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Katie Amelia Barnes

Female


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Katie Amelia Barnes (daughter of George Harper Barnes and Elizabeth Hannah Jeffreys).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes

    Family/Spouse: Miles. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  George Harper Barnes was born on 1 May 1840 in Fort Beaufort, Eastern Cape, South Africa (son of James Whittaker Barnes, 1820 Settler and Sarah Jane Patrick, 1820 Settler); died on 1 Aug 1932 in Oxton farm, Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes

    George married Elizabeth Hannah JeffreysKamastone Mission, Whittlesea (nr), Eastern Cape, South Africa. Elizabeth (daughter of Edmund Charles Jeffrey and Mary Patrick) was born about 1846 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 11 Jun 1926 in Oxton farm, Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth Hannah Jeffreys was born about 1846 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa (daughter of Edmund Charles Jeffrey and Mary Patrick); died on 11 Jun 1926 in Oxton farm, Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Name: Elizabeth Hannah Jeffrey

    Children:
    1. Edmund Percival Barnes died before 1932.
    2. Albertus Shepstone Barnes
    3. Violet Mary Barnes
    4. Sarah Eugene Barnes
    5. 1. Katie Amelia Barnes
    6. Selwyn Barnes
    7. Irene Lizzie Barnes


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  James Whittaker Barnes, 1820 Settler was born in Apr 1807 in Burton-on-Trent, England (son of James Barnes and Mary Dixon, 1820 Settler); died on 19 Sep 1883 in Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 88
    • Name: James Barnes
    • Settler: 13 Dec 1819, Gravesend, Kent, England

    Notes:

    Settler:
    Howard's party on the Ocean

    James married Sarah Jane Patrick, 1820 Settler on 21 Mar 1831. Sarah (daughter of Benjamin Patrick, 1820 Settler and Mary Alcock, 1820 Settler) was born on 24 Apr 1811 in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 3 Jun 1878 in Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Sarah Jane Patrick, 1820 Settler was born on 24 Apr 1811 in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England (daughter of Benjamin Patrick, 1820 Settler and Mary Alcock, 1820 Settler); died on 3 Jun 1878 in Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 2729
    • Name: Sarah Ann Patrick
    • Settler: 15 Feb 1820, Gravesend, Kent, England

    Notes:

    Settler:
    Sephton's party on the Aurora

    Children:
    1. Sarah Jane Meason Barnes was born on 16 Feb 1832 in Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 16 Aug 1907 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    2. James Dixon Barnes was born on 11 Jan 1834 in Salem, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 13 Sep 1924 in Kamastone Mission, Whittlesea (nr), Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    3. Hillaria Shrewbury Barnes was born on 14 Nov 1835 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died before Jun 1838.
    4. Elizabeth Maria Barnes was born on 20 Jun 1837 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    5. Ann Hillaria Barnes was born on 14 Jun 1838 in Fort Beaufort, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died in Sep 1931 in Ficksburg, Free State, South Africa.
    6. 2. George Harper Barnes was born on 1 May 1840 in Fort Beaufort, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 1 Aug 1932 in Oxton farm, Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    7. Arabella Woodcock Barnes was born on 20 Dec 1842 in Fort Beaufort, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 27 Dec 1905 in Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa.
    8. Martha Wedderburn Barnes was born on 7 Aug 1844 in Fort Beaufort, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 24 May 1922 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Baptist Cemetery, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    9. Caleb Benjamin Barnes was born on 9 Apr 1846 in Fort Beaufort, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 5 Oct 1916 in Cathcart, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    10. William John Ayliff Barnes was born in May 1850 in Fort Beaufort, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 25 Jan 1924 in Queenstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    11. Emily Rosina Barnes was born on 14 Oct 1852 in Shiloh, Whittlesea (nr), Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 26 May 1925 in Queenstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    12. Christopher Wedderburn Stephen Barnes was born in 1856 in South Africa.

  3. 6.  Edmund Charles Jeffrey was born on 14 Jan 1821 (son of Charles Jeffrey and Matilda); died on 27 Sep 1895 in Kamastone Mission, Whittlesea (nr), Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Kamastone Missionary cemetery,HEWU district, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Edmund married Mary Patrick on 25 May 1845 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Mary (daughter of Benjamin Patrick, 1820 Settler and Mary Whitnall) was born on 1 Apr 1826; died on 29 Mar 1897 in Kamastone Mission, Whittlesea (nr), Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Kamastone Missionary cemetery,HEWU district, Eastern Cape, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Mary Patrick was born on 1 Apr 1826 (daughter of Benjamin Patrick, 1820 Settler and Mary Whitnall); died on 29 Mar 1897 in Kamastone Mission, Whittlesea (nr), Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Kamastone Missionary cemetery,HEWU district, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes

    Children:
    1. 3. Elizabeth Hannah Jeffreys was born about 1846 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 11 Jun 1926 in Oxton farm, Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    2. Charles Benjamin Jeffrey was born about 1846.
    3. William Edmund Jeffrey
    4. George Henry Jeffrey
    5. Mary Jeffrey
    6. Charlotte Jeffrey
    7. Henry Jeffrey
    8. Eugene Whalley Jeffrey
    9. Sarah or Annie Jeffrey
    10. Purdon Smailes Jeffrey
    11. Ernest Walter Jeffrey
    12. Julia Ida Jeffrey was born about 1868.
    13. John Jeffrey


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  James Barnes was born in 1782 in England.

    James + Mary Dixon, 1820 Settler. Mary (daughter of William Dixon and Mary (Dixon)) was born in 1782 in London, England; died on 6 Jun 1863 in Bowden farm, Albany District, Eastern Cape, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary Dixon, 1820 Settler was born in 1782 in London, England (daughter of William Dixon and Mary (Dixon)); died on 6 Jun 1863 in Bowden farm, Albany District, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 1965
    • Religion: the Protestant Church
    • Settler: 13 Dec 1819, Gravesend, Kent, England

    Notes:

    Settler:
    Howard's party on the Ocean

    Children:
    1. James Barnes was born in 1804 in Finsbury, London, England; died in England.
    2. Elizabeth Barnes was born in 1806 in England; died on 15 Feb 1862 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    3. 4. James Whittaker Barnes, 1820 Settler was born in Apr 1807 in Burton-on-Trent, England; died on 19 Sep 1883 in Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    4. George Sutton Barnes, 1820 Settler was born on 4 May 1811 in London, England; died on 6 Feb 1903 in Bowden farm, Albany District, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

  3. 10.  Benjamin Patrick, 1820 Settler was born in 1778 in Northampton, England; died on 4 Oct 1854 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 2726
    • Name: Benjamin Patrick 1820
    • Occupation: a Husbandman
    • Religion: the Wesleyan Church
    • Settler: 15 Feb 1820, Gravesend, Kent, England

    Notes:

    GSSA, East Cape newsletter - Chronicles, February, 2010 No.91

    Benjamin Patrick, according to family legend, came originally from Ireland. Prior to sailing his family lived at Peterborough, Leicester, England. His wife was Mary Alcock. They were 42 and 40 years respectively when they came out as Settlers with four of their five children, (Mrs Nash in ‘The Settlers Handbook’, does not record the eldest child, Ann - ed), as members of Sephton’s Party on board the sailing ship “Aurora”.
    Edward Wynne recruited a party of 344 persons in London. This party was of the independent type, ie each settler paying the deposit of his own family. Thomas Colling was given charge of it but was unable to embark on the appointed date and Hezekiah Sephton was appointed. Most of them sailed on the “Aurora” (500 tons) with the balance of 33 families in the “Brilliant” (330 tons) under Richard Gush.
    Both ships sailed from Gravesend in the 15th February and arrived in Algoa Bay on Monday 15th May, exactly three months later.
    After disembarking at Algoa Bay, the whole party encamped with other settlers awaiting the arrival of wagons to convey them inland. After a delay of about three weeks wagons arrived, but not enough to convey the whole Sephton Party, so they left in two batches. Sephton and half his party left on Monday the 5th June and were first located at Reed Fountain (Rietfontein) (halfway to Grahamstown at the present day turnoff to Shamwari & Sidbury as told to me by my grandfather - ed). Later they moved to the Assegai Bosch River where, on the 23rd July, 1820 they were joined by the remainder of their party. This, their final destination, was about nine miles above the junction of the Assegai Bosch River and the Kariega River. Opposite Wilmot and Wood, on the North bank, lived Thomas and Sophia Slater and their family and near them, with a deep gorge intervening lived Benjamin Patrick and his family. This gorge or locality is known as “Patrick’s Kloof”.
    The village, at the centre of the settlement, was named Salem, and for many years the Settlers and their descendents made a practice of gathering on the 23rd July, to commemorate the founding there-of.
    The children of Salem Settlers received early educational attention, for William Henry Matthews, a schoolmaster, was a member of the party. He began teaching at Salem in1820 and became master of the school in1822. Miss Sarah Slater, who followed her parents to South Africa in 1826 with Shepherds Party kept a girl’s school at her parents’ home. Because of disputes over money matters, Sephton was removed as head of the party and the administration of party matters was taken over by a committee elected by members of the party. James Hancock and Benjamin Patrick were members of the committee and thereafter used the title “Head of Party” when signing their names.
    A. “With the exception of the Scotch Party at Baviaans River, the large party under Sephton was the most thriving of them all. After a year, they had already built a neat little village, which the called Salem, where they had established a school and where their Clergyman, the Rev. William Shaw, conducted services regularly.”
    Extract from Theal
    B. “It may be further stated that although one of the largest parties, they stood out conspicuously in the determination shown to make the best of the circumstances, to work harmoniously together and as they were, for the most part, a religious community, to act up to high ideals of duty”
    Quoted from Cory.

    Allan E Makin expands with the following info:
    Benjamin Patrick, during the first year or two at Salem, supplemented his farm income by running a business of “General Dealer and Chapman”.
    His wife Mary, nee Alcock, died soon after arrival at the settlement. Under laws of the Dutch East India Company that were in force in the Cape Colony at that time, a surviving spouse could not re-marry until a period of two years had elapsed since the death of a the marriage partner.
    When about half this time had elapsed, Benjamin Patrick wished to marry young Mary Menzies, whose husband, William, had died in 1821 at Devonshire farm after his arrival in the Kariega valley. He had been leader of the Menzies Party that was located just east of the Salem Settlement. To get dispensation from the provisions of the Dutch Law that was preventing the marriage, Patrick sent a memorial (memo) to the Governor in Cape Town which read:
    “… memorialist, a widower, wishes to marry the widow of an English Settler lately deceased who has left no children and may they marry before the expiration of the term required by Dutch Laws as she is having difficulty in the management of her cattle. They would like to be treated in the manner provided by the glorious Constitution of England.”
    The following is an extract from the matrimonial records, Cape Town: Benjamin Patrick, widower, married in Grahamstown on 4th February, 1822, Mary Whitnall, aged 29 years, the widow of William Menzies.” She brought into the marriage the allotment and land rights of her deceased spouse at the nearby location of the Menzies party. Her right to this land grant was confirmed in 1825 by the Governor, Lord Charles Somerset. Theal, in his record states: “…because of the decease of William Menzies the land would now be transferred to Sweetnam as head of the party but, the widow of Menzies, now Patrick, must get her pro rata share of the land never-the-less.”
    Benjamin Patrick served in the Fifth (or Cariega) Infantry division of the Albany Levy, a local defence militia, during its existence from 1823 to 1825. He continued farming at Salem until about the beginning of the decade of 1840 when the family moved to Grahamstown where they lived in Beaufort Street. Benjamin sold his allotment, No 33 to Henry Amos and the other allotments, Nos 8 and 27, to a fellow Salem Settler, Charles Thomas Croft. During the Frontier War of 1834 – 35 his homestead was burnt to the ground and he suffered heavy stock losses, but after the war the homestead had been rebuilt. In Grahamstown he made his living as a carrier and by transport driving to and from Port Elizabeth. In 1849 he was granted a licence to run a retail shop at his home in Beaufort Street.

    Written by Denis Herbert Patrick with additional input


    Settler:
    Sephton's party on the Aurora

    Died:
    Beaufort Street

    Benjamin married Mary Alcock, 1820 Settler on 1 Aug 1801 in St Margaret, Leicester, Leicestershire, England. Mary was born est 1780; died about 1820. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Mary Alcock, 1820 Settler was born est 1780; died about 1820.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 3861
    • Settler: 15 Feb 1820, Gravesend, Kent, England

    Notes:

    Settler:
    Sephton's party on the Aurora

    Children:
    1. Ann Patrick was born in 1801.
    2. Martha Patrick, 1820 Settler was born in 1806; died on 8 Feb 1862 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    3. Joel Job Patrick, 1820 Settler was born in 1809 in Leicester, England; died on 18 Aug 1864 in Somerset East, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    4. 5. Sarah Jane Patrick, 1820 Settler was born on 24 Apr 1811 in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 3 Jun 1878 in Whittlesea, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    5. Samuel Patrick, 1820 Settler was born in 1813.

  5. 12.  Charles Jeffrey

    Charles + Matilda. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Matilda
    Children:
    1. 6. Edmund Charles Jeffrey was born on 14 Jan 1821; died on 27 Sep 1895 in Kamastone Mission, Whittlesea (nr), Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Kamastone Missionary cemetery,HEWU district, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

  7. 14.  Benjamin Patrick, 1820 Settler was born in 1778 in Northampton, England; died on 4 Oct 1854 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 2726
    • Name: Benjamin Patrick 1820
    • Occupation: a Husbandman
    • Religion: the Wesleyan Church
    • Settler: 15 Feb 1820, Gravesend, Kent, England

    Notes:

    GSSA, East Cape newsletter - Chronicles, February, 2010 No.91

    Benjamin Patrick, according to family legend, came originally from Ireland. Prior to sailing his family lived at Peterborough, Leicester, England. His wife was Mary Alcock. They were 42 and 40 years respectively when they came out as Settlers with four of their five children, (Mrs Nash in ‘The Settlers Handbook’, does not record the eldest child, Ann - ed), as members of Sephton’s Party on board the sailing ship “Aurora”.
    Edward Wynne recruited a party of 344 persons in London. This party was of the independent type, ie each settler paying the deposit of his own family. Thomas Colling was given charge of it but was unable to embark on the appointed date and Hezekiah Sephton was appointed. Most of them sailed on the “Aurora” (500 tons) with the balance of 33 families in the “Brilliant” (330 tons) under Richard Gush.
    Both ships sailed from Gravesend in the 15th February and arrived in Algoa Bay on Monday 15th May, exactly three months later.
    After disembarking at Algoa Bay, the whole party encamped with other settlers awaiting the arrival of wagons to convey them inland. After a delay of about three weeks wagons arrived, but not enough to convey the whole Sephton Party, so they left in two batches. Sephton and half his party left on Monday the 5th June and were first located at Reed Fountain (Rietfontein) (halfway to Grahamstown at the present day turnoff to Shamwari & Sidbury as told to me by my grandfather - ed). Later they moved to the Assegai Bosch River where, on the 23rd July, 1820 they were joined by the remainder of their party. This, their final destination, was about nine miles above the junction of the Assegai Bosch River and the Kariega River. Opposite Wilmot and Wood, on the North bank, lived Thomas and Sophia Slater and their family and near them, with a deep gorge intervening lived Benjamin Patrick and his family. This gorge or locality is known as “Patrick’s Kloof”.
    The village, at the centre of the settlement, was named Salem, and for many years the Settlers and their descendents made a practice of gathering on the 23rd July, to commemorate the founding there-of.
    The children of Salem Settlers received early educational attention, for William Henry Matthews, a schoolmaster, was a member of the party. He began teaching at Salem in1820 and became master of the school in1822. Miss Sarah Slater, who followed her parents to South Africa in 1826 with Shepherds Party kept a girl’s school at her parents’ home. Because of disputes over money matters, Sephton was removed as head of the party and the administration of party matters was taken over by a committee elected by members of the party. James Hancock and Benjamin Patrick were members of the committee and thereafter used the title “Head of Party” when signing their names.
    A. “With the exception of the Scotch Party at Baviaans River, the large party under Sephton was the most thriving of them all. After a year, they had already built a neat little village, which the called Salem, where they had established a school and where their Clergyman, the Rev. William Shaw, conducted services regularly.”
    Extract from Theal
    B. “It may be further stated that although one of the largest parties, they stood out conspicuously in the determination shown to make the best of the circumstances, to work harmoniously together and as they were, for the most part, a religious community, to act up to high ideals of duty”
    Quoted from Cory.

    Allan E Makin expands with the following info:
    Benjamin Patrick, during the first year or two at Salem, supplemented his farm income by running a business of “General Dealer and Chapman”.
    His wife Mary, nee Alcock, died soon after arrival at the settlement. Under laws of the Dutch East India Company that were in force in the Cape Colony at that time, a surviving spouse could not re-marry until a period of two years had elapsed since the death of a the marriage partner.
    When about half this time had elapsed, Benjamin Patrick wished to marry young Mary Menzies, whose husband, William, had died in 1821 at Devonshire farm after his arrival in the Kariega valley. He had been leader of the Menzies Party that was located just east of the Salem Settlement. To get dispensation from the provisions of the Dutch Law that was preventing the marriage, Patrick sent a memorial (memo) to the Governor in Cape Town which read:
    “… memorialist, a widower, wishes to marry the widow of an English Settler lately deceased who has left no children and may they marry before the expiration of the term required by Dutch Laws as she is having difficulty in the management of her cattle. They would like to be treated in the manner provided by the glorious Constitution of England.”
    The following is an extract from the matrimonial records, Cape Town: Benjamin Patrick, widower, married in Grahamstown on 4th February, 1822, Mary Whitnall, aged 29 years, the widow of William Menzies.” She brought into the marriage the allotment and land rights of her deceased spouse at the nearby location of the Menzies party. Her right to this land grant was confirmed in 1825 by the Governor, Lord Charles Somerset. Theal, in his record states: “…because of the decease of William Menzies the land would now be transferred to Sweetnam as head of the party but, the widow of Menzies, now Patrick, must get her pro rata share of the land never-the-less.”
    Benjamin Patrick served in the Fifth (or Cariega) Infantry division of the Albany Levy, a local defence militia, during its existence from 1823 to 1825. He continued farming at Salem until about the beginning of the decade of 1840 when the family moved to Grahamstown where they lived in Beaufort Street. Benjamin sold his allotment, No 33 to Henry Amos and the other allotments, Nos 8 and 27, to a fellow Salem Settler, Charles Thomas Croft. During the Frontier War of 1834 – 35 his homestead was burnt to the ground and he suffered heavy stock losses, but after the war the homestead had been rebuilt. In Grahamstown he made his living as a carrier and by transport driving to and from Port Elizabeth. In 1849 he was granted a licence to run a retail shop at his home in Beaufort Street.

    Written by Denis Herbert Patrick with additional input


    Settler:
    Sephton's party on the Aurora

    Died:
    Beaufort Street

    Benjamin married Mary Whitnall about 1822. Mary was born in 1793 in Deal, Kent, England; died on 13 Sep 1855 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Mary Whitnall was born in 1793 in Deal, Kent, England; died on 13 Sep 1855 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Religion: the Wesleyan Church

    Notes:

    Widow - wife of the late William Mensie??

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Patrick was born in 1822 in Salem, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 3 Dec 1890 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    2. Susannah Patrick was born about 1824.
    3. 7. Mary Patrick was born on 1 Apr 1826; died on 29 Mar 1897 in Kamastone Mission, Whittlesea (nr), Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Kamastone Missionary cemetery,HEWU district, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    4. John Patrick was born on 19 Mar 1830; was christened on 11 Apr 1830 in Salem, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 23 Mar 1882; was buried in Grahamstown Cemetery (Old), Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    5. Esther Patrick was born in 1830; died in 1902.
    6. Charlotte Patrick was born in 1832; died in 1918.
    7. Benjamin Patrick was born in 1834; died in 1906.



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