Author Topic: Assisted passage from England 1870s?  (Read 2059 times)

Offline hensher

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Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« on: Friday 22 November 19 15:18 GMT (UK) »
My great grandfather William Edmond Hensher from London was in South Africa by the early 1880s, but in a letter from him to his son he mentions 'when I went to New Zealand'. Can find no other mention of NZ anywhere. He was born in 1853 and not from a wealthy family so presume he went to NZ in the 1870s. He eventually became a gold miner in Africa. Where is best to start searching please?

Offline Milliepede

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Re: Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« Reply #1 on: Friday 22 November 19 15:28 GMT (UK) »
Have you found his passage to South Africa? 

His original destination when he left London would be the place to start as he could have gone from place to place. 

Do you know if he travelled on his own or did he have a wife/children in London?
Hinchliffe - Huddersfield Wiltshire
Burroughs - Arlingham Glos
Pick - Frocester Glos

Offline Milliepede

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Re: Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« Reply #2 on: Friday 22 November 19 15:37 GMT (UK) »
Is this him in 1901

William E Hensher 44 gold prospector agent
Daisy 26
Thomas 7
Ella 1
Gladys 2 months
Elizabeth Collis 17 servant

Death in 1903
Hinchliffe - Huddersfield Wiltshire
Burroughs - Arlingham Glos
Pick - Frocester Glos

Offline BumbleB

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Re: Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« Reply #3 on: Friday 22 November 19 16:05 GMT (UK) »
Thomas William - 1893 - mmn = Beckett - baptised 5 April 1896 - Kettering - born 17 April 1893 - Thomas Edmund (Gold Prospector) and Esther Emily.

Richard Edmund - 1896 - mmn = Beckett - baptised 5 April 1896 - Kettering - born 20 October 1895 - Thomas Edmund (Gold Prospector) and Esther Emily.

Cecil Jack - 1897 - mmn = Beckett - baptised 31 October 1897 - Kettering - born 14 July - Thomas Edmund (Gold Prospector) and Hester.

Ella - 1900 - mmn = Shead

Gladys - 1901 - mmn = Shead

I can't readily see a marriage between Hensher and Beckett or Shead.


Added:  BUT none of this helps in the search for a journey to New Zealand.  :-[

Transcriptions and NBI are merely finding aids.  They are NOT a substitute for original record entries.
Remember - "They'll be found when they want to be found" !!!
If you don't ask the question, you won't get an answer.
He/she who never made a mistake, never made anything.
Archbell - anywhere, any date
Kendall - WRY
Milner - WRY
Appleyard - WRY


Offline Maiden Stone

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Re: Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« Reply #4 on: Friday 22 November 19 16:07 GMT (UK) »
He might have worked his passage if he went as a young, single man.
Was there a mining industry in NZ? Was there a gold rush in Australia which attracted him before he continued to NZ?
Cowban

Offline BumbleB

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Re: Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« Reply #5 on: Friday 22 November 19 16:55 GMT (UK) »
So, Esther Emily died 11 September 1897 - Tooting.  Administration to Robert Hensher, attorney for WEH.

Transcriptions and NBI are merely finding aids.  They are NOT a substitute for original record entries.
Remember - "They'll be found when they want to be found" !!!
If you don't ask the question, you won't get an answer.
He/she who never made a mistake, never made anything.
Archbell - anywhere, any date
Kendall - WRY
Milner - WRY
Appleyard - WRY

Offline Janette

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Re: Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« Reply #6 on: Friday 22 November 19 19:36 GMT (UK) »
Hi,
do you have any more dates as to when he got to South Africa and where and when did he die please?

Cheers Janette

Offline Fresh Fields

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Re: Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« Reply #7 on: Friday 22 November 19 19:44 GMT (UK) »
Hello.

I'm wondering how many W. HENSHER there were. On a very quick look at our archives listings and PapersPast I got only one hit pre 1885.

Otago 1865 for a design of clay pipe on sale.

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT18651215.2.4.2?end_date=31-12-1885&query=Hensher&snippet=true&start_date=01-01-1839

Alan.
Early Settlers & Heritage. Family History.

Offline hensher

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Re: Assisted passage from England 1870s?
« Reply #8 on: Friday 22 November 19 21:09 GMT (UK) »
Wow this forum is a treasure trove for me! William Edmond Hensher must have been in South Africa before 1884 as that was when he married Esther Emily Beckett from Port Elizabeth. Her family arrived there in 1862. He died in April 1903 allegedly of Blackwater fever in the Gold Coast, now Sierra Leone. I've not been able to find any details of his burial.
There were several William Henshers, a family name. The Henshers had quite a dynasty of tobacco pipe makers. William Edmond's father Robert was one and the William in the newspaper advertisement was I think William Edmond's uncle, born 1806. I didn't know he was an exporter so thank you very much for that info!