Showing posts with label Rookwood Cemetery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rookwood Cemetery. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2014

He carried on valiantly

This post is submitted for the annual Trans-Tasman ANZAC Day Blog Challenge

As I am away from my desk and files I am posting below an edited version of my post from the 2012 challenge.
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William James Gowans enlisted on 17 August 1914  and set sail from Sydney on 20 October 1914 on HMAT Euripides.


His war service file at The National Archives of Australia indicates that Private William James Gowans wrenched his knee while carrying ammunition at Gallipoli on 25/4/1915.  It appears as though Gowans must have carried on with his soldiering activities as he is reported as receiving a bullet wound to the head on 27/4/1915.
A Sydney Morning Herald article  "Heroes of the Dardanelles" on 18/5/1915 reported:

William James Gowans
PRIVATE W. J. GOWANS (Petersham).

Wounded.

 PRIVATE W. J. GOWANS.

Private W. J. Gowans, of B. Company, 4th Battalion, 1st Infantry Brigade, who has been reported wounded, is 24 years or age. He is an engineer by trade, and is a son of Mr. W. P. Gowans, St. Leonards, 188 Albany-road, Petersham.


In a medical report dated 19/11/1915 the following treatment was ordered "Major Wade suggests one month's fun then treatment". 

William, my husband's great-uncle, was 23 years and 10 months when he joined the AIF on the 24th September 1914. He was discharged to Australia on 16th October 1915 on the Beltana and discharged as unfit for service on 13th August 1916. No doubt William felt fortunate in having survived the carnage at Gallipoli.  William received a pension of three pounds per fortnight from the government from 14/8/1916 ; I do not know if he was able to return to his work as an engineer.

William can be counted among the lucky ones who returned to Australia. His luck, however, was shortlived; this notice appeared in The Sydney Morning Herald of 12/5/1919:







GOWANS.-May 10, 1919, in his 29th year. William
James Gowans, late 4th Batt., A.I.F., eldest son of  
William P and Eliza Ann Gowans, of Mena, Eu-
rella-street. Burwood.

Older family members have indicated that William was a victim of the flu epidemic of 1919. William is buried in the Old Presbyterian Section of Rookwood Cemetery. His untended grave surrounded by rubbish is deteriorating; I took my photographs about ten years ago before we cleaned away the undergrowth.  


Sunday, August 15, 2010

Take a Look at Rookwood

I have shamelessly lifted the following from this page on The Rookwood Cemetery Site (I hope they appreciate the publicity):

ROOKWOOD OPEN DAY will be held on Sunday 19th September, 9am-3pm.
Activities throughout the whole Cemetery, including:


Heritage & garden tours
Bus tours
Crematorium and mausoleum tours
Offices open for family enquires
A street parade
Grave-digging demonstrations
Talks on the history of Embalming
Frazer Mausoleum and St Michael’s Chapel open
Delicious food
Books & bric-a-brac
Plants, heritage roses
Kids craft & colouring-in competition
Entertainment & HEAPS MORE!
JUST COME ALONG! No bookings required.
FREE ENTRY.
Gold coin donation for tours & buses
LOTS OF PARKING, FREE SHUTTLE BUS FROM LIDCOMBE STATION.
ROOKWOOD IS AN AMAZING PLACE!
The day is organised by the Friends of Rookwood. The Friends is a voluntary group, whose aims are to raise the public’s awareness of the need to preserve our history and raise money to help with restoration projects within the Cemetery.

More information phone or email friends_of_rookwood@hotmail.com

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Tours at Rookwood

The Rookwood Necropolis in the western suburbs of Sydney is Australia's largest cemetery.

As well as being the final resting place for my maternal grandparents, maternal great-grandmother and a clutch of other relatives it is the last home of many famous Australians. For those searching for deceased ancestors there is an Anglican and General deceased search facility on the cemetery's website.

The Friends of Rookwood provide regular tours of this 17 hectare site near Lidcombe. In addition to day tours there are twilight tours conducted by volunteer guides from this association. Details can be found on the Society's website.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Tombstone Tuesday Downunder



In response to Weekly Genealogy Blogging Prompt #3 I am posting a photo of a family grave in Rookwood Cemetery in Sydney, NSW. One of Sydney's oldest cemeteries Rookwood has been operating since 1867, and is one of the largest cemeteries in Australia. It is managed by five separate demoninational Trusts and an independent Crematorium.

Interred in the grave are two family members

The inscription reads:
In Loving Memory / My dear husband /& our father/Ernest Henry/Norman Gillespie/Speedway Rider/Fatally Injured/Sydney Sports Ground/2nd April 1948/Aged 32 Years/Until we meet again.

A second smaller tablet is inscribed:
Also his Dear Mother/ Eliza A E Pritchard/At Peace/17th April 1962.

There is a picture of a motorcycle etched on a small marble tablet at the base of an urn that is situated in the middle of this double grave.

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