Showing 3 items
matching frances harriet holmes
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Federation University Historical Collection
Certificate, Chatham-Holmes Collection: Marriage Certificate, Karl Aumuller and Frances Harriet Holmes, 1876, 20 July 1876
... Aumuller and Frances Harriet Holmes, 1876...Karl Aumuller and Frances Harriet Holmes were married on 20... Aumuller and Frances Harriet Holmes, 1876 Very poor condition ...Karl Aumuller and Frances Harriet Holmes were married on 20 July 1876 at the home of her uncle, "Echo Hills" Station, Queensland Frances' parent were Edward Carter Holmes and Sarah Holmes, nee Kitching, of Ascot Victoria. On the certificate it indicates that Frances lived on "Echo Hills" Station doing home duties.Very poor condition - writing badly faded.karl aumuller, frances holmes, "echo hills", queensland, ascot, edward carter holmes, sarah holmes, kitching -
Federation University Historical Collection
Document, The Aumuller Family
... frances harriet holmes... aumuller family karl aumuller frances harriet holmes salmon family ...Type and hand written documentsaumuller family, karl aumuller, frances harriet holmes, salmon family, henry augustus salmon, mabel holmes, william frederick salmon, catherine holmes, captain melville, captain moonlight -
Federation University Historical Collection
Plant specimen, Flowers from the Holy Land, possibly c1949
This item was located in a book called The English Lakes which was owned by E.C. Holmes [Edward Carter Holmes was the name of my mother's, Elizabeth Mary [Elizabeth] Holmes family's pioneer settler. He arrived in Geelong on the 28th of June, 1849, with his wife Sarah and their first child Frances Harriet as assisted immigrants (people whose passage was subsidised by an assisted immigration scheme) to New South Wales at Port Henry, Geelong in the sailing boat ‘Larpent’. Sarah and Edward arrived two years before his mother, Harriet, arrived as unassisted passenger in Geelong on ‘The Eagle’. 200 of the " Larpent" passengers had been selected in England by Rev John Dunmore Lang whose wish was to encourage the migration of hard-working, God-fearing Protestants to the colony. He sponsored two ships, the "Travancore" and the" Larpent', to bring the settlers to Australia in 1849 with Dr Alexander Thomson, a Sydney Presbyterian minister, ready to receive and settle them. Thomson owned section 10 of the parish of Barrabool known as the Kardinia section — a square mile of undulating land west of Colac, still known today as Larpent. Among the 'Larpent' immigrants were many well-known Ballarat and District pioneers including Armitage, Mercer, Oddie and Scott. For more details about this migration scheme refer to: A thoroughly Protestant emigration: the emigration activities of the Rev. Dr. J.D. Lang / Ian Wynd.2006.] [source: Jane Dyer 2024] Printed card with a pressed botanical specimen glued onto it. Printed onto the card 'Flowers from the Holy Land. Placed on the Holy Sepulchrechatham family archive, chatham, holmes, ec holmes. holy land, relic, botanical, botany, holy sepulchre, botanical specimen