Blogging A-Z – April Challenge – N is for …..

N is for…… .Noack
Continuing the family of my late Cousin’s wife. You can read earlier posts that connect to this family HERE & HERE.
Like the Hartwig’s and Hohnberg’s, the Noack’s migrated from Prussia. This part of my research is in the very early stages.
Johann Carl Frederick Noack was born circa 1815. He was 42 years old when he left Crossen in Bradenberg Prussia on board the August, and arrived in Adelaide on 17th August 1856. There is some discrepancy about his occupation, at one point recorded as a shoemaker and another a sailor. He made his life in Eden Valley with his wife, and little is known of her,except that her surname was Cavanagh.
The link for the A-Z Challenge 2011 post is HERE

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Guildford Luggage Label

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The Great Storm, Shalford Park Cottages, Shalford Road, Guildford, 2nd August 1906

 

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Sunday Stamps – Black Swans

As I didn’t have anything suitable for the poetry theme this week, I went with this one, that fits with my A-Z Challenge theme of Australia. The swan on this stamp looks so graceful, its poetic.
Black Swans are quite common in Australia and whilst they have become popular in areas of Europe, certainly in the UK we are not self sustaining on breeding them. Ironically, there is a small group of black swans in the nearby town of Dawlish Devon.

The Black Swan by Randall Jarrell

When the swans turned my sister into a swan
I would go to the lake, at night, from milking:
The sun would look out through the reeds like a swan,
A swan’s red beak; and the beak would open
And inside there was darkness, the stars and the moon.

Out on the lake, a girl would laugh.
“Sister, here is your porridge, sister,”
I would call; and the reeds would whisper,
“Go to sleep, go to sleep, little swan.”
My legs were all hard and webbed, and the silky

Hairs of my wings sank away like stars
In the ripples that ran in and out of the reeds:
I heard through the lap and hiss of water
Someone’s “Sister . . . sister,” far away on the shore,
And then as I opened my beak to answer

I heard my harsh laugh go out to the shore
And saw – saw at last, swimming up from the green
Low mounds of the lake, the white stone swans:
The white, named swans . . . “It is all a dream,”
I whispered, and reached from the down of the pallet

To the lap and hiss of the floor.
And “Sleep, little sister,” the swan all sang
From the moon and stars and frogs of the floor.
But the swan my sister called, “Sleep at last, little sister,”
And stroked all night, with a black wing, my wings. 

Submitted as Sunday Stamps hosted by Viridian’s Postcard Blog
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High Street, Guildford With Policeman on Horseback

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Sepia Saturday 121 – Flight

Continuing the theme of Australia for the A-Z Challenge, you can read my posts HERE, whilst following the theme for Sepia Saturday. 
This is a photograph from Archive Flight Magazine in 1971 showing the Royal Australian Flying Doctor Service.

Taking part in Sepia Saturday
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Blogging A-Z – April Challenge – M is for …..

M is for…… .Maps
One of the things that is vital to researching is a map of the area. Way back in the early 1990s I spent about $8 on a large map of Australia, one that really shows a good level of detail. I came across it in the filing cabinet a few weeks ago when I started my Australian research quest in readiness for my trip later this year. Said map is currently secured to the wall in my study (easily removed with no damage!)

Not a brilliant photo. I was standing slightly precariously to take this! but it gives a sense of the detail on the map. 
Compared to this postcard which I discovered as part of a large batch that I bought from a bookshop in Hay on Wye. All the post cards had been discovered in books by the seller!

Whilst it does seem to be a bit off in terms of accuracy, I love the busyness of the card. I love the extra detail given to Tasmania, almost as though it was added as an after thought and the map of Great Britain at the top left. The card was published in 1916 and the map of Great Britain is reflective of this, as it shows Ireland as one Country rather than one divided!

The link for the A-Z Challenge 2011 post is HERE

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Weekend Cooking – Macaroni Cheese with Bacon & Mushrooms

Last week someone showed a recipe for Macaroni Cheese and I thought I had not made it for ages. So, I had some Macaroni in the cupboard and cooking commenced!

  • Add macaroni  to a saucepan of boiling water. I always add a plop of olive oil to the water.
  • Chopped up some mushrooms add to a pan
  • Cut up 8 slices of bacon and add the mushrooms. 
  • Add a little salt and pepper
  • Once cooked add the bacon and mushroom to a lasagne dish. 
  • Drain off macaroni and add to lasagne dish
  • Pour cheese sauce over the macaroni, bacon and mushroom mix
  • Give a stir round and sprinkle with grated cheese and a little ground pepper 
  • Into Oven for about 15 minutes or until nice and brown


Cheese Sauce  – all into a saucepan!
  1. One and half tablespoonfuls of plain flour
  2. Around 2oz of butter
  3. 1pint of milk (or half milk and half water)
  4. Salt and Pepper
  5. Add to the hob and stir furiously
  6. Add grated cheese  – depending on how cheesy you like it!

Taking part in Weekend Cooking, hosted by BethFishReads

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Blogging A-Z – April Challenge – L is for …..

L is for…… .Localities
As I research the various lines of my ancestry that have migrated to Australia it is important to me that I understand a little about those places in both a general and genealogical sense. As I have said previously. Australia is a huge Country therefore it is important to understand the general geography of the Country and the States and then the individual places of interest.
As I was planning this post, I remembered back to my first visit. When my Cousin’s daughter, now a Mum herself came home from school. She had gone to school and told everyone she had a cousin from England staying. So, she excitedly came up to me with the atlas the teacher had given her and presented it to me, open at the Australia page and asked me to show her where I lived. I turned the pages to the page of England and made a small pencil mark for the teacher and then I turned the page to the map that effectively shows world over two pages. I then marked England on the map and showed the distance to Australia. Then very simply, once she was over the shock of how far, she remarked, that England is tiny it would surely fit into New South Wales many times.
Thinking back to my posts about Henry Goucher HERE and HERE, it is remarked that he boarded a ship from Sydney to Newcastle and then again from Newcastle to Derwent in Tasmania. Did naughty Henry have any concept that actually the distance he travelled was hundreds of miles, yet in the same Country? We shall never know what he did think, but it is an interesting thought nonetheless.
So, where did my ancestors live – 

  • Ellis & Turpin Families – migrated to Geelong in Victoria 1854-1855
  • Robert Turpin – Transported to New South Wales in 1833
  • John Hunt Butcher – migrated to Richmond in Tasmania in 1821with later branches of the family to Carnamah district Western Australia
  • Henry Goucher – Transported to New South Wales in 1812 spending time in Newcastle & Derwent Tasmania
  • Noack’s, Hartwig’s and Hohnberg’s migrated to South Australia and then spread into Victoria and New South Wales from Prussia

The link for the A-Z Challenge 2011 post is HERE

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Postcard Friendship Friday – Map of Australia circa 1916

It seemed fitting this week to share a postcard that I am using to illustrate one of the A-Z Challenge; my selected theme for this month long posting is Australia. You can read the various posts via this tag line
 
Submitted as part of Postcard Friendship Friday hosted by The Best Hearts are Crunchy 
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