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The four
people buried in the Kennedy family grave at the Brighton General Cemetery
are a husband and wife and two of their eleven children. Robert Henry
Kennedy (1826-95) was born in New South Wales in 1826, the sixth of the
twelve children of John Kennedy and his wife Caroline née Katopodi.
Robert’s father, John, arrived in the colony of New South Wales with his
uncle Matthew Pearce aboard the Surprize in 1794 and was followed the
following year by his widowed father, James Raworth Kennedy and sisters
Jane, Eliza Charlotte and Louisa in the care of their aunt Elizabeth More
Kennedy sailing aboard the Sovereign. Aunt Elizabeth married Andrew
Hamilton Hume and their surviving children were the explorer Hamilton Hume,
Isabella (later Barber), John (murdered in 1840 by the Whitton gang of
bushrangers) and Francis Rawdon, known as Rawdon.
Andrew Hamilton Hume
was the son of a Scottish clerical family living in Ireland. He left a
military career to come, in 1790, to Norfolk Island as advisor on the use of
the native flax, which ultimately proved inappropriate for the making of
linen. Andrew, who had undoubtedly been encouraged to the colony after a
duel and a dalliance with his commanding officer’s daughter, was aboard the
ill-fated Guardian and completed his journey, from South Africa, on
the Lady Julian, the so-called ‘floating brothel’. From Norfolk
Island, Andrew was transferred to Sydney Cove and continued his tiresome
behaviour while in the employ of the Colonial Government.
Rawdon Hume, son
of Andrew and Elizabeth née Kennedy, was father to the Mary buried
here, so the husband and wife were cousins, the grandmother of one being the
great-aunt of the other and the grandfather of one being the great-uncle of
the other and the widower James Raworth Kennedy their great-grandfather in
common.
Mary’s maternal grandmother was Elizabeth Huon, born in the colony
in 1797 the eldest child of Count Gabriel Marie Louis Huon de Kerrilleau, a
middle rank Breton aristocrat, in flight from the terrors of the French
Revolution. Gabriel, released from the New South Wales Corps to tutor John
MacArthur’s younger boys, eventually married Louisa Lesage, a French woman
tried and transported for theft in London, on the evidence of a woman who
would appear to be a wronged and aggrieved wife. Louisa’s convict past was
well hidden until latter years and there are yet members of the family still
very reluctant to believe that she was anything but the self-styled
attendant upon Marie Antoinette at Versailles she had described to her
grandchildren. And perhaps she was, but more likely as some Lady’s maid,
otherwise why keep her true identity such a secret from her own children who
might have wished to meet the noble French relatives?
Robert’s mother,
Caroline, was the child of a Greek-born forger, Peter Katopodi, though that
information was - undoubtedly quite deliberately - not common knowledge
until later generations, and she arrived in New South Wales as a small child
with her convict mother in 1798 aboard Britannia. The mother, Sarah
Best was probably the widow of Colin Reculist, hanged for passing bank bills
forged by Peter Katopodi. The name ‘Reculist’ is otherwise unknown in
English and is nowadays presumed to be a version of the common Greek name ‘Rekalis’.
Having then taken up with Peter Katopodi, the widow Sarah was transported
for theft with little Caroline who was baptised and had the banns called as
‘Catapodia’. Continuing use of such an unusual name leads us to assume that
Sarah was quite sure that Peter Katopodi was the father. Sarah was married
and widowed twice more in the colony, so there is a wide network of Byrne
and Sykes half-siblings all connected to Caroline and John’s descendants.
The Kennedy sons were pioneer landholders on the Billabong Creek at
Jerilderie, New South Wales in company with their sisters’ husbands
Brougham, Brodribb and Desailly. Robert Kennedy and Mary Hume were married
in 1858 and Robert made enthusiastic attempts to irrigate his ‘back block’,
Wunnamurra, from channels which were first hand excavated, then dug
with a new fangled horse drawn scoop brought back from the California
goldfields by George Desailly. Nowadays that district is crisscrossed with
irrigation channels, the fall of the land calculated by laser and computer,
but in Robert’s homemade ditches, judged by eye, the water refused to run
despite frantic efforts at bailing in order to encourage the flow. Babies
were born to Mary and Robert at Wunnamurra, at Roto near
Hillston when the family moved on at the introduction of the Robertson
Land Act and later at Collingwood, Gunning which had been vacated
in fear in 1840 by the widow of Mary’s murdered uncle, John Hume.
In 1879,
the family minus the eldest daughter Emma who was married and settled
elsewhere, moved to Wonnaminta in the Broken Hill-Wilcannia area, to
land which Robert was pioneering, as was his habit. Mary had put off the
move until the youngest child was a suitable age to take “into the
wilderness” so they did not leave until little Millie was 18 months old.
Travelling for six weeks, the troupe of wagons, hacks, spare horses and
stock camped near homesteads when possible; but Mary has described how
self-sufficient they were and accustomed to eating, sleeping and being
furnished with clean clothing wherever they might find themselves. She
comments in her memoir “Mr Kennedy and the young people enjoyed the journey
but I was often very tired I think”. On arrival at Wonnaminta. Mary
as was her custom, had her signature cool-room built, partially underground
and chilled by the breeze extracting any warm air from a small louvred tower
in the roof. She established a garden, taught school to the young,
including aboriginal children, practised homoeopathy, collected botanical
specimens for Baron von Mueller (St. Kilda Cemetery), wrote copious
correspondence and organised picnic races and dances. While the girls hand
sewed long and boring seams - bed sheets or petticoat frills - one read
aloud from a suitable book or from the dictionary. During the first and
prosperous years there was an annual trip to Adelaide to stay in the family
refuge from the summer heat, Wonnaminta House at Crafers in the
Adelaide Hills. Then the rains did not come but the rabbits did, bringing
financial ruin upon Robert and Mary and several other members of the family
who had settled in the same area. The Pastoral Company which had encouraged
Robert to take on more and more debt foreclosed, evicted the family and, to
compound the insult, installed the inexperienced young husband of one of
Robert’s nieces as manager. Within a few weeks of enforced exile in
suburban Melbourne, Robert collapsed and died on 16 January 1895 at his
son’s house Nundorah - Emily Street, Murrumbeena.
The widow Mary and
her unmarried girls took part in Melbourne’s social life on meagre rations,
though invited everywhere by more prosperous relatives and friends.
Ostentation was considered vulgar during these hard times, and to offer
more than one kind of cake at tea was not refined behaviour. Of the three
boys, Frank was employed by his wife’s father, a stock agent in Bowral, New
South Wales. Bob junior tried his hand at small farming, but his
experimental crop failed and he took to prospecting for minerals. Gilbert
went off to the Western Australian goldfields with some cousins, but rather
than chase the dream of gold, established a smart livery stable catering to
the successful miners. And it was often possible to buy the flashy rigs
back at reduced prices when the miners went broke. Gilbert subsequently
fathered, among other children, Buzz Kennedy, a ubiquitous print journalist
with a weekly column, for many years, in the Sydney Morning Herald.
As a television presenter on “Good Morning Australia” and “Beauty
and the Beast”, he was famed for large and colourful bow-ties and an ego
to match.
Jessie Annie Cotter née Kennedy (d 1 July 1941) and Edith
married pastoralists, Effie a New South Wales doctor, Millicent Stawell, the
son of noted chief justice Sir William Stawell (1815-89), and Hilda the heir
of a Scottish textile manufacturer and importer, “D. & W. Murray”. Mary
Kennedy died on 12 December 1915 at The Terrace, Armadale mercifully
spared much of the First World War and the pain of so many of her
descendants and relatives maimed or killed therein. The two offspring
buried with Robert and Mary are the daughters who remained unmarried; Amy
Ida, a nurse who died in early middle age of pernicious anaemia on 1
February 1928; and Mabel Constance (d 5 September 1955), always called
‘Barboo’ by her great nieces and nephews thanks to the baby attempts to say
‘Mabel’ by one of that generation. Mary’s motto in life was - “Whatever thy
hand find then to do, do it with all thy might”, and it would seem she still
does. A calm [and transparent] figure with smooth parted hair and a long
rustling grey skirt has been seen at both Wonnaminta and at the
Crafers house, described by people who have known nothing of the Kennedy
history. Mary is always seen busily straightening quilts, smoothing pillows
and sitting up by sick-beds so clearly she has not yet finished doing
practical things, as she had promised, with all her considerable might. |

(above) Monumental
Headstone (1895)
(Image courtesy of Prue Grieve)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (2004)
(enlarge
image) |