About The SMITH, WOOD and Related Families
Hello and welcome to these pages.
I first got interested in genealogy a few years ago, when my Mum and I got to
talking about her family. I knew very little then about my grandfather, and
nothing about the rest of his family so it was a huge surprise when Mum said
that he had come with his family to Western Australia when he was about ten,
from Wales. Since then we have talked many times about these fascinating times,
and each time I go away and uncover something else, which in turn snowballs with
more memories. I am so lucky I started this journey while that generation is
still here, because those memories are worth bottling.
I started with my near ancestors - my grandparents - SMITH - CARMICHAEL -
EVERITT - HOUNSLOW. Then the same for my dear husband - WOOD - LOBBAN - BROAD -
LOGUE. Now our tree includes 564 surnames! I have researched many side branches
along the way.
I know now that my husband's family in Western Australia dates from the very
earliest years of the colony - these are the SHAW's, LOGUE's and BROAD's. My
father in law has a great memory for family going ons and has told us great
stories and potted histories. Our family roots have led to some very interesting
places. My Dad's family and my husband's lines are very intriguing and there
have already been wonderful books written about some of them.
Between my husband and I there are family lines coming from Scotland, Ireland,
and England. The most recent really great discovery was that my LEASK and
CORSTON family ancestors on my Mothers side were seafarers from the Shetland and
Orkney Islands. They emigrated to South Australia in the early 1850s. Also, I
think I have found a link in the OTTER family through an internet cousin. I
sincerely thank the family historians I have personally been in touch with and
who have been so very generous. You are wonderful people.
If you have any information - including photographs - about the family or any
member of it, that you would be willing to share, please either contact me via the
link towards the top of this page - or use this link to
email Hazel Wood
Also, if you have any questions, please don't be shy about asking.
FAMILIES WE ARE RESEARCHING
This is a work in progress and will keep growing. Here are just some of the families
which are part of our Family Tree.
EVERITT in Huntingdonshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire, Lincolnshire and
Cheshire England, and Flintshire Wales to Western Australia.
SMITH in Ayrshire Scotland to South Australia and Western Australia.
WOOD, ARUNDEL in Western Australia.
BROAD in Sussex England to Western Australia.
OTTER in Yorkshire, Lancashire and Cheshire England to Western Australia.
LEASK in Shetland Islands Scotland to South Australia and Western Australia.
CORSTON in Orkney Islands Scotland to South Australia and Western Australia.
LOBBAN in Banffshire Scotland to Western Australia and Queensland.
HARVEY in Glasgow Scotland to Western Australia.
STAVELEY in Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire England.
STOKES in Kent England, Ireland and the Falkland Islands to Western Australia.
HOUNSLOW in Buckinghamshire England to South Australia and West Australia.
LOGUE in Londonderry Ireland to Western Australia.
BRITTAIN, BURGES in Ireland and West Australia.
CARMICHAEL in Fifeshire Scotland to South Australia and Western Australia.
REEDS, CLARK, BROOKS in South Australia.
NEIL in Ayrshire, Scotland and South Australia.
REID in Scotland and South Australia.
HOWIE, BREMNER, CAMPBELL, STEVENSON, MCHARDY in Scotland.
SHAW, STOCK, STRAINS, O'NEILL, COOPER, MATTHEWS in England.
MEADE, GOODWIN in Ireland.
BOOKS PUBLISHED WHICH CONTAIN INFORMATION ABOUT OUR FAMILIES
History
A Global Clan: Scottish Migrant Networks and Identities Since the Eighteenth Century
Editor: Angela McCarthy Published: 2006
Family Histories
Salt Bush Shepherds A History of the Broad Family in Western Australia 1852-1988
Author: Nan and Trudy Broad Published: 1992
Smith Family History 1848-1972
Author: Max Smith
To Be Heirs Forever
Author: Mary Durack Published: 1976
The 'Caroline' 150 Years in Western Australia of the GEE and TRUSLOVE FAMILIES
1829-1979
Author: Iris Aamot
Local District Histories
A Life Of Its Own: A social and economic history of the City of Geraldton and
the Shire of Greenough, 1846 - 1988
Author: Sister Mary Albertus Bain Published: 1996
The Old North Road
Author: W.J. de Burgh Published: 1986
A Millennium History of Great Gidding
Author: Patrick Ellis and David Shepherd
The Golden Grain and the Silver Fleece: A History of Quairading from 1859-1930
Author: Frances Eaton. Published: 1979
THE BIG Q. A history of Quairading and its surrounding districts.
Author: Ludbrook, Juliet Published: 2003
Bruce Rock: A Revised History
Author: Avon Lovell
Organizations Histories
The Veterans: A History of the Enrolled Pensioner Force in Western Australia,
1850-1880
Author: F.H. Broomhall
Little But Great: The saga of the Silver Chain, 1905-1965
Author: Noel Stewart
A Chain of Care: A History of the Silver Chain Nursing Association, 1905-2005
Author: Jean Chetkovich and Deborah Gare
PRIVACY AND REFERENCING
In keeping with today's privacy precautions, I have kept details of living
individuals concealed. I offer these pages as a celebration of our families and
for the people who may have links or otherwise be interested in what I have
found. If you see information here that you are not happy with, please email me
and I will make amendments.
I am working on providing references for the sources of all the facts I have
included in these pages. I want to provide for someone following in my footsteps
to see where I looked and what evidence I had for these family tree
relationships. The information comes from many places, and I have endeavored to
use it in the right way.
NEWS
AUGUST 2007 A cousin in the LOBBAN family has just contacted me, and we are
corresponding, which is really wonderful. Thank you very much Syd for your interest and
kindness. There will be updates to the LOBBAN connections on these pages very
shortly.
JANUARY 2008 By accident or maybe that should be serendipity, I came across
information about the CARMICHAEL family in a book, in a chapter written by Professor
Ian Richards of Flinders University, South Australia. They were one branch of the
family I had struggled to find much about. I have since been very lucky to receive
copies of many of the letters written in the nineteenth century, by Mr Andrew
CARMICHAEL, which were published in the Fifeshire Advertiser, his hometown newspaper in
Scotland. They give a brilliant account of life in South Australia during the period
of Andrew's correspondence.
|