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William Williams (1814-1864) |
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PART 2: ANCESTORS’ CHARTS (parents of Joan Gaffey): INDIVIDUAL SUMMARIES |
Line of Descent to Joan Gaffey
William
Williams
(Great
grandfather) |
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| Father | William WILLIAMS (bet 1775 & 1777- 1840) | ||
| Mother | Julia LEAHY (bet 1778 & 1780- 1840) | ||
| Birth |
Sep 28 1814 in Pitt Town, near Windsor[1]
[2] |
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| Baptism | Mar 27 1815 in Windsor[3] | ||
| Occupation |
Farmer [4] |
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| Death |
Dec 31 1863 (age 49)[5] |
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| Burial |
Jan 1864 in Windsor C of E (St. Matthews) NSW
(age 49)[6] |
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| Marriage | Mary Anne PENDERGAST (1848 in St. Matthews, Windsor) [7] | ||
| Children |
James William WILLIAMS (1848- 1902) Sophia Jane WILLIAMS (1850-1854)
Charles Edwin WILLIAMS (1852-1932)
Elizabeth Mary WILLIAMS (1854-1922)
Sydney Edgar WILLIAMS (1853-1854)
Wilfred Thomas WILLIAMS (1856-)
Thomas Herbert WILLIAMS
(1858- 1918), married
Mary Ellen Hyde, 1880 Woollahra Sarah E WILLIAMS (1861-) |
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William was a “Currency lad”, the term given the
first white Australian-born colonists.
Like the many others who merited the description, William was the
colonial-born son of two convicts.
Although William had two older sisters, his parents didn’t get
around to getting married until just before William’s own birth in 1814.
Commonly for the time, there are various conflicting estimates of
his age and year of birth, but the baptism record and the 1828 census
agree on the 1814 date. It
appears he had also had a second name, Morgan, recorded only in the death
certificate of his widow, Mary Anne.
He grew up on a small farm on the fertile, but frequently-flooded
river flats of the Hawkesbury River, near Windsor in Sydney’s
north-west, and probably escaped going to school - for the simple reason
there weren’t any in the area at that early stage of settlement, and as
the only son of his farmer father, he would have been needed in the
fields.
The colonial shortage of eligible females meant that he didn’t
marry until comparatively late, when he was 34, to the 17-year-old
granddaughter of another convict couple, the Pendergasts, who had large
landholdings in the Windsor-Hawkesbury district. |
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William and Mary Anne had eight children in their 15 years of marriage; at least one of the children died in infancy. William himself died at a comparatively young age, just 49 years, when his youngest child, Thomas, was only five years old.
William's
life was largely unnoticed in official records - even his death
certificate is missing, and part of his gravestone inscription has been
obliterated by time and weather. However,
the Sydney Morning Herald recorded his death on December 31, 1863,
"at his residence, Breakfast Creek, near Windsor, after a painful
illness, aged 49, leaving a wife and 6 children".
Breakfast Creek was probably a purely local name for the area of
Eastern Creek, which feeds into South Creek, a tributary
of the Hawkesbury.
In his
Will, made shortly before his death, William left his property to his wife
Mary Anne. The land was
described as being “between th
He was
buried next to his father in the churchyard alongside the historic St.
Matthew's Anglican Church at Windsor.
Also buried with William was his young son, Sydney, who had died
nearly 10 years earlier, aged only four months.
A relic of the early European settlement, in the
farming area just south of Windsor, NSW, where William and Mary Ann
Williams raised their family. |
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[1]
NSW Registrar of Births Deaths &
Marriages. NSW Birth
Certificate (son Thomas).
[3]
As above
[4]
NSW Registrar of Births Deaths &
Marriages. NSW Birth
Certificate (son Thomas).
[6]
As above [7] Their son's birth certificate gives the marriage date as 1847; church records on microfiche give it as 1848
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