|
Samuel
Holloway was born on 14 October 1848 into a loving family of John Holloway
and his wife Lucy née Birch. John and Lucy were married on 7 August
1832 at Comberford, Staffordshire, England (Lucy’s birth place) later moving
to the nearby township of Tamworth where they lived in George Street. They
had seven other children before Samuel was born - Hannah, George, Sarah,
John, Edward, Mary-Lucy and Anne. John senior was a landholder, and around
1841 the family moved to a farm called The Royals at Amington, two
miles north of Tamworth. This is where the last four children were born.
John worked the 96 acres of land with the help of two labourers according to
the last census in England before they all migrated to Australia. The
Holloways had many friends amongst them the Booths and the Argyles. These
families were born in Heage, Derby but Thomas Argyle was working as a
solicitor’s clerk in Tamworth. His younger brother Edward, who had migrated
to Australia, wrote many letters back home and these were passed on to
family and friends. John Holloway was friendly with Thomas and would have
read the letters. The Holloway’s were of the Methodist faith and took great
comfort and support from the bible. When trying to decide whether to
migrate to Australia or stay in England, Lucy opened the bible at random and
saw the verse “go into the wilderness and you will be protected” and so they
bought their ticket on the North Atlantic, packed their belongings
and left the family home; Samuel was four years and three months old at the
time. Arriving in Williamstown, Melbourne in 1852, John Holloway first
worked as a butcher amassing a large amount after which the family moved to
Rock House, Kyneton in country Victoria staying with Edward Argyle
for about four months. While staying there, John became interested in
Edwards’ property Duck Swamp near what is now Kerang and purchased
part of that property naming it Tragowell station. George, Samuel’s
eldest brother was left to bring their goods up to Tragowell by
bullock dray, he was 15 years old, and while near the Black Forest, where
Bacchus March is now, George’s hired help took the dray and the two lead
bullocks, leaving George with only the horse and remaining bullocks to find
his way to Tragowell. He finally arrived, was able to find more
bullocks and to get more goods for the family and so they started life on
the land. The following years saw John Holloway build up his property and
trying to find a bullock strain he could use to upgrade his team and in 1857
bought one for £500, a huge amount in those days. The girls who were still
of school age, Ann and Mary-Lucy were taken to boarding school in 1858 at a
private girls school run by Mrs. Fleck at Kyneton. Mr. Farmer - a neighbour
- took Samuel and his brothers John and Edward to school at Mr. John A.
McFarlane’s Brighton Park in 1859. This school eventually became
Brighton Grammar. The cost of schooling is unknown but his father ordered
Edward to leave when he was 18 years old in 1859. Samuel stayed on at the
school, without his brother’s company. Now on his own, Samuel would have
been lonely and when he contacted influenza in 1860 he had no family around
to comfort him. The local doctor treated him but the poor boy must have
died in agony as his trachea was inflamed, in other words he would have
suffocated, and he died on 3 September 1860.
It was his Aunt Palmer who had
the duty to send the telegram which they received the day after the Burke &
Wills expedition left Tragowell station on their way to the top of
the continent - and death. Dr. Hermann Beckler (1828-1914), botanical
collector and doctor travelling with the expedition of which fellow German
William Brahe (q.v.) was a member would write of the “hospitable
house of Messrs Holloway and Barr” during a time of badly needed rain:
“I can assure the reader that
even in Australia, where one is used to expansive hospitality, it is no
trifle to accommodate such a large expedition...and make them comfortable.
But the friendly owners of this far remote station did all they could to
make our evening tolerable, and they succeeded entirely...The Holloways were
pious folk. They prayed with great devotion in the evening and, although
they were very simple people, they offered a long, improvised prayer for the
success of our expedition and for our preservation. In the morning we
received substantial gifts...which we accepted with thanks since these
people were not just religious, but also good Christians”.
Eventually
the family put a headstone on his grave in the Brighton General Cemetery -
Methodist Section “L”, Grave 81. The cemetery is near his former school.
No other members of his family were buried in the cemetery.
Samuel's headstone inscription reads:
SAMUEL HOLLOWAY
BORN OCTR 13TH 1848,
DIED SEPTR 3RD 1860
AGED 11 YEARS.
Another precious gem in
Heaven
That hush'd my heart I
daren't repine.
The child was lent it
was not given
God took his own it was
not mine.
“BUT CHRIST IS ALL AND IN ALL.” |

(above) Samuel Holloway

(above) ‘Royals Farm’ in
Amington, Staffordshire where Sam was born (1922)

(above) John Holloway

(above) Lucy Holloway
née Birch

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |