Gransden Family Web Page


Gordon Robert Anderson was born 1 in 1928. He died 2 in 1994. He married Lorna Evelyn Townsend.

Lorna Evelyn Townsend [Parents] was born 1 in 1932. She died 2 in 2002. She married Gordon Robert Anderson.

They had the following children:

  F i Living
  M ii Rick Anderson was born 1 in 1959. He died 2 in 2007.
  F iii Living

James Bullock.James married Margaret Osborne Beattie.

Margaret Osborne Beattie [Parents] was born on 16 Aug 1838 in Ayrshire,Scotland. She married James Bullock.

Other marriages:
Russell, George

Occupation: Dressmaker

Margaret Osbourne Bullock when married(de facto).Husband James Bullock, md
1858 in Goulburn. James died 1882 in Bathurst.

October 1854, Margaret arrives in the Colony per the ship the Columbia with parents and her brothers and their families
Margaret gave her occupation as domestic servant
Margaret & James had 10 children
Margaret must have moved back to Goulburn after husband’s death where she became a dressmaker
1882 Family living at Bradley Street Goulburn (source 1882 Goulburn Directory)
The blanked out area reads:-
Mrs Russell (nee Mrs Bullock), "Dressmaker Incomparable", can
now give really prompt attention to Ladies' Orders.
(Joy Conroy)


William Furber.William married 1 Mary Brian on 1 Jan 1808 in Church of England, Parramatta, St. John's NSW, Australia.

<>An article by Maitland Historian Harry Boyle in the Maitland Mercury on 26 April 2000 recorded particulars of George Furber A George Furber was one of five foundation initiates in Maitland Lodge or Unity on 4 November 1840, the day the lodge was formed The subject of the historical article would have been thirty and so could have been the one who joined Lodge Unity at that time. His father was William Furber and arrived in the Colony in the “Neptune’ in 1795. William married at Penrith on 1 January’ 1808; George was born in 1810. William died in 1811 In January 1813 a “John Smith” was tried at Leicester and sentenced to seven years. He arrived here in 1814 on the “General Hewitt” and in the same year married at Parramatta to the widow Mary Furber In 1817 he was transported to Newcastle for stealing tobacco from his master. He was a well behaved person and was allowed to settle at Wallis Plains. George Furber was John Smith’s stepson and so would have been one of the first settlers in Maitland. By 1830 he was working land and had a convict assigned to him. He cleared the first streets in Maitland, became a landowner in Bank Street, Lawes Street and on the Paterson River. He became the Innkeeper of the George and Dragon. He was affected by the depression of 1840 and was declared insolvent. He had married Mary Muir in 1832 but she died in 1837. He married again to Honorah Curtin who went with him to Queensland and was the only white woman in the area for a long time. There Furber took over “Girkum”, a station which had been abandoned by John Eales because of the fierce nature of aboriginals who had speared shepherds and sheep. He built a store and wharf on the Mary River and opened an Inn. In 1847, he and an employee were building a fence with two aboriginals and at a given signal one aboriginal chopped Furber’s skull while the other killed his employee. Furber later rode 150 miles to lpswich for attention and when he recovered he searched for the aboriginal and shot him. Furber and his son—in—law, Joseph Wilmhurst, were decoyed into an ambush in the bush and surrounded and murdered in December 1855. He had been a pioneer of Maitland and Queensland and died at the young age of 44.
<>Acknowledgements: Maitland Historian Harry Boyle & Maitland Mercury 26 April 2000

Second-Fleet Convict pioneer of Kissing Point
William Furber was born c.1768, and arrived in Australia as a convict, aged about 22, in the Second Fleet <http://www.historyaustralia.org.au/ifhaa/ships/2ndfleet.htm> aboard the “death ship” Neptune on 28 June 1790 (his Convict Indent showed his name as William Philip Forber) 1. He had been committed to Gloucester Castle Gaol on 28 September 1784, charged with the theft of a brown mare from one William Mower in the parish of Berkeley. He was sentenced to death at the March 1785 Gloucester Assizes, but was reprieved soon afterwards to transportation for 14 years and by early 1787 had been sent to the Ceres hulk on the Thames, age given as 19. Coincidentally this hulk was also to house his future father-in-law, Anthony Brian </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0055&tree=DavoTree>, when it was moored at Portsmouth about eighteen months later, but by that time Furber had been moved to the Thames hulk Censor. He stayed on the Censor, labouring on public works, until 12 November 1789 when he was embarked on the Neptune for the trip to Sydney Cove 2.
By all reports the journey of the Second Fleet was fraught with deprivation for the convicts. Of a total of about 1243 convicts who embarked, some 267 died during the trip; 158 on the Neptune alone, and another 124 died soon afterwards. Such was the outcry on the condition of the prisoners on their arrival in Port Jackson that the Master of the Neptune, Donald Trail, escaped prosecution only by absconding. 3
Conditions in the Colony at that time were harsh, with severe food shortages. To make matters worse, HMS Guardian <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Guardian_(1784)>, having been loaded with food and other provisions in response to requests from Governor Phillip, had sunk off the Cape of Good Hope after colliding with an iceberg.
Given these conditions it is not surprising that the authorities encouraged the practice of farming, and in 1795 William Furber, whilst still a convict, was farming 30 acres of land at fertile, heavily-forested Kissing Point, becoming a recognised pioneer of the area. Some of the trees at that time were over 300 feet tall and up to 50 feet in circumference. 4 In 1797 he married Margaret McArthur 5 or McArby 6, who had arrived as a convict on the Indispensible, at St John's Church, Parramatta.
In February 1799 his wife lodged a complaint in the Sydney Magistrates' Court, charging another woman with "having publicly accused her of adultery & fornication, which had occasioned some serious disturbances between her husband and herself". The court found blame on both sides, and both parties agreed to "depart quietly home & live upon amicable terms together" 7
By 1800 he bought his farm, and was obviously industrious, for despite the lack of implements and beasts, by the 1801 Muster he and his wife were "Off Stores" (i.e. self-sufficient in feeding themselves) and had 4 sheep, 8 pigs, 6 acres of wheat and 10 acres ready for maize to be planted. By the following year he had cleared 27 acres, had 12 under wheat and 10 for maize, had 18 hogs, 10 bushels of wheat and 100 bushels of maize in store, and had two Government Servants (i.e. prisoners) working for him 8.
In 1805, by now having served his time and hence a free man, he had 2 acres of potatoes in addition to wheat and maize, and had 61 sheep and 8 goats as well as hogs, and had 3 prisoners and one free man working for him 9. He also had "upwards of 3000 fruit trees of different kinds" 10. In fact Kissing Point, from being "the original oasis of plenty between Australia's first two settlements, went on to become the fruit bowl of the colony" 11. Furber's orchard grew peaches, oranges, guavas and lemons, and on Sunday 10 May 1805 he placed the following advertisement in the Sydney Gazette and NSW Advertiser: "For Sale. By W. Furber, at Kissing Point, a number of peach seedlings of a proper age for transplanting, and, if taken in quantities, will be disposed of at the very low price of 4d. each plant. Also, some very fine vinegar at 8s. per gallon." 12 He also advertised a kangaroo dog for sale in the same year.
In May 1806 he offered a reward for information regarding the disappearance of his hired stock keeper Thomas Rice, a Ticket-of-Leave convict, who had absconded. By then it also appears his marriage had broken down, for in an advertisement in the Sydney Gazette of 29 June he disclaimed responsibility for his wife's debts. 13
In February 1807 he advertised his farm for sale 14, but on 3 October he obtained a loan for £8/18/4 from John Blaxland, elder brother of explorer Gregory, to purchase pigs. 15
On 4 January 1808 at St John's Church, Parramatta he married Mary Brian </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0054&tree=DavoTree> (Bryan) 16, the eldest child, born on 7 April 1792 and thus not yet 16, of Anthony Brian and Elizabeth Dean </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0056&tree=DavoTree> who married on 3 October 1795. Both of Mary's parents were also Second Fleeters, Anthony having arrived on the Surprize and Elizabeth on the Lady Juliana 17.
In the Sydney Gazette of 1 October 1809, William was described as "an early nurseryman who, for years, supplied the market with fruit, seedlings and vinegar" 18. On 4 June of the same year his property was described in the Gazette as "a capital 30-acre farm at Kissing Point with a shingled dwelling place, capital barn, outhouses, pig styles, sheep-shade, a capital orchard, fenced in, containing excellent peach, pear, orange, guava and lemon trees; 12 acres of wheat, 1 of oats and clover, an acre and a half of potatoes; 3 acres of corn planted and most of the ground broke up." 19 About this time another servant absconded.
A son, George </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0051&tree=DavoTree>, was born to the couple on 18 December 1810 20 and baptised 10 February 1811.
On 4 May 1811 and possibly, like many of his fellow Second Fleeters, in failing health, he advertised peach trees for 2/6d., and was seeking a man and wife to farm 18 or 20 acres of his land in return for breaking up 5 acres annually "with the considerable advantage that there are now peach trees on the ground that will be capable of producing 200 bushels of cyder annually" 21.
William Furber died and was buried about 23 July 1811, aged 45 22. Unfortunately his grave can no longer be distinguished, the headstone having been either eroded too badly to be deciphered or vandalised. His widow Mary went on to marry John Smith in 1814. By 1820 many of the early settlers at Kissing Point had gone, their farms losing productivity due to being overworked and under-fertilized, there being a lack of manure in the colony due to insufficient cattle herds.
Compiled by Ian Davidson <http://familyhistory.davoweb.net> Last modified 10 Jan 2007

References
1 RYAN, R.J., The Second Fleet Convicts, Australian Documents Library Pty Ltd, Sydney, 1982
2 FLYNN, Michael, The Second Fleet - Britain's Grim Convict Armada of 1790, Library of Australian History, Sydney, 1993, p.281
3 ibid
4 LEVY, M.C.I., "Wallumetta" - A History of Ryde and its District 1792-1945, Sydney, 1947
5 MUTCH, Thomas D. Index of Births, Deaths & Marriages, 1788-1857, mss
6 ARCHIVES AUTHORITY OF NSW, Marriages Pre-1800 microfiche
7 FLYNN, Michael, op. cit.
8 BAXTER, Carol J. (ed.), Musters & Lists New South Wales & Norfolk Island 1800-1802, Australian Biographical & Genealogical Record, Sydney, 1988
9 BAXTER, Carol J. (ed.), Muster of New South Wales & Norfolk Island 1805-1806, Australian Biographical & Genealogical Record, Sydney, 1989
10 GEEVES, Philip, A Place of Pioneers - The Centenary History of the Municipality of Ryde, Ryde Municipal Council, Sydney, 1970, p.44
11 ibid., p.43
12 Quoted in PACEY, F.S., Ryde 1790-1926, Sydney, 1926, p.39
13 FLYNN, Michael, op. cit.
14 ibid
15 ARCHIVES OFFICE OF NSW, Colonial Secretary's Papers Microfilm reel no. 6043, bundle 4/1727, p. 202 "Statement of Capital advanced by John Blaxland in his Concerns from 3 April 1807 to 14 September 1808"
16 SMEE, C.J., The Second Fleet Families of Australia, Sydney, 1990; also Mutch Index op. cit.; also ARCHIVES AUTHORITY OF NSW op. cit.
17 SMEE, C.J., op. cit.
18 Quoted in LEVY, M.C.I., op. cit., p. 36
19 ibid.
20 Mutch Index op. cit.; also ARCHIVES AUTHORITY OF NSW, Baptisms Pre-1800 Microfiche
21 Quoted in GEEVES, Philip, op. cit., p.44
22 Mutch Index op. cit.; also ARCHIVES AUTHORITY OF NSW, Burials Pre-1836 microfiche
(Ian Davidson)- This information was copied from Davoweb- the Family history of the Davidson Family of Australia- http://familyhistory.davoweb.net/showmedia.php?mediaID=27

Mary Brian [Parents] was born 1 on 7 Apr 1792 in Sydney NSW, Australia. She married 2 William Furber on 1 Jan 1808 in Church of England, Parramatta, St. John's NSW, Australia.

Other marriages:
Smith, John

Biography of Mary Brian
Early Australian-born mother
Mary Brian (or Bryan) was born 7 April 1792 at Sydney Cove (making her one of the first few hundred Australians of European heritage), the eldest daughter of Anthony Brian </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0055&tree=DavoTree> and Elizabeth Dean </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0056&tree=DavoTree>, both of whom had arrived in the Colony as convicts in the Second Fleet. On 4 January 1808, at age 15, she married another Second Fleeter, William Furber </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0053&tree=DavoTree>. William was a pioneer of the Kissing Point area and a successful farmer, and they had a son, George </getperson.php?personID=I0051&tree=DavoTree> on 18 December 1810.
William died in July 1811, aged 45, and in 1814 Mary went on to marry John Smith, who had arrived in the colony the same year as a convict on the General Hewitt. In 1817 Smith was found guilty of stealing tobacco from his master and was transported to Newcastle. The family settled in the Wallis Plains area near Maitland where John was a farmer.
John died on 13 November 1870 in Newcastle, and Mary died about 1868, aged about 76.
http://familyhistory.davoweb.net/ (Davoweb)

They had the following children:

  M i George Furber was christened 1 on 18 Dec 1810.

<>An article by Maitland Historian Harry Boyle in the Maitland Mercury on 26 April 2000 recorded particulars of George Furber A George Furber was one of five foundation initiates in Maitland Lodge or Unity on 4 November 1840, the day the lodge was formed The subject of the historical article would have been thirty and so could have been the one who joined Lodge Unity at that time. His father was William Furber and arrived in the Colony in the “Neptune’ in 1795. William married at Penrith on 1 January’ 1808; George was born in 1810. William died in 1811 In January 1813 a “John Smith” was tried at Leicester and sentenced to seven years. He arrived here in 1814 on the “General Hewitt” and in the same year married at Parramatta to the widow Mary Furber In 1817 he was transported to Newcastle for stealing tobacco from his master. He was a well behaved person and was allowed to settle at Wallis Plains. George Furber was John Smith’s stepson and so would have been one of the first settlers in Maitland. By 1830 he was working land and had a convict assigned to him. He cleared the first streets in Maitland, became a landowner in Bank Street, Lawes Street and on the Paterson River. He became the Innkeeper of the George and Dragon. He was affected by the depression of 1840 and was declared insolvent. He had married Mary Muir in 1832 but she died in 1837. He married again to Honorah Curtin who went with him to Queensland and was the only white woman in the area for a long time. There Furber took over “Girkum”, a station which had been abandoned by John Eales because of the fierce nature of aboriginals who had speared shepherds and sheep. He built a store and wharf on the Mary River and opened an Inn. In 1847, he and an employee were building a fence with two aboriginals and at a given signal one aboriginal chopped Furber’s skull while the other killed his employee. Furber later rode 150 miles to lpswich for attention and when he recovered he searched for the aboriginal and shot him. Furber and his son-in-law, Joseph Wilmhurst, were decoyed into an ambush in the bush and surrounded and murdered in December 1855. He had been a pioneer of Maitland and Queensland and died at the young age of 44.
<>Acknowledgements: Maitland Historian Harry Boyle & Maitland Mercury 26 April 2000

Anthony Brian was born 1 about 1760 in Middlesex England. He was buried 2 on 16 Sep 1826 in St Anne's Church Ryde, NSW, Australia. He married 3 Elizabeth Dean on 3 Oct 1795 in St Phillips, Sydney, New South Wales, AUSTRALIA.

Biography of Anthony Brian
Second-Fleet Convict pioneer of Kissing Point
Anthony Brian (or Brion or Bryan) was born in Middlesex ca. 1760 and arrived in the Colony on 26 June 1790 as a convict in the Second Fleet <http://www.historyaustralia.org.au/ifhaa/ships/2ndfleet.htm> on the Surprize 1. He had been sentenced on 27 February 1788 at the Old Bailey, Middlesex, to transportation for seven years 2 for allegedly stealing the greatcoat of Lord Grannard's coachman, and was transported by wagon from Newgate Prison to the hulk Ceres in Langstone Harbour, Portsmouth on 12 August 1788, where he stayed until embarked on the Surprize on 30 November 1789 for the Second Fleet trip to Sydney 3. Although not as horrific as the Neptune, the death rate amongst the prisoners on the Surprize was still 14%.
Anthony married fellow Second Fleeter Elizabeth Dean </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0056&tree=DavoTree> in Sydney on 3 October 1795 by Rev Richard Johnson. From the X with which both signed the register it appears that neither was literate. 4 The couple had three children:
Mary </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0054&tree=DavoTree>, born 7 April 1792 at Sydney Cove, who at age 15 married Second Fleeter William Furber </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0053&tree=DavoTree> on 4 January 1808;
Ann, born 11 January 1795 at Sydney Cove, and
Maria, born 27 November 1796 at Sydney Cove, who married another convict, Patrick Field.
On 19 November 1794 Anthony settled on a 30-acre farm at Eastern Farms (Kissing Point), roughly at the present site of Ryde High School and Christine Avenue, North Ryde. 5 On 18 October 1799 the land was granted to him by Governor Hunter. 6 Also about this time his marriage broke down, and Elizabeth left him for one James Evans, a Sydney carpenter, by whom she bore numerous children, the first in August 1800, before her death in 1829. 7 Evans (born ca. 1775) had arrived in the Colony in February 1792 on the Pitt. 8
By 1800 Brian was "off stores", although he was recorded as having one female (possibly an error) and 3 children "on stores", and at that time had "... had no stock". 9 By 1802 he was free, and had cleared 18 acres; 5 planted to wheat and ten ready for sowing to maize. He also had 2 hogs and 25 bushels of maize in hand. He was now recorded as having two children and a prisoner on indent with him, all "off stores". 10
Apparently he sold the farm soon afterwards, for it was sold again by a William Cox in April 1804 at auction for 21 guineas. 11
In 1814 he was recorded as a landholder with a male and a female convict, and appears on a List of Persons Receiving an Assigned Convict dated 19 February 1822. 12 He does not appear in the next Landholders Muster, also in 1822, although Flynn suggests he is incorrectly recorded under the name Arthur Brian in the 1822 General Muster.
At the time of his burial at St Anne's, Ryde, on 16 September 1826 Brian was described as a "back farmer" at Field of Mars, 13 aged 74 (but probably closer to 66).
Compiled by Ian Davidson <http://familyhistory.davoweb.net> Last modified 10 Jan 2007

References
1 SMEE, C.J., The Second Fleet Families of Australia, Sydney, 1990
2 RYAN, R.J., The Second Fleet Convicts, Australian Documents Library Pty Ltd, Sydney, 1982
3 FLYNN, Michael, The Second Fleet - Britain's Grim Convict Armada of 1790, Library of Australian History, Sydney, 1993, p.180
4 ibid, p.242
5 ibid, p.282
6 ARCHIVES OFFICE OF NSW, Colonial Secretary's Papers Microfiche no. 3267, "Lists of all Grants & Leases of Land and Town Allotments Registered in the Colonial Secretary's Office 1788-1809", p. 102
7 FLYNN, Michael, op. cit., p.242
8 MC KAY, Margaret (ed.), A Register of Pioneer Families, The 1788-1820 Pioneer Association, Sydney, 1988, Vol. 1 p. 142
9 BAXTER, Carol J. (ed.), Musters & Lists New South Wales & Norfolk Island 1800-1802, Australian Biographical & Genealogical Record, Sydney, 1988
10 BAXTER, Carol J. (ed.) 1814 General Muster of N.S.W., Australian Biographical & Genealogical Record, Sydney, 1987
11 FLYNN, Michael, op. cit.
12 ARCHIVES OFFICE OF NSW, Colonial Secretary's Papers Microfiche no. 3291, "List of Persons Receiving an Assigned Convict", p. 98
13 FLYNN, Michael, op. cit.

Taken from Davoweb- http://familyhistory.davoweb.net/showmedia.php?mediaID=28&medialinkID=45

Died at "a back farm, Kissing Point, Field of Mars", buried 16 Sep 1826,
age 74, Free by Servitude Settler or Farmer, clergyman John Espy Keane. (At Anne's Register entry)

Elizabeth Dean [Parents] was christened 1 on 8 Mar 1765 in Austrey, Warwickshire, England. She died 2 about 28 Dec 1829 in Sydney NSW, Australia. She married 3 Anthony Brian on 3 Oct 1795 in St Phillips, Sydney, New South Wales, AUSTRALIA.

Biography of Elizabeth Dean
Second-Fleet Convict and early European Australian mother
Elizabeth Dean (or Deane) was born ca. 1769 in Warwickshire and arrived in the Colony as a convict in the Second Fleet <http://www.historyaustralia.org.au/ifhaa/ships/2ndfleet.htm> on the Lady Juliana on 3 June 1790, aged about 19. She had been tried, together with Mary Warren, at the Warwick Assizes on 2 April 1788, found guilty of "feloniously stealing" linen and other goods 1 and sentenced to be transported for seven years. 2
Elizabeth married fellow Second Fleeter Anthony Brian </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0055&tree=DavoTree> in Sydney on 3 October 1795 by Rev Richard Johnson. From the X with which both signed the register it appears that neither was literate. 3 The couple had three children:
Mary </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0054&tree=DavoTree>, born 7 April 1792 at Sydney Cove, who at age 15 married Second Fleeter William Furber </familyhistory/getperson.php?personID=I0053&tree=DavoTree> on 4 January 1808;
Ann, born 11 January 1795 at Sydney Cove, and
Maria, born 27 November 1796 at Sydney Cove, who married another convict, Patrick Field.
On 19 November 1794 Anthony settled on a 30-acre farm at Eastern Farms (Kissing Point), roughly at the present site of Ryde High School and Christine Avenue, North Ryde. 4 By about 1799 his marriage had broken down, and Elizabeth left him for one James Evans, a Sydney carpenter, by whom she bore numerous children, the first in August 1800, before her death in 1829. 5
Elizabeth Dean was buried (as Evans) on 28 December 1829, probably in the Elizabeth St Burial Ground (later known as Devonshire St Cemetery). 6
Compiled by Ian Davidson http://familyhistory.davoweb.net Last modified 10 Jan 2007

References
1 FLYNN, Michael, The Second Fleet - Britain's Grim Convict Armada of 1790, Library of Australian History, Sydney, 1993, p.242
2 COBLEY, John, The Crimes of the Lady Juliana Convicts - 1790, Library of Australian History, Sydney, 1989, p.43
3 FLYNN, Michael, op. cit., p.242
4 ibid, p.282
5 ibid, p.242
6 ibid, p.242
Ian Davidson- http://familyhistory.davoweb.net

They had the following children:

  F i Mary Brian
  F ii Ann D. Brian was christened on 11 Jan 1795.
  F iii Maria Brian was christened on 27 Nov 1796.

William Dean [Parents] was christened 1 about 1736 in Austrey, Warwickshire, England. He married Ann Thomas.

Ann Thomas.Ann married William Dean.

They had the following children:

  F i Elizabeth Dean

William Dean.William married Elizabeth.

Elizabeth.Elizabeth married William Dean.

They had the following children:

  M i William Dean

John Douglas Kelly died 1 on 23 Nov 1985 in Lane Cove, NSW, Australia. He married Ivy May Young.

Died intestate.
Occupation- Civil engineer
(Dasha Brandt)

Ivy May Young [Parents] was born in 1895 in Merri Merri Creek, Warren NSW, Australia. She died on 22 Jan 1988 in Mowle Village, Castle Hill, NSW, Australia. She was buried 1 in Northern Suburbs Crematorium, Ryde, NSW, Australia. She married John Douglas Kelly.

They had the following children:

  M i John Kelly was born 1 in 1928 in Nairobi, Kenya. He died 2 in 1930 in Randwick, NSW, Australia. The cause of death was Cancer.

Living [Parents]

Living [Parents]

They had the following children:

  M i Living
  M ii Living
  F iii Living
  F iv Living
  F v Living

Robert Porter.Robert married Eleanor Duggan.

Eleanor Duggan.Eleanor married Robert Porter.

They had the following children:

  F i Living

Joseph Nolan Carter [Parents] was born 1 on 3 Nov 1908 in Gilgandra, NSW, Australia. He died 2 on 15 Aug 1973 in Coonamble, NSW, Australia. He was buried 3 in 1973 in Roman Catholic Cemetery, Coonamble, NSW, Australia. He married 4 Muriel Jean Hillan in 1936 in Molong, NSW, Australia.

Muriel Jean Hillan [Parents] was born 1 in 1913 in Molong, NSW, Australia. She died 2 on 4 Jul 1996 in Coonamble, NSW, Australia. She was buried 3 in Jul 1996 in Roman Catholic Cemetery, Coonamble, NSW, Australia. She married 4 Joseph Nolan Carter in 1936 in Molong, NSW, Australia.

They had the following children:

  F i Living
  F ii Living

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