This
photo now lives in the "family history bedroom". I stare at it every day.
Actually
it captivates me. It is quite possible
that I knew it as a young child as it was more than likely hanging in my
grandmother’s old flat where I spent my
early years. It's large, stained and
watermarked. When it was found it had probably spent 40 years lying flat in the
top of a wardrobe hiding amongst the Kerr photos.
It's
obviously been displayed in large frame at some stage. Perhaps it belonged to
the bride? It took me a while to even know which side of the family came from
until my eagle eyed husband spotted it in a video montage my mother had put together
in the 1980s. So it went from the Kerr pile to the Gadsby pile of photos. A little later cousin Wendy identified
everyone correctly having known each of the characters. It was taken at the wedding of my Great Aunt Selina
(Lena) Gadsby 1890-1954 and Alexander Thurlow 1888-1962 in Balmain in 1918.
For
the first time I was seeing my Grandmother Julia 1903-1954 and my great
grandmother Selina Gadsby nee Smith 1869-1935. Young Selena aged 28 married Alec
aged 30.
l-r Maude Gadsby, Robert and Alec Thurlow, Lene Gadsby, Selina Gadsby, John Robert and Julia Gadsby |
The
story is that Alec was a fellow travelling to Australia with his brothers; he
met Lena who was travelling from London to Sydney on the “Zealandia” with her 4
sisters, baby brother and mother in 1912.
They were to meet up in Sydney with her brothers and father Thomas as they
were travelling by different transport. Lena had left behind her fiancé, Ben a butcher in London but had many
weeks to while away the time on the journey.
Lena struck up a friendship. Alec and
his brothers were lifelong friends with the Gadsbys when they landed in Sydney.
Mother
Selina though was not happy about the friendship and dispatched letters to Ben
back in London to make haste to Australia.
Details about Ben are a little sketchy but he did come to Sydney at some
time later in the next few years. In a
strange turn of events Selena Sr ran off with Ben when he arrived in Sydney and
literally set up shop with him a small goods store in North Sydney. Another little Gadsby child had been born –
Edith in 1914.
With
Selina taken off with Ben it was left to her daughter Lena to care for the baby
and other siblings before she eventually
married Alec in 1818. Dad, Thomas Gadsby with his eldest’s help had been
holding the household together, working as a bricklayer to keep the wolves from
the door.
It
is an incomplete family photo as several of the family is missing. To me Selena,
my great grandmother looks like she doesn't belong. Is it the dress? At
first I had assumed she was a maid. She’s standing at the rear behind the bride
and the groom who is seated. They don’t
look entirely happy to be lining up together for the shot. Julia a shy 15 year
old, my grandmother is standing to the right. In three years time she will be a
bride herself. Her older sister, Maude
Rose, 18 is seated on the left. Alec had his brother Robert Thurlow (standing)
as his groomsman- you can see the resemblance?
Seated
in the front is Selina’s brother John Robert (Uncle Jack). At only 20 he looks frail. When Cousin Wendy
describes him she says he's just back from the war- gassed in France- but his war
records show no sign of gassing. Rather he seems to have suffered from
shellshock and in this shot he looks a little haunted.
Missing
from the photo is Thomas Gadsby, Lena’s father. Sadly a rare chance of a photo
missed- we have none of him. Within a few years all of the older children will
have married but sadly this is the only wedding photo.
Also
missing are brother Harold and Thomas who have been away at war. The littlest children are not included in the
shot-Kitty, Grace, William and Edith. They
were probably too young to attend the wedding.
Since
I started doing family history the photo with its stained backing stands on an
easel over looking (supervising?) my research desk. It accompanies me on my
family history journey. Naturally it was
the theme photo of our 100 year Gadsby family reunion. Other family photos of
the small children didn’t come to light until years later so this is truly
treasured.
It's
a moment in time captured for what it’s worth – a partial gathering of the clan
whether they liked it or not. I'm so glad to have it and for a while it was the
only childhood photo of my grandmother.
Taken a year so so later some of the missing siblings got in the shot
l-r rear to front Harold, Frank Kelf, Kitty, Maude, Julia and Grace Gadsby c 1920
|
Alec
and Lena were well off, owned their own business and own home. They ran a
toilet towel business-Hygienic Towel Supply which later became the Snow White
Towel Company. Occasionally the nieces were employed. Alec and Lena had no
children but often gave their spare rooms to those in the family in need of a
place to stay.
I never knew Lena or Julia. They died in 1954 the year before I was born. This shot of them laughing and playing with my cousins looks like a much happier shot. Perhaps it's a few little squirming cuties that is missing from the wedding shot above.
Julia, Jillian, Lena and little Airdrie c1952 |
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