Entries by Redgate Consultants

‘Tis the mind that shines

When Georgiana packed in 1829 for the sea voyage to her new home in Australia, she included some reading choices that wouldn’t usually be on the list of a person described as strictly pious, including this copy of the songs of Robert Burns. This beautiful little book was given to ‘GM’ as a wedding gift […]

1829 wedding dress

The beginnings of Georgiana’s relationship with John Molloy were a mystery so discovering the circumstances of their first meeting and the way their connection grew over many years was been one of the most exciting research pathways for me. Georgiana’s private journals leave clues about her wedding dress and veil embroidered with tiny flowers and […]

A letter from Georgiana

Georgiana wrote this letter to a family friend, Mrs Frances Birkett, after arriving in Western Australia and it’s full of personal information about her first year in the colony. For reasons we’ll probably never know, the letter was forwarded to Georgiana’s mother. Mrs Kennedy kept all her correspondence and her personal documents were stored safely […]

A day to remember

Here’s one of my favourite photographs from the last decade on the Georgiana trail: myself with Mrs Patricia Sedgwick at the window of what was once Georgiana’s parents’ bedroom at Crosby Lodge, looking out towards the village of Crosby-on-Eden. I’m no expert on 19th century woodwork, but I think the window shutters are the originals […]

noongarculture.org.au

The Noongar people have been the traditional owners of southwest WA for more than 45000 years. Local Aboriginal people spent time at the Molloys’ home in Augusta, worked on the farm at the Vasse (Busselton) and helped Georgiana with her flower collecting. Their children and hers played together. She often wrote about the Noongar way […]

Heirlooms of paper and ink

18th century writers used personalised, creative flourishes that look so attractive today in our world of word-processing. Here’s one of the old documents in Georgiana’s family archive. Written using the sharpened end of a feather quill, on parchment made from calf-skin, it was signed and sealed in 1713. This close up shows the now hardened […]

A lucky find: April 2015

The wonderful thing about history is that there’s always, always more for a researcher to discover! One morning, during a coffee break two months after my book had been published, I tried some new research criteria and a small but interesting story about Georgiana’s father popped up in the list of hits. It tells us […]