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Francis Burns (1808-1891) |
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PART 1:BYRNES FAMILY
ANCESTORS’ CHARTS : (Parents of Peter Byrnes):
INDIVIDUAL SUMMARIES (Scroll down for full list): |
- |
Line of Descent to Peter Byrnes:
Francis
Burns
(Great
Grandfather) |
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Father |
Michael Burns[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Mother | Mary Tennion | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Birth |
1808, Longford (Parish of Ballymacormick), Ireland[2] |
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| Occupation | tailor[7], soldier | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Enlisted |
Jul 11 1825 in Mullingar, Co. Westmeath (age 17)[3] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Discharged |
Jul 20 1849 in Wellington, New
Zealand (age 41)[4] |
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| Lived at: |
Wellington, New Zealand (bet
1845 and 1859)[5] |
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| Death |
Apr 12 1891 in Dunwich Benevolent Asylum (Stradbroke
Island) Queensland from senile decay[6] |
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| Marriage | Mary WILSON (no documentation) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Children |
James BYRNES (1857-1932) [stepson?] married Grace Pobar, Toowoomba 1882 |
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Francis Burns, an Irish lad from County Longford, joined the British
Army in 1825 when he was just 17 years old. In the Army, he learned his trade of tailoring, an
occupation that he followed on and off over the years after he left the
service.
His regiment, the 65th, known as the Royal Tigers, was
stationed in Ireland until 1829 when it was sent overseas, to the West
Indies and North America (Canada).
The
regiment served many long years on foreign soil, returning home only
briefly to Ireland in 1843. Then,
another long voyage, this time escorting convict ships to Van Dieman’s
Land, in 1845.
The Regiment was split into several detachments for the voyage, with
Private Burns assigned to the Pestonjee
Bomanjee. Also on board
were Private William Sexton, his wife Mary, and newborn daughter.
Some dozen or more years later, Francis was to become Mary’s
second partner.
The convict convoy landed at Hobart Town on December 30, 1845, and
soon after the soldiers headed back to Sydney to join the
Levant,
and the rest of the regiment in New Zealand. The convict convoy landed at Hobart Town on December 30, 1845, and soon after the soldiers headed back to Sydney to join the Levant, and the rest of the regiment in New Zealand |
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As the 1840s came to a close, it appears that the British Government was keen to cut back on some of its military expenses, and decided that such a large complement of soldiers was not warranted in New Zealand. A programme of encouraged discharges was undertaken, with soldiers being offered inducements to return to civilian life[8]. After nearly 25 years in the service, Francis and William Sexton were among those to decide that life in Wellington away from the barracks, might be a reasonable alternative.
On his discharge from the Army
in 1850, Francis’ details were given as:[9]
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Soldiers
(names unknown) from the 65th Regiment, in New Zealand, at the
time Francis was a Private in the Regiment.
(Photo:
William Main,
Wellington
through a Victorian Lens,
Millwood
Press, 19 Ottawa Road, Wellington, 1972)
On
his Soldier’s Discharge Papers, Francis was described as “5ft 9in tall
with dark hair, hazle (sic) eyes and a sallow complexion”.
It appears that Francis was illiterate, signing his discharge
papers with an ”X”.
With his Army pension of 1/- per diem and working in his old
trade as a tailor, Francis settled in Port Nicholson (now Wellington).
He is named in a list of jurors for the area in 1852.
An 1852 New Zealand Government Gazette uses the spelling BYRNS, with
an address in Hawkstone street, while the later lists (1854,’57,’58)
use BURNS, in Tinakori Road. All
give "tailor" as his occupation.
In an 1858 electoral roll, his qualification is "Freehold,
Tinakori Road", which is noted as his ‘Place of Abode’.
By the mid-1850s, his fellow soldier-in-arms, William Sexton and his
young family had also settled nearby in Tinakori road.
It appears that at some stage after 1857, Francis became the
de
facto husband of
William’s wife Mary (nee Wilson). The only mentions of Francis' marriage to Mary are on the
death certificate of his (step?) son James, which details his mother’s
marriages to William Sexton and Francis Byrnes, and Mary’s own death
certificate, both of which are vague on details.
However, Mary was never free to marry Francis – William still
lived on, for more than another 20 years.
The Wilson-Sexton-Burns trio gives rise to some speculation.
The 1857 birth certificate of the youngest child Mary Sexton had in
Wellington, New Zealand (with William Sexton as the father of record), is
for a son named James - and Francis Burns’ son James always claimed he
was born in Wellington, New Zealand, around the same time, also to Mary
Wilson. Francis, in all
probability, was James’ step-father, with James taking his
step-father’s name (albeit with a change of spelling).
According to his British Army pension records, Francis moved to
Australia in mid 1859 and his new family settled in Queensland (where Mary
died just a few years later
on a remote property 200 kilometres northwest of Gayndah in 1864).
How the family came to be on the property
Rawbelle,
is not known as the station's records were destroyed by fire in the 1970s
(although Francis probably worked as a shepherd there), but his name and
occupation of tailor are clearly listed on Mary's death certificate, filed
by the manager of the property.
In the mid 1870s, Francis went to live with his step daughter, Sarah
Sexton and her new husband, a printer, William Smith, in Toowoomba.
According to early Queensland electoral rolls, Francis lived with
Sarah and William in their homes around Toowoomba, firstly in Philip
Street, then for more than 10 years in Kent St.
However, by 1889, he had moved away from the Smith family, taking
up residence for a short time in Hume Street.
For many of the earlier years at least, it’s probable another
member of the Smith household was Francis son/stepson, James, who, like
his brother-in-law William, went on to become a printer by trade.
The next official record of Francis is in 1891, when he was
transferred from Brisbane Hospital to the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum on
Stradbroke Island on February 18.
His
admission records note "he has been unable to work for two
years" (at the time of his admission to Dunwich, he was more than 83
years old!).
Francis survived for only two months at Dunwich, dying in April
1891. He was buried in an
unmarked, but numbered grave (no. 931) in Dunwich cemetery, a picturesque
spot overlooking Moreton Bay
A couple of interesting points in the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum
admission records which tends to confirm the speculation above on
Francis’ family - he is recorded as never having married, and therefore
no children are listed, and that he had “no relatives, no cash, no
property” in the Colony. However,
in a handwritten note possibly added later (after his death) a name was
written on the record: "Jas. Burns, Govt. Printing Office”, thus
clearly establishing the link with his son James.
(The Government Printing Office was where James worked).
Francis’
unmarked gravesite No. 931 at Dunwich
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[1]
Francis' admission to Dunwich, and his subsequent death certificate
are the only documents found which give his parents' names.
[2]
Francis’ Army discharge papers (WO 97.782).
[3]
as above
[5]
New Zealand Government Gazette. -
Wednesday, February 11, 1852, Jurors' List for District of Port
Nicholson for 1852; Thursday February 9, 1854, Jurors' List for the District
of Wellington, for the Year 1854; Wednesday, February 4, 1857, Jurors' List
for the District of Wellington for the year 1857; Thursday, February 4,
1858, Jurors' List for the District of Wellington for 1858.
[6]
Francis' death certificate
[7]
as above in New Zealand Government Gazette and death certificate, and son James'
marriage certificate.
[8]
See War Office records, correspondence between the Duke of Wellington
and Earl Grey, WO 43 876, which sets out the reasons and the pension
entitlements for such discharged soldiers.
[9]
Hugh and Lyn Hughes, Discharged
in New Zealand: (a record of soldiers of the Imperial Foot Regiments who
took their discharge in New Zealand 1840-1870), New Zealand Society of
Genealogists Inc. 1988. [10 The Army records use both the “Burns” and “Burnes” spelling.
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