1805 - 1887 (82 years)
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| Name |
NICHOLAS, Henric [1] |
| Born |
1805 [1] |
| Gender |
Male |
| Died |
25 Jul 1887 |
Cawood, Ouse, Tasmania [1] |
| Buried |
26 Jul 1887 |
St John the Baptist Anglican Cemetery, Ouse, Tas. [1] |
| Person ID |
I22204 |
My Genealogy |
| Last Modified |
16 Sep 2023 |
| Father |
NICHOLAS, Edward, b. 1769, Nant, Monmouthshire, Wales , d. 8 Oct 1837, ‘Nant’, Bothwell, Tasmania (Age 68 years) |
| Relationship |
natural |
| Mother |
DAVIES, Susannah (Susan), b. 1767, England , d. 19 Feb 1850, ‘Nant’, Bothwell, Tasmania (Age 83 years) |
| Relationship |
natural |
| Married |
5 May 1791 |
Llantillo, Crossenny, Monmouth, Wales [2] |
| Family ID |
F5956 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
| Family |
GATENBY, Sarah, b. 30 May 1812, Whitby, Yorkshire, England , d. 7 Jan 1905 (Age 92 years) |
| Married |
25 Jul 1833 |
Longford, Tas., #36/2360. [1, 2] |
| Children |
| | 1. NICHOLAS, Hannah, b. 19 Jan 1835, d. 21 Sep 1923 (Age 88 years) [natural] |
| | 2. NICHOLAS, Elizabeth, b. 11 Aug 1836, d. 18 Aug 1852, Hamilton, Tas., #35/69. (Age 16 years) [natural] |
| | 3. NICHOLAS, Sarah, b. 1841, d. 26 May 1930 (Age 89 years) [natural] |
| | 4. NICHOLAS, Ellen, b. 12 Aug 1845, d. 12 Aug 1938, Hobart, Tasmania Australia (Age 93 years) [natural] |
| | 5. NICHOLAS, Henrie, b. 13 Sep 1848, d. 25 Sep 1851, Hamilton, Tas., #35/55. (Age 3 years) [natural] |
| | 6. NICHOLAS, George Clarence, b. 17 Oct 1851, d. 4 Nov 1933 (Age 82 years) [natural] |
|
| Last Modified |
16 Sep 2023 |
| Family ID |
F5948 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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| Notes |
- Cawood,
1844
Purchase date. Cawood House is beautifully built of stone and stands by the Ouse River, with rich irrigated flats and fine stone outbuildings. For some reason the walls of two of the outbuildings, the stables and barn, are out of square by about a foot. By 1871 Henric Nicholas had acquired Cawood, Springvale and Hunter's Hill. and when Mr Nicholas died it was inherited by his son George Clarence, who was born there in 1851. At the beginning of the century the Cawood Estate covered about 75,000 acres, being one of the largest and best in the state; 30,000 sheep were shorn every year, and there 2,500 head of cattle. All the sheep in those days were shorn at TOR HILL in one of the largest sheds in the country, the wool being sent for sale to England, as was then so often the case. Fat stock in great numbers was sent to supply the hungry miners at Mount Lyell, generally over the Linda Track.
H_Boutell
H_Boutell originally shared this on 23 Feb 2012
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