Saturday, 7 June 2014

A Tribute to Francis Arthur Baron aka Great Uncle Frank

Papers Past is a brilliant resource for all those interested in history in general, or in family history, for the life and times of one's ancestors are often very well documented in real time in contemporary newspapers. A number of years ago I found an image of one Francis Arthur Baron in the pages of the Dunedin based publication called the "Otago Witness". This newspaper has 3056 issues online from 11 January 1851 - 24 November 1909. According to Papers Past the Witness began in Dunedin in January 1851 as a four page, fortnightly newspaper. It became a weekly in August that year. At this time illustrated weekly newspapers were a popular and important form of publication in New Zealand and the paper continued to be published until 1932. I sincerely appreciate that this was the nature of the way some newspapers operated back then,  as it became the source of a significant find some years back when I located a grainy and rather indistinct image of one of Henry William's sons, Francis Arthur Baron. Francis Arthur Baron is recorded as having been born on 3 May 1877 in North East Valley in Dunedin. His birth entry, which I accessed in March 1993, reveals that his parents were Henry William Baron and Ellen McQuillan and that it was his Dad who registered his birth on 13 June 1877. There is nothing more to be found, as yet, about this, the eighth child and third son, in the family until he appears in the local paper the "Otago Daily Times" of 2 January 1900 as having made a donation to the Patriotic Fund of one pound. A couple of weeks later, on January 19, he is recorded as heading off from Dunedin for the south on a through train.                         The next thing that the local newspapers reveal about Francis, whom everyone called Frank, is his death in South Africa during the Boer War and it is the obituary image of him that I decided to pursue to see if I could locate a better one than the one digitised on Papers Past. I wrote to the Otago Daily Times, who hold the archive material of the Witness requesting a better copy of the image that appeared in the Otago Witness, just two years after he was on that train for the south, on January 22, 1902. The resulting digital image is a very much crisper and clearer image and I am indebted to the staff of the Otago Daily Times who worked so hard to provide this for me. Francis had succumbed to enteric fever in Kroonstadt on December 16, 1901. Even though he had enlisted out of Dunedin, New Zealand for the Boer War, he was not a member of the local contingents established here in New Zealand. Rather, he travelled up to South Africa and joined the South African Light Horse as a Sergeant. He lies in the Kroonstadt Garden of Remembrance in the Orange Free State, far from his family and friends in Dunedin, New Zealand. It is of passing interest that his name is spelled incorrectly on the metal monument at this cemetery and the date of his death is recorded as 17 December when all other records indicate that he died on 16 December 1901.

            












His name and sacrifice is also commemorated in at least three places around New Zealand. One is at the War Memorial Museum in Auckland where his name is carved in the granite slabs in the special Boer War Memorial there:

    



Another is in Timaru where his name is on the Boer War Memorial there:                                                 And the third place where he is confirmed as being immortalised is at the Ranfurly Veterans' Home in Three King's, Auckland. 

 
          


One can only imagine the sense of loss that Henry William and Ellen must have experienced upon the death of their precious son so far from his home and a peek at the official record for Frank on his military record on Archway indicates that Henry William spent many years trying to locate the War medals and clasps that were due to Frank for his war service. It took at least two years for these to be forwarded to the family after their initial request. 
        

My research indicates that the image below is what they were seeking as their final tribute to a son lost in what we now refer to as the South African War 1899-1902. The New Zealand History Online website defines this war thus:"The South African War (or Second Anglo-Boer War) was the first overseas conflict to involve New Zealand troops. Fought between the British Empire and the Boer South African Republic (Transvaal) and its Orange Free State ally, it was the culmination of longstanding tensions in southern Africa." 

                       
The image of Francis Arthur Baron, now in the hands of his family 100 years after his untimely death, is uncanny for the resemblance he bears to living descendants. When I asked Trevor last night who he thought the photograph looked like, he agreed with me immediately!  I wonder if others in the family can see the likeness also?


Monday, 28 April 2014

Slowly But Surely

It has been a long time since my last post so maybe the disappointment I wrote about in the last entry has taken its toll on my enthusiasm for the task!  No, not really. I have branched out in search of Henry William's wife, Ellen McQuillan, and have been deeply involved in trying to find her of late! I will post about that search separately but in the meantime there are some small steps of progress to report in the hunt for the true parents of the Rev. John Baron.
Using Family Search online search engines I have been able to locate a John Baron born on 16 July 1795 with a christening on 27 August 1795 in Wigan, Lancashire, England. John Baron's parents from this transcription are James Baron and Ellen Jackson who had been married on 3 Sep 1793 in Palatine, Wigan, Lancashire, ENGLAND. At this point there is still no way of proving that this John Baron is actually "our" John Baron.  I have ordered in a film of the will of a James Baron, Attorney at Law, who died in 1831 and I have viewed a film of the Alphabetical Index of Wills Proved and Letters of Administration and Tuition where I have found a James Baron Attorney at law of Wigan in the Index. Also in this same Index I have located an entry for an Ellen Baron of Hulme, Manchester who died a widow in 1833. Is it possible that after the death of James Baron she moved to be near one of her children? I am now waiting for the film of the actual wills to arrive at my local Family History Centre in the hope that I can make a link with James Baron's wife and children and, thus, link the two generations to what is already proven.
So while I have waited for this film to arrive from the Family History Centre in Salt Lake City, Utah I have found a reference to a James Baron, Attorney at Law, on a website called Family Chest.  http://www.familychest.co.uk/ The documents available to researchers on this site relate to people who bought, sold or leased a house or land, made a will, or entered into any kind of legal agreement from the 18th century through until the early 20th century. There is a free surname index of the principal parties in each document and should you be lucky enough the original documents are available to purchase. When I searched for James Baron in this Index up popped two documents in which James Baron was the Attorney at Law and one of the signatories.In order to explore these documents further and to ascertain whether it was worth purchasing one of them, I e-mailed the administrator of this site, one Allan Azzaro. A more helpful person I could not hope to have met!  He was able to share with me the contents of the two documents that related to James Baron and shared much information about the contents of these: "In Doc.Ref.0504100 it seems quite clear that James Baron is acting only as a trustee for one of the others involved, and gets only the briefest mention.  It might just be worth noting that the document was almost certainly drawn up by James Baron or one of his associates in that it is marked 'Baron, Wigan' in the bottom corner of the front cover.  In addition, all the signatures are witnessed by 'Henry Hartley, Clerk to Mr Baron, Solicitor, Wigan'.  Unfortunately James Baron's signature doesn't appear anywhere on it." For the second document, and the one that is more relevant to the search for James Baron, Allan shares: "Doc.Ref. 0503024 is slightly more interesting in that the property in question is being sold jointly by Hugh Fairhurst, James Fairhurst, Thomas Fairhurst and James Baron.  All four of them have exactly equal legal status in the transaction. Maybe you know that a document entitled 'Lease for a year' always represents the first part of a sale (or mortgage) of property by the method of 'Lease and Release' :-  the Lease is made on one day and then the Release follows on the day after.  Unfortunately the Lease is always very brief and it is the Release (which we don't have in our collection in this case) which usually gives much more detail as to what is going on. My best guess here is that Hugh, James and Thomas Fairhurst, together with James Baron, are the Executors of the will of Thomas Fairhurst (deceased - the father of Hugh and James).  This is the easiest explanation of them all jointly selling the property.  But once again James Baron isn't really doing anything other than acting as any solicitor would.  This document does have a fairly good signature of James Baron, but there is nothing to indicate whether or not it was drawn up by him." So, for me, it was simply not worth purchasing either of these documents as it would seem that they are both of much more interest to other family researchers. My interest, however, was in trying to get a copy of James Baron's signature from the second document!  Again, this great man, Allan Azzaro and his wife Brenda, were so wonderfully helpful and were able to send me a copy of this signature as it appeared on the second document. Given that this document is from 28 Feb 1813, the signature is in excellent condition and so very interesting to see after all these years!

So that is a small piece of what I have turned up lately in the search for the Baron ancestors. I am hoping that the film containing James Baron's will, will arrive soon for me to go through with a fine tooth comb to see if it might reveal some more of this man and his story as I try to put the meat on the Baron's bones!