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Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe

Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe MD (1774 – 28 May 1852) was a medical doctor whose family were early settlers of South Australia, remembered in several place names, namely Ayliffe's Crossing and Ayliffe Hill,[1] which is skirted by Ayliffe's Road.

History edit

Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe (1774 – 28 May 1852) was born into a wealthy and well connected family whose details are somewhat obscure, but around the age of 12 was orphaned and was, with a brother and two sisters, placed in the guardianship of George O'Brian Wyndham (18 December 1751 – 11 November 1837), the 3rd Earl of Egremont, who was also executor of their father's will, and their surnames were changed to the earlier form of "Ilive". The Earl went through a form of marriage in Europe with Thomas's eldest sister Elizabeth ( – 30 December 1822), who had several children by him, the eldest being George Wyndham (5 June 1787 – 18 March 1869), later to become Colonel Wyndham, then Lord Leconfield. Thomas was sent to St John's College, Cambridge to study medicine.

On 5 April 1796, before he had completed his course, Thomas, who had resumed the surname Ayliffe, married Hester Jinks. She was two years his senior, a Catholic and of unassuming parentage. The union was deemed unsuitable by the Earl, who withdrew Ayliffe from the university in disgrace and cut him out of his father's will. By the terms of the will this was within his rights until Thomas turned 28.[2]

Ayliffe somehow completed his BA degree in 1800, and what formal qualifications he had to practise medicine are unclear, though he was styled "surgeon", and taught what he knew to his sons. After having six children, the Earl and Duchess were married legally then in May 1803 separated.[2] The Earl died on 11 November 1837 and Col. George Wyndham (5 June 1787 – 18 March 1869), who inherited everything except the title,[3] settled £40,000 on Ayliffe in the form of land in South Australia selected by Frederick Mitchell: some 160 acres (65 ha) in the Adelaide foothills near Sturt Creek (sections 12, 13 and 14, Hundred of Adelaide),[4] some 600 or 700 acres (240 or 280 ha) near Clare, and a large area on Yorke Peninsula, as well as livestock and buildings. By the terms of the sale Ayliffe was obliged to settle on the property.

Thomas and (presumably) Hester with their three sons and families emigrated to South Australia on the Pestonjee Bomanjee, arriving in October 1838. Governor Gawler, who came out on the same boat, became a family friend. They arrived in October 1838 and camped at Glenelg, near the site of the present Town Hall. Also on Pestonjee Bomanjee were Henry Sanders and his wife Sarah née Knott, parents of George Ayliffe's wife Elizabeth (1810–1844) and Dr. Henry Ayliffe's future wife Esther Sanders (c. 1815–18). Other Sanders family members on the ship had been engaged by the Ayliffes as servants or employees. Among their staff was head groom Henry Ayers, later Sir Henry.[4] They had brought with them some livestock including brood mares and a stallion. They settled on their foothills property, dubbed "Wyndham Farm", their first residence being a prefabricated wooden structure, a "Manning's portable cottage" or similar,[5] and a substantial house was completed soon after.[2]

He lived at "Wyndham Farm" with his family,[6] and opened a medical practice with his sons George and Henry as T.H., G., & H. Ayliffe, in the former residence of R. Craigie, Angas Street near Drummond's Scotch Secession Church. George died in 1844 and the practice continued as T.H. & H. Ayliffe.[7]

Thomas died peacefully after a few hours' illness.[8] Of the fate of his wife Hester there is no record to be found. Her name appears on the Pestonjee Bomanjee passenger list but, as with their son Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe (c. 1812–1895), that is no proof of her having arrived in South Australia.

The immigrants edit

Two married daughters (Cecelia, who may have been born as early as 1791, and Frances) remained in England, and their second son (Thomas) Hamilton Ayliffe (c. 1812 – 28 July 1895), though booked on the Pestonjee Bomanjee, did not emigrate until years later; the reason is not clear. It is also not certain that Thomas Ayliffe's wife Hester was on board; no record of her death, or her being in South Australia have been found.

George Hamilton Ayliffe, in full perhaps George Edward Frederick Hamilton Ayliffe,[9] (1810 – 13 October 1844) and his wife Elizabeth née Sanders (1809 – 26 October 1894) also emigrated on the Pestonjee Bomanjee in 1838, and settled in "Belle Vue" cottage, South Road, St Marys. They were particular friends of Sir Dominick Daly and Lady Daly.[2] He succeeded H. T. Whittell as Registrar of Births Deaths and Marriages in January 1889.

He died after a painful and protracted illness. His wife Elizabeth never remarried and continued to live at "Belle Vue". She brought up their children with the financial support of her late husband's cousin, Lord Leconfield.[10] Their children Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe (1834–1900), Ettie Bode (c. 1836–1920), Cecelia Hill (24 August 1838 – 6 November 1915), George Hamilton Ayliffe (1840–1906) and William H. Ayliffe (9 October 1844 – 1928) all had long and productive lives. Elizabeth died peacefully with all her faculties intact and in excellent health up to the last days.

Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe (1834 – 27 March 1900) was four years old when the family left for South Australia. At age 18 he joined the gold rush to Victoria and sent 6 oz. of gold to his mother.[4] He was a contractor who did a lot of business for the Government, including the Bay Road, the South Road, the Morphett Street bridge and the Clarendon bridge and became quite wealthy. He developed on his property a valuable quarry, from which much quartzite and bluestone was obtained.[4] He subsequently engaged in cattle speculation, and lost heavily,[11] and was declared insolvent in 1861.[4] In 1873 he went to New Zealand, where he invested in gold mining ventures, then eight years in the Northern Territory, then worked in Adelaide from 1881 or earlier as an auctioneer and commission agent, with offices in Currie Street. He returned to gold mining in Western Australia, and died in Kanowna.

Elizabeth Esther "Ettie" Ayliffe (c. 1836 – 3 August 1920) was born in Exeter, a daughter of Dr. George Ayliffe, who emigrated to South Australia when she was two years old. She was trained as a teacher, reportedly by T. A. Caterer,[5] though this is most unlikely. Perhaps a confusion with Elizabeth Esther Cecelia Ayliffe (1857–1940) daughter of Dr. Ayliffe of Angaston, who taught at Daveyston for many years (see below).

Was she the Miss Ayliffe who ran a boarding school for ladies at her home "Saltram", in Glenelg in 1875 and 1876?[12]

She married Joseph Adolphus Bode (c. 1819 – 10 June 1898) on 23 March 1877, lived at "Sunningdale Park" near Strathalbyn. She was his second wife; Martha Bode having died in 1865. J. A. Bode was eldest son of Gustavus Adolphus Bode of Mount Pleasant, Staffordshire, England, a prominent military man. J. A. Bode was a regular guest at Government House and a frequent writer to the Press on all manner of subjects.

She was the author of many poems printed in the daily Press, such as Want,[13] Christmas Sonnet,[14] The Story of Cree and Cri[15] and published poetry collections:

  • Bode, Ettie E (1885), Original poems, [s.n.], retrieved 17 September 2016
  • Mrs J. A. Bode, The Islander "An island in the Australasian seas", 1878 poetry
  • Mrs J. A. Bode, Lubra "Ours was the land, all ours, mine and my peoples: the tribes", 1885 poetry

and several novels serialized in South Australian newspapers:

  • Old Love Letters (1870)[16]
  • The Flaw in the Diamond (1885)[17]
  • A Tale of Colonial Life (1889)[18]

Cecelia Hamilton Wyndham Ayliffe (24 August 1838 – 6 November 1915) was born on the Pestonjee Bomanjee.[19] She married journalist and elocutionist Thomas Padmore "T. P." Hill ( – 28 November 1879) on 26 November 1859. She was author of Checkmated (1878), a roman à clef about the lovelife of J. E. Neild.[20] In later life, while in transit from Venice to Sydney by the R.M.S. Mirzapore, Cecilia was one of the passengers detained at the Torrens Island Quarantine Station in January–February 1882 during an incident of smallpox.[21] Cecilia made trips to New Zealand in 1887 and San Francisco in 1889, during which she falsely claimed that she was a correspondent for the London Morning Post.[19] She subsequently left for England in search of a possible inheritance,[22] but her court case failed due to forged documents; she died on 6 November 1915 in St John’s Wood, Middlesex.[19]

Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe[23] (c. 1812 – 28 July 1895) was recorded as a passenger on the Pestonjee Bomanjee with his father and two brothers, but in fact came out later, perhaps via Hobart on 10 July 1843 or via Launceston, as an Ayliffe (no other name recorded) arrived in Adelaide on the Raven from that port in December 1847. One account had his vessel shipwrecked off New Zealand and he lived with Maoris for a year.[2] He worked for a time as a ship's carpenter on a vessel working between Tasmania and New Zealand.[24] made a visit to New Zealand, where he was made prisoner by the Maoris, but escaped at night and swam out to a trading boat which took him back to South Australia.[25] He was a highly literate man and well-versed in history. He had some medical training, as had his brothers, but unlike them never went into practice. He married Jane Bell (c. 1828 – 9 August 1911) in 1845. He settled in the Sturt district, then moved to the Stockport – Hamley Bridge area, where he lived for 35 years. He served as clerk of the Local Court, on the Stockport District Council, and returning-officer for Wooroora and Light for several years. He was a pioneer of fruit-growing on the River Light. He died leaving a widow, six sons and three daughters.[25]

Dr. Henry Ayliffe FRCS, LSA (1818 – 24 April 1890) studied medicine in London under his father, and emigrated to South Australia on the Pestonjee Bomanjee in 1838 with his father, brother George, nephew Thomas and nieces Elizabeth and Cecelia. He set up in practice and lived in Hindley Street to 1843[26] then Brown Street in the city. He returned to England for further medical training and higher qualifications at Guy's Hospital and St Bartholomew's Hospital, and returned to Adelaide in 1853, but not without incident, as the ship Anne Milne was wrecked off Portland, Victoria.[4] He resumed practice in Grote Street, close to the Catholic chapel.[27] He moved to Angaston, where he set up in practice, and in 1867 was appointed Government medical officer to the destitute poor.[28]

Family edit

The list below is not exhaustive, but is expected to include all members of the family likely to be encountered in histories of early European settlement. Bold entries denote members whose biographies appear in "The immigrants" above.

Dr. Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe (1774 – 28 May 1852) married Hester Jinks ( – ) on 5 April 1796. They had two daughters (who married and remained in England and are not listed here) and three sons:

Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe (c. 1812 – 28 July 1895) married Jane Bell (1 February 1828 – 9 August 1911) on 23 July 1845, farmed at Hamley Bridge. He was a brother of Dr. George Hamilton Ayliffe (1810–1844) and Dr. Henry Ayliffe (1818–1890).

  • John Hamilton Ayliffe (14 April 1846 – 25 November 1919) married Catherine Mill (12 August 1850 – 24 May 1928) on 9 July 1872, lived in Coonatto (now Moockra), moved to Western Australia and farmed in the Dumbleyung district. Catherine and six children survived him.
  • Alfred Hamilton Ayliffe (14 March 1848 – 12 December 1931) married Esther Selina James ( – 1946) on 2 August 1884, lived in Balaklava
  • Alfred Sabastian Neil Ayliffe (20 January 1887 – 22 August 1962) married Margaret Matilda Wellner ( – 1952) in 1914
  • Ivy Adeline Jane Ayliffe (25 February 1889 – 17 November 1969) married Thomas Albert Henry Victor Adey (1888 – 1918) in 1911; she married again to Peter Dunn in 1921
  • Alice Dora Ayliffe (3 June 1892 – 1 March 1967) married William Edward Miller in 1914
  • George Ray Ayliffe (5 March 1895 – 1988) married Alice May Collin (1894– ) on 7 October 1918
  • Herbert Sydney "Syd" Ayliffe (30 June 1897 – 18 November 1942)
  • Walter Courteney Ayliffe (13 March 1850 – 18 December 1908) married Sarah Lang Doidge (1850 – 13 February 1921) in 1875, lived at Hamley Bridge.
  • Emily Priscilla Ayliffe (22 January 1877 – 10 December 1952) married William Roberts in 1900
  • George Albert Ernest Ayliffe (13 April 1880 – 12 February 1955) married Ada Louisa Batt ( –1944) in 1902
  • Julia Elizabeth Ayliffe (13 March 1883 – ) married Thomas Tozer (25 August 1871 – 21 June 1917); she married again, to John Albert Brain (1874– ) on 12 March 1918[29]
  • Hurtle Walter Stanley Ayliffe (7 May 1889 – 27 February 1933) married Bertha Amelia Richard ( – 1920) in 1910. He married again to Ethel Blanche Rosina May Martin in 1921
  • Mary Jane Ayliffe (26 June 1852 – 15 April 1918) married John Martin jun. of Stockport, lived at Gladstone
  • Edmund Ayliffe (13 October 1856 – 14 December 1943) married Charlotte Elizabeth Winton ( – 1943) of Roseworthy on 21 March 1889, lived at Hamley Bridge.
  • Stuart Hamilton Ayliffe (21 November 1892 – 26 May 1947) married Eva May Gust ( – 1954) on 28 June 1915
  • Edna Charlotte Jane/Jean Ayliffe (26 May 1895 – 21 October 1906) died after her brother's experimental acetylene generator exploded[30]
  • Gerald Keith Ayliffe (14 August 1898 – 9 April 1971) married Pretoria Maud Barker, née Hargrave (1900–1989) in 1943
  • Clarence Wyndham Ayliffe (8 August 1902 – 5 May 1972) married Doris Francis May Lampard ( – ) in 1927
  • Arthur Ayliffe (23 October 1859 – 28 January 1937) of Balaklava
  • Hubert Ayliffe (21 March 1862 – 27 January 1940) married Annie Amelia Saunders (17 July 1865 – 7 September 1954) on 24 September 1890, lived in Adelaide
  • Archibald Cleve "Archie" Ayliffe (28 December 1892 – 4 September 1967)
  • Florence Ayliffe (21 August 1864 – 14 December 1952) married George Frederick William Martin ( – 26 January 1928) on 30 July 1890; children include Don, Dot, Edmund, Laura, Syd and Linda
  • Maud Ayliffe (25 March 1867 – 2 August 1931) married John Thomas Quinn ( – 1929) of Mintaro on 23 February 1887, lived Hamley Bridge
  • Alice Rose Ayliffe (20 November 1869 – 29 May 1938) married Richard Pillar ( – 5 September 1951) on 15 November 1893, lived Hamley Bridge

Dr. George Hamilton Ayliffe (1810 – 13 October 1844) married Elizabeth Sanders (1809 – 26 October 1894) in England.

  • Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe (1834 – 27 March 1900) married Adelaide Miller (1831 – 2 March 1923) in 1857, lived at Wyndham Farm, St. Marys in 1858, then Ovingham in 1880, died in Kanowna, West Australia. She never left the State.[31]
  • George Edward Hamilton Ayliffe (11 October 1858 – 21 November 1936) married Letitia Maria Kelsh ( – 1932) on 3 October 1883. He was a surveyor in the Engineer-in-Chief's Department, Adelaide, lived at Childers Street, North Adelaide. He was responsible for laying out the town of "Bligh", renamed Arno Bay in 1940.[1]
  • Fanny Adelaide Ayliffe (23 May 1860 – 21 August 1913) married Herbert Ralph Smythe (c. 1854 – 2 January 1922) on 2 September 1880. Herbert was a land agent and member of the Adelaide Stock Exchange.
  • Percy St. Barbe Ayliffe (17 December 1865 – 29 June 1927) married Marie Power ( – ) of Tasmania on 24 November 1913. A pioneer of the Gascoyne region, Western Australia,.[32] he killed himself by strangulation.[33]
  • Ethelwyn Hamilton "Ethel Adelaide" Ayliffe (6 August 1868 – 10 December 1944) married Herbert Edward Hinde ( – 28 June 1944) on 13 December 1902. She was a teacher at Mount Gambier Ladies' College in 1889 and principal in 1892. He was a bank accountant, lived 240 Jeffcott Street, North Adelaide, later 1 Frederick Street, Gilberton. In 1898 she lived at 32 Barnard Street, North Adelaide and was a teacher at a private school, Childers Street, North Adelaide in 1900, then principal. The school closed 1903 and classes were taken over by Mrs. Hinde on the corner of Jeffcott and Barnard Streets. They had two children: John Hinde and Elizabeth "Betty" Hinde.
  • Blanche Olave St. Barbe Ayliffe ( – c. 1931) was student at Advanced School for Girls, taught at Mount Bryan East to 1895 (Captain George H. Wilkins a notable student),[34] then appointed provisional teacher at Woodlands, Paddy's Bridge in 1897, Green's Plains, to the north west of Paskeville, South Australia in 1900.
  • Olave Adelaide Ayliffe (4 April 1871 – 18 February 1933) had much anguished poetry published in newspapers.[35][36][37]
  • Lucy Barbara Ingoldsby Smythe (24 February 1882 – 28 September 1917) married A(rthur) Tarlton Jefferis ( – 1965) on 1 June 1911. Tarlton was a leading analytical chemist, a son of Rev. Dr. James Jefferis; novelist Barbara Jefferis was a daughter.
  • Elizabeth Esther "Ettie" Ayliffe (c. 1836 – 3 August 1920) married Joseph Adolphus Bode (c. 1819 – 10 June 1898) on 23 March 1877, lived at "Sunningdale Park" near Strathalbyn. She was his second wife; Martha Bode née Chapman having died in 1865. J. A. Bode was eldest son of Gustavus Adolphus Bode of Mount Pleasant, Staffordshire, England.
  • Fylafie Iline Hamilton "Effie" Bode (1880 – 11 February 1921) married Joseph Alfred Hayward (c. 1880 – 2 November 1909) on 6 March 1909. She had a daughter Josephine Ada Grantley Hayward on 5 January 1910, in 1938 engaged to, maybe married, George Milne. Fylafie married again, to Arthur Boushear ( –1956) in 1917.
  • Cecelia Hamilton Wyndham Ayliffe (24 August 1838 – 6 November 1915) married journalist and elocutionist Thomas Padmore "T. P." Hill ( – 28 November 1879) on 26 November 1859. Their relationship, if any, to Thomas Padmore "Tod" Hill (c. 1889 – 19 July 1937) noted SA horse trainer, who died following a car crash is not known.
  • son, perhaps Fred, who became a journalist,[2] (16 January 1862 – ), was still alive in December 1879[38]
  • Alfred Brandon Hill (13 March 1864 – 5 December 1875) a brilliant student, he died of scarlet fever. Curiously he was often described as their only son.
  • George Hamilton Ayliffe (25 May 1840 – 2 November 1906) married Sarah Ann "Annie" Gleeson (1840 – 20 November 1928) on 26 February 1864. Annie was a daughter of Edward Burton Gleeson, a founder of Clare. George was appointed to the Mounted Police in 1859 then from 1875 held various public service positions including Secretary of the Central Board of Health. He was acting City Coroner during the celebrated Barrington-Sheridan abortion hearings, when his argument with the defendant's counsel was widely reported.[39] When he retired he was Registrar-General of Births, Deaths, and Marriages.[40][41] The story goes that on the eve of her marriage to Arthur King she eloped with George Ayliffe.[42] In 1878 they were living on Park Street Unley, then around 1885 on Unley Road, opposite the Cremorne Hotel, later at Turner Street, Glenelg.
  • Ida Constance Ayliffe (1 March 1865 – 17 January 1937) married con-man Laurence Millington Davidson ( – 30 July 1891) on 14 May 1891. He eloped with her sister Maude six weeks later,[43] which ended in a double suicide (see below). She married again, to Henry George Kelly (c. 1854 – 30 March 1937) of "Kilkerran", Maitland on 6 June 1900.
  • (Annie) Maude Ayliffe (16 September 1871 – 30 July 1891) eloped with her sister's husband Laurence Davidson on the liner SS Hohenzollern (1873) on 27 June. The ship arrived at Colombo and he committed suicide by pistol shot in his cabin while being apprehended. Maude swallowed a strychnine capsule and died shortly after.[44]
  • Gerald Gleeson Ayliffe (27 October 1873 – 3 November 1948) married Agnes Marion Johns ( – 1945) in 1906. District Clerk of Kingscote, Kangaroo Island. He was a lieutenant in the Bushmen's Corps during the Boer War, married Marie.[2]
  • George Hamilton Ayliffe (12 November 1907 – 1989)
  • Annie Marion Ayliffe (29 November 1910 – )
  • Kathleen Beatrice "Cassie" Ayliffe (2 June 1876 – 21 July 1967) married James Hamilton Windebank (1880–1953) in 1907
  • Thomas Hamilton Gerald Windebank (1912–2006)
  • Eileen Alice Gleeson Windebank (1908– )
  • Claude Hamilton Ayliffe (8 July 1878 – 28 March 1931) married Annette Mary Western ( – ) in 1907, farmed at Keith
  • Audrey Annette Wyndham Western Ayliffe (4 June 1908 – 1982) married Gordon Ralph Gilbert (1905–1979) in 1933
  • George Wyndham Ayliffe (2 November 1883 – 1 August 1922) married Evelyn Stanbury "Eva" Kelly ( – ) in 1916. He lived at Cygnet River, KI and published poetry 1908–1912 when he left for Maitland. He was active in the community.
  • William Hamilton Ayliffe (19 October 1844 – 20 July 1928) married Ellen Maria Pollitt (17 January 1847 – 5 July 1925) on 22 February 1870. In 1881 they were living in Brighton. Ellen was the youngest daughter of James Pollitt
  • Frank Hamilton Ayliffe (17 March 1871 – 29 July 1943) married Elizabeth Ann "Bessie" Davison (c. 1867 – 20 August 1924); he married again, to Jean ?? ( – 1967).
  • James Hamilton Ayliffe (c. 1891 – 7 November 1917) fought at Gallipoli; killed at Villers-Bretonneux[45]
  • William Hawden Ayliffe (c. 1893 – 25 April 1918) killed at Villers-Bretonneux
  • Florence Hamilton Ayliffe (14 August 1872 – 25 January 1948) married Henry Carleton Pollitt (1869 – 1925) on 18 May 1917. He was a son of Rev. James Pollitt and a first officer on P & O liners.
  • Violet Elsie Ayliffe (1 February 1875 – 1 February 1965) married Frank Hamilton (5 February 1859 – 13 June 1913) on 17 September 1895. He was the principal owner of Hamilton's Ewell Vineyards.[46]
  • William Lionel Ayliffe (22 January 1877 – 22 January 1967) married Catherine Kathleen Antony Page (c. 1890 – 17 July 1973) on 22 January 1914, lived on Kangaroo Island
  • Burt Ayliffe (23 March 1914 – 14 May 1942) fought with 2nd AIF during WWII. Died of wounds in Italy.
  • Jim Ayliffe (14 September 1919 – 20 January 1943) with 2nd AIF, died in Papua New Guinea.
  • Clem Ayliffe (19 December 1921 – 23 November 1942) with 2nd AIF, killed in action, Papua New Guinea.
  • James Burton Ayliffe (24 March 1879 – 31 July 1967) married Laura Russell Dumas ( – 1955) on 18 September 1912
  • Capt. Sydney Hamilton Ayliffe (2 December 1881 – 12 March 1954) married Alice Campbell Strachan, née Campbell, (1889–), widow of Capt. William. Leighton Strachan (31 March 1888 – 25 April 1915), on 8 February 1922; lived 121 Esplanade Brighton. Strachan was killed at Gallipoli. She was a noted worker for patriotic causes; organised the Gallipoli memorial vase held by the State Library.
  • Alice Anne Hamilton Ayliffe (22 December 1922 – )
  • Cpl. Sydney Hamilton Ayliffe (17 January 1924 – )

Dr. Henry Hamilton Ayliffe (1818 – 24 April 1890) married Esther Sanders (c. 1815 – 11 March 1880) in 1844, lived in Angaston. He was a brother of Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe (1812–1895) and George Hamilton Ayliffe (1810–1844).

  • Henry Charles Hamilton Ayliffe (18 June 1846 – 10 March 1916) trained as a solicitor, articled to H. C. Palmer, then with Matthews & Cox, before going into solo practice in Adelaide in 1881.[47] He married Leonora Mary Bryant (c. 1861 – 25 July 1924) in 1884
  • Ernest Henry Ayliffe (24 May 1885 – ) married Annie Terese Dunne ( – ) on 21 October 1915
  • Robert Hamilton Ayliffe (13 October 1893 – 1 May 1959) married Alfena Janet "Fena" Withers ( –1975) on 24 April 1922
  • George Bryant Ayliffe (10 March 1897 – 29 June 1916) with 1st AIF. Fought at Gallipoli, killed in action in France.
  • Grace Lily Ayliffe (30 October 1900 – 1990) married Vivian Rhodes Millhouse on 8 June 1927.
  • Francis William John Ayliffe (10 March 1848 – 8 January 1850)-->
  • Charlotte Elizabeth Ayliffe (4 January 1850 – 1915) gave evidence at her mother's inquest.[48]
  • Clara Blanche Ayliffe (10 January 1854 – 11 December 1896) married Edmund Cliffe Brown ( – ) on 14 November 1878
  • Ellen Esther Cecelia Ayliffe (8 September 1857 – 9 September 1940). She was a provisional teacher at Dalkey Hill in 1891, and taught at Daveyston near Greenock from 1900 or earlier to 1916 or later, and for a time at Hanson. She was present at the "Back to Daveyston"[49] and "Back to Hanson"[50] celebrations of 1936.

Further reading edit

  • Masters, Jeremy (2015), 'Mr Ayliffe, surgeon' and 'this ingenious lady': uncovering the origins of Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe and Elizabeth, the countess of Egremont, [Abbotsford, Victoria] Jeremy Masters, ISBN 978-0-646-93811-0
  • Hamilton, Ian The Ayliffe Family privately printed in Adelaide, limited edition, private circulation (160 copies) 1978. Available as pdf.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Geoffrey H. Manning. "A Glossary of South Australian Place Names - From Aaron Creek to Zion Hill" (PDF). State Library of South Australia. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Ian Hamilton. "The Ayliffe Family" (PDF). Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  3. ^ The Earl's marriage was not accepted by the Church, and the title expired with him. Wyndham became Baron Leconfield of Petworth, Sussex in 1859
  4. ^ a b c d e f Maggy Ragless. "Shepherds Hill Recreation Park" (PDF). Flinders University of SA. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  5. ^ a b "Concerning People". The Register (Adelaide). Vol. LXXXV, no. 23, 012. South Australia. 10 August 1920. p. 4. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ Alison Dolling The History of Marion on the Sturt pub. 1981 by Peacock Publications for City of Marion ISBN 0 909209 48 0
  7. ^ "Advertising". Adelaide Observer. No. 78. South Australia. 21 December 1844. p. 1. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  8. ^ "Family Notices". South Australian Register. Vol. XVI, no. 1783. South Australia. 1 June 1852. p. 2. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia. He had been generally referred to as surgeon, but this appears to be the only instance of him being given the post-nominal "M.D."
  9. ^ "Family Notices". Adelaide Observer. Vol. XXXIV, no. 1852. South Australia. 31 March 1877. p. 3. Retrieved 21 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ "Death of Mrs. E. Ayliffe". The Advertiser (Adelaide). South Australia. 27 October 1894. p. 6. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ "The Late Mr. T. H. Ayliffe". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Vol. XLII, no. 12935. South Australia. 3 April 1900. p. 7. Retrieved 15 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ "Advertising". Evening Journal (Adelaide). Vol. VII, no. 2074. South Australia. 26 October 1875. p. 1. Retrieved 18 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  13. ^ "Want". South Australian Register. Vol. L, no. 12, 093. South Australia. 17 August 1885. p. 3. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  14. ^ "Christmas Sonnet". Evening Journal (Adelaide). Vol. XVII, no. 5168. South Australia. 26 December 1885. p. 2. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  15. ^ "The Story of Cree and Cri". Adelaide Observer. Vol. XLII, no. 2308. South Australia. 26 December 1885. p. 44. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  16. ^ "Old Love Letters". Adelaide Observer. Vol. XXVII, no. 1485. South Australia. 19 March 1870. p. 14. Retrieved 19 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  17. ^ "Original Tale. The Flaw in the Diamond". Southern Argus. Vol. XVIII, no. 1005. South Australia. 11 June 1885. p. 4. Retrieved 19 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  18. ^ "A Tale of Colonial Life (Chapter I)". The Express and Telegraph. Vol. XXVII, no. 7, 820. South Australia. 31 December 1889. p. 7. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  19. ^ a b c Masters, Jeremy (2015). "'Mr Ayliffe, surgeon' and 'this ingenious lady': uncovering the origins of Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe and Elizabeth, the countess of Egremont" (PDF). Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  20. ^ Mimi Colligan. "Theatre in the Neild Scrapbooks". State Library Victoria. Retrieved 15 September 2016.
  21. ^ "Torrens Island Quarantine Station". South Australian Register. Adelaide, SA: National Library of Australia. 13 February 1882. p. 4. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
  22. ^ "The Late Mr. T. H. Ayliffe". South Australian Register. Vol. LX, no. 15, 198. South Australia. 30 July 1895. p. 6. Retrieved 17 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  23. ^ Some references include "Paul" among his given names, and he may have been generally known as "Hamilton".
  24. ^ "ManningIndex of South Australian Place Names". State Library of South Australia. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  25. ^ a b "Death of Mr. T. H. Ayliffe". The Express and Telegraph. Vol. XXXII, no. 9, 516. South Australia. 30 July 1895. p. 3. Retrieved 15 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  26. ^ "Advertising". South Australian Register. South Australia. 6 December 1843. p. 1. Retrieved 20 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  27. ^ "Advertising". South Australian Register. Vol. XVII, no. 2059. South Australia. 21 April 1853. p. 1. Retrieved 20 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  28. ^ "Obituary". Evening Journal (Adelaide). Vol. XXII, no. 6124. South Australia. 26 April 1890. p. 4. Retrieved 16 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  29. ^ "Family Notices". The Express and Telegraph. Vol. LV, no. 16, 420. South Australia. 1 May 1918. p. 3. Retrieved 16 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  30. ^ "Hamley Bridge". Kapunda Herald. Vol. XLII, no. 3, 366. South Australia. 26 October 1906. p. 7. Retrieved 19 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  31. ^ "Obituary". The Chronicle (Adelaide). Vol. LXV, no. 3, 468. South Australia. 10 March 1923. p. 17. Retrieved 15 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  32. ^ "Valedictory". The Northern Times. Vol. XIII, no. 639. Western Australia. 24 November 1917. p. 2. Retrieved 16 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  33. ^ "Casualties". The Register (Adelaide). Vol. XCII, no. 26, 792. South Australia. 30 June 1927. p. 8. Retrieved 19 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  34. ^ "Capt. Wilkins". The Observer (Adelaide). Vol. LXXXV, no. 4, 433. South Australia. 9 June 1928. p. 54. Retrieved 19 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  35. ^ "Miscellaneous". The Register (Adelaide). Vol. LXXII, no. 19, 000. South Australia. 5 October 1907. p. 14. Retrieved 19 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  36. ^ "A Photograph". The Observer (Adelaide). Vol. LXV, no. 3, 458. South Australia. 11 January 1908. p. 53. Retrieved 19 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  37. ^ "Gethsemane". The Observer (Adelaide). Vol. LXVI, no. 5, 237. South Australia. 17 July 1909. p. 55. Retrieved 19 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
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thomas, hamilton, ayliffe, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, january, 2023, 1774, 1852, medical, doctor, whose, family, were, early. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article January 2023 Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe MD 1774 28 May 1852 was a medical doctor whose family were early settlers of South Australia remembered in several place names namely Ayliffe s Crossing and Ayliffe Hill 1 which is skirted by Ayliffe s Road Contents 1 History 1 1 The immigrants 2 Family 3 Further reading 4 ReferencesHistory editThomas Hamilton Ayliffe 1774 28 May 1852 was born into a wealthy and well connected family whose details are somewhat obscure but around the age of 12 was orphaned and was with a brother and two sisters placed in the guardianship of George O Brian Wyndham 18 December 1751 11 November 1837 the 3rd Earl of Egremont who was also executor of their father s will and their surnames were changed to the earlier form of Ilive The Earl went through a form of marriage in Europe with Thomas s eldest sister Elizabeth 30 December 1822 who had several children by him the eldest being George Wyndham 5 June 1787 18 March 1869 later to become Colonel Wyndham then Lord Leconfield Thomas was sent to St John s College Cambridge to study medicine On 5 April 1796 before he had completed his course Thomas who had resumed the surname Ayliffe married Hester Jinks She was two years his senior a Catholic and of unassuming parentage The union was deemed unsuitable by the Earl who withdrew Ayliffe from the university in disgrace and cut him out of his father s will By the terms of the will this was within his rights until Thomas turned 28 2 Ayliffe somehow completed his BA degree in 1800 and what formal qualifications he had to practise medicine are unclear though he was styled surgeon and taught what he knew to his sons After having six children the Earl and Duchess were married legally then in May 1803 separated 2 The Earl died on 11 November 1837 and Col George Wyndham 5 June 1787 18 March 1869 who inherited everything except the title 3 settled 40 000 on Ayliffe in the form of land in South Australia selected by Frederick Mitchell some 160 acres 65 ha in the Adelaide foothills near Sturt Creek sections 12 13 and 14 Hundred of Adelaide 4 some 600 or 700 acres 240 or 280 ha near Clare and a large area on Yorke Peninsula as well as livestock and buildings By the terms of the sale Ayliffe was obliged to settle on the property Thomas and presumably Hester with their three sons and families emigrated to South Australia on the Pestonjee Bomanjee arriving in October 1838 Governor Gawler who came out on the same boat became a family friend They arrived in October 1838 and camped at Glenelg near the site of the present Town Hall Also on Pestonjee Bomanjee were Henry Sanders and his wife Sarah nee Knott parents of George Ayliffe s wife Elizabeth 1810 1844 and Dr Henry Ayliffe s future wife Esther Sanders c 1815 18 Other Sanders family members on the ship had been engaged by the Ayliffes as servants or employees Among their staff was head groom Henry Ayers later Sir Henry 4 They had brought with them some livestock including brood mares and a stallion They settled on their foothills property dubbed Wyndham Farm their first residence being a prefabricated wooden structure a Manning s portable cottage or similar 5 and a substantial house was completed soon after 2 He lived at Wyndham Farm with his family 6 and opened a medical practice with his sons George and Henry as T H G amp H Ayliffe in the former residence of R Craigie Angas Street near Drummond s Scotch Secession Church George died in 1844 and the practice continued as T H amp H Ayliffe 7 Thomas died peacefully after a few hours illness 8 Of the fate of his wife Hester there is no record to be found Her name appears on the Pestonjee Bomanjee passenger list but as with their son Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe c 1812 1895 that is no proof of her having arrived in South Australia The immigrants edit Two married daughters Cecelia who may have been born as early as 1791 and Frances remained in England and their second son Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe c 1812 28 July 1895 though booked on the Pestonjee Bomanjee did not emigrate until years later the reason is not clear It is also not certain that Thomas Ayliffe s wife Hester was on board no record of her death or her being in South Australia have been found George Hamilton Ayliffe in full perhaps George Edward Frederick Hamilton Ayliffe 9 1810 13 October 1844 and his wife Elizabeth nee Sanders 1809 26 October 1894 also emigrated on the Pestonjee Bomanjee in 1838 and settled in Belle Vue cottage South Road St Marys They were particular friends of Sir Dominick Daly and Lady Daly 2 He succeeded H T Whittell as Registrar of Births Deaths and Marriages in January 1889 He died after a painful and protracted illness His wife Elizabeth never remarried and continued to live at Belle Vue She brought up their children with the financial support of her late husband s cousin Lord Leconfield 10 Their children Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe 1834 1900 Ettie Bode c 1836 1920 Cecelia Hill 24 August 1838 6 November 1915 George Hamilton Ayliffe 1840 1906 and William H Ayliffe 9 October 1844 1928 all had long and productive lives Elizabeth died peacefully with all her faculties intact and in excellent health up to the last days Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe 1834 27 March 1900 was four years old when the family left for South Australia At age 18 he joined the gold rush to Victoria and sent 6 oz of gold to his mother 4 He was a contractor who did a lot of business for the Government including the Bay Road the South Road the Morphett Street bridge and the Clarendon bridge and became quite wealthy He developed on his property a valuable quarry from which much quartzite and bluestone was obtained 4 He subsequently engaged in cattle speculation and lost heavily 11 and was declared insolvent in 1861 4 In 1873 he went to New Zealand where he invested in gold mining ventures then eight years in the Northern Territory then worked in Adelaide from 1881 or earlier as an auctioneer and commission agent with offices in Currie Street He returned to gold mining in Western Australia and died in Kanowna Elizabeth Esther Ettie Ayliffe c 1836 3 August 1920 was born in Exeter a daughter of Dr George Ayliffe who emigrated to South Australia when she was two years old She was trained as a teacher reportedly by T A Caterer 5 though this is most unlikely Perhaps a confusion with Elizabeth Esther Cecelia Ayliffe 1857 1940 daughter of Dr Ayliffe of Angaston who taught at Daveyston for many years see below Was she the Miss Ayliffe who ran a boarding school for ladies at her home Saltram in Glenelg in 1875 and 1876 12 She married Joseph Adolphus Bode c 1819 10 June 1898 on 23 March 1877 lived at Sunningdale Park near Strathalbyn She was his second wife Martha Bode having died in 1865 J A Bode was eldest son of Gustavus Adolphus Bode of Mount Pleasant Staffordshire England a prominent military man J A Bode was a regular guest at Government House and a frequent writer to the Press on all manner of subjects She was the author of many poems printed in the daily Press such as Want 13 Christmas Sonnet 14 The Story of Cree and Cri 15 and published poetry collections Bode Ettie E 1885 Original poems s n retrieved 17 September 2016 Mrs J A Bode The Islander An island in the Australasian seas 1878 poetry Mrs J A Bode Lubra Ours was the land all ours mine and my peoples the tribes 1885 poetryand several novels serialized in South Australian newspapers Old Love Letters 1870 16 The Flaw in the Diamond 1885 17 A Tale of Colonial Life 1889 18 Cecelia Hamilton Wyndham Ayliffe 24 August 1838 6 November 1915 was born on the Pestonjee Bomanjee 19 She married journalist and elocutionist Thomas Padmore T P Hill 28 November 1879 on 26 November 1859 She was author of Checkmated 1878 a roman a clef about the lovelife of J E Neild 20 In later life while in transit from Venice to Sydney by the R M S Mirzapore Cecilia was one of the passengers detained at the Torrens Island Quarantine Station in January February 1882 during an incident of smallpox 21 Cecilia made trips to New Zealand in 1887 and San Francisco in 1889 during which she falsely claimed that she was a correspondent for the London Morning Post 19 She subsequently left for England in search of a possible inheritance 22 but her court case failed due to forged documents she died on 6 November 1915 in St John s Wood Middlesex 19 Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe 23 c 1812 28 July 1895 was recorded as a passenger on the Pestonjee Bomanjee with his father and two brothers but in fact came out later perhaps via Hobart on 10 July 1843 or via Launceston as an Ayliffe no other name recorded arrived in Adelaide on the Raven from that port in December 1847 One account had his vessel shipwrecked off New Zealand and he lived with Maoris for a year 2 He worked for a time as a ship s carpenter on a vessel working between Tasmania and New Zealand 24 made a visit to New Zealand where he was made prisoner by the Maoris but escaped at night and swam out to a trading boat which took him back to South Australia 25 He was a highly literate man and well versed in history He had some medical training as had his brothers but unlike them never went into practice He married Jane Bell c 1828 9 August 1911 in 1845 He settled in the Sturt district then moved to the Stockport Hamley Bridge area where he lived for 35 years He served as clerk of the Local Court on the Stockport District Council and returning officer for Wooroora and Light for several years He was a pioneer of fruit growing on the River Light He died leaving a widow six sons and three daughters 25 Dr Henry Ayliffe FRCS LSA 1818 24 April 1890 studied medicine in London under his father and emigrated to South Australia on the Pestonjee Bomanjee in 1838 with his father brother George nephew Thomas and nieces Elizabeth and Cecelia He set up in practice and lived in Hindley Street to 1843 26 then Brown Street in the city He returned to England for further medical training and higher qualifications at Guy s Hospital and St Bartholomew s Hospital and returned to Adelaide in 1853 but not without incident as the ship Anne Milne was wrecked off Portland Victoria 4 He resumed practice in Grote Street close to the Catholic chapel 27 He moved to Angaston where he set up in practice and in 1867 was appointed Government medical officer to the destitute poor 28 Family editThe list below is not exhaustive but is expected to include all members of the family likely to be encountered in histories of early European settlement Bold entries denote members whose biographies appear in The immigrants above Dr Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe 1774 28 May 1852 married Hester Jinks on 5 April 1796 They had two daughters who married and remained in England and are not listed here and three sons Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe c 1812 28 July 1895 married Jane Bell 1 February 1828 9 August 1911 on 23 July 1845 farmed at Hamley Bridge He was a brother of Dr George Hamilton Ayliffe 1810 1844 and Dr Henry Ayliffe 1818 1890 John Hamilton Ayliffe 14 April 1846 25 November 1919 married Catherine Mill 12 August 1850 24 May 1928 on 9 July 1872 lived in Coonatto now Moockra moved to Western Australia and farmed in the Dumbleyung district Catherine and six children survived him Alfred Hamilton Ayliffe 14 March 1848 12 December 1931 married Esther Selina James 1946 on 2 August 1884 lived in BalaklavaAlfred Sabastian Neil Ayliffe 20 January 1887 22 August 1962 married Margaret Matilda Wellner 1952 in 1914 Ivy Adeline Jane Ayliffe 25 February 1889 17 November 1969 married Thomas Albert Henry Victor Adey 1888 1918 in 1911 she married again to Peter Dunn in 1921 Alice Dora Ayliffe 3 June 1892 1 March 1967 married William Edward Miller in 1914 George Ray Ayliffe 5 March 1895 1988 married Alice May Collin 1894 on 7 October 1918 Herbert Sydney Syd Ayliffe 30 June 1897 18 November 1942 Walter Courteney Ayliffe 13 March 1850 18 December 1908 married Sarah Lang Doidge 1850 13 February 1921 in 1875 lived at Hamley Bridge Emily Priscilla Ayliffe 22 January 1877 10 December 1952 married William Roberts in 1900 George Albert Ernest Ayliffe 13 April 1880 12 February 1955 married Ada Louisa Batt 1944 in 1902 Julia Elizabeth Ayliffe 13 March 1883 married Thomas Tozer 25 August 1871 21 June 1917 she married again to John Albert Brain 1874 on 12 March 1918 29 Hurtle Walter Stanley Ayliffe 7 May 1889 27 February 1933 married Bertha Amelia Richard 1920 in 1910 He married again to Ethel Blanche Rosina May Martin in 1921Mary Jane Ayliffe 26 June 1852 15 April 1918 married John Martin jun of Stockport lived at Gladstone Edmund Ayliffe 13 October 1856 14 December 1943 married Charlotte Elizabeth Winton 1943 of Roseworthy on 21 March 1889 lived at Hamley Bridge Stuart Hamilton Ayliffe 21 November 1892 26 May 1947 married Eva May Gust 1954 on 28 June 1915 Edna Charlotte Jane Jean Ayliffe 26 May 1895 21 October 1906 died after her brother s experimental acetylene generator exploded 30 Gerald Keith Ayliffe 14 August 1898 9 April 1971 married Pretoria Maud Barker nee Hargrave 1900 1989 in 1943 Clarence Wyndham Ayliffe 8 August 1902 5 May 1972 married Doris Francis May Lampard in 1927Arthur Ayliffe 23 October 1859 28 January 1937 of Balaklava Hubert Ayliffe 21 March 1862 27 January 1940 married Annie Amelia Saunders 17 July 1865 7 September 1954 on 24 September 1890 lived in AdelaideArchibald Cleve Archie Ayliffe 28 December 1892 4 September 1967 Florence Ayliffe 21 August 1864 14 December 1952 married George Frederick William Martin 26 January 1928 on 30 July 1890 children include Don Dot Edmund Laura Syd and Linda Maud Ayliffe 25 March 1867 2 August 1931 married John Thomas Quinn 1929 of Mintaro on 23 February 1887 lived Hamley Bridge Alice Rose Ayliffe 20 November 1869 29 May 1938 married Richard Pillar 5 September 1951 on 15 November 1893 lived Hamley BridgeDr George Hamilton Ayliffe 1810 13 October 1844 married Elizabeth Sanders 1809 26 October 1894 in England Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe 1834 27 March 1900 married Adelaide Miller 1831 2 March 1923 in 1857 lived at Wyndham Farm St Marys in 1858 then Ovingham in 1880 died in Kanowna West Australia She never left the State 31 George Edward Hamilton Ayliffe 11 October 1858 21 November 1936 married Letitia Maria Kelsh 1932 on 3 October 1883 He was a surveyor in the Engineer in Chief s Department Adelaide lived at Childers Street North Adelaide He was responsible for laying out the town of Bligh renamed Arno Bay in 1940 1 Fanny Adelaide Ayliffe 23 May 1860 21 August 1913 married Herbert Ralph Smythe c 1854 2 January 1922 on 2 September 1880 Herbert was a land agent and member of the Adelaide Stock Exchange Percy St Barbe Ayliffe 17 December 1865 29 June 1927 married Marie Power of Tasmania on 24 November 1913 A pioneer of the Gascoyne region Western Australia 32 he killed himself by strangulation 33 Ethelwyn Hamilton Ethel Adelaide Ayliffe 6 August 1868 10 December 1944 married Herbert Edward Hinde 28 June 1944 on 13 December 1902 She was a teacher at Mount Gambier Ladies College in 1889 and principal in 1892 He was a bank accountant lived 240 Jeffcott Street North Adelaide later 1 Frederick Street Gilberton In 1898 she lived at 32 Barnard Street North Adelaide and was a teacher at a private school Childers Street North Adelaide in 1900 then principal The school closed 1903 and classes were taken over by Mrs Hinde on the corner of Jeffcott and Barnard Streets They had two children John Hinde and Elizabeth Betty Hinde Blanche Olave St Barbe Ayliffe c 1931 was student at Advanced School for Girls taught at Mount Bryan East to 1895 Captain George H Wilkins a notable student 34 then appointed provisional teacher at Woodlands Paddy s Bridge in 1897 Green s Plains to the north west of Paskeville South Australia in 1900 Olave Adelaide Ayliffe 4 April 1871 18 February 1933 had much anguished poetry published in newspapers 35 36 37 Lucy Barbara Ingoldsby Smythe 24 February 1882 28 September 1917 married A rthur Tarlton Jefferis 1965 on 1 June 1911 Tarlton was a leading analytical chemist a son of Rev Dr James Jefferis novelist Barbara Jefferis was a daughter Elizabeth Esther Ettie Ayliffe c 1836 3 August 1920 married Joseph Adolphus Bode c 1819 10 June 1898 on 23 March 1877 lived at Sunningdale Park near Strathalbyn She was his second wife Martha Bode nee Chapman having died in 1865 J A Bode was eldest son of Gustavus Adolphus Bode of Mount Pleasant Staffordshire England Fylafie Iline Hamilton Effie Bode 1880 11 February 1921 married Joseph Alfred Hayward c 1880 2 November 1909 on 6 March 1909 She had a daughter Josephine Ada Grantley Hayward on 5 January 1910 in 1938 engaged to maybe married George Milne Fylafie married again to Arthur Boushear 1956 in 1917 Cecelia Hamilton Wyndham Ayliffe 24 August 1838 6 November 1915 married journalist and elocutionist Thomas Padmore T P Hill 28 November 1879 on 26 November 1859 Their relationship if any to Thomas Padmore Tod Hill c 1889 19 July 1937 noted SA horse trainer who died following a car crash is not known son perhaps Fred who became a journalist 2 16 January 1862 was still alive in December 1879 38 Alfred Brandon Hill 13 March 1864 5 December 1875 a brilliant student he died of scarlet fever Curiously he was often described as their only son George Hamilton Ayliffe 25 May 1840 2 November 1906 married Sarah Ann Annie Gleeson 1840 20 November 1928 on 26 February 1864 Annie was a daughter of Edward Burton Gleeson a founder of Clare George was appointed to the Mounted Police in 1859 then from 1875 held various public service positions including Secretary of the Central Board of Health He was acting City Coroner during the celebrated Barrington Sheridan abortion hearings when his argument with the defendant s counsel was widely reported 39 When he retired he was Registrar General of Births Deaths and Marriages 40 41 The story goes that on the eve of her marriage to Arthur King she eloped with George Ayliffe 42 In 1878 they were living on Park Street Unley then around 1885 on Unley Road opposite the Cremorne Hotel later at Turner Street Glenelg Ida Constance Ayliffe 1 March 1865 17 January 1937 married con man Laurence Millington Davidson 30 July 1891 on 14 May 1891 He eloped with her sister Maude six weeks later 43 which ended in a double suicide see below She married again to Henry George Kelly c 1854 30 March 1937 of Kilkerran Maitland on 6 June 1900 Annie Maude Ayliffe 16 September 1871 30 July 1891 eloped with her sister s husband Laurence Davidson on the liner SS Hohenzollern 1873 on 27 June The ship arrived at Colombo and he committed suicide by pistol shot in his cabin while being apprehended Maude swallowed a strychnine capsule and died shortly after 44 Gerald Gleeson Ayliffe 27 October 1873 3 November 1948 married Agnes Marion Johns 1945 in 1906 District Clerk of Kingscote Kangaroo Island He was a lieutenant in the Bushmen s Corps during the Boer War married Marie 2 George Hamilton Ayliffe 12 November 1907 1989 Annie Marion Ayliffe 29 November 1910 Kathleen Beatrice Cassie Ayliffe 2 June 1876 21 July 1967 married James Hamilton Windebank 1880 1953 in 1907Thomas Hamilton Gerald Windebank 1912 2006 Eileen Alice Gleeson Windebank 1908 Claude Hamilton Ayliffe 8 July 1878 28 March 1931 married Annette Mary Western in 1907 farmed at KeithAudrey Annette Wyndham Western Ayliffe 4 June 1908 1982 married Gordon Ralph Gilbert 1905 1979 in 1933George Wyndham Ayliffe 2 November 1883 1 August 1922 married Evelyn Stanbury Eva Kelly in 1916 He lived at Cygnet River KI and published poetry 1908 1912 when he left for Maitland He was active in the community dd William Hamilton Ayliffe 19 October 1844 20 July 1928 married Ellen Maria Pollitt 17 January 1847 5 July 1925 on 22 February 1870 In 1881 they were living in Brighton Ellen was the youngest daughter of James PollittFrank Hamilton Ayliffe 17 March 1871 29 July 1943 married Elizabeth Ann Bessie Davison c 1867 20 August 1924 he married again to Jean 1967 James Hamilton Ayliffe c 1891 7 November 1917 fought at Gallipoli killed at Villers Bretonneux 45 William Hawden Ayliffe c 1893 25 April 1918 killed at Villers BretonneuxFlorence Hamilton Ayliffe 14 August 1872 25 January 1948 married Henry Carleton Pollitt 1869 1925 on 18 May 1917 He was a son of Rev James Pollitt and a first officer on P amp O liners Violet Elsie Ayliffe 1 February 1875 1 February 1965 married Frank Hamilton 5 February 1859 13 June 1913 on 17 September 1895 He was the principal owner of Hamilton s Ewell Vineyards 46 William Lionel Ayliffe 22 January 1877 22 January 1967 married Catherine Kathleen Antony Page c 1890 17 July 1973 on 22 January 1914 lived on Kangaroo IslandBurt Ayliffe 23 March 1914 14 May 1942 fought with 2nd AIF during WWII Died of wounds in Italy Jim Ayliffe 14 September 1919 20 January 1943 with 2nd AIF died in Papua New Guinea Clem Ayliffe 19 December 1921 23 November 1942 with 2nd AIF killed in action Papua New Guinea James Burton Ayliffe 24 March 1879 31 July 1967 married Laura Russell Dumas 1955 on 18 September 1912 Capt Sydney Hamilton Ayliffe 2 December 1881 12 March 1954 married Alice Campbell Strachan nee Campbell 1889 widow of Capt William Leighton Strachan 31 March 1888 25 April 1915 on 8 February 1922 lived 121 Esplanade Brighton Strachan was killed at Gallipoli She was a noted worker for patriotic causes organised the Gallipoli memorial vase held by the State Library Alice Anne Hamilton Ayliffe 22 December 1922 Cpl Sydney Hamilton Ayliffe 17 January 1924 dd Dr Henry Hamilton Ayliffe 1818 24 April 1890 married Esther Sanders c 1815 11 March 1880 in 1844 lived in Angaston He was a brother of Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe 1812 1895 and George Hamilton Ayliffe 1810 1844 Henry Charles Hamilton Ayliffe 18 June 1846 10 March 1916 trained as a solicitor articled to H C Palmer then with Matthews amp Cox before going into solo practice in Adelaide in 1881 47 He married Leonora Mary Bryant c 1861 25 July 1924 in 1884Ernest Henry Ayliffe 24 May 1885 married Annie Terese Dunne on 21 October 1915 Robert Hamilton Ayliffe 13 October 1893 1 May 1959 married Alfena Janet Fena Withers 1975 on 24 April 1922 George Bryant Ayliffe 10 March 1897 29 June 1916 with 1st AIF Fought at Gallipoli killed in action in France Grace Lily Ayliffe 30 October 1900 1990 married Vivian Rhodes Millhouse on 8 June 1927 Robin Millhouse QC 9 December 1929 28 April 2017 dd Francis William John Ayliffe 10 March 1848 8 January 1850 gt Charlotte Elizabeth Ayliffe 4 January 1850 1915 gave evidence at her mother s inquest 48 Clara Blanche Ayliffe 10 January 1854 11 December 1896 married Edmund Cliffe Brown on 14 November 1878 Ellen Esther Cecelia Ayliffe 8 September 1857 9 September 1940 She was a provisional teacher at Dalkey Hill in 1891 and taught at Daveyston near Greenock from 1900 or earlier to 1916 or later and for a time at Hanson She was present at the Back to Daveyston 49 and Back to Hanson 50 celebrations of 1936 Further reading editMasters Jeremy 2015 Mr Ayliffe surgeon and this ingenious lady uncovering the origins of Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe and Elizabeth the countess of Egremont Abbotsford Victoria Jeremy Masters ISBN 978 0 646 93811 0 Hamilton Ian The Ayliffe Family privately printed in Adelaide limited edition private circulation 160 copies 1978 Available as pdf References edit a b Geoffrey H Manning A Glossary of South Australian Place Names From Aaron Creek to Zion Hill PDF State Library of South Australia Retrieved 21 September 2016 a b c d e f g Ian Hamilton The Ayliffe Family PDF Retrieved 19 September 2016 The Earl s marriage was not accepted by the Church and the title expired with him Wyndham became Baron Leconfield of Petworth Sussex in 1859 a b c d e f Maggy Ragless Shepherds Hill Recreation Park PDF Flinders University of SA Retrieved 20 September 2016 a b Concerning People The Register Adelaide Vol LXXXV no 23 012 South Australia 10 August 1920 p 4 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Alison Dolling The History of Marion on the Sturt pub 1981 by Peacock Publications for City of Marion ISBN 0 909209 48 0 Advertising Adelaide Observer No 78 South Australia 21 December 1844 p 1 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Family Notices South Australian Register Vol XVI no 1783 South Australia 1 June 1852 p 2 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia He had been generally referred to as surgeon but this appears to be the only instance of him being given the post nominal M D Family Notices Adelaide Observer Vol XXXIV no 1852 South Australia 31 March 1877 p 3 Retrieved 21 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Death of Mrs E Ayliffe The Advertiser Adelaide South Australia 27 October 1894 p 6 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia The Late Mr T H Ayliffe The Advertiser Adelaide Vol XLII no 12935 South Australia 3 April 1900 p 7 Retrieved 15 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Advertising Evening Journal Adelaide Vol VII no 2074 South Australia 26 October 1875 p 1 Retrieved 18 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Want South Australian Register Vol L no 12 093 South Australia 17 August 1885 p 3 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Christmas Sonnet Evening Journal Adelaide Vol XVII no 5168 South Australia 26 December 1885 p 2 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia The Story of Cree and Cri Adelaide Observer Vol XLII no 2308 South Australia 26 December 1885 p 44 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Old Love Letters Adelaide Observer Vol XXVII no 1485 South Australia 19 March 1870 p 14 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Original Tale The Flaw in the Diamond Southern Argus Vol XVIII no 1005 South Australia 11 June 1885 p 4 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia A Tale of Colonial Life Chapter I The Express and Telegraph Vol XXVII no 7 820 South Australia 31 December 1889 p 7 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia a b c Masters Jeremy 2015 Mr Ayliffe surgeon and this ingenious lady uncovering the origins of Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe and Elizabeth the countess of Egremont PDF Retrieved 17 June 2018 Mimi Colligan Theatre in the Neild Scrapbooks State Library Victoria Retrieved 15 September 2016 Torrens Island Quarantine Station South Australian Register Adelaide SA National Library of Australia 13 February 1882 p 4 Retrieved 23 June 2018 The Late Mr T H Ayliffe South Australian Register Vol LX no 15 198 South Australia 30 July 1895 p 6 Retrieved 17 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Some references include Paul among his given names and he may have been generally known as Hamilton ManningIndex of South Australian Place Names State Library of South Australia Retrieved 20 September 2016 a b Death of Mr T H Ayliffe The Express and Telegraph Vol XXXII no 9 516 South Australia 30 July 1895 p 3 Retrieved 15 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Advertising South Australian Register South Australia 6 December 1843 p 1 Retrieved 20 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Advertising South Australian Register Vol XVII no 2059 South Australia 21 April 1853 p 1 Retrieved 20 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Obituary Evening Journal Adelaide Vol XXII no 6124 South Australia 26 April 1890 p 4 Retrieved 16 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Family Notices The Express and Telegraph Vol LV no 16 420 South Australia 1 May 1918 p 3 Retrieved 16 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Hamley Bridge Kapunda Herald Vol XLII no 3 366 South Australia 26 October 1906 p 7 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Obituary The Chronicle Adelaide Vol LXV no 3 468 South Australia 10 March 1923 p 17 Retrieved 15 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Valedictory The Northern Times Vol XIII no 639 Western Australia 24 November 1917 p 2 Retrieved 16 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Casualties The Register Adelaide Vol XCII no 26 792 South Australia 30 June 1927 p 8 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Capt Wilkins The Observer Adelaide Vol LXXXV no 4 433 South Australia 9 June 1928 p 54 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Miscellaneous The Register Adelaide Vol LXXII no 19 000 South Australia 5 October 1907 p 14 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia A Photograph The Observer Adelaide Vol LXV no 3 458 South Australia 11 January 1908 p 53 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Gethsemane The Observer Adelaide Vol LXVI no 5 237 South Australia 17 July 1909 p 55 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Our Melbourne Letter Warragul Guardian Vol 1 no 8 Victoria Australia 4 December 1879 p 3 Retrieved 21 September 2016 via National Library of Australia The Barrington Case The Advertiser Advertiser Vol XLVIII no 14 760 South Australia 7 February 1906 p 7 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Death of Mr G H Ayliffe Evening Journal Adelaide Vol XL no 11143 South Australia 2 November 1906 p 1 Retrieved 15 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Obituary The Chronicle Adelaide Vol 49 no 2 516 South Australia 10 November 1906 p 41 Retrieved 15 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Lucy Webb s Diary The Northern Argus Vol LXXIX no 5 074 South Australia 2 December 1948 p 10 Retrieved 15 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Fraud and Elopement Daily Telegraph Adelaide Vol XI no 144 Tasmania Australia 29 June 1891 p 2 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia The Davidson Tragedy Adelaide Observer Vol XLVIII no 2598 South Australia 18 July 1891 p 33 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Biographical The Register Adelaide Vol LXXXII no 22 173 South Australia 1 December 1917 p 11 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Douglas Wilkie The Hamiltons Retrieved 21 September 2016 Mr Henry Charles Ayliffe The Observer Adelaide Vol LXXIII no 5 585 South Australia 18 March 1916 p 39 Retrieved 18 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Coroner s Inquest The Express and Telegraph Vol XVII no 4 853 South Australia 16 March 1880 p 3 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Back to Daveyston The Leader Angaston Vol 18 no 942 South Australia 22 October 1936 p 1 Retrieved 18 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Back To Hanson School The Advertiser Adelaide South Australia 26 November 1936 p 14 Retrieved 18 September 2016 via National Library of Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index 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