Showing posts with label Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lee. Show all posts
Sunday, April 12, 2015
Sentimental Sunday - Family Gathering
This weekend has been very productive, with the confirmation of the date and venue for the Shepherd, Carraige, Lee Family Gathering to be held on the 4th October, 2015. The family gathering is for anyone who is connected to the descendants of Christina Lee and her two husbands Malcolm Michael Shepherd and Lionel Carraige. Family names include, Lee, Shepherd, Carraige, McGregor, McDonald, McPherson, Weston, Webb, Rixon and Davidson.
These families were among the earliest settlers in the Araluen, Braidwood, Nelligen, Bateman's Bay, Milton and Ulladulla districts of Southern New South Wales.
The next few months will be spent connecting with as many family members as possible, collecting family photos and stories and finalising arrangements for the day. A learning process for us all :).
If you think you are connect to these families or know someone who is, please leave me a message on this blog and I will arrange to send you the details.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Work Day Wednesday - Sawyers on Acacia Farm
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Sawing logs - Acacia Farm Nelligen
Today I would like to share with you another of my recently discovered pictures of life on Acacia Farm, This is a picture of my father Malcolm Shepherd helping his uncle Jordie Lee saw a log on the farm with an old two handed saw.
The two man saw was used in the timer industry and involved two sawyers standing or sitting on either side of the log, and the sawyers would alternate in pulling the saw through the wood. The saws were designed to cut in both directions, and the special tooth design of the saw allowed the sawdust to be cleared from the cut as the sawyers worked |
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Those Places Thursday - Acacia Farm, Clyde River, Nelligen
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Acacia Far - Clyde River - near Nelligen, NSW
Last night I was going through some old files on our computer and found a folder of old photos that my husband had kindly scanned for me a couple of years. Note to self!! I need to go through these and label and file into appropriate family files.
I started looking through the pictures and was very excited to find quite a few of Acacia Farm. I believe they would have been taken around very close to the time when my parents were married, probably just before they were married and my father bought my mother from Broken Hill to meet all his family who lived on the South Coast of NSW.
So over the next couple of days I would like to share with you some of the lovely old black and white pictures of Acacia Farm. This farm was where five generations of the Lee family lived from the late 1800'. My Nanna Christina Lee (daughter of George Lee and Catherine McGregor) grew up on this farm and travelled by boat down to the school in the small village of Nelligen. Then when her husband Malcolm Michael Shepherd passed away my father lived there with his grandparents. My Nanna’s youngest brother Jordie inherited the farm and it was then passed down to his daughter.
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Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Wordless Wednesday - James McGregor's Grand daughters
It is always exciting when something you write or post links you with family members. This afternoon, my Facebook page, Family Stories: Photographs and Memories, I was contacted by a cousin who had come across my blogs on the McGregor/Lee Families by pure accident. She was quite excited to see the stories on her ancestors.
Her great grandmother Mona Lee was my Nanna's, Christina Lee, sister and they were the daughters of Catherine McGregor and George Lee and the Grand daughters of James McGregor and Mary MacPherson. So especially for you cousin, I have posted their photo for you. I look forward to catching up with you soon.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Sunday's Obituary- George William Lee Obituary (1859-1936)

To stay in keeping with the title of my blog, Family Stories: Photographs and Memories, I thougt it is time to start telling some of these family stories. What better way than to start with the obituary of my great grandfather George Lee. George was born in the small community of Nelligen, NSW the first surviving son of two of the early settlers of this district, Thomas George Lee and Emma Jane Weston. George married Catherine McGregor in 1888 and are the parents of my Grandmother, Chistina Sterand Lee. They and their family lived on the Nelligen River at "Acacia Farm". The old farm house that features in one of my earlier blogs, "Acacia Farm".
Death of Mr George Lee
"This passing was not sudden or unexpected. Slowly but surely age and illness, untied the knot of life and in the solemn hush of last Sabbath, breaking dawn, his spirit broke the earthy bars and drifted out into the calm of the eternal land..
The late Mr Lee came to Nelligen when a child with his fathers large family of virile workers, and became well and truly anchored as “Farmer George” on the Clyde river ever since. In early life he married “Miss Kate McGregor” of Braidwood district, who proved a right worthy help made and splendid mother of four sons and five daughters. Three of the stalwart sons, Clyde, James and Norman are well and favourably know in the Police Department of this state, where the outstanding physique and reliable efficiency soon attracted attention. James made many friends in Moruya, where he was stationed for two years.
The five daughters, all married and settled in the district, Mrs Saunders, Mrs Rixon, Mrs M. Shepherd, Mrs E. Rixon and Mrs Sheppard. Mr Lee’s long and uneventful life, centered on home and family and he had but little time for aught else. Of static temperament, calm and deliberte in judgment, slow in speech and action through storm or shine, he kept the even finer of his way and throughout his honorable life ever proved a good husband, a fond father, a true friend and a humble Christian who practiced more in common life than man preached in high places.
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Headstone: George Lee - Nelligen |
At conclusion of ritual Mr Trelfell gave a stirring straight from the shoulder, heart to heart sympathetic address that went straight to the mark and seemed to gather fresher force when told beneath the dark blue dome of gods great Cathedral and the closing benediction brought a sense of ineffable calm to the many mourners, Mr Trefell has only recently been appointed to Milton Circuit, but soon came to the front ‘with” the harness of enterprise specially qualify him for sacred mission, and he is doing splendid work in the district."
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Those Places Thursday - Acacia Farm, Nelligen
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Acacia Farm, Clyde River, Nelligen |
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George and Catherine Lee |
"Acacia Farm" has been part of our family history for over 100 years. The old farmhouse was on the banks of the Clyde River, up stream from the small town of Nelligen, NSW, Australia. My great grandparents George Thomas Lee and his wife Catherine (nee McGregor) moved to the farm in the early 1900's, with their family of nine children.
My Grandmother Christine Sterland Lee was their seventh child, and she and her siblings would travel by boat down the Clyde River to the small school in Nelligen.
When I was very young I can remember crossing the Clyde River on the punt at Nelligen (in the days before the bridge was built). In the Christmas holidays cars would line up for miles waiting for their turn to go across on the Punt. We would get out of the car and look over the side and watch all the jellyfish in the river. There used to be thousands of them blobbing along in the water as we passed.
Dad used to tell stories of when he lived there with his grandmother (Catherine Lee) after his father, Malcolm Shepherd died following a logging accident. He described how they would row the boat down the river to Nelligen for supplies and catch the tide on the way back to the farm. I can remember visiting there as a little girl with my dad and Pop. My Nan's brother Uncle Jordie lived there at the time. We walked down to the paddock towards The Point where there was a nice little sandy beach. Uncle Jordie was growing turnips and I remember he pulled out a couple and gave to me to give to Nan to make soup. The lushness of the farm made a big impression on me as at that time our family lived on a sheep station in the far west near Broken Hill.
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Waiting to catch Punt to cross the Clyde River, Nelligen |
The "farm" as everyone called it, was often the meeting place for family get togethers. Everyone would roll up with huge baskets of food and drink. The big black kettle would be put over the small open fire in the old kitchen that my great grandmother used to cook in. It was constantly kept on the boil to keep up with the copious quantities of tea that were made. The adults would sit around in the front garden, surrounded by huge old blue hydrangeas plants, swapping stories of days gone by, while all the kids would run wild, playing hide-and-seek etc. There were always strict rules not to go on parts of the old veranda, as the floorboards were rotten. At the back of the farm house there where huge old fruit trees and an outside loo and shed that was covered in a choco vine that had certainly got out of hand. Lots of great hiding places!!
After lunch, and more cups of tea, if we were lucky everyone would go up to the beach at The Point for a swim while the men folk tried their hand at fishing. I clearly remember spending time with my Nan using a stick with a short line and hook and bread to catch little fish for bait. It was great fun. The farm has now been sold, but I do believe the old ruins of the original farm house are still there.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Wordless Wednesday: Christina Carriage and Hazel Herbert
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My Grandmothers: Hazel Herbert (nee Palin) and Christina Carriage (nee Lee) |
In my blog The Other Half of My Family Tree - stories of my female ancestors, a project in which I aim to tell stories of the women in my family tree, I have so far written about both my grandmothers, Edna Hazel Palin and Christina Sterland Lee. Last night while I was searching through an old album of my fathers for photos for the final chapter on the story on Edna Hazel Palin, I found the picture above. It is a rare picture of both my Grandmothers, which must have been taken around the time my parents were married and Hazel and Roy Herbert (my mothers parents) came all the way from Broken Hill to Milton on the coast of NSW to visit my fathers mother, Christina and step father, Lionel Carriage. Such a great find!!! I had to share it on Wordless Wednesday.
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