Hi Tom and Judith
I have John Henry Reed's Marriage Certificate of 6 March 1884. If you contact me through Ancestry I will email you both a copy. I can also email you a printout of the whole Reed/Stone and Walker family details.
John Henry is listed as being born as Henry at Ballarat in 1855 and his Parents were Henry Reed and Martha Mitchell . They had three children, Ennis, Oswald St John and Pearl Hawthorn Reed, who married into the Fagan family.
Martha died in 1860 aged 28 at 'Den' - (must be a bad transcription error) - somewhere in Victoria. There are three Henry Reeds in the Death Indexes to 1888 which fit the bill if he was born say in 1827 (five years before Martha was born). One died at Dunolly (the 'Den' in Martha's death records?) and the others at South Yarra and Brighton.
I am trying to find where John Henry and Anne are buried. Anne (Walker) is not recorded at Ballarat, Springvale, St Kilda or Fawkner Cemeteries so I have emailed the Melbourne General cemetery at Carlton. Otherwise I will need to buy the Death certificate.
John also married Annie Teresa Stone in 1902, the year before he died, as you are aware. He used his address as Rochester Terrace, Albert Park which doesn't exist. Hint of something?
Ellen Maria Stone, born 1861 at Melbourne, who became Sister Mary Claver, died in 1932 aged 63 at Brighton. Her death age of 63 is wildly off the mark and is either 71 or 70. Her name was shown as Mary 'Claver' Stone. As a Catholic family, she took the name of St Peter Claver (1580-1654), the Patron Saint of Slaves (he worked and died in Columbia).
John Henry's second wife Annie Theresa Stone died as Annie Teresa 'Fabiola' Stewart at Frankston in 1921 aged 52. I see in your chats a newspaper recorded her name as 'Stuart'. I have searched both spellings but cannot find any marriage up to 1942 (last date for the indexes). I have searched the Frankston Cemetery records but no luck.
Annie Theresa also took a Saints name (Saint Fabiola who died on 27 December 399 [or 400] who did good works among the poor in those early Roman days).
Look forward to seeing you from Ancestry.
Richard