

( Meggs obliterated & replaced with George Rouse)

7 —-Simpson

8. J.Blake

9. J.Warner Mr Oxley’s man

10. F.Lloyd Mr Oxley’s man

11. R.Kippas Rough Carpenter

12. R.Watts Labourer

13. Thos Ellis Labourer

14. Thos Cribb Labourer

15. John Dwyer Boat Builders Boy

Note 6:

As replacement(s) were required for Hubbard, John Williams, cooper and Henry Shippey, coach builder would have been included to assist John Dwyer. Shippey, a coach builder replaced Kippas, who had a broken leg.

Commissioner Bigge, was appointed to conduct an exhaustive investigation, into the Government and life of the Colony.

Charles Fraser made a written submission to Commissioner Bigge, accusing William Cox of illegally using Government servants, stock, land and stores for his own use.

As a result Commissioner Bigge conducted hearings at Bathurst, during 1820, to hear evidence from convicts and emancipists who had been involved in working for Cox. Those giving evidence included James Blake, Patrick Byrne, and Richard Kippas.

Kippas, a rough carpenter, who had been listed to go with Oxley, broke a leg and had to be replaced. Interestingly he gave evidence that 5 months after his arrival aboard the Indefatigable he, and several other convicts escaped to the west of the mountains in an endeavour to reach a Dutch settlement on the west coast of Australia. He claimed they reached a point 150 miles west of Bathurst. This would have been within 20 miles(32kms) of present day Condobolin.

One may say it is a most unlikely scenario however why was he chosen to go with Oxley and not confined to the Goal Gang.

The submitted evidence indicated Cox was not only guilty of misappropriating labour, stock, property, stores and materials but also of recommending an excess of pardons for convicts.”

Lieutenant William Cox arrived in the Colony of New South Wales in 1799 aboard the Minerva, as Paymaster for the Regiment. He bought his wife and four of his six young sons. He lived at Dundas, purchasing Brush Farm from John Macarthur, whom he had succeeded as paymaster. In 1809, he resigned his commission, and retired to civilian pursuits. Later Governor Macquarie made him a magistrate of the Hawkesbury region and he earned a reputation for being a humane magistrate and employer. It was no secret that he incensed Commissioner Bigge with his attitudes. Cox earned several good commissions building for the Governor including gaols, schools and the court house in Windsor built to plans by Francis Greenway in 1820. After the crossing of the Blue Mountains, Macquarie had earlier commissioned Cox in 1814 to build the road over the mountains. It was a lucky day for Richard Kippax that, after his failed escape, he was employed by Cox.

I did find an interesting account in an old newspaper, of this hair brained adventure that nearly cost Richard Kippax his life published in the Bathurst Free Press from 1889, which was running a series on early Australian History, and in Part II there were several accounts of famous convict escapes. Later, while searching Trove Digitised Newspaper, I found an article from 1815 in the Sydney Gazette about Kippax’s ill-fated journey.

Bathurst Free Press and Mining Journal, 12 January 1889

Below is an email from Nicola, dated 21 February 2012, who also lent me about a wonderful book she had purchased called Tour to Hell by David Levell which goes someway to explaining why it was that Richard Kippax and his escapees thought they might have reached civilisation just over the Blue Mountains.

Hi Virginia

Thanks for the photos. Your previous email inspired me to go to Rookwood on the hunt but i didn’t look for William Henry because I thought you might already have it.

If I get a chance I might go back soon – it is only 20 minutes from Bexley.

Attached is the excerpts from the book 

“Tour To Hell – Convict Australia’s Great Escape Myths” by David Levell from 2008.

The book is an account of the early convict years and the “escape myths” held by convicts e.g. some were convinced that a white civilisation existed in the nearby bush, or that Timor was a short distance overland, presumably because Timor would have been the next port of call after Sydney for many convict vessels.

 

It is very exciting about the UK contact.  I think it is quite hard to track down the parents of convicts but the National Archives have some records that could help.

Enjoy Bathurst.  

cheers Nicola

David Levell in his book Tour to Hell, writes about an even earlier attempted escape by John Ablett, a convict working as William Cox’s groom, who took his master’s dogs for a “walk” one day, intent on walking to Timor, at least a year before Richard Kippax’s disastrous journey. A year later, rather than be punished for this escape bid, Cox pressed for Ablett to be granted a ticket of leave by Governor Macquarie.

“As Ablett said later, “I don’t know of any other of his servants who got their liberty in the same way”. It was a complete turnaround for a man who, only a year before, had been reduced to eating his dogs while trying to beat an escape route through the bush to Timor. He made no more attempts to run, but after returning to duty at Clarendon he may well have inspired imitators.” David Levell, Tour to Hell, page 188

David Levell also referred to a Sydney Gazette article of 2 December 1815, The Gazette recorded afterwards that Kippas and his companions had “supposed possible to effect their escape from hence to New Guinea, by the way of the newly discovered Country to the Westward of the Blue Mountains”. Five years later Kippas gave a statement which suggests he thought of New Guinea as an overland Dutch colony.”

The Sydney Gazette recounts the tale of a fugitive party of eight escapees, and their “chimerical and absurd attempt that gross ignorance almost ever suggested to man.” It may have seemed light hearted, and the convicts may not have been punished due to the appalling state of health that they were in, however, it cost one man his life. Richard Kippax’s good friend John Haigh tragically did not survive the expedition. John Haigh was with Kippax at the Yorkshire Assizes standing side by side during their trials, Richard for highway robbery and John for sheep stealing; both were sentenced to death, later commuted to transportation for life aboard the Indefatigable and then both sent to Windsor.

“The dismal crawl back to Bathurst began the next morning. Although saved from immediate starvation, they were rapidly running out of trade goods. Soon, too weak to eat the nettles, they were existing solely on mint tea. Two days of this diet left one man, John Haigh too sick to continue. Leaving him in the care of the strongest man, the five others struggled onwards. Shortly afterward they had their last meeting with Aborigines who swapped a few possums for a hat. Berries sustained them for the next three days, but they could only stagger two or three miles a day before collapsing with exhaustion. On the third day, while lying on the ground half-dead from hunger and exposure, they had the lifesaving vision of a horseman riding toward them, accompanied by another man on foot.” David Levell, Tour to Hell, page 192

“The survivors were not punished, but they endured a long convalescence. Kippas went to Bathurst with William Cox in January 1817, where he was kept busy building stockyards and sheep hurdles. He wasn’t the only convict dreamer pioneering the interior. In March 1818 John Ablett joined the very first party of permanent settlers at Bathurst, granted fifty acres on the Macquarie River’s east bank.” David Levell, Tour to Hell page 194

Sydney Gazette, 2 December 1815

London Times March 1814

Hull Packet & Original Weekly Commercial, Literary & General Advertiser Nov 1813

 

Fact Sheet for Hannah Howell 1795-1871

After the death of Richard Kippax in 1839, Hannah, at 45 years of age, quickly forms a relationship with another convict, Philip Thoroughgood. Philip was convicted as a horse stealer, and arrived in the colony of New South Wales in 1828 aboard the Phoenix. Philip and Hannah have four children.

Phillip (1840-1903), Mary Ann (1843-1910), George (1846-1894) and Henry (1851-1927).

Doing the mathematics on these children, it places Hannah as a plus fifty-year-old woman still having children, and I hesitated to collect these records at first. While not disputing the births of these children, I can’t help wondering about the correctness of her birth date, and question the age details given at her death. Given that Ann Germaine was Samuel’s partner up until about 1805, I have seen other researchers have placed Hannah’s birth as late as 1803.

http://australianroyalty.net.au/individual.php?pid=I25321&ged=purnellmccord.ged

Australia, Death Index 1787-1985:

Name: Richard Kippas
Death Date: 1839
Death Place: New South Wales
Registration Year: 1839
Registration Place: Sydney, New South Wales
Volume Number: V1839507 23A

Australia, Births and Baptisms, 1792-1981:

Name: George Thorogood
Gender: Male
Baptism Age: 0
Birth Date: 19 Jan 1846
Baptism Date: 20 Dec 1846
Baptism Place: St. John, Ashfield, New South Wales, Australia
Residence Date: 1846
Residence Place: New South Wales, Australia
Father: Philip Thorogood
Mother: Hannah
FHL Film Number: 993956

In much the same way that I discovered that my ancestor Richard Kippax was a convict, I literally stumbled across this post in ancestry, as soon as I added Samuel Howell into my ancestry.com tree as the father of Hannah Howell.

Nicola Paul posted on her ancestry.com family tree in September 2011 this story:

Extract from “The Second Fleeters” Author M Flynn 1993 

HOWELL, SAMUEL (c1772-1835)

“Samuel Howell was sentenced to death at the 5 March 1789 Winchester (Hampshire) Assizes with Mary Jones (qv) and Joseph England (who was pardoned in April) for burglary on 21 August 1788 of the house of Elizabeth Gearle, widow (since deceased) at Over Wallap. A large quantity of clothing and 96 halfpence had been stolen.  Howell was reprieved to transportation for life the following month and was sent on board the Portsmouth hulk Lion on 7 August 1789, age given as 16. He was embarked on the Scarborough, transported on 29 November 1789.

Good behaviour in the colony earned Howell a conditional pardon in June 1800. He was employed as a constable at Sydney in 1801 and was described as a smith there in 1814.  He had been living with or married to an unnamed woman, but their marriage had broken down by March 1805 when he placed a notice in the Sydney Gazette disclaiming responsibility for her debts.  In 1822, he was employed by the merchant and manufacturer Simeon Lord in the Sydney district.  In 1828, age given as 63, he was employed as a blacksmith by William Bruce in Pitt Street, Sydney.  He died in May 1835 and was buried on the 12th, described in the register of St Phillips, Sydney as a blacksmith, aged 70.”

An online website called Australian Royalty.net.au (link provided previously) was a wonderful source of information about Samuel Howell and placed there was an excerpt from an English Newspaper in 1789.

“On Thursday the Assizes for this County began at the Castle of this City, before Sir William Henry Ashhurst, Knt. and the Honourable Francis Buller, Esq. when the eight following prisoners received judgment of DEATH, viz. William Dungan, alias Quin, charged with feloniously and burglariously breaking and entering the house of George Monro, in the Neighbourhood of Havant, in this County, and stealing divers articles of plate, and other things, his property. mary Jones, Samuel Howell, and Joseph England, charged on a violent suspicion of feloniously and burglariously breaking and entering the dwelling house of Elizabeth Gentle, in the Parish of Wallop, in this County, and stealing divers sorts of apparel and other things, her property. ..
This morning, before the Judges left this City, Edward Belton, John Trewman, Mary Jones, Samuel Howell, and Joseph England, were reprieved; and William Dungan, John Winbow and John Bridger, are left for execution.”
Hampshire Chronicle Mon 9 Mar 1789 p. 3

Shortly after I found this post by Betty Swain on her ancestry.com family tree:

Scarborough was a transport ship of 430 tons, built at Scarborough, Yorkshire in 1782. She formed part of the First Fleet, which commenced European settlement of Australia in 1788. Her master was John Marshall, and the surgeon was Dennis Considen. She left Portsmouth on 13 May 1787, carrying 208 male convicts, and arrived at Port Jackson, Sydney, Australia, on 26 January 1788. On leaving Port Jackson on 5 May 1788, in company with the Lady Penrhyn, she travelled to China. On 17 May 1788, she landed at Lord Howe Island for birds and vegetables, and arrived in England on 15 June 1789.She returned to New South Wales with the notorious Second Fleet. In company with Surprize and Neptune she sailed from England with 253 male convicts on 19 January 1790. Her master was again John Marshall and the surgeon was Augustus Jacob Beyer. She arrived at the Cape of Good Hope on 13 April 1790, and spent 16 days there, taking on provisions, and 8 male convicts from HMS Guardian, which had been wrecked after striking an iceberg. She and Neptune parted from Surprize in heavy weather and arrived at Port Jackson on 28 June, 160 days out from England. During the voyage 73 convicts died (28%) and 96 (37%) were sick when landed. Dennis Considen (died 1815) was an Irish-born surgeon, best known for his pioneering role in the use of Australian native plants for pharmaceutical use, especially eucalyptus oil, which he used to treat the convicts. He sailed with the First Fleet as surgeon on the Scarborough which transported English convicts to Port Jackson, Australia, in 1788.

I did some reading into the Second Fleet and discovered that the treatment of the convicts was vastly different to that of the First Fleet. The Second Fleet comprised six ships, Guardian, Justinian, Lady Juliana (which sailed earlier), Surprize, Neptune and Scarborough.

Scarborough, convict transportation ship, by marine artist Frank Allen

“Lady Juliana arrived June 3, 1790, was found to carry not food but female convicts, mainly elderly and infirm.  Justinian, arrived June 20, brought food and news that the principal store ship, Guardian, had founded off the Cape of Good Hope.

The ships carried the first detachment of the New South Wales Corps to replace the Marines whose officers object to performing civilian or judicial duties.  The Corps under command of Captain Nicholas Nepean, has among its officers Captain Hill, Lieutenant Edward Abbott and Lieutenant John Macarthur.

Much indignant comment has been aroused by conditions aboard the ships.  For the long journey from Home 1,200 convicts were packed into them.  The ships were under charter from private contractors who cut rations to starvation limits and neglect cleanliness in order to save money and increase their profits.

The Chaplain, Reverend Richard Johnson, who boarded the transports on arrival and denounced the conditions he saw as horrifying.  Convicts lay between decks almost naked and lacking bedding and beds.  Many were in irons.  Scurvy, dysentery and fever were rife.  Reverend Johnson saw poor, fettered wretches die before his eyes.  The bodies were thrown overboard and allowed to lie upon the rocks.

His Excellency, Governor Phillip has severely censured the commanders of the transports and ordered all bodies to be buried on the north shore.  The sick has been accommodated in hospital and in emergency hospital tents. There are 488 persons receiving attention: 267 are reported dead on the voyage.” Cheryl Timbury, 25 January 2016 Newsletter, First Fleet Fellowship, Victoria Inc.

From what I could glean from my research, the contractors for the Second Fleet were paid in London per head, and didn’t really worry too much about how many convicts actually arrived in Sydney, or if they were well looked after. It turns out that the contractors had been employed previously, bringing cargoes of slaves from Africa to America, and after the English lost the American War of Independence, this previously lucrative business tailed off. It is a shocking reflection on their past treatment towards African slaves, and the conditions under which they must have suffered. Captain Arthur Philip was apparently crestfallen when he discovered the state of the convicts aboard the Second Fleet, not only had the Colony nearly starved to death due to lack of provisions and crop failure, they now had hundreds of convicts to recuperate under dire circumstances.

I can only lament that my ancestor Samuel Howell committed his felony a year too late to be included in the First Fleet, however, my admiration and appreciation of Samuel is enormous. He was obviously a survivor, and while his relationships to his wife Ann Germaine, and later to his partner Bridget Carty ended in failure, the Census showed him caring and providing for his family as best he could. He must have been grateful that, at the age of 16, he was given a new chance, in a new country with the opportunity to turn his life around.

It was a fascinating research experience for me to find each record for the Howells, as well as searching Trove digitised newspapers to find small advertisements and articles placed into local newspapers about their lives. In collecting Census Records, Convict Indents, Gaol Deliveries, Coronial Enquiries and Orphanage Records for Samuel Howell’s family I was taken back in time to view their complex lives, and their struggles to survive in the harsh penal colony of New South Wales.

New South Wales, Australia, Convict Indents 1788-1842

Samuel’s trial is listed as Winchester and the boat he sailed on was the Scarborough.

Australian Convict Transportation Register, Second Fleet

This record gives Samuel’s date of trial as 5 March 1789, and lists his sentence as life.

I consider this record below to be Samuel Howell’s marriage record to Ann Jarmy and I think I was the first researcher to find and publish this fact.

Samuel Holloway

 in the Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950

Name: Samuel Holloway
Spouse Name: Ann Jermis
Marriage Date: 1797
Marriage Place: New South Wales
Registration Place: Sydney, New South Wales
Registration Year: 1797
Volume Number: V

Australian Convict Transportation Registers – Third Fleet, 1791

Ann Jarmy (sic), Bishop Thompson and Charles Barwick were committed for the same crime at the Norwich Assizes on 26 July 1790, and convicted for 7 years and transported on the Mary Ann, and part of the Third Fleet in 1791.

Samuel Howell and Ann Jarmy married in 1797, they already have three children, Henry Howell (1794-1831), Hannah Howell (1795-1871) and Maria Howell (1796-18161).

Henry Howell married Mary Harriet Hill on 3 April 1815 and they have eight children, Ann 1816, Sarah 1818, William 1820, Ann 1820, George 1823, Harriet 1824, David 1827 and Alexander, 1830.

Henry Howell, housekeeper, his wife Mary, and children Ann 4, Sarah 7 and George 2 years all appear on the New South Wales and Tasmania Convict Muster (1806-1849) for 1825 along with Henry’s father Samuel Howell listed lower down with his family.

1825 New South Wales Census for Henry Howell and family and Samuel Howell and family

Recently I was corresponding with another researcher, Mary Petroff who had assisted me with some old photographs taken by an early Sydney photographer and historian Mrs A.G. Foster in 1901 of Devonshire Cemetery. Her husband Arthur George Foster was also an historian who transcribed very accurately many of the headstones at Devonshire Cemetery in 1901. The Fosters devoted all their spare time in 1901 to the task of recording the headstones, knowing that the cemetery was soon to be razed and the site was to be converted into what is now known as Sydney’s Central Railway. The State Library of New South Wales is the place where this precious collection is housed but at the moment the only way to find the image you require is to trawl through each image one by one. However the results are absolutely so exciting. Whilst searching for another family record I came across this wonderful record for Henry Howell. Henry’s headstone was amongst a large number that were removed to Bunnerong Cemetery, however, after another relocation to Botany Pioneer Cemetery his headstone did not survive the second re-location.

Transcription of the headstone of Henry Howell died 15 August 1831, buried at Devonshire Cemetery, Sydney, Arthur George Foster Collection, Mitchell Library, Sydney (detail)

Devonshire Cemetery Transcriptions for Henry Howell, Image courtesy of the Arthur George Foster Collection, 1901, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales

Henry Howell was buried in a large group of graves associated with his wife Mary Harriet Hill’s family.

Devonshire Cemetery Transcriptions for the family of William and Mary Hill, Image courtesy of the Arthur George Foster Collection, 1901, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales

Devonshire Cemetery Transcriptions for the family of William and Mary Hill (cont.), Image courtesy of the Arthur George Foster  Collection, 1901, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales

As a matter of incredible luck I spied the name Henry Howell in the background of one of Mrs Foster’s many photographs of Devonshire Cemetery. I am sure this very early, historic and precious photograph is the only one the family has for Henry Howell burial.

Headstone of Henry Howell, died 15 August 1831, Devonshire Cemetery, image from the photographs taken by Mrs Foster, Mitchell Library, Sydney, 1901, detail from photo number 434, File number: FL8502237

Hannah Howell, whom I have previously dealt with.

Maria Howell married William Bruce in 1815 and had five sons, Edward 1819, William 1821, James 1823, George, 1825 and Richard 1827. The 1828 New South Wales Australia Census shows Samuel Howell actually working with William Bruce in Sydney.

A Public Notice from Samuel Howell, Sydney Gazette, 24 March 1805

It is evident that the marriage of Samuel Howell and Ann Germaine/Jarmy had broken down in 1805 and Ann was apparently now living with Bishop Thompson, who was tried at Norwich Asssizes on the same day as Ann, and also was transported on the Third Fleet. This obvious former association, whether by necessity or desire, Ann had taken up with Bishop Thompson.

New South Wales and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters, 1806-1849 Ann Germain, 1806

Ann Germain can clearly be seen from this General Muster as housekeeper to B Thompson. The wonderful part of these musters is the continual listing of each convict and the ship that they were transported on. Ann Germain was transported on the Mary Ann, a ship from the Third Fleet.

Ann Germain and Bishop Thompson had two children, Charles (1805-1811) and Sophia Bishop (1808-). I would suggest from the date of Charles’ birth, this could well have been the reason for Samuel placing the Public Notice in the Sydney Gazette in March 1805, stating he was not responsible for his wife’s debts.

Ann Germain also had a relationship with James Eager and she had a child Diana (1820) who was listed on the NSW Census for 1824 and sadly Ann is listed as having died the year before.

New South Wales 1824 Census, Windsor, listing Ann and Diana Germaine

I was then able to confidently collect Ann Howell’s death record showing that Ann died in Windsor in 1823.

 Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985

Name: Ann Howell
Death Date: 1823
Death Place: New South Wales
Registration Year: 1823
Registration Place: Windsor, New South Wales
Volume Number: V18235686 28

Headstone for Ann Howell, died 23 March 1823, St Matthew’s Anglican Church Cemetery, Windsor. Photo from FindAGrave taken by WW.

It was wonderful to find that Ann Howell’s grave survives today in Windsor, buried with her son in law William Huddy Perry (1802-1872) the husband of her daughter, Diana Hague/Eagar/Edgar (1810-1887). Diana is also buried at Windsor in an unmarked grave.

New South Wales, Australia, Colonial Secretary’s Papers, Special Bundles 1788-1856

This record notes that Samuel Howell has a large family and he is sponsored by D. Wentworth.

Event Date 10 Sep 1818
Event Description On list of persons to receive grants of land in 1818
Comments Of Sydney
Page 49
Samuel Howell

New South Wales and Tasmania Convict Muster (1806-1849) for 1822

The 1822 Muster lists Samuel Howell and three of his children from his second marriage to Bridget Carty, Mary 5, Samuel 3 and John 1, and Henry Howell, baker, Samuel’s son from his first marriage to Ann Germain, together with Henry’s wife Mary Howell nee Hill and their three young children, Mary 5, Samuel 3 and John 1 year. I later discovered that the reason Bridget did not appear on this 1822 census was because she was in gaol as an accessory to the Bradley murder, which was well covered in the newspapers. Bridget Carty was transported for 7 years in 1815 aboard the Alexander.

Sydney Gazette 12 October 1822

New South Wales, Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930, Sydney 1822

Bridget Howell is admitted to Parramatta Women’s Gaol otherwise known as Parramatta Women’s Factory in 1822, listed as a convict transported on the Alexander.

Monitor 23 April 1828

Bridget Howell was sent to Gaol at the Parramatta Factory for the second time in 1828 for receiving stolen property, and according to the Howell Genealogy, an online website which thoroughly accounts for Samuel Howell’s large and dysfunctional family.

On both occasions, Bridget was listed as a Third-Class prisoner, the harshest class of prisoners at the Female Factory, “kept to hard labour, such as moving earth, breaking stones, etc, and is also deprived of tea and sugar.”

New South Wales, Australia, Gaol Description and Entrance Book 1818-1930 for 1828

1828 Census for Parramatta Women’s Factory listing Bridget Howell, aged 39, convict of the Alexander, 1813, transported for 7 years.

Samuel Howell and Bridget Carty had four children, Mary Ann Howell (1818-1876), Samuel Howell (1819), John Howell (1819-1823) and William Howell (1822-1823)

Mary Ann Howell married John McGrath in 1836 and they had eight children, Ann (1837), John (1829), Jane (1841-1932), Theresa (1843-1910), Bridget (1848-1916), Emma (1849), Joseph (1851-1890), Samuel (1855) and Mark (1858)

Australia, Birth Index, 1788-1922
Name Mary Howell
Birth Date 1818
Birth Place New South Wales
Registration Year 1818
Registration Place Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Father Samuel Howell
Mother Bridget
Volume Number V18184395 18
Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950
Name Mary A Howell
Spouse Name John Mc Grath
Marriage Date 1836
Marriage Place New South Wales
Registration Place Sydney New South Wales
Registration Year 1836
Volume Number V

Mary Ann had a difficult upbringing, which I discovered from records indicating that she had been placed in an orphanage after her mother was gaoled for the second time in 1828

N.S.W. Admissions to Orphans School 1817-1833 for Mary Ann Howell in 1831

Mary Ann Howell’s parents are listed as Samuel and Bridget Howell on this 1828 record. Interestingly Bridget is also known as Cassidy on this record. Mary, aged 10, was admitted on 12 June 1828 and on the far-right hand side of the record admission Mary Ann’s date of birth is given as 22 Feb 1820.

N.S.W., Admissions to Orphan Schools, 1817-1833 for Mary Ann Howell in 1829

It is again recorded that Mary Howell, aged 10, was admitted to Orphans School on 12 June 1828 and lists her parents as Samuel and Bridget Howell, and Bridget’s address is given as “Factory”, and Mary is listed as a child of a convict. The next records I capture are when Bridget makes an application by letter for Mary’s removal from The Female’s Orphans School.

Application for Removal from Orphans School 1817-1833 for Mary Ann Howell in 1832

Application for Removal from Orphans School 1817-1833 for Mary Ann Howell in 1832

It would seem that a change in circumstance was behind the application letters for the removal of Mary Ann Howell from Orphans School. Although Bridget signs her name to the letter as Bridget Howell it seems that Bridget has been married by Father Therry to Mr Gallice, and together they are industriously running a shop. It would appear that Bridget has reformed her ways and she is to be given a second chance as the mother of Bridget. It is nice to know that Bridget was earnest in her pleading letter for Mary Ann to be released from the orphanage.

1828 NSW Census for 1828

This census I had previously collected for Samuel Howell of the Scarborough, and as I mentioned earlier, Samuel, a blacksmith was working for his son-in-law Mr McGrath of Pitt Street. I also noticed that the son of Samuel and Bridget Carty, also called Samuel, aged 8, listed as BC (Born Colony), was living with Andrew Gillis of Hunter Street, Sydney. After collecting the record for Mary Howell’s release from Orphans School, the name Gallice seemed to me to suggest that this was possibly the same man mentioned in both records. While Bridget was in gaol, Andrew Gillis was looking after Samuel and Bridget’s son. I then determined to further challenge this jigsaw puzzle by trying to find Andrew’s 1828 Census and find out his occupation, and that would possibly be the Gallette’s shop referred to in Bridget’s plea letter.

1828 NSW Census for Andrew Gillis

Andrew is listed as a 30-year-old dealer, living in Hunter Street, who arrived in New South Wales aboard the Isabella 2 in 1820, transported for 7 years. I became interested in Andrew and further research on Trove Digitised Newspapers I found that Andrew sold up in Sydney in 1835, moved to the country, killed a man and was executed for his crime in 1837. An astonishing, but possibly not surprising culmination to my research of this very dysfunctional family group.

Sydney Gazette, 16 February 1837

NSW Gaol Entrance Description 1834-1838

This record confirmed that indeed it was Andrew Gillis of the Isabella 2 who was executed in 1837. I am sure that Bridget’s relationship with Andrew Gillis had ended several years earlier because I picked up a newspaper clipping advertising the sale of the contents of Gillis shop on Cnr Bligh and Hunter Streets, stating that he was preparing to retire into the country.

Sydney Gazette, 5 February 1835

NSW Gaol Entrance Book 1839-1840

This record for Bridget Howell of the Alexander is dated 15 May 1839 showing her arrest on account of drunkenness. This is a sad final record for Bridget, and I can’t find a death record for her at this stage. It is hoped that she was looked after by her daughter Mary Ann, who seemed to be her only surviving child.

Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985

Name: Samuel Howell
Death Date: 1835
Death Place: New South Wales
Registration Year: 1835
Registration Place: Sydney, New South Wales
Volume Number: V18351803 19

NSW Coroner’s Inquests 1821-1937

Samuel Howell’s death record, burial transcription and Coroner’s report show that Samuel, a blacksmith, died at Parramatta Road, Sydney on 11 May 1834, and the cause of death was recorded as “a visitation of God”. Samuel was 66 years old. His parents were not listed on this death record, it is possible that we will never know confidently the names of his parents, but it is certain that his crime took place near Winchester, England, as he was tried at the Winchester Assizes. Presumably he lived in this area before his crime. Some ancestry.com trees list his parents as Bartholomew Walter Howell and Ann Quoll, of Kent, England.

For now, this is where I finish my chapter on the Kippax and Howell Families.

Virginia Rundle 4 August 2017, updated March 2019

 

Bibliography:

Ancestry.com records and help from the the family trees of Nicola Paul, Betty Swain and Sue Adams

Trove Digitised Newspapers

Howell Genealogy

Arthur George Foster Papers, 1901, Devonshire Cemetery Transcriptions, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales

Mrs Arthur George Foster Photographic Collection on glass, 1901, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales

AustralianRoyalty.net.au

Sydney Town Hall online archives

New South Wales State Archives

New South Wales State Library

Australian National Library

2016 Newsletter, First Fleet Fellowship, Victoria Inc.

The Second Fleeters, M Flynn 1993

English Newspapers mentioning John Kipas, courtesy of Nicola Paul

Dictionary of Sydney, online resource

Parramatta Female Factory 1826, watercolour by Augustus Earle, Australian National Library

Plan of Parramatta Female Factory by Standish Lawrence Harris, Mitchell Library, Sydney

Surveying New South Wales – The Pathfinders, Gregory Keith Oxley

Charles Percy Pickering Collection, State Library of New South Wales

Marilyn Rowan Transcription Agency

Rundle Family Photo Collection

Robson Family Photo Collection

Tour to Hell, David Levell, 2008

 

9 comments On The Kippax and Howell Family of Sydney

  • Peter Brangwin Robson

    Hi,
    Ken Robson was my Uncle…he was very passionate about our family tree for many of my growing up years. He was very close to my Father who was his older brother. It was me that contacted your mother when he died in 1987. I am sorry to here that your own mother died at the beginning of last year. He often spoke well of her. I looked after Ken almost to his death in my home.
    I do believe his original family trees and other personal effects are located in the Wollongong Council Library.
    In good Robson tradition I had two wonderful sons and a daughter yielding 14 grandchildren. Sadly we lost number two son to a road accident in 2013 leaving behind a wife and 7 children. Our oldest son Andrew is an Anglican Minister and knows a lot of the Robson history as I computerise most of what Ken produced in the earlier days.

    • Hello Peter,
      How wonderful to hear from you after all this time. I knew Ken well. He visited our home several times and offered my mother great sympathy at a time when she was so sad after my dear father died. We visited Ken in Paddington just before his death. My sister has a copy of Ken’s Robson Family History, written at a time before the internet. It was an amazing document. I had my DNA done a few years back for the Kilpatrick project on my dad’s mother’s side, with no results. However I left my DNA on the site and just last month I had confirmation finally about the Veitch family. Not your side though. So it does work!

      How kind of you to contact mum, I do appreciate this. Dearest mum was 94 and lived a full and wonderful life. I will go to Wollongong Library where they have a lot of info and photo albums as well. So pleased you have continued the Robson line. Ken would be so happy! His work was amazing.

      If you ever come to Sydney, please look me up, as my sister and I would be so pleased to meet you.

      My email is virginia@arundle.com

      Kind regards
      Virginia Rundle nee Robson

  • just discovered all this lovely info…to which i can claim connection[via the samuel kippax family] . i have much to read but have been reminded of something you might like to know if you are not aware yet…Larke [Robson] and Neave [Kippax] along with Carter owned grenville motors see
    http://www.bmcexperience.com.au/bmce-issue17/snowy-land-rovers

    • Hello Meryl, Thanks for your reply, and thrilled you like my chapter. I have just written up The Robson Family of Sydney and I have placed quite a bit of information there about Larke Hoskins and the early motor car industry. Perhaps you could email me your connection to Samuel Kippax and I will place you into my ancestry.com family tree? virginia@arundle.com Funnily enough I was stuck in a traffic jam in William Street, Kings Cross yesterday and when I looked at the large brick building I saw it is still called Grenville House. I had known that Larke Hoskins was there in William Street, but had not realised the connection with the building until yesterday. Now your email! Next time I will stop and take a photo. Kind regards Virginia

  • Hi,
    Very much appreciate this information-laden resource. My name is Phillip Hazleton. I am the eldest son of Leila Warren Kippax, daughter of Arthur Craigie Kippax who is the brother of Alan Kippax and Roy Kippax.
    Their father (my great grandfather) was Arthur Percival Howell Kippax who married ….. and here is where I can find very little ….. Sophia Estelle Craigie, sister to Janet and Kate (I was told half a century ago) and daughter of Captain James Craigie (again … I was told he was an Irish sea captain). My mother describes her grandmother (Sophia Estelle Craigie) as “black Irish”. My problem …. I can find no trace of Captain James Craigie, his forebears or descendants! I am wondering if you’ve come across any trace of them? Kind regards, Phillip

  • Hi Virginia.
    A fantastic resource, extremely well researched and set out. I have only come across your material recently, but it has been a wonderful help in breaking down some brick walls.
    Especially in relation to the Faughtley / Wright nomenclature. It revealed my 4th Great Aunt, Esther Elizabeth Onions, was buried as a ‘Wright’ not a ‘Faughtley’. She had married George Faughtley in 1835, but subsequently he was known as George Robert Faughtley Wright. Hey presto…. I had found her.
    Thanks again.
    Regards Lee

  • Hi Virginia, I enjoyed reading your lengthy research today. Much of it was familiar to me as I have researched my line over the years.
    I am Leila Kippax, Meryl Johnston’s cousin and named after Phillip Hazelton’s mother Leila Warren Kippax. ‘Uncle Arthur’ (Arthur Craigie Kippax) and ‘Aunty Mainie’ (not sure about the spelling) were my god parents and I remember them well.
    My dad Dudley and Meryl’s mother Neta were 2 of Cecil Waugh Kippax’s children. Cecil’s parents were Samuel Kippax and Eliza Waugh (nee Robertson).

    • Hello Leila,
      Did you ever teach at Murwillumbah High School in the early 1970’s? If so, I remember you well as you taught me in 1A English!
      Kind regards,
      Murray Wale

  • hello virginia. I sent you an email re john kippax. have you received it?

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