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Robert Cock

Robert Cock (25 May 1801 – 23 March 1871) was one of the first European explorers of the Adelaide region of South Australia following the establishment of the colony in December 1836.

Robert Cock
Born1801 (1801)
Fife, Scotland
Died23 March 1871(1871-03-23) (aged 69–70)
Mount Gambier, South Australia
Spouse(s)Elizabeth (Betty) Wishart (1805–1830) and Catherine Christie (1807–1870)
Children
with Betty: Betty (Elizabeth) Benny (1824–1852), Christian Chambers (1825–1867), Agnes (Nancy) Kelly (1828–1848), Robert Cock (1828–1884)
with Catherine: James Cock (1833–1901), Catherine Warren (1835–1881) Jane Squire (1838–1862), John Cock (1840–1914), Ann Cock (1847–1861), unnamed male Cock (1849–1849)
Parent(s)Robert Cock ((1876-10-28)28 October 1876[1] Abbotshall, Fife, Scotland – (1939-12-16)16 December 1939 Adelaide, South Australia) and Christian nee Williamson (1781–1836)
RelativesWilliam Owen (brother-in-law), Reverend James Benny (son-in-law)[2]

History edit

Robert was born in Dysart, Fife, Scotland in 1801, and arrived in South Australia with his family aboard HMS Buffalo in December 1836, thus being in the first group of settlers in the new colony. Robert actively set about setting up his business affairs in the new colony.

He set up a sort of thatched roof in which he and his wife and 6 children lived while he built a house. The house, when built, was used as a store and saleroom, and the family remained in the primitive shelter whilst he pursued his explorations".[3]

He was appointed SA's first government auctioneer in early 1837, a position he held until November 1838. He was for a time in partnership with fellow Buffalo passenger William Ferguson as auctioneers, and owners of Magill estate (then spelled Makgill, named for Cock's trustee), which they subdivided.

He conducted explorations of the areas around Adelaide, and the Yorke and Eyre peninsulas. In December 1837, Robert led a party of William Finlayson, A. Wyatt and G. Barton to explore the country between Adelaide and Lake Alexandrina. Leaving Adelaide on 25 December, they became the first Europeans to climb Mount Barker (although there is a more plausible counter-claim by Sir John Morphett[4]). They crossed and named the Hindmarsh and the Angas rivers, arriving at Lake Alexandrina on 31 December.[5][6] (The Hindmarsh was subsequently renamed the Bremer). In his journal, Robert noted the suitability of the region for wine growing. (He is occasionally cited as being the first to identify the Adelaide Hills as suitable for wine growing e.g. Pike). There is a memorial cairn to the explorers in Bridgewater, near the Bridgewater Mill site. Cox's Creek (originally Cock's Creek) was named after him.[7]

In June 1838, Robert discovered a carriage route through the Adelaide Hills, which opened up communication between Adelaide and the Mt Barker region.[8]

In August 1838, Robert Cock along with Edward Eyre and Bewes Strangways travelled back to Mount Barker to meet the celebrated explorer Charles Sturt, who had driven stock from New South Wales to Adelaide[9]

In December 1838, Robert and the surgeon, R. G. Jameson, conducted a survey of the east coast of Yorke Peninsula. They concluded "if we could have found a fresh water river, we would have found it a good country for the maintenance of flocks and herds. From the numerous native population it is obvious that there is no scarcity of fresh water, although we could not find it."[10]

In May 1839, Robert explored the Port Vincent area in conjunction with James Hughes.

In June 1839, Robert led a party on the schooner Victoria, captained by Captain Hutchinson. They explored Spencer Gulf, following the western shores of the Yorke Peninsula and the coast of the Eyre Peninsula as far as Port Lincoln. "Water can be had at from ten to twenty feet from the surface. In all probability the peninsula will in time be a great agricultural district."[11]

Robert also demonstrated concern for the welfare of the aboriginal population:

... Robert Cock was deeply disturbed to find that local authorities still had no intention of honouring a commitment made while still in Britain to set aside one fifth of all land to provide a fund for aboriginal welfare. Having bought land in Adelaide he felt morally obliged to pay interest on one-fifth of the purchase price. 'I felt it my duty', he informed the local Protector of Aborigines in 1838, 'to pay to the proper authorities for the use of the natives this yearly rent'. He denied that the money was a donation but 'a just claim that the natives of this district have on me as an occupier of those lands'.[12]

On another occasion he intervened in a dispute between the aborigines and the settlers to prevent violence, reminding the settlers that the law was for protection of all.[13]

After several years as a land agent, Robert took up farming, first at Balhannah in the Adelaide hills and by 1853[14] in Mount Gambier, where he was one of the original residents. Later on, he opened up a brewery in Mount Gambier.

Robert died in Mount Gambier in 1871, where he is buried in the Pioneers cemetery. A son, James Cock (1833–1901) was MHA for Victoria from 1890 to 1899.

Family edit

Robert Cock married Elizabeth 'Betty' Wishart (1805–1830) on 15 Jan 1823 in Kilmany, Fife, Scotland.[15] He married again, to Catherine Christie (23 March 1807 – 18 Apr 1870) on 28 May 1832 in Abdie, Fife, Scotland;[16]

Robert and Catherine emigrated to South Australia in 1836 aboard HMS Buffalo with the children of both wives:

  • Betty Cock (27 March 1824 Abdie, Fife, Scotland[17] – 24 December 1852 Adelaide, South Australia) married the Reverend James Benny[18] of Balhannah on 11 December 1846, James Benny went on to marry Frances Maria Robertson Just née Yeates
  • Christian Cock (1825 – 7 December 1867) married Dr. Henry Chambers (1816 – 10 July 1881) of Nairne on 15 March 1847. Chambers was a nephew of Capt. Matthew Flinders. (His mother Henrietta Chambers, née Flinders, (29 January 1791 – 1838) married James Chambers on 14 Apr 1814).
  • Elizabeth Christian Chambers (c. 1850 – 6 August 1911) married Arthur Greenway Pollitt (1 May 1842 – c. 26 January 1917), son of James Pollitt in 1878.
  • Agnes (Nancy) Cock (15 August 1828[19] – 23 November 1848) married John Kelly (1819–1892) of Cumberland Farm, Mount Barker on 9 November 1847
  • their daughter Agnes Cock (1848–1932) married Alexander Cumming Falconer (c. 1841 – 10 June 1885)[20]
  • Robert Cock (c. 1828 – 16 December 1884) brewer of Balhannah, then Kyneton, Victoria
  • James Cock (1833–1901) married Magdalene Williams (1842 – 24 July 1923) on 4 October 1861
their children were:
  • Anne Cock (1862– ) married William Henry Collins ( – ) on 6 January 1886, lived at Mount Gambier
  • Mary Cock (c. 1865 – 27 July 1899) married W. H. Kilsby ( – ) lived at Mount Gambier
  • Catherine Cock (1867–) married Alfred Ernest Tozer ( – ) of Port Wakefield on 3 October 1900; they lived at Scott Creek
  • Jane Rosetta "Jean" Cock (1869 – 14 September 1936)
  • Magdalene Cock (1872–) married George Arthur Hill in 1904
  • Andrew Owen Cock (1875–) of Broken Hill
  • David Gambier Cock (1881–) of Mount Barker
  • Catherine Cock (c. 1835 – 14 October 1881) married William Warren ( – ) on 30 June 1855
  • Jane Cock (1838 – 23 February 1862) married Edward Squire ( – )
  • John Cock (c. 1840 – 29 December 1913)[21] married Sarah Jones ( – ) in 1863
  • Ann Cock (c. January 1847 – 29 September 1861)

Robert Cock's father, also named Robert Cock (c. 1776 – 16 December 1839)[22] arrived in South Australia on the Catherine Jamieson in December 1838.

Two brothers and a sister arrived in November 1838 on the Rajasthan, chartered by Robert Cock;:[23]

  • Alexander Cock (c. 1809 – 10 July 1872) and his wife Mary Cock, née Thomson (1807 – 6 December 1885)
  • James Cock ( – ) and his wife Christina Cock ( – ) (same person as Elizabeth Cock (c. 1802 – 31 January 1846)?)
  • Christina Owen, née Cock ( – 4 May 1848), and her husband William Owen

Another brother, William Cock ( – ) arrived on Waterloo in June 1840.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950," database, FamilySearch (2 January 2015), Robert Cock, 28 Oct 1776; citing , reference , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 1,040,142.
  2. ^ later a prominent Presbyterian minister at Morphett Vale ("Rev. James Benny's Jubilee". Adelaide Observer. Vol. LX, no. 3, 233. 19 September 1903. p. 40. Retrieved 4 September 2017 – via National Library of Australia.)
  3. ^ R. G Jameson, New Zealand, South Australia and New South Wales; a record of recent travels in these colonies, with especial reference to emigration, CHAPTER IV (1842)
  4. ^ Out Among the People The Advertiser 30 December 1937 accessed 20 July 2011
    This article also canvasses alternative origins of the name Cox's Creek.
  5. ^ South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register, Adelaide, Saturday 20 January 1838
  6. ^ Recollections of Old Colonists" (RGSA vol 6), "Reminiscences by Pastor Finlayson" pp 48-49
  7. ^ "Memories of Eighty Years". The Mount Barker Courier and Onkaparinga and Gumeracha Advertiser. SA. 17 December 1886. p. 4. Retrieved 7 June 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  8. ^ South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register, dated 16 June 1838
  9. ^ South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register, 25 August 1838
  10. ^ South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register, 8 December 1838
  11. ^ South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register, Saturday, 15 June 1839
  12. ^ Henry Reynolds, The Whispering in our hearts, quoting Aboriginal Protection Society Report, 5, 1839, p137
  13. ^ James Backhouse, A Narrative of a Visit to the Australian Colonies
  14. ^ "The Days Before Yesterday". The Border Watch. Vol. 77, no. 8257. South Australia. 1 January 1938. p. 3. Retrieved 28 November 2020 – via Trove.
  15. ^ "Scotland Marriages, 1561-1910," database, FamilySearch (8 December 2014), Robert Cock and Betty Wishart, 15 Jan 1823; citing Kilmany, Fife, Scotland, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 1,040,166.
  16. ^ "Scotland Marriages, 1561-1910," database, FamilySearch (8 December 2014), Robert Cock and Catherine Christie, 28 May 1832; citing Abdie,Fife,Scotland, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 1,040,144.
  17. ^ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950," database, FamilySearch (2 January 2015), Betty Cock, 27 Mar 1824; index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 1,040,144.
  18. ^ later a prominent Presbyterian minister at Morphett Vale ("Rev. James Benny's Jubilee". Adelaide Observer. Vol. LX, no. 3, 233. 19 September 1903. p. 40. Retrieved 4 September 2017 – via National Library of Australia.)
  19. ^ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950," database, FamilySearch (2 January 2015), Agnes Cock, 15 Aug 1828; citing , reference , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 1,040,144.
  20. ^ "Family Notices". The Express and Telegraph. Vol. IX, no. 2, 589. South Australia. 17 June 1872. p. 2. Retrieved 4 September 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  21. ^ "Personal". The Barrier Miner. Broken Hill, NSW. 7 January 1914. p. 2. Retrieved 1 October 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  22. ^ "Family Notices". Southern Australian. Adelaide. 19 December 1839. p. 3. Retrieved 3 October 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  23. ^ "First Importation from Scotland". South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register. Adelaide. 20 October 1838. p. 3. Retrieved 2 October 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  24. ^ Mussared, Peter. "Robert Cock (1801-1871)" (PDF). The Pioneers Association of SA Inc. Retrieved 2 October 2015. It seems there were two William Cocks on that boat, both with families – further information would be helpful.

robert, cock, musician, uses, persona, cock, adam, gates, 1801, march, 1871, first, european, explorers, adelaide, region, south, australia, following, establishment, colony, december, 1836, born1801, 1801, fife, scotlanddied23, march, 1871, 1871, aged, mount,. For the US musician who uses the persona Bob Cock see Adam Gates Robert Cock 25 May 1801 23 March 1871 was one of the first European explorers of the Adelaide region of South Australia following the establishment of the colony in December 1836 Robert CockBorn1801 1801 Fife ScotlandDied23 March 1871 1871 03 23 aged 69 70 Mount Gambier South AustraliaSpouse s Elizabeth Betty Wishart 1805 1830 and Catherine Christie 1807 1870 Childrenwith Betty Betty Elizabeth Benny 1824 1852 Christian Chambers 1825 1867 Agnes Nancy Kelly 1828 1848 Robert Cock 1828 1884 with Catherine James Cock 1833 1901 Catherine Warren 1835 1881 Jane Squire 1838 1862 John Cock 1840 1914 Ann Cock 1847 1861 unnamed male Cock 1849 1849 Parent s Robert Cock 1876 10 28 28 October 1876 1 Abbotshall Fife Scotland 1939 12 16 16 December 1939 Adelaide South Australia and Christian nee Williamson 1781 1836 RelativesWilliam Owen brother in law Reverend James Benny son in law 2 History editRobert was born in Dysart Fife Scotland in 1801 and arrived in South Australia with his family aboard HMS Buffalo in December 1836 thus being in the first group of settlers in the new colony Robert actively set about setting up his business affairs in the new colony He set up a sort of thatched roof in which he and his wife and 6 children lived while he built a house The house when built was used as a store and saleroom and the family remained in the primitive shelter whilst he pursued his explorations 3 He was appointed SA s first government auctioneer in early 1837 a position he held until November 1838 He was for a time in partnership with fellow Buffalo passenger William Ferguson as auctioneers and owners of Magill estate then spelled Makgill named for Cock s trustee which they subdivided He conducted explorations of the areas around Adelaide and the Yorke and Eyre peninsulas In December 1837 Robert led a party of William Finlayson A Wyatt and G Barton to explore the country between Adelaide and Lake Alexandrina Leaving Adelaide on 25 December they became the first Europeans to climb Mount Barker although there is a more plausible counter claim by Sir John Morphett 4 They crossed and named the Hindmarsh and the Angas rivers arriving at Lake Alexandrina on 31 December 5 6 The Hindmarsh was subsequently renamed the Bremer In his journal Robert noted the suitability of the region for wine growing He is occasionally cited as being the first to identify the Adelaide Hills as suitable for wine growing e g Pike There is a memorial cairn to the explorers in Bridgewater near the Bridgewater Mill site Cox s Creek originally Cock s Creek was named after him 7 In June 1838 Robert discovered a carriage route through the Adelaide Hills which opened up communication between Adelaide and the Mt Barker region 8 In August 1838 Robert Cock along with Edward Eyre and Bewes Strangways travelled back to Mount Barker to meet the celebrated explorer Charles Sturt who had driven stock from New South Wales to Adelaide 9 In December 1838 Robert and the surgeon R G Jameson conducted a survey of the east coast of Yorke Peninsula They concluded if we could have found a fresh water river we would have found it a good country for the maintenance of flocks and herds From the numerous native population it is obvious that there is no scarcity of fresh water although we could not find it 10 In May 1839 Robert explored the Port Vincent area in conjunction with James Hughes In June 1839 Robert led a party on the schooner Victoria captained by Captain Hutchinson They explored Spencer Gulf following the western shores of the Yorke Peninsula and the coast of the Eyre Peninsula as far as Port Lincoln Water can be had at from ten to twenty feet from the surface In all probability the peninsula will in time be a great agricultural district 11 Robert also demonstrated concern for the welfare of the aboriginal population Robert Cock was deeply disturbed to find that local authorities still had no intention of honouring a commitment made while still in Britain to set aside one fifth of all land to provide a fund for aboriginal welfare Having bought land in Adelaide he felt morally obliged to pay interest on one fifth of the purchase price I felt it my duty he informed the local Protector of Aborigines in 1838 to pay to the proper authorities for the use of the natives this yearly rent He denied that the money was a donation but a just claim that the natives of this district have on me as an occupier of those lands 12 On another occasion he intervened in a dispute between the aborigines and the settlers to prevent violence reminding the settlers that the law was for protection of all 13 After several years as a land agent Robert took up farming first at Balhannah in the Adelaide hills and by 1853 14 in Mount Gambier where he was one of the original residents Later on he opened up a brewery in Mount Gambier Robert died in Mount Gambier in 1871 where he is buried in the Pioneers cemetery A son James Cock 1833 1901 was MHA for Victoria from 1890 to 1899 Family editRobert Cock married Elizabeth Betty Wishart 1805 1830 on 15 Jan 1823 in Kilmany Fife Scotland 15 He married again to Catherine Christie 23 March 1807 18 Apr 1870 on 28 May 1832 in Abdie Fife Scotland 16 Robert and Catherine emigrated to South Australia in 1836 aboard HMS Buffalo with the children of both wives Betty Cock 27 March 1824 Abdie Fife Scotland 17 24 December 1852 Adelaide South Australia married the Reverend James Benny 18 of Balhannah on 11 December 1846 James Benny went on to marry Frances Maria Robertson Just nee Yeates Christian Cock 1825 7 December 1867 married Dr Henry Chambers 1816 10 July 1881 of Nairne on 15 March 1847 Chambers was a nephew of Capt Matthew Flinders His mother Henrietta Chambers nee Flinders 29 January 1791 1838 married James Chambers on 14 Apr 1814 Elizabeth Christian Chambers c 1850 6 August 1911 married Arthur Greenway Pollitt 1 May 1842 c 26 January 1917 son of James Pollitt in 1878 Agnes Nancy Cock 15 August 1828 19 23 November 1848 married John Kelly 1819 1892 of Cumberland Farm Mount Barker on 9 November 1847their daughter Agnes Cock 1848 1932 married Alexander Cumming Falconer c 1841 10 June 1885 20 Robert Cock c 1828 16 December 1884 brewer of Balhannah then Kyneton Victoria James Cock 1833 1901 married Magdalene Williams 1842 24 July 1923 on 4 October 1861their children were Anne Cock 1862 married William Henry Collins on 6 January 1886 lived at Mount Gambier Mary Cock c 1865 27 July 1899 married W H Kilsby lived at Mount Gambier Catherine Cock 1867 married Alfred Ernest Tozer of Port Wakefield on 3 October 1900 they lived at Scott Creek Jane Rosetta Jean Cock 1869 14 September 1936 Magdalene Cock 1872 married George Arthur Hill in 1904 Andrew Owen Cock 1875 of Broken Hill David Gambier Cock 1881 of Mount BarkerCatherine Cock c 1835 14 October 1881 married William Warren on 30 June 1855 Jane Cock 1838 23 February 1862 married Edward Squire John Cock c 1840 29 December 1913 21 married Sarah Jones in 1863 Ann Cock c January 1847 29 September 1861 Robert Cock s father also named Robert Cock c 1776 16 December 1839 22 arrived in South Australia on the Catherine Jamieson in December 1838 Two brothers and a sister arrived in November 1838 on the Rajasthan chartered by Robert Cock 23 Alexander Cock c 1809 10 July 1872 and his wife Mary Cock nee Thomson 1807 6 December 1885 James Cock and his wife Christina Cock same person as Elizabeth Cock c 1802 31 January 1846 Christina Owen nee Cock 4 May 1848 and her husband William OwenAnother brother William Cock arrived on Waterloo in June 1840 24 References edit Scotland Births and Baptisms 1564 1950 database FamilySearch 2 January 2015 Robert Cock 28 Oct 1776 citing reference index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah Salt Lake City FHL microfilm 1 040 142 later a prominent Presbyterian minister at Morphett Vale Rev James Benny s Jubilee Adelaide Observer Vol LX no 3 233 19 September 1903 p 40 Retrieved 4 September 2017 via National Library of Australia R G Jameson New Zealand South Australia and New South Wales a record of recent travels in these colonies with especial reference to emigration CHAPTER IV 1842 Out Among the People The Advertiser 30 December 1937 accessed 20 July 2011This article also canvasses alternative origins of the name Cox s Creek South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register Adelaide Saturday 20 January 1838 Recollections of Old Colonists RGSA vol 6 Reminiscences by Pastor Finlayson pp 48 49 Memories of Eighty Years The Mount Barker Courier and Onkaparinga and Gumeracha Advertiser SA 17 December 1886 p 4 Retrieved 7 June 2015 via National Library of Australia South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register dated 16 June 1838 South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register 25 August 1838 South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register 8 December 1838 South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register Saturday 15 June 1839 Henry Reynolds The Whispering in our hearts quoting Aboriginal Protection Society Report 5 1839 p137 James Backhouse A Narrative of a Visit to the Australian Colonies The Days Before Yesterday The Border Watch Vol 77 no 8257 South Australia 1 January 1938 p 3 Retrieved 28 November 2020 via Trove Scotland Marriages 1561 1910 database FamilySearch 8 December 2014 Robert Cock and Betty Wishart 15 Jan 1823 citing Kilmany Fife Scotland index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah Salt Lake City FHL microfilm 1 040 166 Scotland Marriages 1561 1910 database FamilySearch 8 December 2014 Robert Cock and Catherine Christie 28 May 1832 citing Abdie Fife Scotland index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah Salt Lake City FHL microfilm 1 040 144 Scotland Births and Baptisms 1564 1950 database FamilySearch 2 January 2015 Betty Cock 27 Mar 1824 index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah Salt Lake City FHL microfilm 1 040 144 later a prominent Presbyterian minister at Morphett Vale Rev James Benny s Jubilee Adelaide Observer Vol LX no 3 233 19 September 1903 p 40 Retrieved 4 September 2017 via National Library of Australia Scotland Births and Baptisms 1564 1950 database FamilySearch 2 January 2015 Agnes Cock 15 Aug 1828 citing reference index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah Salt Lake City FHL microfilm 1 040 144 Family Notices The Express and Telegraph Vol IX no 2 589 South Australia 17 June 1872 p 2 Retrieved 4 September 2017 via National Library of Australia Personal The Barrier Miner Broken Hill NSW 7 January 1914 p 2 Retrieved 1 October 2015 via National Library of Australia Family Notices Southern Australian Adelaide 19 December 1839 p 3 Retrieved 3 October 2015 via National Library of Australia First Importation from Scotland South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register Adelaide 20 October 1838 p 3 Retrieved 2 October 2015 via National Library of Australia Mussared Peter Robert Cock 1801 1871 PDF The Pioneers Association of SA Inc Retrieved 2 October 2015 It seems there were two William Cocks on that boat both with families further information would be helpful Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Cock amp oldid 1181399353, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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