Print Bookmark
Thomas Henry Rex Barber

Thomas Henry Rex Barber

Male 1903 -

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Less detail
Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Thomas Henry Rex BarberThomas Henry Rex Barber was born on 7 Sep 1903 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa (son of Frederick Hugh Barber and Eira Rebecca Evans).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes

    Thomas married Elsie May Chiverton on 30 Dec 1927 in Mombasa, Kenya. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Frederick Hugh BarberFrederick Hugh Barber was born on 8 Jan 1848 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was christened on 10 Feb 1848 in Grahamstown Cathedral (St Michael and St George), Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa (son of Frederick William Barber and Mary Elizabeth Bowker, 1820 Settler); died on 17 May 1919 in Eldoret, Kenya.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes

    Notes:

    Dug for diamonds with his father and brother in Kimberley, 1871. His journals of an expedition to the Victoria falls in 1875 and another to Matebeleland in 1877-8 have been published by the Rhodes Livingstone Museum, under the title 'Zambezia and Matabeleland in the Seventies'. This trip was made by ox-wagon through Bechuanaland via the Makarikari Pan to Pandematenga where, owing to tsetse fly, they left the wagon and completed the remaing 60 miles on foot. Fred was a painter of landscapes and antelopes. With his brother was a co-founder of the town of Barberton in Transvaal in 1884. Immigrated to Kenya and is buried at Eldoret.
    quoted from Men of our Times 1905.
    'Frederick Hugh Barber, who ranks with his brother, H.M. Barber, as one of the pioneers of South African history, is the son of F.W. Barber, Esq., a geologist and scientific farmer of the district of Grahamstown. His mother was the daughter of Miles Bowker (one of the British Settlers of 1820, an authoress, scientist, naturalist and artist of great fame. Born at Grahamstown, Mr. F.H. Barber grew up on his parents' farm, and was educated at St. Andrew's College, Grahamstown. After leaving college, he launched out into various pursuits and enterprises, and his career has been one of singular experience and marked with considerable success. In 1870 he started on an exploring tour with a view to prospecting, and travelled to the Vaal River, pegging and working claims on nearly all the river diggings. He and his brother pegged and worked original claims on De Beers, Du Toits Pan, Bultfontein, and Kimberley. In 1872 he joined the Frontier Armed and Mounted Police under Sir Walter Currie as sub-inspector, and on retiring from the force three years later was presented with a handsome testimonial to his troop. In 1875 he started from Kimberley in a bullock wagon to visit the Victoria Falls and shoot big game. His love of sport took him through Matabeleland in 1877. Ten years spent in a bullock wagon, hunting, travelling and prospecting, brought him in contact with nearly every country south of the Zambezi, including Bamangwatoland,Matabeleland, Mashonaland, Bechuanaland, Manicaland, Gazaland, the Kalihari Desert, German West Africa, Zululand, Swaziland, Basutoland, the Transkei, and the Portuguese south coast colonies. He became a great friend of the chief Khama, and spent three months on a friendly visit to Lobengula in 1878. In 1879 he returned and worked claims on the Kimberley mine, and the following year we find him actively engaged in ostrich and cattle farming in Albany. The goldfields of North-eastern Transvaal next attracted his attention, and with his brother, H.M. Barber, and cousin Graham H. Barber, he plunged into the speculative and venturous career consistent with the life of a miner and digger. Their efforts were successful, and as a witness of the result of their labours, "Barberton" named after the brothers, rose into existence and fame. In 1886 Mr. Fred H. Barber proceeded to the Witwatersrand goldfields and settled in Ferreira's Camp (now Johannesburg), where he floated almost the first company on the Rand, the "Ferreira", with a capital of twelve thousand pounds. Before floating the company, he sank on the claims the first shaft on the Rand to a depth of 50 feet, thereby proving the permanency of the reef, and crushed 100 tons of ore at Struben's mill, which yielded over 1 oz. to the ton over the plates, the ore being carried by bullock wagon for nine miles. He floated the Simmer and Jack Company, and acted as director and promoter of some of the principal companies on the Rand, including the Jumpers, Aurora, Spes Bona, Kleinfontein, Princess and Nigel Deep. He was also associated with the flotation of the Transvaal and Delagoa Bay Investment Company and the Johannesburg Board of Executors, in both of which he was one of the directors. Mr. Barber is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, and is on the Committees of the Grahamstown Museum, Art Society, and Botanical Gardens; and a J.P. of Albany. He was late chairman of the Board of Works, Municipal Council, Grahamstown. He belongs to the following clubs : Rand and Pioneer, Johannesburg; Albany and Grahamstown Clubs, Grahamstown; and the City Club, Cape Town. In 1809 Mr. Barber married Miss F.R. Evans, daughter of the late J.B. Evans of Rietfontein,Graaff Reinet, who introduced the Angora goat into South Africa. In reviewing Mr. Barber's interesting and varied career it is impossible to do him the justice he merits from want of space. Our brief summary of his important and useful life has been little short of cataloguing the main events of his career. His life has been many-sided, comprising as it does that of farmer, frontier policeman, explorer, hunter, miner, prospector and speculator. His expeditions have extended into almost every remote part of Central South Africa and the colonies, while on the Continent they have included nearly every country in Europe, besides visiting Egypt and travelling up the Nile. A man of culture and refinement that in no way have deteriorated from the rougher influences of life, he figures prominently among the leading men who have aided in the promotion and extension of South African interests. His enthusiasm and love of sport, natural history, and enterprise is characterised by self-restraint, probably due to his excellent home training. Throughout his career he has shown a singular recognition of the higher ideals of life. '

    Frederick married Eira Rebecca Evans on 26 Oct 1898 in London, England. Eira (daughter of John Brown Evans and Anne Caroline Rex) was born on 13 May 1874 in 'Reitfontein', Willowmore, Cape Colony, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Eira Rebecca Evans was born on 13 May 1874 in 'Reitfontein', Willowmore, Cape Colony, South Africa (daughter of John Brown Evans and Anne Caroline Rex).
    Children:
    1. 1. Thomas Henry Rex Barber was born on 7 Sep 1903 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Frederick William BarberFrederick William Barber was born on 20 May 1813 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England (son of Thomas Barber and Mary Atherstone); died on 2 Jan 1892 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Notes:

    Settled in South Africa in 1839 and farmed at Highlands. Served in the Frontier War of 1846. Dug diamonds in Kimberley in 1871.

    Grahamstown Journal September - December 1842 listed by Sue Mackay 26 July 2004.
    Married on the 19th instant in St. George's Church, Graham's Town by the Rev. J. Heavyside, Frederick William Barber to Mary Elizabeth, eldest daughter of the late Miles Bowker Esq. of 'Tharfield.'

    from 'THE BOWKERS OF THARFIELD' by Ivan and Raymond Mitford-Barberton:
    "For a time Fred learned farming with Dr. John Atherstone, Guybon's father and a few years later started farming on his own at a farm called 'Bloemhof' near Graaff-Reinet. It was while he was here that he married Maria Elizabeth daughter of Miles BOWKER. As he was rather busy at the time he wrote to his fiancee asking her to come up and marry him in Graaff-Reinet but her mother replied that if her daughter was not worth fetching he could do without her. This very soon brought him down and he and Maria Elizabeth were married in the Settlers' Church, St. John's in Bathurst in 1845."

    Frederick married Mary Elizabeth Bowker, 1820 Settler on 19 Dec 1842 in Church Of St George, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Mary (daughter of Miles Bowker, 1820 Settler and Anna Maria Mitford, 1820 Settler) was born on 5 Jan 1818 in Manor Farm, South Newton, Wiltshire, England; was christened on 22 Feb 1818 in St Andrew's Parish Church, South Newton, Wiltshire, England; died on 4 Sep 1899 in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa; was buried in Commercial Road Cemetery, Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary Elizabeth Bowker, 1820 SettlerMary Elizabeth Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 5 Jan 1818 in Manor Farm, South Newton, Wiltshire, England; was christened on 22 Feb 1818 in St Andrew's Parish Church, South Newton, Wiltshire, England (daughter of Miles Bowker, 1820 Settler and Anna Maria Mitford, 1820 Settler); died on 4 Sep 1899 in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa; was buried in Commercial Road Cemetery, Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 104
    • Settler: 7 Jan 1820, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England
    • Residence: 25 Jun 1820, Olive Burn farm, Kleinemonde, Eastern Cape, South Africa

    Notes:

    She opened a school for girls in Grahamstown in 1844. Published a volume of fifty poems of varying merit, under the title 'The Erythrina Tree and Other Verses'. Became a noted botanist and authority on South African flora and achieved an international reputation. No less that eight of her numerous monographs on botanical, entomological and zoological subjects were published by Linnean and other learned societies in Europe, some of them being translated into foreign languages. Over a number of years she regularly corresponded with famous botanists, like Sir Joseph and Sir William Hooker; she supplied Charles Darwin with much valuable information for the epock-making 'Origin of the Species', and materially aided Dr. W.H. Harvey in the compilation of his 'Thesaurus Capensis'. A collection of her drawings and paintings hang in the Albany Museum, Grahamstown.

    Extract from the Grahamstown Journal, December 1842.
    Married on the 19th inst. in St.George's Church, Graham's Town by the Rev.J.HEAVYSIDE, Frederic Wm.BARBER to Mary Elizabeth, eldest daughter of the late Miles BOWKER Esq. of Tharfield

    From : Men of the Times - Pioneers of the Transvaal and Glimpses of South Africa - Transvaal Publishing Company - Printed by Eyre and Spottiswoode in 1905 and copied by Sylvia Gazendam on facebook:
    "This lady was born in England, and came to South Africa with her parents, who were settlers of 1820, spending her childhood and youth at Tharfield, near Port Alfred. She was the constant companion of her father, himself an ardent student of nature and a good botanist; from him she learnt the principles of those sciences which gained her the friendship of the Hookers and of Doctor Harvey, whom she materially assisted in the compilation of the "Thessaurus Capensis", many of her discoveries being named after her in both her maiden and married names. From her love of natural history sprung a life-long correspondence with Charles Darwin and many other eminent men of the day. Many of her papers of observation on South African fauna and flora were read before and published by the Linnean Society. Her genius was also recognised on the Continent and she was elected a member of the Hungarian Ornithological Society. During the early troublesome times of the frontier the family were frequently shut up in laagers surrounded by hostile Kaffirs, and on several occasions had to flee for their lives. This lady was the author of a volume of fifty charming poems, all of which bear testimony to her sense of humour and love of natural history. In the year 1845 she was married to Frederick William Barber, son of Thomas Barber, the eminent artist of Nottingham, England, and had two sons and a daughter. In 1854 her husband was granted the farm Lammermoor on the Zwart Kei for service rendered in the war against the Kaffir chief Kreli, when he was driven across the great Kei. In these new fields many of her botanical discoveries were made. From here they removed to the farm Highlands, near Grahamstown, and it was there that she conducted her most important investigations in the life studies of butterflies, her valuable services being handsomely acknowledged by Mr. Rowland Triman in his work on the butterflies of South Africa. Eighteen years later the family removed to the Griqualand West diamond fields, where Mrs. Barber lived for many years, and painted a number of her pictures. Her hospitable home was the rendezvous of all the men of note who visited the country during the early days of Kimberley. On the discovery of gold in the Transvaal Mrs. Barber removed thither with her two sons, spending the cold winter with her brother, Colonel Bowker, of Malvern, Natal. Her death took place in that colony, in Pietermaritzburg, on September 4th 1899. During her lifetime Mrs. Barber gave her herbarium and collection of butterflies to the Albany Museum, and to these her son's daughter has added her many varied and beautiful paintings of birds, flowers and insects, as a memorial of her, and for the encouragement of others in their pursuit of these beautiful subjects which so filled her life with unalloyed pleasure and interest, and to whose glorious pageant year by year her name will live and be remembered.'

    ~~~~~~~~~~~
    McGregor Museum Kimberley

    CELEBRATING WOMEN in WOMEN'S MONTH : MARY ELIZABETH BARBER (1818-1899)—noticing her feminist Darwinism and the micro-politics of her knowledge of birds…

    M.E. Barber, who spent some years on the Diamond Fields in the 1870s, was an amateur scientist—“South Africa's first lady natural historian"—who, without formal education, made a name for herself in botany, ornithology and entomology.

    Through her science, moreover, Barber was a FEMINIST and CAMPAIGNER for GENDER EQUALITY, as Tanja Hammel shows in an article, "Thinking with Birds: Mary Elizabeth Barber's Advocacy for Gender Equality in Ornithology".

    Hammel writes that "Birds raised [Barber's] awareness of women's subordinate role in settler society and became her 'best friends' in advocating gender equality. She addressed people who believed in the human's special position in the chain of being and showed them that, since there was gender equality among birds, that should also be part of humanity if humans were superior."

    We cite in full the Abstract of Tanja Hammel’s paper: "This article explores parts of the first South African woman ornithologist's life and work. It concerns itself with the micro-politics of Mary Elizabeth Barber's knowledge of birds from the 1860s to the mid-1880s. Her work provides insight into contemporary scientific practices, particularly the importance of cross-cultural collaboration. I foreground how she cultivated a feminist Darwinism in which birds served as corroborative evidence for female selection and how she negotiated gender equality in her ornithological work. She did so by constructing local birdlife as a space of gender equality. While male ornithologists naturalised and reinvigorated Victorian gender roles in their descriptions and depictions of birds, she debunked them and stressed the absence of gendered spheres in bird life. She emphasised the female and male birds' collaboration and gender equality that she missed in Victorian matrimony, an institution she harshly criticised. Reading her work against the background of her life story shows how her personal experiences as wife and mother as well as her observation of settler society informed her view on birds, and vice versa. Through birds she presented alternative relationships to matrimony. Her protection of insectivorous birds was at the same time an attempt to stress the need for a New Woman, an aspect that has hitherto been overlooked in studies of the transnational anti-plumage movement."

    Mary Elizabeth Barber was an accomplished poet and painter. She herself illustrated her scientific contributions that were published by learned societies such as the Royal Entomological Society in London, the Royal Botanical Gardens in Kew, and the Linnaean Society of London.

    In addition, M.E. Barber has earned special mention in connection with the early recognition of Stone Age artefacts, noticing and describing prehistoric stone tools while she was at the Diamond Fields in the early 1870s. Alan Cohen, writing in the South African Archaeological Bulletin, states: "Mary Elizabeth Barber and her brothers, Thomas Holden and James Henry Bowker, were three of the earliest South Africans to investigate and realise the significance of Stone Age tools. In this they were for a time, arguably in advance of their European counterparts, and deserve wider recognition as pioneers in the field of South African archaeology."

    Photo: Mary Elizabeth Barber with (probably) her brothers Thomas Holden Bowker and James Henry Bowker, about 1880.

    References:
    Cohen, A. 1999. “Mary Elizabeth Barber, the Bowkers and South African Prehistory." South African Archaeological Bulletin 54: 120-127.

    Hammel, T. 2015. “Thinking with Birds: Mary Elizabeth Barber's Advocacy for Gender Equality in Ornithology.” Kronos 41 (SPECIAL ISSUE: The Micro-Politics of Knowledge Production in Southern Africa): 85-111.

    ENGLAND BIRTHS AND CHRISTENINGS, 1538-1975

    Indexing Project (Batch) Number C15227-1
    System Origin England-ODM
    GS Film number 1279339
    Name Mary Elizabeth Bowker
    Gender Female
    Christening Date 22 Feb 1818
    Christening Place SOUTH NEWTON,WILTSHIRE,ENGLAND
    Birth Date 05 Jan 1818
    Father's Name Miles Bowker
    Mother's Name Anna Maria

    Settler:
    Bowker's Party on the Weymouth

    Died:
    At the home of her daughter, Mary Ellen 'Highlie' Bailie. see https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91W-TSB7-B?i=661&cc=2721608 entry 177

    Notes:

    Grahamstown Journal, Dec 1842.
    Married on the 19th inst. in St.George's Church, Graham's Town by the Rev.J.HEAVYSIDE, Frederic Wm.BARBER to Mary Elizabeth, eldest daughter of the late Miles BOWKER Esq. of Tharfield

    Children:
    1. 2. Frederick Hugh Barber was born on 8 Jan 1848 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was christened on 10 Feb 1848 in Grahamstown Cathedral (St Michael and St George), Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 17 May 1919 in Eldoret, Kenya.
    2. Henry Mitford-Barberton was born on 7 Sep 1850 in 'Highlands', Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was christened on 3 Jun 1851 in St George's Cathedral, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 25 May 1920 in Uasin Gishu, Eldoret, Kenya; was buried in Eldoret, Kenya.
    3. Mary Ellen Barber was born on 14 Sep 1853 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 16 Mar 1938 in London, England.

  3. 6.  John Brown Evans was born on 13 May 1831 in Mabus, Parish Of Marthry, Pembroke, South Wales (son of John Evans and Ann Howell); died on 29 Dec 1888 in London, England.

    John married Anne Caroline Rex on 10 Mar 1859 in Graaff-Reinet, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Anne (daughter of Frederick Rex and Johanna Elizabeth Bain) was born on 2 Nov 1841; died on 1 May 1878 in Port Elizabeth, Eastern Cape, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Anne Caroline Rex was born on 2 Nov 1841 (daughter of Frederick Rex and Johanna Elizabeth Bain); died on 1 May 1878 in Port Elizabeth, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    Children:
    1. Edgar Howell Rex Evans was born on 7 Jan 1860 in Aberdeen, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 2 Apr 1942 in Alexandria, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Alexandria, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    2. Morgan Frederick Bain Evans was born on 29 Apr 1861 in Graaff-Reinet, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    3. Oscar Edward George Evans was born on 6 Oct 1862 in Graaff-Reinet, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 30 Aug 1917 in Melrose, Bedford district, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    4. Clarence William Evans was born on 29 May 1864 in Aberdeen, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    5. Menelaus Evans was born on 1 Jun 1867 in Willowmore, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died in Dec 1895 in Cummings Store, Insizwa, Rhodesia.
    6. Edith Annie Evans was born on 14 Oct 1869 in Willowmore, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    7. Blanche Gwynne Evans was born on 12 Apr 1872 in Willowmore, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    8. 3. Eira Rebecca Evans was born on 13 May 1874 in 'Reitfontein', Willowmore, Cape Colony, South Africa.
    9. Lyell Evans was born on 23 Jul 1876 in Willowmore, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 15 Jul 1926 in Clover Fields, Cradock district, Eastern Cape, South Africa.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Thomas BarberThomas Barber was born on 28 Mar 1771 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England (son of Thomas Barber and Ann Abbott); died on 12 Sep 1843 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; was buried in Nottingham General Cemetery, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England.

    Notes:

    Thomas Barber was a well known painter of Nottingham, who painted portraits of many of the aristocracy of the Midlands. He studied at the studio of Sir Thomas Lawrence and was a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy. He left many fine portraits of his wife and family, and these are still treasured heirlooms of his descendants. His marriage to Mary Atherstone produced 7 sons and 1 daughter. . ref: Some Frontier Families, by I Mitford-Barberton & Violet White. page 32

    Thomas married Mary Atherstone on 9 Jun 1795 in St Nicholas, Nottingham, England. Mary (daughter of Hugh Atherstone and Ann Green) was born in 1769; was christened on 15 Apr 1769; died on 25 Sep 1825 in Derby, Derbyshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary AtherstoneMary Atherstone was born in 1769; was christened on 15 Apr 1769 (daughter of Hugh Atherstone and Ann Green); died on 25 Sep 1825 in Derby, Derbyshire, England.

    Notes:

    Mary was a member of the Moravian Church, and Thomas appears to have been closely associated with the members. He had painted portraits of all the contemporary Bishops, including Bishop and Sister Clemens ( Barbers of the Peak, page 19)

    Children:
    1. Thomas Barber was born on 31 May 1796; died on 14 May 1824 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; was buried in Brookside Chapel, Derby, Derbyshire, England.
    2. Hugh Atherstone Barber was born on 25 Dec 1799 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 3 Feb 1878 in Cradock, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    3. Rev. Henry Barber was born on 28 May 1801 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 9 Jan 1878 in Leek, Staffordshire, England.
    4. Anne Atherstone Barber was born on 21 Dec 1802 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 21 Dec 1819 in Derby, Derbyshire, England.
    5. Joseph Barber was born on 12 May 1804 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 9 Dec 1872 in Ramsey, Isle Of Man.
    6. Alfred Barber was born on 16 Jul 1805.
    7. Alfred Barber was born on 19 Mar 1809 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; died in 1884 in Totterdown, Bristol,Somerset, England.
    8. 4. Frederick William Barber was born on 20 May 1813 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 2 Jan 1892 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

  3. 10.  Miles Bowker, 1820 SettlerMiles Bowker, 1820 Settler was born in 1758 in Deckham Hall, Gateshead, Durham, England; was christened on 19 Sep 1758 in All Saint's, Newcastle on Tyne, Northumberland, England (son of Thomas Bowker and Dorothy Falconer Monkhouse); died on 25 Mar 1839 in Tharfield, Kleinemonde, Bathurst District, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried on 27 Mar 1839 in Tharfield, Kleinemonde, Bathurst District, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 105
    • Occupation: a Gentleman Farmer
    • Residence: 1800, Deckham Hall, Gateshead, Durham, England
    • Residence: 1801, Mitford Manor, Mitford, Northumberland, England
    • Residence: 1809, Deckham Hall, Gateshead, Durham, England
    • Residence: 3 May 1811, Charborough Park, West Almer, Dorsetshire, England
    • Residence: 1817, Manor Farm, South Newton, Wiltshire, England
    • Settler: 7 Jan 1820, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England; : 61y
    • Residence: 25 Jun 1820, Olive Burn farm, Kleinemonde, Eastern Cape, South Africa
    • Residence: 1833, Tharfield, Kleinemonde, Bathurst District, Eastern Cape, South Africa

    Notes:

    Miles Bowker was born at Deckham Hall in Gateshead.
    Extracted from 'The Bowkers of Tharfield' Pages 4 & 5.
    'Deckham Hall was demolished in 1934 to make room for modern residences. In the July of that year Raymond Mitford-Barberton. and his family were motoring through Gateshead on the way to Scotland. Half-way through the town he asked a policeman whether he had ever heard of Deckham Hall. 'Oh yes,' he replied, 'Turn back and take the first street to your left. It is on the bare top of the hill beyond the last houses. The property now belongs to Lord X and the Hall is being demolished". {see the picture of the map}

    Finding Deckhams was as easy as that. The hall had been built on the summit of the hill with an all round view; Gateshead to the South, smoky Newcastle beyond the Tyne to the north and eastward the great river with its hundreds of ships - colliers carry coal to all the world. Little remained of this once fair mansion of the BOWKERS. All the walls had been taken down a few days before we got there but we got a fair idea of the extent and shape of the building from its massive stone foundations. Like many houses of that period it was not very large on the ground floor, but it probably stood several stories high. The main reception hall was distinguishable by its large fireplace."

    8.3.1800 Married in Morpeth, Northumberland. He farmed sheep in the Cheviot hills
    Moved to Dorset in 1810-1811.
    3rd May 1811 he paid £32-0-0 in land tax for property owned by Richard Earl Drax Grosvenor, the owner of Charborough Park, Dorset where he farmed Merino sheep for 6 years. Children baptised in Almer Church. He was paying a land tax in 1811 of £9-9s for a freehold owned by William Trenchard in Lytchett Matravers, the village bordering on to Charborough Park.
    By 1816 this tax had gone up to £11-9s-8d. In 1816 he was also paying 19 shillings for land occupied on Charbourough Park owned by Richard Drax Grosvenor. He also rented land in the Morden parish - see Morden Parish website
    1817 Moved to Manor Farm, South Newton, Wiltshire, which was owned by the Earl of Pembroke of Wilton House.
    Dec 1819 Portsmouth to sail on Weymouth.

    Miles Bowker was head of the Bowker party that left Portsmouth, England, aboard the Weymouth sailing on the 7th January 1820. The Weymouth arrived in Cape Town on 26th April 1820, and then sailed to Port Elizabeth, arriving there after 15th May 1820. Sometime during May or June, the Bowker party left Algoa Bay. Their route crossed over the Koega and Zwartkops rivers near the coast, and then inland over Grass Ridge to the Addo Drift, across the Sundays River about 20 miles from it's mouth, and then over the Addo Heights. From this point the route took a south-easterly direction, more or less parallel to the coast, passing Congo's Kraal and Graafwater, to Jager's Drift on the Bushmans River. After passing the mission station at Theopolis, they forded the Kowie river at it's mouth at low tide, by utilising two exposed sandbanks. This trip took about 8 days to complete, and was led by Petrus Oosthuizen, who became a great friend of Miles Bowker. Two of Miles's sons married Petrus' daughters. . The Bowker party of 23 consisted of: Miles, wife Ann Maria, sons William Monkhouse B., Miles Brabbin, Thomas Holden, Robert Mitford, Septimus, Octavius, and daughters Mary Elizabeth and Anna Maria; Henry Adams, G Austen, Charles Besant, G.Flooks, John Hayter, William Ingram, Richard Limes, John Stanford and his wife Maria, son John and daughters Letitia, Jane and Sophia. The eldest Bowker son, John Mitford, joined the family in 1922 after tying up the family affairs in South Newton, Wiltshire, and the last son, James Henry, was born at Tharfield. . The Bowker family were allocated the land known as Tharfield, on the KleinMonden River, north of Port Kowie (Port Alfred). . Miles, together with Major Pigot and J. Dyason tried to develop Port Kowie as a harbour in 1821. He was appointed as a Heemraad (judicial assessor) to assist the deputy magistrate, Major Jones, at Grahamstown in 1821, but Lord Somerset dismissed Major Jones and the heemraad in 1822. . Interested in botany, he was sending indigenous bulbs from the Lower Albany area to the Government Secretary as early as 1826. He was also a pioneer in establishing the wool industry in the Eastern Cape Province, in 1826, with merino sheep.

    Miles Bowker, a Wiltshire farmer, led a party on the Weymouth. They settled on the right bank of the George River and called it Olive Burn. He came out with his wife and 8 children and one was born while lying at anchor in Table Bay.

    Lower Albany Chronicle:
    15 April 1822: Cape seed-wheat had been issued to party and division leaders as follows: to Edward FORD for 8 men, to Miles BOWKER for 6, James RICHARDSON 8, George SMITH 20, COCK's party 30, Christopher THORNHHILL 8, Thomas WAKEFORD 5, Timothy FLANEGAN 8, Thomas ADAMS 6, George ANDERSON 3, Lieut. John BAILIE 8, Thomas PHILIPPS 9, Benjamin OSLER 6, William GRIFFITHS 5, George WATSON 6.

    23 May 1835: Miles BOWKER junior helped to repel another raid from across the Lynedoch River on the cattle at Tharfield. One of the enemy was killed. Miles BOWKER gave warning to George SMITH and to Thomas WILLIAMS. The latter left to report to Bathurst Post and George SMITH with his family took refuge at Tharfield, which was in more open country than Smith's Bush.

    29 May 1835: Miles BOWKER and George SMITH were compelled to retire on Bathurst Post with their families.

    ~~~~~~~~~~
    British South Africa
    A History of the Colony of the Cape of Good Hope from its Conquest 1795 to the Settlement of Albany by the British Emigration of 1819 [A.D. 1795 - 1825]
    WITH NOTICES OF SOME OF THE BRITISH SETTLERS OF 1820
    BY
    COLIN TURING CAMPBELL
    [Residient at Graham's Town, 1845-1871]

    Bowker, Miles, head of a party from Wiltshire, who came in the Weymouth. He was of gentle birth, a scholar, and a good botanist. His first residence was at Oliveburn, near the coast, and subsequently at Tharfield, on the Lynedoch or Kleinemond River. He was appointed, with Captain Duncan Campbell, Heemeraad of Albany for many years, but resigned office, preferring the cultivation of his farms to politics. He died early in the year 1839, in the seventy-fifth year of his age, and was buried at Tharfield. He brought with him from England eight sons and two daughters. His youngest son was born at Oliveburn, making nine sons in all. Their names are well known in the Frontier districts and Colony. They all followed in their father's footsteps as farmers and agriculturists, and all took an active share in the numerous Kafir engagements, giving their services for the benefit of their country.

    ~~~~~~~~~~

    The Early Bowker Settlers - from the East Cape Branch of GSSA Chronicles, issue 94, November 2010
    Miles Bowker, who came out on the “Weymouth”, was not a typical Settler. He was not a young man (52) and not poor, or as so many immigrants were, lacking in farming experience. His family numbered eleven at the time of sailing: himself his young wife Anna (38), eight sons and one daughter. His eldest son, John Mitford, remained in England to wind up the family affairs, the second daughter, Anna Maria, was born onboard the Weymouth on the day that the ship arrived in Cape Town, 26th April, and the youngest son was born two years after their arrival.

    Miles Bowker had been a gentleman farmer and breeder of Merino sheep on Manor Farm, South Newton (near Wilton) Wiltshire and it was his intention to do this in South Africa but on a larger scale. His application was recommended by his landlord, Lord Pembroke who made a personal visit to the Colonial department and also by William Boscawen, a cousin of Lord Falmouth. The Journey from South Newton to Portsmouth where the party was to embark was made with a borrowed travelling carriage and several farm wagons loaded with household furniture and agricultural implements. The Settlers were not able to board HM store Ship Weymouth immediately as her fitting was not yet completed so as a temporary measure they were accommodated on a hulk in Portsmouth harbour that was used as a ship’s tender.

    The route to their location was over the Zwartkops and Coega Rivers, and then over the Addo Heights. From there in a South-easterley direction, more or less parallel to the coast, passing Congo’s Kraal and Graafwater, to Jager’s Drift on to the Bushmans River. After passing the mission station at Theopolis, the forded the Kowie River at its mouth at low tide, by utilising two exposed sandbanks. The trip took about 8 days to complete and was led by Petrus Oosthuisen, who became a great friend of Miles Bowker. Two of Miles’ sons married Petrus’ daughters.

    He had been given a tract of land on the right bank of the George River and its location was named Oliveburn. However, it became known as Tharfield, on the Kleinemond River, north of Port Alfred. It was larger than he had requested. However, it was not long before he realised that this was inadequate as it soon became apparent that the Suurveld and Merino did not go together. Over the years wheat was tried but it was a dismal failure owing to rust. Cotton farming came to nothing.

    The original “Deed of Grant” still exists, dated 15th February, 1822, and bearing the signature of the Governor, Lord Charles Somerset and that of the Government Surveyor Johan Knobel. The land is described as “a piece of One Thousand, Two Hundred and Seventy morgen of land situated in the Albany District.” There follows a description of the boundaries. Conditions are set out : ”That land shall be cultivated by free labourers only, and that any employment of slaves upon it shall render the same to forfeiture. Likewise of his punctually paying, or causing to be paid, at the expiration of every twelfth month, from the date of these present, unto the Receiver General of the land Revenue, the sum of Ten Rixdollars.” A further 844 morgen was granted on the 8th September, 1843.

    The story of the Bowker Settlers is typical of the story of the 1820 British settlers as a whole, and all present descendants of Settlers could, with accuracy, apply the same or similar happenings to their own ancestors. The only difference was that few other families had so many sons – there were nine of them in the original Bowker family - and each one of them made a name for himself in South Africa. No wonder Sir George Cory in his “Rise of South Africa” said; “Of all the valuable acquisitions which accrued to the Colony from the Settler’s movement, the Bowker family stands out pre-eminently…
    “It is not possible in this place to give even a list of the acts of bravery, political distinctions and losses and sufferings – the usual reward of self-sacrificing devotion to the welfare of the Eastern Colony – which are associated with the names of the sons of Miles Bowker. Suffice it to say that they fought for their country in all the Frontier wars, not merely as the rank and file but as leaders and commandants of the burgers. We find Bowkers as diplomatic agents with the Frontier tribes, in the house of Assembly, in the Legislative Council, as Resident Magistrates, in short in all situations of delicacy and responsibility. Their sterling worth and the value of their services were, for the most part, appreciated and recognised by a grateful country – after they were dead”

    John Mitford took part in the campaign against the M’fecane in 1828 and served as a lieutenant, 1st battalion Provisional Colonial Infantry in the war of 1834-1835, being appointed Resident Agent with the Fingo Settlement near Fort Peddie. In the war of 1846-1847 he was Commandant Lower Koonap River Burghers and Field- Cornet Fish River in 1847. He died during this war.

    Thomas Holden was also a member of the 1828 campaign against the M’fecane and served as Lieutenant, Provisional Colonial Infantry in the 1834-1835 war and Captain, Grahamstown Native Levy in the 1846-1847 war and as Commandant of Burghers in that of 1850-1853. He was Resident Magistrate Kat River Settlement in 1848 and a Member of the House of Assembly from 1854 to 1863. He founded the town of Queenstown where there is a Bowker Park and Bowker’s Kop.

    Bertram Egerton also took part in the campaign against the M’fecane in 1828 and served as the Corps of Guides in the war of 1834-1835. In the war of 1846-1847 he was commandant, Mill River Station and was in charge of the laager at Oakwell in the war of 1850-1853. He was commandant of the Rovers in the war of 1877 at the age of 69. In 1879 he was a Member of the legislative council for the Eastern Province.

    Mary Elizabeth married Frederick William Barber and gave rise to the Mitford-Barberton name. Mary merits more than passing notice. She was remarkable for her vast and accurate knowledge of the plant and insect life of South Africa. Charles Darwin owed much to her for the information she gave him in these matters in connection with the famous “Origin of Species”. Her numerous, beautiful and accurate watercolour paintings of insects and flowers now adorn the walls of one of the rooms of the Albany Museum in Grahamstown. Only 14 of the 71 paintings survived the fire in 1941.

    James Henry never married. He was Commandant of the Frontier Armed and Mounted Police and later became the High Commissioner of Basutoland. He reached the rank of Colonel, during the Seventh and Eighth Frontier Wars. For a period he was Chief Commissioner on the diamond fields of Griqualand West. Co-authored, with Roland Trimen, of “South African Butterflies”, which is still one of the standard works on the subject.

    Of Miles Bowker’s home at Tharfield, John Bond in his book “They were South Africans” quotes John Mitford Bowker saying “It is now eleven years by since my father and mother and their nine sons lived under one roof in this neighbourhood. Our hearts were as one, our exertions united, and our home so happy that, though it was high time, yet none of us had married and branched off”.
    It must have been very soon after this that the tragic Frontier War of 1834 – 1835 struck this prosperous home and every other home in the Eastern Province. Without warning the tribesmen in their thousands invaded these districts from the Winterberg to the sea.
    When the Bowkers received their first intimation of the coming of the onslaught the tribesmen had already crossed the Fish River, nine miles away. The brothers were already shearing their sheep when an official order summoned everyone to Grahamstown. The Bowkers proceeded to collect their livestock and hunt for their oxen in the bush. That same night young Fletcher from a neighbouring farm galloped to the door of Tharfield house saying: “I have it first hand from an old fellow whose life I saved that the tribesmen intend to murder us all tonight” (Some white farmers were murdered that night, and at least twenty more within a week).
    The Bowkers hastily inspanned their wagon and piled onto it essential foodstuffs, cooking utensils and lead & moulds for making bullets.
    The women made a pile of the valuable family silver and crockery on the dining-room table, with some money and heirlooms.{the women were all at Oliveburn at this timeand not at Tharfield} Four of the brothers staggered down the road with this heavy load tied up in a table-cloth and buried it in an ant-bear hole about twenty metres off the road and about four hundred metres away, their tracks were obliterated by a storm which broke at that moment. The treasure was never recovered.
    On Christmas night of 1834 the assembled farmers and others successfully defended the Church at Bathurst (with the women and children inside) whilst thousands of yelling tribesmen launched one attack after another. Later they accomplished a successful evacuation to Grahamstown through the unsuspecting tribesmen’s lines. All of the Settlers’ livestock and possessions were stolen by the enemy: 456 farmhouses were burnt or pillaged; 5600 horses and 150,000 cattle were driven away. The Burgers were called out, and with them the Bowker Brothers fought until the end, under the command of Colonel Sir Harry Smith. Besides the agricultural difficulties, the Settlers also had to contend with the continual Frontier unrest. In the 1846 War of the Axe their home did not suffer much damage. W Currie writing to John Mitford Barber on 13th July, 1846 said, ”The Bathurst Burgers are trying to make the most of the times. Tharfield was all-right, not a single tribesman had been into the house”.

    From: The Settler Handbook by MD Nash; Lower Albany Historical Society’s “Long Ago” 1967; “Looking Back” September, 1980; and other sources.
    ~~~~~~~~~~

    National Archives, Kew CO48/67 transcribed by Sue Mackay.

    June 9th 1824

    My Lord,

    I do myself the honor of enclosing a copy of a letter I a few days ago received from Mr. Mile BOWKER from the new settlement to the eastward of the Cape of Good Hope.

    Amidst the afflicting intelligence communicated to the public through the medium of the public papers of the distress experienced by the settlers in that part of the world, the account from Mr. BOWKER may in my poor opinion be interesting even to your Lordship as coming from a practical, well informed, respectable & industrious individual: at all events it cannot be wrong to communicate its contents to your Lordship, who will pardon the liberty and appreciate the intention.

    I have the honor to be with the highest respect & consideration

    Your Lordship's most humble serv't

    R. STANDISH HALEY

    [enclosed letter, addressed to Lieut. Richard STANDISH HALEY RN, Poole, Dorsetshire]

    Olive Town

    near the mouth of the Cowie

    Albany

    Feb'y 24th 1824

    My Dear Sir,

    You will long ago have heard of the difficulties the settlers have undergone since their arrival here by losing three, and nearly a fourth harvest, but Government having kindly helped them with [ugly rice?] during a good part of that time and rations for the two first years keeping great part of the deposit to pay for them has greatly mitigated these evils and things are now [wearing?] a better aspect, as we have found a species of wheat, coarse indeed and rush straw, that in a great measure withstands the rust, our great enemy in agriculture, & being convinced that growing corn is not to be our staple pursuit, we attend now to Horticulture & planting rather than agriculture, still depending upon herds & flocks as our best pursuits; this last has been much checked by our treacherous and near neighbors the Caffres who are only a few miles from us and have been constantly stealing for these last few years both from the Dutch and English to a very great extent, but Major SOMERSET having lately taken the worst of them by surprise and ?? them severely we hope they will be quiet in future or more severe measures must be resorted to and they must be driven to a distance as it is only to order it and it may be instantly accomplished, as tho' [a stout case?] of people, yet having nothing to cope with fire arms, they are soon discomfitted or destroyed. For my own part tho' [many?] of the men that I took out with me as servants did me no good in fulfilling my agreement with Lord BATHURST in securing me one thousand acres of location, yet thro' the help of my sons & their most excellent mother we have been able to get forward [obscured] better than any other settlers, tho' several of them came out without means which was far from our case& we have now only to regret the distance we are at from our dear friends & relatives as in all other respects our prospects far exceed any thing we could hope for in England. Upon finding our location unequal to means Government have kindly given us another place, making it near 5,000 acres with one and a half miles of sea coast. One of the finest spots in this country, lying four miles from the mouth of the Great Fish River and five from the mouth of the Cowie, now become our sea port, whilst many or nearly all are complaining tho' not for want of land for Government has in that respect been sufficiently liberal to such as could do it justice, we are getting on almost as well as we could wish. Our fruit trees, though only three years from the stone or cutting, are many of them bearing fruit – we have planted above 15,000 vines, many of which are now bearing, and we have twenty different sorts of fruit trees & most of them will be fruitful to all appearance in another year, and we are preparing again for a similar plantation; our prospects of improvement will be also much in feeding as in cattle, sheep & pork we can have an excellent market for it [salted?] at the Cowie, where our cheese, which we make very good, as well as fat & hides, have a good market. Cloathing is still very dear tho' that is not likely long to be the case as the exchange has greatly fallen and our goods will be in future without land carriage. Land is now very much occupied in Albany tho' larger than Yorkshire yet good places may be bought for from £150 to £200 for 1,000 acres but it is increasing in value as many people are now satisfied with the means of living here, the climate being for health and comfort almost without its parallel & its production of the most valuable sorts may be made profitable such as tobacco, coffee, cotton and drugs of very many sorts, oils &c &c. It is a family's own fault rich or poor if they do not thrive, the Dutch here are all rich and they have not the industry of the English tho' they are careful and provident; many of them have here from 1,000 to 10,000 sheep and five or six hundred head of cattle. More – our population of all colours and many nations, Heathens, Mohamatons and every sort and denomination of Christians – this multitude is ill amalgamated and we have many tricks & thievings amongst them. We had no less than 64 cases or trials come before the Court of Session which is held monthly, of which I am now the Senior Heemraad Magistrate, tho' Landdrost Mr. RIVERS being our Chairman & proper the Court consists of six other Heemraad of a which my friends Major PIGOT & Capt. CAMPBELL were some time ago Members but are now out there being party's here as well as in England, but we [steer?] in the mean. We have many half pay officers both of the army and of the navy and they do well as they endeavour. I have written you much of this long detail for your own information & of Mr. PITT your neighboring Magistrate of Organ House and any other you may please to communicate it to.

    I am to have a school on my place to which Government give to a master 200 dollars pr annum & chapels and schools are now everywhere erecting [obscured] by the Frome, Warminster and Somerset parties who have given me great trouble to keep in peace but they are mostly thriving on about 230 acres for each family and they will get more land as they deserve it or can do it justice. We have plenty of fish and game & almost every description of wild beast from the elephant & hippopotamus to the mouse on my premises. My boys have become very dextrous in killing all sorts of monsters who neglected to keep their distance & tho' often heard thro' the night are seldom seen. Our worst enemy is the large wolf dog which hunts in packs and will fell down an ox before our eyes in the day time. In other respects we are in a land of myrtle and evergreens – a land of milk & honey which is found wild in the trees and taken without killing the bees with little trouble. We have in very little been disappointed in this country as excepting the antiseptic disposition of every new soil to foreign vegetation & the rust before our arrival little known, we found it equal to the general description given, and if the rust had not been so destructive I believe in point of [obscured] this would have been for its time the first settlement put in action & I still think it will soon [answer?] all its misfortunes and satisfy all my Lord BATHURST's very best hopes.

    We expect to see the Arethusa at our port soon – she is trading on this coast. We expect most of the coasters will soon be here for goods for the merchants or stores for the frontier army.

    Most faithfully & affectionately yours

    Miles BOWKER

    [signed]
    ~~~~~~~~~


    Settler:
    Bowker's Party on the Weymouth

    Died:
    Grahamstown Journal: Thursday 28 March 1839

    DIED at 3 o'clock am on Monday the 25th inst after one hours illness, Miles BOWKER Esq of Tharfield, Albany in his Eighty-first year.
    ~~~~~~

    Miles married Anna Maria Mitford, 1820 Settler on 8 Mar 1800 in Morpeth, Northumberland, England. Anna (daughter of Capt. John Mitford and Dorothy Young) was born in 1782 in Mitford Manor, Mitford, Northumberland, England; died on 8 Jul 1868 in 'Kruisfontein', Alexandria, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in 1868 in Tharfield, Kleinemonde, Bathurst District, Eastern Cape, South Africa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Anna Maria Mitford, 1820 SettlerAnna Maria Mitford, 1820 Settler was born in 1782 in Mitford Manor, Mitford, Northumberland, England (daughter of Capt. John Mitford and Dorothy Young); died on 8 Jul 1868 in 'Kruisfontein', Alexandria, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in 1868 in Tharfield, Kleinemonde, Bathurst District, Eastern Cape, South Africa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • 1820 Lineage: Yes
    • Settler ID: 570
    • Residence: 1816, Manor Farm, South Newton, Wiltshire, England
    • Settler: 7 Jan 1820, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England; : 37y
    • Residence: 25 Jun 1820, Olive Burn farm, Kleinemonde, Eastern Cape, South Africa

    Notes:

    Anna Maria was born at Mitford Manor in the village of Mitford, Northumberland in 1782.

    The Manor House previously stood, adjacent to the old church of St Mary Magdalene, on the eastern side of the River Wansbeck. The substantial ruins now standing on the site represent the remains of a 16th-century house and of a porch tower built in about 1637.

    The original house was substantially demolished and rebuilt in about 1810, then abandoned by the Mitfords when they built a new mansion house, Mitford Hall, and park on the opposite bank of the river in 1828. In the 20th century, a modern house was created out of the kitchen wing. The current Mitford Hall, owned and occupied by Shepherd Offshore.

    Anna would not have known the 'new' Mitford Hall, as she was already in Olive Burn in South Africa.

    from www.shepherdoffshore.com:
    "The land around Mitford was originally owned prior to the Norman Conquest by Sir John of Mitford whose name was derived from the site’s location between two fords over the rivers Font and Wansbeck.
    After 1066 Sir John’s daughter, Sybilla, was married to Richard Bertram, son of the Seigneur of Dignain in Normandy. King William endowed Bertram with considerable land holdings and as a result a number of churches, including Brinkburn Priory and Newminster Abbey, were built by the family together with Mitford Church, which dates from 1135.
    Mitford Castle itself was known to have existed by 1138 and this was constructed on the site of an Anglo Saxon fort. The Castle has the only 5 sided keep in England but was subsequently laid waste by King John’s Flemish troops in 1215 and by 1327 was in ruins.
    The Bertram and Mitford families merged together but lived in times of continuing troubles pray not only to the marauding Scots but also the whims of the Kings of England the family’s landed estates were subject to attack and confiscation.
    It was not until after the restoration of Charles II that the majority of the lands, which previously had belonged to the family, were returned to Robert Mitford, an enthusiastic royalist. This completed the task of his ancestors over the preceding three centuries in consolidating the family’s properties.
    A more settled period in the family history ensued and Bertram Mitford succeeded to the Hunmanby and Osbaldeston estates in Yorkshire in 1835. Subsequently taking the name of Osbaldeston in addition to and before the Mitford name, Bertram was responsible for pulling down the Manor House, leaving the Pele Tower intact and constructing the present Hall in 1828.
    The family line at Mitford continued up until 1990’s although other members of the family established themselves elsewhere and these include the Exbury branch, headed by Lord Redesdale, from where the famous Mitford sisters hailed.
    The Shepherd family purchased the Estate from the Mitford family in 1993 and a large scale programme of restoration and modernisation has been in progress throughout the Estate ever since."

    see : http://www.thesouthafrican.com/news/south-african-inherits-an-english-village.htm

    Grahamstown Journal 8 July 1868:
    DIED at Kruis Vontein, on the 8th July 1868, Anna Maria BOWKER Sen, relict of the late Miles BOWKER, of Tharfield, aged 87. Friends at a distance will please accept this notice.

    Settler:
    Bowker's Party on the Weymouth

    Children:
    1. John Mitford Bowker was born on 13 Apr 1801 in Mitford Hall, Mitford, Northumberland, England; was christened on 6 May 1801 in Mitford Church, Mitford, Northumberland, England; died on 11 Apr 1847 in 'Oakwell', Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    2. William Monkhouse Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 10 Mar 1803 in Mitford Hall, Mitford, Northumberland, England; was christened on 18 Apr 1807 in Mitford Church, Mitford, Northumberland, England; died on 3 Feb 1876 in Thorn Kloof, Albany, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Thorn Kloof, Albany, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    3. Miles Brabbin Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 27 Jan 1805 in Mitford, Northumberland, England; was christened on 15 Jan 1807 in Mitford Church, Mitford, Northumberland, England; died on 28 Jul 1864 in Thorn Kloof farm, Fish River, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    4. Thomas Holden Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 24 Feb 1807 in Mitford Hall, Mitford, Northumberland, England; was christened on 10 Mar 1807 in Mitford Church, Mitford, Northumberland, England; died on 26 Oct 1885 in Tharfield, Kleinemonde, Bathurst District, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Tharfield, Kleinemonde, Bathurst District, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    5. Bertram Egerton Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 24 Nov 1808 in Morpeth, Northumberland, England; was christened on 7 Jan 1809 in Mitford, Northumberland, England; died on 28 Dec 1904 in Santa Clara, Parktown, Johannesburg, Transvaal, South Africa; was buried in Rand Pioneer Memorial, Wemmer Pan, Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa.
    6. Robert Mitford Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 30 Aug 1810 in Deckham Hall, Gateshead, Durham, England; was christened on 4 Oct 1813 in Parish Church of Saint Mary, Almer, Dorset, England; died on 24 Aug 1892 in Glen Avon farm, Somerset East, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Craigie Burn farm, Somerset East, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    7. Septimus Bourchier Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 10 Aug 1812 in Almer, Dorset, England; was christened on 4 Oct 1813 in Parish Church of Saint Mary, Almer, Dorset, England; died on 2 Aug 1895 in Alstonfields farm, Bedford district, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Alstonfields farm, Bedford district, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    8. Octavius Bourchier Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 27 May 1815 in Almer, Dorset, England; was christened on 27 May 1815 in Parish Church of Saint Mary, Almer, Dorset, England; died on 21 Jul 1899 in Champagne farm, Zastron district, Free State, South Africa.
    9. 5. Mary Elizabeth Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 5 Jan 1818 in Manor Farm, South Newton, Wiltshire, England; was christened on 22 Feb 1818 in St Andrew's Parish Church, South Newton, Wiltshire, England; died on 4 Sep 1899 in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa; was buried in Commercial Road Cemetery, Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa.
    10. Anna Maria Bowker, 1820 Settler was born on 26 Apr 1820 in Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa; was christened on 20 Apr 1823 in Albany District, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 24 Apr 1895 in Albany Road, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was buried in Grahamstown Cemetery (Old), Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    11. Colonel James Henry Bowker was born on 23 Aug 1825 in Olive Burn farm, Kleinemonde, Eastern Cape, South Africa; was christened on 17 Dec 1825 in Albany District, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died on 29 Oct 1900 in Escombe, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa; was buried in Escombe, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa.

  5. 12.  John Evans was born in Mabus, Parish Of Marthry, Pembroke, South Wales (son of John Evans and Martha Mathias).

    John + Ann Howell. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Ann Howell (daughter of John Howell and Eleanor Richards).
    Children:
    1. Morgan Evans
    2. Hugh Evans
    3. Alfred Evans
    4. James Evans
    5. Rebecca Evans
    6. 6. John Brown Evans was born on 13 May 1831 in Mabus, Parish Of Marthry, Pembroke, South Wales; died on 29 Dec 1888 in London, England.

  7. 14.  Frederick Rex was born on 30 Aug 1811 in Knysna, Western Cape, South Africa (son of George Rex and Carolina Margaretha Ungerer); died on 8 Nov 1850 in Knysna, Western Cape, South Africa.

    Notes:

    Issue : 6 children

    Frederick married Johanna Elizabeth Bain on 2 Sep 1838 in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Johanna (daughter of Andrew Geddes Bain and Maria Elizabeth Von Backstrom) was born on 7 Jun 1821 in Graaff-Reinet, Eastern Cape, South Africa; died in 1882. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Johanna Elizabeth Bain was born on 7 Jun 1821 in Graaff-Reinet, Eastern Cape, South Africa (daughter of Andrew Geddes Bain and Maria Elizabeth Von Backstrom); died in 1882.

    Notes:

    Married on 2 Sept 1838 Frederick Rex, illegit son of George Rex who was the illegit son of George III

    Children:
    1. George Wellington Rex was born on 28 Jul 1840 in Knysna, Western Cape, South Africa; died on 28 Mar 1923; was buried in Rustenburg, North West, South Africa.
    2. 7. Anne Caroline Rex was born on 2 Nov 1841; died on 1 May 1878 in Port Elizabeth, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    3. Frederick Edward George Rex was born on 2 Oct 1843; died on 11 Dec 1918 in Aberdeen, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
    4. Henriette Geddes Maria Bain Morroco Rex was born on 31 May 1845 in Free State (Orange Free State), South Africa; died on 24 Feb 1917 in Seapoint, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa.
    5. John George Duthie Rex was born on 7 Jan 1847; died on 1 Nov 1917.
    6. Maria Elizabeth Rex was born on 20 Nov 1848.



Please help towards my time and effort in maintaining this website. Every £, $, € and Rand helps!
Many Thanks, Paul

This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding v. 14.0.4, written by Darrin Lythgoe © 2001-2024.

Maintained by Paul Tanner-Tremaine. | Data Protection Policy, Terms of Use and Disclaimers.