Family History Friday

Family History Friday: Mac’s Hotel, Franklin st., Melbourne

In 1853, Mac’s Hotel was built for Mr R’s great-great-great-grandfather, John McMillan. It is classified by the National Trust because it is the oldest surviving purpose-built hotel in continuous use in Melbourne.

John McMillan was born in Durness, Sutherland, Scotland in 1816, the son of Ewan McMillan, foxhunter and game keeper, and Flora McKay. He arrived in Melbourne before 1841 when his first application for a publican’s licence was knocked back. He gained a licence the following year.

Mac's hotel, 2008 Photo from OnMyDoorstep

Mac’s hotel, 2008
Photo from OnMyDoorstep

The Argus (Melbourne) Friday 3 February 1854 p 3

The Argus (Melbourne) Friday 3 February 1854 p 3

Want to read more about the history of the hotel? I have copied an article from OnMyDoorstep here.

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Family History Friday

Family History Friday: Walter Stone, OAM

Walter is my second cousin, twice removed. I am very proud to have this man as my blood relative. In the book, The Passionate Bibliophile , written by his widow, Jean, she said Walter’s great-grandfather was a failed burglar.

Indeed, Thomas Horner Stone (our common ancestor – my great-great-great-grandfather) was a convict: he managed to avoid the noose when caught coming out of a dwelling with 38 yards of silk and 15 yards of silk velvet. His trial was held at the Old Bailey, followed by transportation to New South Wales, arriving 1832.  Thomas Stone was one of the first men to buy a house block in Condobolin. Jean Stone reports Thomas had a good collection of books in his home, though she doubted he could read.

stone walter

“Walter William Stone (1910-1981), bibliophile, bibliographer and publisher, was born on 24 June 1910 at Orange, New South Wales, eldest of five children of New South Wales-born parents Walter Phillip Stone, bookmaker, and his wife Maud Ellen, née Baker. The family moved to Sydney, where Walter attended Parramatta High School. For a few years from about 1930 he was a clerk in the solicitor’s practice of his uncle, James Baker. He then worked as a rent collector and a door-to-door salesman, and at anything that was available. These early years had a profound effect on his political views. Socialist politics were always important in the Stone family and Walter had become a member of the Auburn branch of the Australian Labor Party in 1928. …”

Want more? Go to the Australian Dictionary of Biography website.

Citation details
Alan Ventress, ‘Stone, Walter William (1910–1981)’, Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/stone-walter-william-15729/text26917, published in hardcopy 2012, accessed online 30 May 2014.
This article was first published in hardcopy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 18, (MUP), 2012

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Family History Friday

Family History Friday: Damien PARER

It is always lovely to claim a famous / infamous person as one’s blood relative.

Damien Parer is Mr R’s second cousin, twice removed. Their ancestors in common are Mr R.’s Great-Great-Great Grandparents, John and Elizabeth Corcoran (nee Spillane) — Damien’s Great Grandparents. John Corcoran died in Ireland and Elizabeth lived in Kyneton area, Victoria.  read more

Tobruk, Libya. 1941-08. Damien Parer, a Department of Information photographer, filming with a Newman-Sinclair 35mm camera, probably the Auto Kine Camera model, during the Siege of Tobruk. Parer could be filming material for the Department of Information production, Siege of Tobruk. (See AWM Film F01097)

 

 

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