Category: Australia

  • Jesse Wright and Mary Ann Hancock

    Jesse Wright (2nd great-grandfather, maternal side) was born in 1845 in Wakefield, Yorkshire, England. He died in 1899, possibly in Wentworth, NSW. He was the son of George Wright (1807-1882) and Mary Ann Crooks (1809-1880).

    Jesse Wright's Baptism Record

    Jesse was a grazier.

    Mary Ann Hancock was born in 1851 in Euston, NSW and died in 1931 in Mildura. She was the daughter  of John Hancock and Louise Gibbs.

    Mary Ann was a mid-wife [who] travelled on paddle-steamers on the Murray and Darling River systems to homesteads of pregnant women. [She is] written about in the book, ‘Water into Gold’ by Ernestine Hill.

    Jesse and Mary Ann married in 1871 in Wentworth. They had ten children, including their first born, Frederick George Wright (16 September, 1872) who married Josephenna Theresa Cramer.

    Frederick and Josephenna were Cyril Wright’s parents. They’re my great grandparents on my mum’s side (Eileen, Mary Wright-Curran). 

    Information Source: Mary Davis – Family History Records

    Jessie and Mary Ann's Graves

    Jesse Wright - Death Notices

  • Ileen Smith and Cyril Wright

    Ileen Smith and Cyril Wright
    Ileen Smith and Cyril Wright
    Nanna and Pop Wright

    Ileen Bridget Smith and Cyril Jesse Wright (my maternal grandparents) married in the Sacred Heart Church in Mildura, Victoria in 1925.

    My mum (Eileen Wright-Curran) recalled that they moved around a lot as a family – for work opportunities. Cyril worked on the fruit blocks and as a fruit classer. Ileen worked picking fruit, packing dried fruit (for shops), house cleaning, and raising her seven children.

    They had been married for 45 years when Cyril died in 1970. Ileen died in 1984. They are both buried in Mildura.

    Memories about Ileen (Nanna) and Cyril (Pop) from Eileen Curran

    Love

    I never ever felt not loved or that I didn’t have the same as everyone else.

    Nanna’s lost engagement ring

    Pop was working as a fruit classer (rating the quality of the fruit) while Nanna was picking someone’s block. As she did so she lost her engagement ring.

    She was really upset about it, ‘stranger than fiction‘ that was the headline in the Swan Hill paper. It was about Mr Wright who was the head fruit classer at the packing shed and he used to go up to the sweat boxes when the fruit came in, and he’d grab the fruit like that and look for colour and size and everything. And he did that and anyway one of the ones that he picked up, here’s his wife’s engagement ring. So they said, ‘stranger than fiction.’

    Nanna Wright

    Nanna Wright would buy clothes for us and knit jumpers for us. She was a good embroiderer.

    They used to tear rags and wind hair around the rags to curl the hair back then.

    Memories from Greg Curran

    I remember Nanna used to love going to the Senior Citizens Club in Minyip where they’d play cards, have chats and go on outings.

    Nanna also loved a bet or two and lollies, which she used to hide because she wasn’t supposed to eat them due to her diabetes.

    In Minyip she had a little dog called Whiskey who was highly excitable and would run laps at top pace around the huge tank in her backyard.

    Generous Pop

    …he had nothing but would give you everything. He would bring back gifts from Adelaide where he went for treatment for emphysema.

    He would bring back Friction Cars that made lots of noise much to the annoyance of mum with her headaches.  Every time Michael and Kevin [my brothers] would hear the Volksy [Volkswagen] they’d say, ‘Pop’s here,’ thinking that he’d have something for them.

    My mum while pregnant with me (Greg) couldn’t keep food down. She could only have flat lemonade which my mum and dad couldn’t afford. Every week Pop Wright would bring down 7 bottles for them. 

    Mum (Eileen) and Dad (Kevin) needed a car one time to take one of us kids to a doctor in Adelaide. Dad first asked his dad, Herbert Curran.

    I said to dad about borrowing the car cos he had a new car every few years anyway. And he said, ‘ohh I’ll have to have it greased and do this and do that.’ And I said, ‘stick it.’ (laughs) And I went out to Mary’s father, Cyril and told Cyril about it. And he gave us the Volkswagen which was in an older condition than Dad’s was. So we took the little Volksy…

    Pop Wright was apparently the best one to pick grapes for according to my dad (Kevin Curran) cos he paid better and he wasn’t a hard boss. 

    Card Games (memory from Mary Davis)

    Pop liked to play cards and one family joke played on him was that whenever someone said, ‘whose turn is it to deal?’, everyone would say, ‘Pop’s turn.’ He didn’t realise that he was always dealing.

    Where they lived

    Here are the places Nanna and Pop Wright lived together:

    1941 Cardross (Ray Hampton’s place)

    it was like a paradise cos that was like a normal house…flowers over the pergola, like little roses…Dad put up swings for us with ropes on the trees because there were plenty of trees. I used to think it was heaven…

    Cardross (Picker’s Hut on Cardross Road)

    …there was a hut outside the main part… a kitchen and one bedroom. I don’t know what we did for baths. Mum must have got dishes and that cos I remember when we were in the mud-house we used to wash our face and hands and…she’d wash us down in a dish every night in front of the fire.

    …the boys used to sleep outside in the bungalow. Mum, dad and the babies used to sleep in mum and dad’s room. 

    Red Cliffs (out the back of it) – Mud House

    Pop had a contract for the picking of two blocks…Nanna wanted them to move out of the mud house because it was too damp. So they moved.

    That (the mud house) was a better house than the pickers’ hut. There was more room and privacy.

    Red Cliffs (on the way into town) on Bob Langford’s property

    It was difficult to find places to live that would accept a family of seven. 

    Benifra (on the road to Swan Hill) near Nyah West

    My father [Cyril] got a job as a fruit classer [rating the quality of the grapes] at Nyah West Packing Shed, which was pretty elite in those days…mum of course was out picking on someone’s block…for money to help the family.

    Eileen (my mum) remembers going to Benifra State School which only had 1 teacher and around 30 kids. 

    Irymple – 7 Gowrie Grove (Housing Commission place)

    We lived there till, mum worked with dad at the shed, saved enough to put a deposit on a house in Thirteenth Street [Mildura].

    106A Thirteenth Street, Mildura

    …It wasn’t a real flash house or anything.
    My mum lived here (Ileen Wright) when she started going out with my dad (Kevin Curran).

    Old rusty letterbox with number 106A
    106A 13th Street, Mildura, 2011
    106A 13th Street, Mildura 2011

    Cowra Avenue, Mildura (around 16th Street)

    • My mum (Eileen Wright) lived here till she got married to Kevin Curran.
    Old house on fruit block. Lawn out front with a number of trees
    Family house of Cyril and Ileen Wright on Cowra Avenue in Cardross – 2011.

    15th Street and Cowra Avenue, Mildura

    • This was the last Mildura place Nanna Wright lived in till she moved to Minyip, Victoria. 
    15th Street Mildura, near corner of Cowra Avenue in 2011

    Main Street, Minyip

    • Nanna Wright lived on her own in Minyip in a rented place owned by the Germano family till her death in 1984.
    • I remember this as a cold, dark place – no matter the time of day. It got very little natural light. It only had an outdoor toilet that needed to be emptied (Greg Curran) 
    • Her place was diagonally opposite us (the Curran family) in the Post Office where my dad (Kevin Curran) worked as Post Master and mum (Eileen, Mary Wright) worked as a telephonist and mum.

  • Mullingar Station

    Mullingar Station is situated 15 minutes from the town of Pooncarie in NSW, Australia. The Darling River runs through the station.

    Patrick Curran (my paternal great grandfather) was granted the lease of the land that he called Mullingar on 7 December, 1910. He paid a deposit of four pounds, ten schillings. His assets at that time were 670 pounds, 5 horses, and 2 cows.

    Patrick and his wife, Isabella Herbert, their family and belongings were moved here by paddle steamer. They camped in a clump of trees by the river till they could build a house there. 

    Their house was constructed from timber and corrugated iron. It consisted of a living room and bedrooms, a kitchen and dining room. 

    Source: Gordon Curran, in The Family History of Michael Curran 1836-1997.

    Photo: Greg Curran 2009

    Photo: Greg Curran 2009
    Out front of house – Mullingar. Photo: Greg Curran 2009

    Original buildings at Mullingar Station (2009)

    Grandma Kelleen Curran had her wedding reception here - Mulingar
    Grandma Kelleen Curran (nee Cullinan) had her wedding reception here. Photo: Greg Curran 2009
    Photo: Greg Curran, 2009
    Photo: Greg Curran, 2009

    Family photos at Mullingar Station

  • Herbert Family Summary

    Me: Gregory Brian Curran (1965-). Son of Kevin Curran and Eileen Mary Wright. 

    My Great Grandparents (Paternal side):

    Patrick_IsabellaCurran2

    My Great-Great Grandparents

    • John Herbert (1825-1888) and Margaret James (1828-1903)

    The Herbert family Australian history starts in Wallaroo in South Australia, Australia.

  • Pooncarie

    Pooncarie, or Pooncaira as it was originally gazetted, (meaning large sandhill in the Barkindji language) is a very small town in south west, New South Wales, Australia.

    The Barkindji people lived in the area for around 40 000 years, prior to the arrival of white people.

    Established in 1840 through illegal grazing runs, Pooncarie gained prominence as a paddle steamer port to take workers and provisions to sheep stations, and wool bales to markets in the south It came to be known as ‘The Port’ by locals.

    Explorers Burke and Wills passed through the area in 1860 in their south to north expedition across Australia.

    There are a number of sheep properties in the Pooncarie region.

    Sources:

    Dunn, J. https://www.outbackmag.com.au/pooncarie-nsw-2648/.

    visitnsw.com/destinations.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pooncarie

    https://www.aussietowns.com.au/town/pooncarie-nsw

    Curran and Cullinan Families in Pooncarie

    Two stations in Pooncarie are linked to the Curran and Cullinan families: Mullingar (Curran Family) and Kelleen (Cullinan Family).

    Mullingar was established in 1910 by Patrick Curran.

    Kelleen was established in February 1888 by Michael Cullinan.

    See the Michael Cullinan and Patrick Curran posts for further details of their lives in Pooncarie.

    Curran Family

    Entrance to Mullingar Station

    Cullinan Family

    1915: Michael Cullinan is fined and given good behaviour bond for 6 months for using “threatening language in a public place” at a landsale at Endfield near Pooncarie. His appeal on the basis that it wasn’t a public place was dismissed with costs of 10 pounds, 10 schillings costs.

    Threatening Language Charge
    Source: Richmond River Herald – Northern District Advertiser, 10 December 1915