Elizabeth "Betty" CarrAge: 751858–1933
- Name
- Elizabeth "Betty" Carr
- Given names
- Elizabeth
- Nickname
- Betty
- Surname
- Carr
Birth | 12 April 1858 43 41 Frankston, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1858 Note: Sydney and Melbourne linked by electric telegraph. Note: New South Wales men achieve the right to vote. |
Australian History | 1859 (Age 8 months) Note: SS Admella wrecked off south-east coast of South Australia with the loss of 89 lives. Note: Australian rules football codified, Melbourne Football Club founded Note: Queensland separates from New South Wales with its western border at 141 degrees E. |
Australian History | 1860 (Age 20 months) Note: John McDouall Stuart reaches the centre of the continent. South Australian border changed from 132 degrees E to 129 degrees E. |
Australian History | 1861 (Age 2) Note: The ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition occurs. Note: skiing in Australia introduced by Norwegians in the Snowy Mountains goldrush town of Kiandra |
Australian History | 1862 (Age 3) Note: Stuart reaches Port Darwin, founding a settlement there. Queensland's western border is moved to 139 degrees E. |
Australian History | 1863 (Age 4) Note: South Australia takes control of the Northern Territory which was part of the colony of New South Wales. |
Australian History | 1867 (Age 8) Note: Gold is discovered at Gympie, Queensland. Note: Saint Mary MacKillop founds Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart. |
Australian History | 1868 (Age 9) Note: The transportation of convicts to Western Australia ceases. |
Australian History | 1869 (Age 10) Note: Children of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent are removed from their families by Australian and State government agencies. |
Birth of a brother | 1870 (Age 11) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
younger brother -
William Carr
|
Death of a brother | 1871 (Age 12) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
younger brother -
William Carr
|
Australian History | 1872 (Age 13) Note: Overland Telegraph Line linking Darwin and Adelaide opens. |
Marriage of a sister | Mary Carr - View family 12 March 1873 (Age 14) Sandhurst, Victoria, Australia
brother-in-law -
James Trembath Thomas
elder sister -
Mary Carr
|
Photo | Photo about 1873 (Age 14) |
Australian History | 1873 (Age 14) Note: Uluru is first sighted by Europeans, and named Ayers Rock. |
Australian History | 1875 (Age 16) Note: SS Gothenburg strikes Old Reef off North Queensland and sinks with the loss of approximately 102 lives. Note: Adelaide Steamship Company is formed. |
Birth of a son #1 | 1877 (Age 18) Sandhurst, Victoria, Australia |
Marriage of a brother | John Carr - View family 1878 (Age 19) Collingwood, Victoria, Australia
elder brother -
John Carr
sister-in-law -
Jane Irvine
|
Death of a father | 15 December 1878 (Age 20) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
father -
John Carr
|
Australian History | 1878 (Age 19) Note: First horse-drawn trams in Australia commenced operations in Adelaide. |
Australian History | 1879 (Age 20) Note: The first congress of trade unions is held. |
Australian History | 1880 (Age 21) Note: The bushranger Ned Kelly is hanged. Note: Parliamentarians in Victoria become the first in Australia to be paid for their work. |
Birth of a daughter #2 | 1881 (Age 22) Victoria, Australia
daughter -
Florence Margaret "Pearl" Thomas
|
Event | 14 June 1882 (Age 24) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
father -
John Carr
elder sister -
Ann Carr
elder sister -
Sarah Carr
South Bourke and Mornington Journal (Richmond, Vic. : 1872 - 1920), Wednesday 14 June 1882, page 2
Note:
FRANKSION BAND, OF HOPE. :''Fron a! Correspondent. A meeting of the above Society ins held in the We…
FRANKSION BAND, OF HOPE. :''Fron a! Correspondent. A meeting of the above Society ins held in the Wesleyan church on Ihurs day .night, Mr. J. Carr bccupied the chair;:
The following ladies and gentle .mtn. contributed to . pass away the 1evening in a very enjoyable manner: ishE.s Carrr-'an g"Beautiful Home" very prettilyy;' Mr. J. Bentick's recita iosn,." The Drunkard's Child," was .very creditable; :?r. J. Cart sang f' Only a child;" Miss A. Carr rendered asong very fairly ,and Mr. J: IcComb gaverna reading from J. B. Goduh's Lectures.: In a trio by Mr. and 3lisse S. and A. Cart, entitled 'Iearer Home' tie voiceS blended very harmoniously. Owing to, the lateness of the hour ot commencing, little more could he done than inviting" those who wvishedtow joii~ the Society; f fi which' only two |
Australian History | 1882 (Age 23) Note: First water-borne sewerage service in Australia commenced operations in Adelaide. |
Event | 14 June 1882 (Age 24) Frankston, Victoria, Australia |
Event | 14 June 1882 (Age 24) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
elder sister -
Sarah Carr
|
Death of a mother | 20 August 1882 (Age 24) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
mother -
Mary Jagger
|
Marriage | Oliver Henry "O. H." Potts - View family 13 November 1883 (Age 25) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
Note:
Dad and Mum constantly throughout their lives were always helping the sick and needy.
Often in the early hours of the morning, a knock would come on their bedroom window with a request that they come to some home to help a sick or dying person and, nothing daunted, they would get dressed, often in the cold midwinter. Most calls came during the cold, wet months. Off they would go, through paddocks of wet grass and scrub and muddy lanes to the home of the sick person, oftimes a distance of some six miles.
These calls over the years numbered hundreds. The old folks were great homeopathists. Mum had a large homeopathic medicine and ailment book and a small box which held 24 bottles of homeopathic medicines. This book and medicine chest were always carried on the errands of mercy and succour. Many people living in the district at that time owed their continued life and return to health to prompt action by Mum, and a bottle of homeopathic medicine.
If anyone died, Dad and Mum were always called on to carry out the last obsequies for the subsequent burial. It was far easier to call on Mr. and Mrs. Potts. in the middle of the night, than try and raise the undertaker in Healesville from his slumbers. Not only were Mum and Dad in demand to help the sick and suffering, but they always seemed to have the house full of needy friends and visitors. Map from 1885 showing properties of John Carr and OH Potts in Frankston.
Note:
Comparing the map with a map of today I would say today's Potts Rd continued through what is called Centre Rd today and the Potts property was on the SW corner of today's Centre Rd and North Rd.
Alternative: Comparing the map with Google maps The Potts property looks as though it is bounded in the north by present day Robinsons Rd, at the east by a line drawn south from Donald Rd, at west by a line drawn south from Bergmen Rd and the south boundary being Larnach Rd (partial because of the corner block owned by Cross). Peter Woods |
Australian History | 1883 (Age 24) Note: The opening of the Sydney-Melbourne railway Note: Silver is discovered at Broken Hill |
Birth of a daughter #3 | 8 June 1884 (Age 26) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
daughter -
Elizabeth Violet Potts
|
Adoption of a son | 1885 (Age 26) |
Death of a sister | after 1885 (Age 26)
elder sister -
Mary Carr
|
Birth of a son #4 | 15 July 1886 (Age 28) Frankston, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1887 (Age 28) Note: An Australian cricket team is established, defeating England in the first Ashes series. First direct Inter-colonial passenger trains begin running between Adelaide and Melbourne. |
Birth of a son #5 | 7 April 1888 (Age 29) Frankston, Victoria, Australia
son -
John Carr Potts
|
Australian History | 1889 (Age 30) Note: The completion of the railway network between Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney. Note: Sir Henry Parkes delivers the Tenterfield Oration. |
Birth of a son #6 | 17 January 1890 (Age 31) Frankston, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1890 (Age 31) Note: The Australian Federation Conference calls a constitutional convention. |
Death of a brother | 4 March 1891 (Age 32)
elder brother -
John Carr
|
Birth of a son #7 | 26 October 1891 (Age 33) Frankston, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1891 (Age 32) Note: A National Australasian Convention meets, agrees on adopting the name 'the Commonwealth of Australia' and drafting a constitution. Note: The first attempt at a federal constitution is drafted. Note: The Convention adopts the constitution, although it has no legal status Note: A severe depression hits Australia |
Australian History | 1892 (Age 33) Note: Gold is discovered at Coolgardie, Western Australia. |
Birth of a son #8 | 27 May 1893 (Age 35) Frankston, Victoria, Australia |
Residence | September 1893 (Age 35) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Note: According to JJ Potts this is the date the family moved from Frankston to Healesville. |
Australian History | 1893 (Age 34) Note: The Corowa Conference (the 'people's convention') calls on the colonial parliaments to pass enabling acts, allowing the election of delegates to a new constitutional convention aimed at drafting a proposal and putting it to a referendum in each colony. |
Australian History | 1894 (Age 35) Note: South Australia becomes the first Australian colony, and the second place in the world, to grant women the right to vote, as well the first Parliament in the world to allow women to stand for office. |
Residence | Oliver Henry "O. H." Potts - View family 1895 (Age 36) Badger Creek, Victoria, Australia
Note:
The first white settlement in this area was a cattle run owned by Dalry, established in 1846.
In 1863 an aboriginal reserve was set up under the care of John Green. Green named the settlement Coranderrk, the aboriginal name for the Christmas Bush which grew there in great profusion. The settlement extended from the Yarra River to Don Road on both sides of Badger Creek and covered an area of 4000 acres. In 1894 a government program of village settlement for the unemployed saw farmers introduced to the area and 2000 acres of Coranderrk were reserved.
The children of the settlement originally went to school at the Coranderrk reserve. As numbers increased a school was opened at Badger Creek in January 1899. State School No. 3309 began with about 20 children, under Head teacher Adrienne Black. The Coranderrk School was closed and the children from the reserve joined the settlers’ children at the new school. The building, moved from Gruyere North, was erected on a half hectare site which was purchased for ten pounds. Further land was acquired in 1955 and again in 1979, increasing the school to its present area of 3.5 hectares.
Note:
Extracts of the book "History and Genealogy of the Potts-Carr family" compiled and written by J.J. P…
Extracts of the book "History and Genealogy of the Potts-Carr family" compiled and written by J.J. Potts. M.B.E., J.P. Kaniva - 1967.
Glen Violet
The survey of the land being completed, Oliver Henry Potts was successful amongst eight applicants, in being granted by the Lands Board, Block 10B, Parish of Gracedale, Shire of Healesville, Victoria. The official lease was issued on 1st August, 1900, six years after a licence to occupy was granted. The area of land surveyed was an original portion of the Coranderrk Aborigine Reserve.
The area of the block was 17 acres by survey, but 20 acres land surface. It was centred on a hill which dipped down to creeks at either end.
Someone was foolish enough to say that there was gold on Block 10B. If this was so, it was never discovered.
The block faced the Don Road, had a southern frontage to Badger Creek. Madam's Lane (now Chalet Road) was at the northern boundary and on the west was the property selected by Mr. Newnham. He built a house at a later period and lived on the block with his wife and three daughters.
The Pickaninny Creek flowed diagonally through the northern end of the block.
The Badger (Coranderrk) Creek, was a beautifully clear, pure, fast-flowing stream. It had Its source In the mountains behind
Mount Juliet, and flowed between Mt. Riddell and Mt. Toolebewong down through the gorges, eventually meandering through the Yarra flats to spill Into the Yarra River. It was not made use of by the settlers, whose properties adjoined its banks. It was handy for stock and for those who lived close enough to cart water from It for domestic use. Irrigation was not an essential in the heavy rainfall area, and so the Badger flowed on uninterrupted by humans.
While Joseph Shaw was Superintendent of the Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, he supervised a water supply system, for the station. The aboriginals under his direction, dug a channel some two miles in length, taking the water from the creek, 'at the crossing near where the Sanctuary now stands. He siphoned the water under the Dairy Road, and at the station it flowed Into a small brick reservoir. The reservoir was kept continually full, the overflowing water running back into the Badger. Pipes from the reservoir were put In strategic points, close to the houses. This gave the settlement of some 100 souls a pure, fresh reticulated water supply. That was the only use to which the waters of Badger Creek were put. The channel was known to the aboriginals as the "purp".
We lived close to the creek, and carted our water in the early days in a barrel on a sledge (usually a forked tree trunk).
In later years, we cut a channel from the creek for about five chains to a point where it had a fall of 20 feet to the creek below. A pipe connected the water to a "ram" pump, which, worked by the water automatically, pumped it to the top of the hill, where the house was built. Thus we had the water "laid on," and the barrel and the sledge were done away with. There was a never-ending supply of pure, fresh water for the home and garden. When the district was reticulated from a weir in Blue Jacket Creek, a tributary to the Badger, from Mt Riddle, the pump was dispensed with.
The Badger Creek area was included In the Maroondah catchment when the Government transferred the whole area to the Metropolitan Board of Works, at the time of its inauguration in 1891.
A weir was constructed in the upper reaches of the Badger Creek by the Board, and the official opening took place on January 15, 1909. A pipe line of 15 inch diameter pipes conveyed the water to the Graceburn aqueduct - a distance of 31 miles. This work was completed in December, 1908.
In 1928, construction commenced for the construction of a new weir further upstream of the original one, to enable water to be diverted at a higher elevation. This aqueduct, which was being constructed at the same time as the weir, diverted the water to the O'Shannassy aqueduct.
The new diversion and aqueduct were completed in 1929, when the water went direct to the Olinda reservoir. The Silvan reservoir received both Coranderrk (Badger) and O'Shannassy after It was completed in 1931. Since the construction of these weirs the Badger Creek flow was greatly diminished, especially in the summer months.
RASPBERRY PATCH WASHED AWAY
Heavy rains in the mountains often made the Badger a roaring torrent. It often overflowed its banks and flooded adjoining properties. I can well remember going in a wagon, drawn by two horses, with Dad to Hatchwell's, who had a raspberry farm In the Don River valley. We loaded on 1000 young raspberry plants. These
were carefully planted on the flat alongside the creek. Before they had time to take root, along came a flood and the 1000 plants were washed away. That was the end of the raspberry venture at home. We went back to potatoes and pasture.
SETTLING IN ON THE NEW BLOCK
Now for the new block of land.
It was untouched by the hand of man, and thickly covered with a lovely stand of timber and scrub. It was given the name of "Glenviolet," and was thereafter known by that name.
NEW VENTURE IN LIFE
With the six children-Violet, Olly, John, James, William and Jabez -together with the adopted ones - Bert and Pearl Thomas - Oliver and Elizabeth set out on a new venture In life. Oliver was 32 years of age and Elizabeth 36 years.
TREES CUT DOWN FOR WAGON TO ENTER
So thick was the forest of trees and scrub that a path had to be cut to get the wagon and buggy on to the property.
A further area was cleared and tents erected. This was a real pioneering experience. Cooking was done over an open fire, with a camp oven, plus cast iron saucepans and kettles.
MOVE FOR A HOUSE
Having settled temporarily in the tents, the next move was to build a house. There was an abundance of material on the property in the tall, straight timber, but no method or machinery to saw them into weatherboards or even rough planks. So, with the American background of his father, Oliver Potts decided to build a log cabin.
Messrs. Ruddle (carpenter) and Donnelly (shipwright) were engaged to build the home.
The tallest and straightest of the trees were cut down, and had the bark stripped from them in six feet lengths. This bark was smoke dried by leaning the sheets, sap inwards, against a tree and lighting a fire under them.
The building was 33 feet long and 18 feet wide. It was not necessary to join any of the logs as each one used was 33 feet in length. Such was the beautiful stand of timber on the block.
The logs were adzed into shape, and placed one on top of the other to a height of 10 feet, with interstices cut at the end to give them stability. Wooden pegs were used for further security. Large log beams were placed across from wall to wall. Doors and windows were cut out of the solid walls.
The house faced the east, and a large log fire place was built at the southern end. It had two large hobs and a log chimney about 20 feet high. Cooking was done over the open fire and bread baked In a camp oven, held over the fire by wire hooks suspended from chains fastened to an iron bar, as were other cooking utensils.
Huge fires were built up in the winter nights and these kept the room warm. It was not possible to sit closer than four feet from these fires!
The cabin was divided into two rooms, logs being used for the
division wall kept in place by stout uprights. The gable roof was built with sapling rafters, over which were placed the flattened smoke-cured bark. This bark was held in position with wire tied to large heavy logs. The roof never leaked, nor was the bark displaced by strong wind storms, even at gale force.
The joins between the log walls were filled with clay daub. which was smoothed off with a trowel.
Thus by ingenuity and hard work, was a comfortable house built for the family to move into.
That log cabin was the only one of its kind In that part of the State, and became of great historic interest.
In later years a one-fire stove was Installed to replace the openfire cooking.
PAYMENT BY BARTER
Money was almost an unknown commodity In those old days. They were years of depression in which the banks had closed and disrupted the financial economy of the State of Victoria.
Thus Dad made payment to Mr. Ruddle for his work on the house by dragging logs and carting wood on his block, which was where the Military School of Health is situated in what was known as Ruddle's Lane. To pay Mr. Donnelly, Dad did some ploughing for him. He had a single furrow plough drawn by two horses, and ploughed many hundreds of acres for various settlers, in an endeavour to raise some money to feed and clothe the large family. |
Australian History | 1895 (Age 36) Note: The premiers, except for those of Queensland and Western Australia, agree to implement the Corowa proposals. Note: Waltzing Matilda is first sung in public, in Winton, Queensland Note: Banjo Paterson publishes The Man from Snowy River |
Birth of a son #9 | 21 June 1896 (Age 38) Healesville, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1896 (Age 37) Note: The Bathurst Conference (the second 'people's convention') meets to discuss the 1891 draft constitution |
Australian History | 1897 (Age 38) Note: In two sessions, the Second National Australasian Convention meets (with representatives from all colonies except Queensland present). They agree to adopt a constitution based on the 1891 draft, and then revise and amend it later that year. Note: Catherine Helen Spence became the first female political candidate for political office, standing for election as a representative for South Australia. |
Birth of a daughter #10 | 12 February 1898 (Age 39) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
daughter -
Sarah Elizabeth Annie "Betty" Potts
|
Australian History | 1898 (Age 39) Note: The Convention agrees on a final draft to be put to the people. Note: After much public debate, the Victorian, South Australian and Tasmanian referendums are successful; the New South Wales referendum narrowly fails. Later New South Wales votes 'yes' in a second referendum, and Queensland and Western Australia also vote to join. |
Birth of a son #11 | 4 July 1899 (Age 41) Healesville, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1899 (Age 40) Note: The decision is made to site the national capital in New South Wales, but not within 100 miles of Sydney. Note: The Australian Labor Party holds office for a few days in Queensland, becoming the first trade union party to do so anywhere in the world. Note: The first contingents from various Australian colonies are sent to South Africa to participate in the Second Boer War. |
Australian History | 1900 (Age 41) Note: Several delegates visit London to resist proposed changes to the agreed-upon constitution. Note: The constitution is passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom as a schedule to the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act, and is given royal assent |
Australian History | 1901 (Age 42) Note: (01 Jan) Australia becomes a federation on 1 January. Edmund Barton becomes Prime Minister; the 7th Earl of Hopetoun becomes Governor-General Note: The first parliament met in Parliament House, Melbourne Note: Immigration Restriction act was introduced- The White Australian Policy Note: The Australian National Flag was flown for the first time |
Australian History | 1902 (Age 43) Note: The Franchise Act guarantees women the right to vote in federal elections (by this stage, most states had already done this). However, it excludes most non-European ethnic groups, including Aboriginal people, unless already registered to vote on State roles. Note: King Edward VII approved the design of the Australian flag. Note: Breaker Morant is executed for having shot Boers who had surrendered |
Australian History | 1903 (Age 44) Note: The High Court of Australia is established with Samuel Griffith as the first Chief Justice. Note: The Defence Act gives the federal government full control over the Australian Army Note: Alfred Deakin elected Prime Minister |
Family Photo | Family Photo 16 July 1904 (Age 46) Badger Creek, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1904 (Age 45) Note: A site at Dalgety, New South Wales chosen for the new national capital Note: Chris Watson forms the first federal Labor (minority) government |
Birth of a son #12 | 8 October 1905 (Age 47) Victoria, Australia
son -
John Walter Thomas Potts
|
Adoption of a son | 8 October 1905 (Age 47)
son -
John Walter Thomas Potts
|
Australian History | 1906 (Age 47) Note: Australia takes control of south-eastern New Guinea |
Photo | Family Photo 13 November 1908 (Age 50) Healesville, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1908 (Age 49) Note: Dorothea Mackellar publishes My Country Note: The Dalgety proposal for the national capital is revoked, and Canberra is chosen instead |
Australian History | 1909 (Age 50) Note: The first powered aeroplane flight in Australia is made. |
Australian History | 1910 (Age 51) Note: Andrew Fisher forms the first federal majority Labor government. |
Australian History | 1911 (Age 52) Note: The Royal Australian Navy is founded Note: The Northern Territory comes under Commonwealth control, being split off from South Australia Note: The first national census is conducted. Note: Australian Capital Territory proclaimed. |
Australian History | 1912 (Age 53) Note: Australia sends women to the Olympic Games for the first time Note: Walter Burley Griffin wins a design competition for the new city of Canberra |
Australian History | 1913 (Age 54) Note: Blaxland, Lawson and Wentworth cross the Blue Mountains. Note: Matthew Flinders refers to New South Wales by the name 'Australia'. |
Australian History | 1913 (Age 54) Note: The foundation stone for the city of Canberra is put in place |
Occupation | Home Duties 1914 (Age 55) Badgers Creek, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1914 (Age 55) Note: Australian soldiers are sent to the First World War. This was first time Australians had fought under the Australian flag, as opposed to that of Britain's. |
Marriage of a son | James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts - View family 17 July 1915 (Age 57) Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia
daughter-in-law -
Evelyn Maude Langley
|
Marriage of a daughter | Elizabeth Violet Potts - View family 27 November 1915 (Age 57) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
son-in-law -
Leslie Roy Langmead
daughter -
Elizabeth Violet Potts
|
Australian History | 1915 (Age 56) Note: (25 APRIL)Australian soldiers land at Anzac Cove on the Gallipoli Peninsula in Turkey on 25 April. Note: Jervis Bay Territory comprising 6,677 hectares surrendered and becomes part of the Australia Capital Territory. Note: Surfing is first introduced to Australia Note: Billy Hughes became Prime Minister |
Marriage of a son | Jabez Jagger "Jay" Potts M.B.E. J.P. - View family 11 September 1916 (Age 58) Mordialloc, Victoria, Australia
daughter-in-law -
Ruby Caroline Miller
|
Australian History | 1916 (Age 57) Note: Hotels are forced to close at 6 p.m., leading to the beginning of the 'six o'clock swill' Note: Australia suffers heavy casualties in the Western Front Battle of the Somme. Note: The Returned Sailors� and Soldiers� Imperial League of Australia, the forerunner to the Returned and Services League of Australia is founded Note: The Labor government under Billy Hughes splits over conscription. First referendum on conscription is rejected |
Birth of a grandson #1 | 17 April 1917 (Age 59) Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Leonard Potts
|
Charlie and Beryl's Wedding | Weddiing Photo 5 September 1917 (Age 59) |
Marriage of a son | Charles Ernest Herbert "Charlie" Potts B.A. - View family 15 September 1917 (Age 59) Surrey Hills, Victoria, Australia
daughter-in-law -
Beryl Mayo Watson
|
Australian History | 1917 (Age 58) Note: Second referendum on conscription is rejected. Transcontinental railway linking Adelaide to Perth is completed. Note: Australian 4th Light Horse Brigade launches last cavalry charge in modern warfare to capture Beersheba from the Ottoman Turks. |
Australian History | 1918 (Age 59) Note: (08 AUG) Battle of Amiens Note: Australian troops spearhead 8 August offensive against Hindenberg Line - the 'black day of the German Army'. Note: On 12 August, Australian commander General Sir John Monash is knighted in the field of battle by King George V Note: First World War ends - 60,000 Australians dead. Note: The Darwin Rebellion takes place, with 1,000 demonstrators demanding the resignation of the Administrator of the Northern Territory, John A. Gilruth. |
Occupation | Home Duties 1919 (Age 60) Badger Creek, Victoria, Australia |
Photo | Son's in WWI 1919 (Age 60) |
Australian History | 1919 (Age 60) Note: Prime Minister Billy Hughes signs Treaty of Versailles: the first signing of an international treaty by Australia. Australia obtains League of Nations mandate over German New Guinea. |
Birth of a grandson #2 | 6 April 1920 (Age 61) Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Albert James Potts
|
Birth of a grandson #3 | 14 April 1920 (Age 62) Cheltenham, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Noel Jagger Potts
|
Birth of a grandson #4 | 21 June 1920 (Age 62)
grandson -
John Carr Potts
|
Death of a grandson | 21 June 1920 (Age 62)
grandson -
John Carr Potts
|
Birth of a grandson #5 | 26 September 1920 (Age 62) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Oswald Roy Langmead
|
Birth of a granddaughter #6 | 31 October 1920 (Age 62) Creswick, Victoria, Australia
granddaughter -
Beryl Patricia "Pat" Potts
|
Australian History | 1920 (Age 61) Note: The airline Qantas is founded |
Death of a grandson | 26 January 1921 (Age 62) Mordialloc, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Noel Jagger Potts
|
Burial of a grandson | January 1921 (Age 62) Cheltenham, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Noel Jagger Potts
|
Birth of a grandson #7 | 9 September 1921 (Age 63) Camberwell, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Frederick John Potts
|
Birth of a grandson #8 | 4 October 1921 (Age 63) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Oliver Leslie Langmead
|
Birth of a granddaughter #9 | 2 December 1921 (Age 63) Cheltenham, Victoria, Australia
granddaughter -
Ruby Yvonne Potts
|
Australian History | 1921 (Age 62) Note: Edith Cowan becomes the first woman elected to an Australian parliament |
Birth of a grandson #10 | 20 November 1922 (Age 64) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Harold Athol Langmead
|
Australian History | 1922 (Age 63) Note: The Smith Family charity is founded in Sydney |
Birth of a granddaughter #11 | 10 March 1923 (Age 64) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
granddaughter -
Margaret Oliver Potts
|
Birth of a granddaughter #12 | 6 April 1923 (Age 64) Camberwell, Victoria, Australia
granddaughter -
Jean Dulcie Potts
|
Birth of a granddaughter #13 | 3 June 1923 (Age 65) Victoria, Australia
granddaughter -
Evelyn Maude "Betty" Potts
|
Australian History | 1923 (Age 64) Note: Vegemite is first produced |
Death of a grandson | 18 February 1924 (Age 65) Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Leonard Potts
|
Occupation | Home Duties 1924 (Age 65) Badger Creek, Victoria, Australia |
Birth of a granddaughter #14 | 5 January 1925 (Age 66) Cheltenham, Victoria, Australia
granddaughter -
Velma Jeannette Potts
|
Marriage of a son | James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts - View family 2 November 1926 (Age 68) Sea Lake, Victoria, Australia
daughter-in-law -
Violet Marquerite Kirk
|
Australian History | 1926 (Age 67) Note: The first Miss Australia contest is held |
Marriage of a son | Harold George Wilson Potts - View family 8 December 1927 (Age 69) Box Hill, Victoria, Australia
daughter-in-law -
Emma Haines Sedgman
|
Australian History | 1927 (Age 68) Note: The tenth parliament is formally opened in Canberra, finalising the move to the new capital |
Birth of a grandson #15 | 17 February 1928 (Age 69)
grandson -
Dr. James Kenneth George Potts
|
Birth of a granddaughter #16 | 29 February 1928 (Age 69) Camberwell, Victoria, Australia
granddaughter -
Lorna Dorothy Potts
|
Death of a daughter | 15 March 1928 (Age 69) Healesville, Victoria, Australia
daughter -
Sarah Elizabeth Annie "Betty" Potts
|
Australian History | 1928 (Age 69) Note: Bert Hinkler makes the first successful flight from Britain to Australia, and Charles Kingsford Smith makes the first flight from the United States to Australia. The Shrine of Remembrance is built. |
Birth of a granddaughter #17 | 26 January 1929 (Age 70) Kadina, South Australia, Australia
granddaughter -
Valerie Elizabeth Potts
|
Death of a sister | 24 February 1929 (Age 70)
elder sister -
Ann Carr
|
Birth of a grandson #18 | 14 October 1929 (Age 71) Dimboola, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Geoffrey Jagger Potts
|
Australian History | 1929 (Age 70) Note: Western Australia celebrates its centenary Note: Labor returns to office under James Scullin. The Great Depression hits Australia. |
Birth of a grandson #19 | 8 January 1930 (Age 71) Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Harold Carr Potts
|
Australian History | 1930 (Age 71) Note: Batsman Don Bradman scores a record 452 not out in one cricket innings Note: Phar Lap wins his first Melbourne Cup |
Occupation | Home Duties 1931 (Age 72) Badger Creek, Victoria, Australia |
Australian History | 1931 (Age 72) Note: Sir Douglas Mawson charts 4,000 miles of Antarctic coastline and claims 42% of the icy mass for Australia |
Birth of a grandson #20 | 9 August 1932 (Age 74) Creswick, Victoria, Australia
grandson -
Charles Henry Lyle Potts
|
Australian History | 1932 (Age 73) Note: The Sydney Harbour Bridge opens Note: The Labor government falls and Joseph Lyons becomes Prime Minister |
Australian History | 1933 (Age 74) Note: Western Australia votes at a rerefendum to secede from the Commonwealth, but the vote is ignored by both the Commonwealth and British governments |
Death | 20 May 1933 (Age 75) Healesville, Victoria, Australia |
Death |
niece -
Ethel Jane Carr
|
Burial | May 1933 (Age 75) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Cemetery: Healesville Cemetary |
Religion | Salvation Army |
Family with parents - View family |
father |
John Carr
Birth 17 June 1814 34 30 Whitwell, Yorkshire, England Death 15 December 1878 (Age 64) Frankston, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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3 years mother |
Mary Jagger
Birth 2 February 1817 22 22 Liverpool, Lancashire, England Death 20 August 1882 (Age 65) Frankston, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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Marriage: 17 February 1846 — Manchester, Lancashire, England |
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Mary Carr
Birth March 1846 31 29 Manchester, England Death after 1885 (Age 38) Loading...
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22 months #2 elder sister |
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3 years #3 elder brother |
John Carr
Birth 1851 36 33 Manchester, England Death 4 March 1891 (Age 40) Loading...
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2 years #4 elder sister |
Agnes Carr
Birth 1853 38 35 Manchester, England Death yes Loading...
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2 years #5 elder sister |
Sarah Carr
Birth 1855 40 37 Manchester, England Loading...
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3 years #6 herself |
Elizabeth "Betty" Carr
Birth 12 April 1858 43 41 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 20 May 1933 (Age 75) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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12 years #7 younger brother |
William Carr
Birth 1870 55 52 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 1871 (Age 12 months) Frankston, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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Family with Oliver Henry "O. H." Potts - View family |
husband |
Oliver Henry "O. H." Potts
Birth 26 January 1862 37 27 Yackandandah, Victoria, Australia Death 10 August 1948 (Age 86) Box Hill, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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-4 years herself |
Elizabeth "Betty" Carr
Birth 12 April 1858 43 41 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 20 May 1933 (Age 75) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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Marriage: 13 November 1883 — Frankston, Victoria, Australia |
|
-7 years #1 son |
Herbert Henry "Bert" Thomas
Birth 1877 Sandhurst, Victoria, Australia Death 4 February 1945 (Age 68) Brighton East, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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4 years #2 daughter |
Florence Margaret "Pearl" Thomas
Birth 1881 Victoria, Australia Death yes Loading...
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3 years #3 daughter |
Elizabeth Violet Potts
Birth 8 June 1884 22 26 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 5 May 1960 (Age 75) Surry Hills, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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2 years #4 son |
Oliver Henry "Olly" Potts Jr.
Birth 15 July 1886 24 28 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 1969 (Age 82) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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21 months #5 son |
John Carr Potts
Birth 7 April 1888 26 29 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 23 September 1954 (Age 66) Loading...
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21 months #6 son |
James Abraham Garfield "Jim" Potts
Birth 17 January 1890 27 31 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 26 January 1959 (Age 69) Auburn, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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21 months #7 son |
William Robert "Bill" Potts
Birth 26 October 1891 29 33 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 16 February 1960 (Age 68) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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19 months #8 son |
Jabez Jagger "Jay" Potts M.B.E. J.P.
Birth 27 May 1893 31 35 Frankston, Victoria, Australia Death 27 May 1974 (Age 81) Loading...
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3 years #9 son |
Charles Ernest Herbert "Charlie" Potts B.A.
Birth 21 June 1896 34 38 Healesville, Victoria, Australia Death 21 August 1957 (Age 61) Surrey Hills, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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20 months #10 daughter |
Sarah Elizabeth Annie "Betty" Potts
Birth 12 February 1898 36 39 Healesville, Victoria, Australia Death 15 March 1928 (Age 30) Healesville, Victoria, Australia Loading...
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17 months #11 son |
Harold George Wilson Potts
Birth 4 July 1899 37 41 Healesville, Victoria, Australia Death 4 August 1995 (Age 96) Loading...
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6 years #12 son |
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Elizabeth "Betty" Carr has 0 first cousins recorded
Father's family (0)
Mother's family (0)
Australian History | Sydney and Melbourne linked by electric telegraph. |
Australian History | SS Admella wrecked off south-east coast of South Australia with the loss of 89 lives. |
Australian History | John McDouall Stuart reaches the centre of the continent. South Australian border changed from 132 degrees E to 129 degrees E. |
Australian History | The ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition occurs. |
Australian History | Stuart reaches Port Darwin, founding a settlement there. Queensland's western border is moved to 139 degrees E. |
Australian History | South Australia takes control of the Northern Territory which was part of the colony of New South Wales. |
Australian History | Gold is discovered at Gympie, Queensland. |
Australian History | The transportation of convicts to Western Australia ceases. |
Australian History | Children of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent are removed from their families by Australian and State government agencies. |
Australian History | Overland Telegraph Line linking Darwin and Adelaide opens. |
Australian History | Uluru is first sighted by Europeans, and named Ayers Rock. |
Australian History | SS Gothenburg strikes Old Reef off North Queensland and sinks with the loss of approximately 102 lives. |
Australian History | First horse-drawn trams in Australia commenced operations in Adelaide. |
Australian History | The first congress of trade unions is held. |
Australian History | The bushranger Ned Kelly is hanged. |
Australian History | First water-borne sewerage service in Australia commenced operations in Adelaide. |
Marriage | Dad and Mum constantly throughout their lives were always helping the sick and needy.
Often in the early hours of the morning, a knock would come on their bedroom window with a request that they come to some home to help a sick or dying person and, nothing daunted, they would get dressed, often in the cold midwinter. Most calls came during the cold, wet months. Off they would go, through paddocks of wet grass and scrub and muddy lanes to the home of the sick person, oftimes a distance of some six miles.
These calls over the years numbered hundreds. The old folks were great homeopathists. Mum had a large homeopathic medicine and ailment book and a small box which held 24 bottles of homeopathic medicines. This book and medicine chest were always carried on the errands of mercy and succour. Many people living in the district at that time owed their continued life and return to health to prompt action by Mum, and a bottle of homeopathic medicine.
If anyone died, Dad and Mum were always called on to carry out the last obsequies for the subsequent burial. It was far easier to call on Mr. and Mrs. Potts. in the middle of the night, than try and raise the undertaker in Healesville from his slumbers. Not only were Mum and Dad in demand to help the sick and suffering, but they always seemed to have the house full of needy friends and visitors. |
Marriage | Dad and Mum constantly throughout their lives were always helping the sick and needy.
Often in the early hours of the morning, a knock would come on their bedroom window with a request that they come to some home to help a sick or dying person and, nothing daunted, they would get dressed, often in the cold midwinter. Most calls came during the cold, wet months. Off they would go, through paddocks of wet grass and scrub and muddy lanes to the home of the sick person, oftimes a distance of some six miles.
These calls over the years numbered hundreds. The old folks were great homeopathists. Mum had a large homeopathic medicine and ailment book and a small box which held 24 bottles of homeopathic medicines. This book and medicine chest were always carried on the errands of mercy and succour. Many people living in the district at that time owed their continued life and return to health to prompt action by Mum, and a bottle of homeopathic medicine.
If anyone died, Dad and Mum were always called on to carry out the last obsequies for the subsequent burial. It was far easier to call on Mr. and Mrs. Potts. in the middle of the night, than try and raise the undertaker in Healesville from his slumbers. Not only were Mum and Dad in demand to help the sick and suffering, but they always seemed to have the house full of needy friends and visitors. |
Australian History | The opening of the Sydney-Melbourne railway |
Australian History | An Australian cricket team is established, defeating England in the first Ashes series. First direct Inter-colonial passenger trains begin running between Adelaide and Melbourne. |
Australian History | The completion of the railway network between Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney. |
Australian History | The Australian Federation Conference calls a constitutional convention. |
Australian History | A National Australasian Convention meets, agrees on adopting the name 'the Commonwealth of Australia' and drafting a constitution. |
Australian History | Gold is discovered at Coolgardie, Western Australia. |
Residence | According to JJ Potts this is the date the family moved from Frankston to Healesville. |
Australian History | The Corowa Conference (the 'people's convention') calls on the colonial parliaments to pass enabling acts, allowing the election of delegates to a new constitutional convention aimed at drafting a proposal and putting it to a referendum in each colony. |
Australian History | South Australia becomes the first Australian colony, and the second place in the world, to grant women the right to vote, as well the first Parliament in the world to allow women to stand for office. |
Residence | The first white settlement in this area was a cattle run owned by Dalry, established in 1846.
In 1863 an aboriginal reserve was set up under the care of John Green. Green named the settlement Coranderrk, the aboriginal name for the Christmas Bush which grew there in great profusion. The settlement extended from the Yarra River to Don Road on both sides of Badger Creek and covered an area of 4000 acres. In 1894 a government program of village settlement for the unemployed saw farmers introduced to the area and 2000 acres of Coranderrk were reserved.
The children of the settlement originally went to school at the Coranderrk reserve. As numbers increased a school was opened at Badger Creek in January 1899. State School No. 3309 began with about 20 children, under Head teacher Adrienne Black. The Coranderrk School was closed and the children from the reserve joined the settlers’ children at the new school. The building, moved from Gruyere North, was erected on a half hectare site which was purchased for ten pounds. Further land was acquired in 1955 and again in 1979, increasing the school to its present area of 3.5 hectares. |
Residence | Extracts of the book "History and Genealogy of the Potts-Carr family" compiled and written by J.J. Potts. M.B.E., J.P. Kaniva - 1967.
Glen Violet
The survey of the land being completed, Oliver Henry Potts was successful amongst eight applicants, in being granted by the Lands Board, Block 10B, Parish of Gracedale, Shire of Healesville, Victoria. The official lease was issued on 1st August, 1900, six years after a licence to occupy was granted. The area of land surveyed was an original portion of the Coranderrk Aborigine Reserve.
The area of the block was 17 acres by survey, but 20 acres land surface. It was centred on a hill which dipped down to creeks at either end.
Someone was foolish enough to say that there was gold on Block 10B. If this was so, it was never discovered.
The block faced the Don Road, had a southern frontage to Badger Creek. Madam's Lane (now Chalet Road) was at the northern boundary and on the west was the property selected by Mr. Newnham. He built a house at a later period and lived on the block with his wife and three daughters.
The Pickaninny Creek flowed diagonally through the northern end of the block.
The Badger (Coranderrk) Creek, was a beautifully clear, pure, fast-flowing stream. It had Its source In the mountains behind
Mount Juliet, and flowed between Mt. Riddell and Mt. Toolebewong down through the gorges, eventually meandering through the Yarra flats to spill Into the Yarra River. It was not made use of by the settlers, whose properties adjoined its banks. It was handy for stock and for those who lived close enough to cart water from It for domestic use. Irrigation was not an essential in the heavy rainfall area, and so the Badger flowed on uninterrupted by humans.
While Joseph Shaw was Superintendent of the Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, he supervised a water supply system, for the station. The aboriginals under his direction, dug a channel some two miles in length, taking the water from the creek, 'at the crossing near where the Sanctuary now stands. He siphoned the water under the Dairy Road, and at the station it flowed Into a small brick reservoir. The reservoir was kept continually full, the overflowing water running back into the Badger. Pipes from the reservoir were put In strategic points, close to the houses. This gave the settlement of some 100 souls a pure, fresh reticulated water supply. That was the only use to which the waters of Badger Creek were put. The channel was known to the aboriginals as the "purp".
We lived close to the creek, and carted our water in the early days in a barrel on a sledge (usually a forked tree trunk).
In later years, we cut a channel from the creek for about five chains to a point where it had a fall of 20 feet to the creek below. A pipe connected the water to a "ram" pump, which, worked by the water automatically, pumped it to the top of the hill, where the house was built. Thus we had the water "laid on," and the barrel and the sledge were done away with. There was a never-ending supply of pure, fresh water for the home and garden. When the district was reticulated from a weir in Blue Jacket Creek, a tributary to the Badger, from Mt Riddle, the pump was dispensed with.
The Badger Creek area was included In the Maroondah catchment when the Government transferred the whole area to the Metropolitan Board of Works, at the time of its inauguration in 1891.
A weir was constructed in the upper reaches of the Badger Creek by the Board, and the official opening took place on January 15, 1909. A pipe line of 15 inch diameter pipes conveyed the water to the Graceburn aqueduct - a distance of 31 miles. This work was completed in December, 1908.
In 1928, construction commenced for the construction of a new weir further upstream of the original one, to enable water to be diverted at a higher elevation. This aqueduct, which was being constructed at the same time as the weir, diverted the water to the O'Shannassy aqueduct.
The new diversion and aqueduct were completed in 1929, when the water went direct to the Olinda reservoir. The Silvan reservoir received both Coranderrk (Badger) and O'Shannassy after It was completed in 1931. Since the construction of these weirs the Badger Creek flow was greatly diminished, especially in the summer months.
RASPBERRY PATCH WASHED AWAY
Heavy rains in the mountains often made the Badger a roaring torrent. It often overflowed its banks and flooded adjoining properties. I can well remember going in a wagon, drawn by two horses, with Dad to Hatchwell's, who had a raspberry farm In the Don River valley. We loaded on 1000 young raspberry plants. These
were carefully planted on the flat alongside the creek. Before they had time to take root, along came a flood and the 1000 plants were washed away. That was the end of the raspberry venture at home. We went back to potatoes and pasture.
SETTLING IN ON THE NEW BLOCK
Now for the new block of land.
It was untouched by the hand of man, and thickly covered with a lovely stand of timber and scrub. It was given the name of "Glenviolet," and was thereafter known by that name.
NEW VENTURE IN LIFE
With the six children-Violet, Olly, John, James, William and Jabez -together with the adopted ones - Bert and Pearl Thomas - Oliver and Elizabeth set out on a new venture In life. Oliver was 32 years of age and Elizabeth 36 years.
TREES CUT DOWN FOR WAGON TO ENTER
So thick was the forest of trees and scrub that a path had to be cut to get the wagon and buggy on to the property.
A further area was cleared and tents erected. This was a real pioneering experience. Cooking was done over an open fire, with a camp oven, plus cast iron saucepans and kettles.
MOVE FOR A HOUSE
Having settled temporarily in the tents, the next move was to build a house. There was an abundance of material on the property in the tall, straight timber, but no method or machinery to saw them into weatherboards or even rough planks. So, with the American background of his father, Oliver Potts decided to build a log cabin.
Messrs. Ruddle (carpenter) and Donnelly (shipwright) were engaged to build the home.
The tallest and straightest of the trees were cut down, and had the bark stripped from them in six feet lengths. This bark was smoke dried by leaning the sheets, sap inwards, against a tree and lighting a fire under them.
The building was 33 feet long and 18 feet wide. It was not necessary to join any of the logs as each one used was 33 feet in length. Such was the beautiful stand of timber on the block.
The logs were adzed into shape, and placed one on top of the other to a height of 10 feet, with interstices cut at the end to give them stability. Wooden pegs were used for further security. Large log beams were placed across from wall to wall. Doors and windows were cut out of the solid walls.
The house faced the east, and a large log fire place was built at the southern end. It had two large hobs and a log chimney about 20 feet high. Cooking was done over the open fire and bread baked In a camp oven, held over the fire by wire hooks suspended from chains fastened to an iron bar, as were other cooking utensils.
Huge fires were built up in the winter nights and these kept the room warm. It was not possible to sit closer than four feet from these fires!
The cabin was divided into two rooms, logs being used for the
division wall kept in place by stout uprights. The gable roof was built with sapling rafters, over which were placed the flattened smoke-cured bark. This bark was held in position with wire tied to large heavy logs. The roof never leaked, nor was the bark displaced by strong wind storms, even at gale force.
The joins between the log walls were filled with clay daub. which was smoothed off with a trowel.
Thus by ingenuity and hard work, was a comfortable house built for the family to move into.
That log cabin was the only one of its kind In that part of the State, and became of great historic interest.
In later years a one-fire stove was Installed to replace the openfire cooking.
PAYMENT BY BARTER
Money was almost an unknown commodity In those old days. They were years of depression in which the banks had closed and disrupted the financial economy of the State of Victoria.
Thus Dad made payment to Mr. Ruddle for his work on the house by dragging logs and carting wood on his block, which was where the Military School of Health is situated in what was known as Ruddle's Lane. To pay Mr. Donnelly, Dad did some ploughing for him. He had a single furrow plough drawn by two horses, and ploughed many hundreds of acres for various settlers, in an endeavour to raise some money to feed and clothe the large family. |
Residence | The first white settlement in this area was a cattle run owned by Dalry, established in 1846.
In 1863 an aboriginal reserve was set up under the care of John Green. Green named the settlement Coranderrk, the aboriginal name for the Christmas Bush which grew there in great profusion. The settlement extended from the Yarra River to Don Road on both sides of Badger Creek and covered an area of 4000 acres. In 1894 a government program of village settlement for the unemployed saw farmers introduced to the area and 2000 acres of Coranderrk were reserved.
The children of the settlement originally went to school at the Coranderrk reserve. As numbers increased a school was opened at Badger Creek in January 1899. State School No. 3309 began with about 20 children, under Head teacher Adrienne Black. The Coranderrk School was closed and the children from the reserve joined the settlers’ children at the new school. The building, moved from Gruyere North, was erected on a half hectare site which was purchased for ten pounds. Further land was acquired in 1955 and again in 1979, increasing the school to its present area of 3.5 hectares. |
Residence | Extracts of the book "History and Genealogy of the Potts-Carr family" compiled and written by J.J. Potts. M.B.E., J.P. Kaniva - 1967.
Glen Violet
The survey of the land being completed, Oliver Henry Potts was successful amongst eight applicants, in being granted by the Lands Board, Block 10B, Parish of Gracedale, Shire of Healesville, Victoria. The official lease was issued on 1st August, 1900, six years after a licence to occupy was granted. The area of land surveyed was an original portion of the Coranderrk Aborigine Reserve.
The area of the block was 17 acres by survey, but 20 acres land surface. It was centred on a hill which dipped down to creeks at either end.
Someone was foolish enough to say that there was gold on Block 10B. If this was so, it was never discovered.
The block faced the Don Road, had a southern frontage to Badger Creek. Madam's Lane (now Chalet Road) was at the northern boundary and on the west was the property selected by Mr. Newnham. He built a house at a later period and lived on the block with his wife and three daughters.
The Pickaninny Creek flowed diagonally through the northern end of the block.
The Badger (Coranderrk) Creek, was a beautifully clear, pure, fast-flowing stream. It had Its source In the mountains behind
Mount Juliet, and flowed between Mt. Riddell and Mt. Toolebewong down through the gorges, eventually meandering through the Yarra flats to spill Into the Yarra River. It was not made use of by the settlers, whose properties adjoined its banks. It was handy for stock and for those who lived close enough to cart water from It for domestic use. Irrigation was not an essential in the heavy rainfall area, and so the Badger flowed on uninterrupted by humans.
While Joseph Shaw was Superintendent of the Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, he supervised a water supply system, for the station. The aboriginals under his direction, dug a channel some two miles in length, taking the water from the creek, 'at the crossing near where the Sanctuary now stands. He siphoned the water under the Dairy Road, and at the station it flowed Into a small brick reservoir. The reservoir was kept continually full, the overflowing water running back into the Badger. Pipes from the reservoir were put In strategic points, close to the houses. This gave the settlement of some 100 souls a pure, fresh reticulated water supply. That was the only use to which the waters of Badger Creek were put. The channel was known to the aboriginals as the "purp".
We lived close to the creek, and carted our water in the early days in a barrel on a sledge (usually a forked tree trunk).
In later years, we cut a channel from the creek for about five chains to a point where it had a fall of 20 feet to the creek below. A pipe connected the water to a "ram" pump, which, worked by the water automatically, pumped it to the top of the hill, where the house was built. Thus we had the water "laid on," and the barrel and the sledge were done away with. There was a never-ending supply of pure, fresh water for the home and garden. When the district was reticulated from a weir in Blue Jacket Creek, a tributary to the Badger, from Mt Riddle, the pump was dispensed with.
The Badger Creek area was included In the Maroondah catchment when the Government transferred the whole area to the Metropolitan Board of Works, at the time of its inauguration in 1891.
A weir was constructed in the upper reaches of the Badger Creek by the Board, and the official opening took place on January 15, 1909. A pipe line of 15 inch diameter pipes conveyed the water to the Graceburn aqueduct - a distance of 31 miles. This work was completed in December, 1908.
In 1928, construction commenced for the construction of a new weir further upstream of the original one, to enable water to be diverted at a higher elevation. This aqueduct, which was being constructed at the same time as the weir, diverted the water to the O'Shannassy aqueduct.
The new diversion and aqueduct were completed in 1929, when the water went direct to the Olinda reservoir. The Silvan reservoir received both Coranderrk (Badger) and O'Shannassy after It was completed in 1931. Since the construction of these weirs the Badger Creek flow was greatly diminished, especially in the summer months.
RASPBERRY PATCH WASHED AWAY
Heavy rains in the mountains often made the Badger a roaring torrent. It often overflowed its banks and flooded adjoining properties. I can well remember going in a wagon, drawn by two horses, with Dad to Hatchwell's, who had a raspberry farm In the Don River valley. We loaded on 1000 young raspberry plants. These
were carefully planted on the flat alongside the creek. Before they had time to take root, along came a flood and the 1000 plants were washed away. That was the end of the raspberry venture at home. We went back to potatoes and pasture.
SETTLING IN ON THE NEW BLOCK
Now for the new block of land.
It was untouched by the hand of man, and thickly covered with a lovely stand of timber and scrub. It was given the name of "Glenviolet," and was thereafter known by that name.
NEW VENTURE IN LIFE
With the six children-Violet, Olly, John, James, William and Jabez -together with the adopted ones - Bert and Pearl Thomas - Oliver and Elizabeth set out on a new venture In life. Oliver was 32 years of age and Elizabeth 36 years.
TREES CUT DOWN FOR WAGON TO ENTER
So thick was the forest of trees and scrub that a path had to be cut to get the wagon and buggy on to the property.
A further area was cleared and tents erected. This was a real pioneering experience. Cooking was done over an open fire, with a camp oven, plus cast iron saucepans and kettles.
MOVE FOR A HOUSE
Having settled temporarily in the tents, the next move was to build a house. There was an abundance of material on the property in the tall, straight timber, but no method or machinery to saw them into weatherboards or even rough planks. So, with the American background of his father, Oliver Potts decided to build a log cabin.
Messrs. Ruddle (carpenter) and Donnelly (shipwright) were engaged to build the home.
The tallest and straightest of the trees were cut down, and had the bark stripped from them in six feet lengths. This bark was smoke dried by leaning the sheets, sap inwards, against a tree and lighting a fire under them.
The building was 33 feet long and 18 feet wide. It was not necessary to join any of the logs as each one used was 33 feet in length. Such was the beautiful stand of timber on the block.
The logs were adzed into shape, and placed one on top of the other to a height of 10 feet, with interstices cut at the end to give them stability. Wooden pegs were used for further security. Large log beams were placed across from wall to wall. Doors and windows were cut out of the solid walls.
The house faced the east, and a large log fire place was built at the southern end. It had two large hobs and a log chimney about 20 feet high. Cooking was done over the open fire and bread baked In a camp oven, held over the fire by wire hooks suspended from chains fastened to an iron bar, as were other cooking utensils.
Huge fires were built up in the winter nights and these kept the room warm. It was not possible to sit closer than four feet from these fires!
The cabin was divided into two rooms, logs being used for the
division wall kept in place by stout uprights. The gable roof was built with sapling rafters, over which were placed the flattened smoke-cured bark. This bark was held in position with wire tied to large heavy logs. The roof never leaked, nor was the bark displaced by strong wind storms, even at gale force.
The joins between the log walls were filled with clay daub. which was smoothed off with a trowel.
Thus by ingenuity and hard work, was a comfortable house built for the family to move into.
That log cabin was the only one of its kind In that part of the State, and became of great historic interest.
In later years a one-fire stove was Installed to replace the openfire cooking.
PAYMENT BY BARTER
Money was almost an unknown commodity In those old days. They were years of depression in which the banks had closed and disrupted the financial economy of the State of Victoria.
Thus Dad made payment to Mr. Ruddle for his work on the house by dragging logs and carting wood on his block, which was where the Military School of Health is situated in what was known as Ruddle's Lane. To pay Mr. Donnelly, Dad did some ploughing for him. He had a single furrow plough drawn by two horses, and ploughed many hundreds of acres for various settlers, in an endeavour to raise some money to feed and clothe the large family. |
Australian History | The premiers, except for those of Queensland and Western Australia, agree to implement the Corowa proposals. |
Australian History | The Bathurst Conference (the second 'people's convention') meets to discuss the 1891 draft constitution |
Australian History | In two sessions, the Second National Australasian Convention meets (with representatives from all colonies except Queensland present). They agree to adopt a constitution based on the 1891 draft, and then revise and amend it later that year. |
Australian History | The Convention agrees on a final draft to be put to the people. |
Australian History | The decision is made to site the national capital in New South Wales, but not within 100 miles of Sydney. |
Australian History | Several delegates visit London to resist proposed changes to the agreed-upon constitution. |
Australian History | (01 Jan) Australia becomes a federation on 1 January. Edmund Barton becomes Prime Minister; the 7th Earl of Hopetoun becomes Governor-General |
Australian History | The Franchise Act guarantees women the right to vote in federal elections (by this stage, most states had already done this). However, it excludes most non-European ethnic groups, including Aboriginal people, unless already registered to vote on State roles. |
Australian History | The High Court of Australia is established with Samuel Griffith as the first Chief Justice. |
Australian History | A site at Dalgety, New South Wales chosen for the new national capital |
Australian History | Australia takes control of south-eastern New Guinea |
Australian History | Dorothea Mackellar publishes My Country |
Australian History | The first powered aeroplane flight in Australia is made. |
Australian History | Andrew Fisher forms the first federal majority Labor government. |
Australian History | The Royal Australian Navy is founded |
Australian History | Australia sends women to the Olympic Games for the first time |
Australian History | Blaxland, Lawson and Wentworth cross the Blue Mountains. |
Australian History | The foundation stone for the city of Canberra is put in place |
Australian History | Australian soldiers are sent to the First World War. This was first time Australians had fought under the Australian flag, as opposed to that of Britain's. |
Australian History | (25 APRIL)Australian soldiers land at Anzac Cove on the Gallipoli Peninsula in Turkey on 25 April. |
Australian History | Hotels are forced to close at 6 p.m., leading to the beginning of the 'six o'clock swill' |
Australian History | Second referendum on conscription is rejected. Transcontinental railway linking Adelaide to Perth is completed. |
Australian History | (08 AUG) Battle of Amiens |
Australian History | Prime Minister Billy Hughes signs Treaty of Versailles: the first signing of an international treaty by Australia. Australia obtains League of Nations mandate over German New Guinea. |
Australian History | The airline Qantas is founded |
Australian History | Edith Cowan becomes the first woman elected to an Australian parliament |
Australian History | The Smith Family charity is founded in Sydney |
Australian History | Vegemite is first produced |
Australian History | The first Miss Australia contest is held |
Australian History | The tenth parliament is formally opened in Canberra, finalising the move to the new capital |
Australian History | Bert Hinkler makes the first successful flight from Britain to Australia, and Charles Kingsford Smith makes the first flight from the United States to Australia. The Shrine of Remembrance is built. |
Australian History | Western Australia celebrates its centenary |
Australian History | Batsman Don Bradman scores a record 452 not out in one cricket innings |
Australian History | Sir Douglas Mawson charts 4,000 miles of Antarctic coastline and claims 42% of the icy mass for Australia |
Australian History | The Sydney Harbour Bridge opens |
Australian History | Western Australia votes at a rerefendum to secede from the Commonwealth, but the vote is ignored by both the Commonwealth and British governments |
Early Frankston History
An Anglican church and school were built in 1855, with the first Frankston post office opening on 1 September 1857 and a pottery established in 1859. During the 1860s, there were estimated to be around 30 people living in Frankston, with about 200 others living in the surrounding area. In 1874, a state school was built in Frankston as well as a Mechanics' Institute and free library in 1880. The first savings bank opened in 1881, and two brickworks factories and a cordial manufacturer were operating by the 1880s.
The Melbourne railway came on 1 August 1882, which saw Frankston develop into a seaside resort
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