AIGS/FHC Member's - Family Trees

Jessie Campbell HAM

Female 1907 - 1993  (85 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Jessie Campbell HAM was born on 25 Dec 1907 in Echuca, Victoria, Australia (daughter of Edwin Henry HAM and Jane McMaster REID); died on 21 Dec 1993.

    Jessie married James Hugh HANDS in 1929 in Victoria, Australia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Joan HANDS
    2. Leonard HANDS

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Edwin Henry HAM was born on 27 Jul 1870 (son of Richard HAM and Margaret CRONK); died on 1 Jul 1945.

    Notes:

    Roll of Victorian Voters at the Federal Referendum 1899:
    Ham, Edwin H., Rochester, farmer.

    "Pioneers of the Echuca and Moama Districts, pre 1925":
    The prospect in the 1870's for Richard Ham and his family of new land becoming available from the Crown, north of the Murray, was exciting. Withfivesons and three daughters, spreading out from their property "Windermere" in the Diggora district seemed the natural thing to do.
    For Richard, securing the property "Altcar" north-west of Moama, was the culmination of a long journey which he had started in north Cornwall asaboy. Together with his father, Richard snr., and five older brothers (two other brothers had arrived in Australia earlier) Richard disembarkedin1852 at Port Phillip from the ship 'Bombay'. It had been a tragic journey, with his mother and young sister dying in an accident on board astheship neared the Victorian coastline.
    After a period of farming with his father and brothers at Dowling Forest (where Richard snr. is buried) near Ballarat, and working on theEurekagoldfields, Richard and wife Margaret (who had been a teacher on the diggings) moved north. Other Ham families moved north also, to Lascelles(nearSwan Hill and later to Queensland) and Lockington, where Richard's brother William settled. By all accounts it was an arduous journey toDiggorawith a son Richard percy being born in the wagon on the way.
    So it was that three of Richard's sons and a married daughter, Margaret (Mrs Robert Docherty) moved to the Moama - Tatiala district. George andhiswife Flora lived at "Altcar" on the corner of Thyra and Hams Roads; Edwin and his wife Jenny (Reid) took up another Crown land grant at"Glenburnie"in the Tataila parish, with Frank and his wife gertrude (Cable) on the property "Ilsley Park", nearby on the banks of the Murray River.
    Richard Percy stayed in the Diggora district, eventually retiring into Rochester. Norman farmed at Bamawm and at Griffith, NSW. The othertwodaughters married in the Elmore-Rochester area. Alice became Mrs Roger Shotton and Mabel became Mrs Bill Bodger.
    [the article has more information about their lives]

    Edwin married Jane McMaster REID on 25 Mar 1896. Jane died on 28 May 1956 in Bendigo, Victoria, Australia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Jane McMaster REID died on 28 May 1956 in Bendigo, Victoria, Australia.
    Children:
    1. Charles Caldwell HAM was born on 29 Nov 1897 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia; died in 1981.
    2. Grace Margaret HAM was born on 21 Aug 1899 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia.
    3. Helen Jean HAM was born on 3 Mar 1903 in Echuca, Victoria, Australia.
    4. 1. Jessie Campbell HAM was born on 25 Dec 1907 in Echuca, Victoria, Australia; died on 21 Dec 1993.
    5. Edwin Richard Campbell HAM was born on 25 Dec 1908 in Echuca, Victoria, Australia; died in 1973 in Echuca, Victoria, Australia.
    6. Robert Reid HAM was born on 17 May 1912 in Echuca, Victoria, Australia; died on 10 Jun 1980 in Echuca, Victoria, Australia.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Richard HAM was born about 1836 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England (son of Richard HAM and Grace MOUNTJOY); died in Aug 1926 in Warragamba, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 30 Aug 1926 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 11 Dec 1836, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England
    • Census: 6 Jun 1841, Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England
    • Census: 5 Jan 1851, Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England
    • Immigration: 14 Dec 1852, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

    Notes:

    Richard was on the goldfields with his brothers William and Henry Mountjoy, and his uncle Henry, and his cousins Samuel and David. The goldreturnswere listed in the Geelong Advertiser - "the escort brought the following quantities of gold from Ballarat to Geelong"
    April 14, 1852:
    David Ham, 62oz. 14dwt.
    William Ham, 58oz. 10dwt.
    April 21, 1852:
    Henry Ham, 109oz. 10dwt.
    May 3, 1852:
    David Ham, 41oz. 13dwt.
    October 6, 1852:
    William Ham, 71oz. 14dwt
    October 23, 1852:
    William Ham, 52oz. 4dwt.
    David Ham, 47oz. 9dwt.
    David Ham, 32oz. 9dwt.
    Samuel Ham, 57oz. 11dwt.
    Samuel Ham, 66oz. 6dwt.
    November 2, 1852:
    David Ham, 119oz. 10dwt.
    Henry Ham, 107oz. 18dwt.
    William Ham, 88oz. 4dwt.
    William Ham, 47oz. 2dwt.
    October 6, 1853:
    Henry Ham, 50oz. 5dwt.
    H. M. Ham, 137oz. 10dwt.
    Richard Ham, 96oz. 10dwt.
    October 13, 1853:
    William Ham, 73oz. 10dwt.
    Henry Ham, 33oz. 15dwt.
    H. M. Ham, 110oz. 10dwt.
    Totals for between April 1852 and October 1853:
    Samuel, 123oz. 17dwt.
    David, 303oz. 15dwt.
    Henry, 301oz. 8dwt.
    Richard, 96oz. 10dwt.
    Henry Mountjoy, 248oz.
    William, 391oz. 4dwt.
    They were paid nearly £4 per ounce for the gold, so they would seem to have made some good money which enabled them all to purchase land andbuildhouses over the next few years. They were on the goldfields in the very early days when it was much easier to find gold than in the later yearsofthe gold rushes.

    1856 Electoral Roll of Victoria:
    Ham, Richard, South Geelong, freehold Noble St., Ashby Division.

    Roll of Victorian Voters at the Federal Referendum 1899:
    Ham, Richard, Pannoomilloo, farmer.

    "Early Pioneers of Rochester Area":
    HAM BROS., Richard, Henry and William , selected separate blocks at Diggora in 1872. Ex-councillor W.S.C. Ham, M.B.E., R.P. Ham and Mrs Bodger,whostill live in the district, are children of the original settlers.

    "Then ... the Water Wheel Turned" by Fae Stevens & Elizabeth O'Brien, 1967:
    Told by Mrs Bodger, of Rochester, who was born at Pannoo-Milloo in 1886.
    Her father Richard Ham and his wife and four children faced the long trek by covered waggon from Dowling Forest near Ballarat in 1874, comingthroughthe Whipstick, then almost a trackless forest. Clearing timber to start cultivation was the first task, and mother and a five months oldbaby in thepram helped each day in gathering up the lighter scrub and firing the heaps. This baby was the late Percy Ham.
    The Ham families were very musical and helped form a choir.
    The Ham family owned the only buggy in the district for some time and often loaned it for local weddings. A fine vineyard was planted in an acreofsandy soil and yielded grapes of fine flavour and quality. The original property still remains in the Ham family, and Mrs Bodger considers itsomeof the best wheat growing land in the district.
    Ed and Cliff Ham, sons of Henry, also farmed in Pannoo-Milloo and only recently the property was sold. Cliff Ham was a councillor for 36 years andin1952 was awarded the M.B.E.
    The Pannoo-Milloo post office was opened in the Ham residence in 1877 and until it closed in 1923, this office was in the hands of only twofamilies,Hams and Hanleys. Mrs Park (mother of Roy and David) herself a member of the Ham family, was in charge for many years.

    "Pioneers of the Echuca and Moama Districts, pre 1925":
    The prospect in the 1870's for Richard Ham and his family of new land becoming available from the Crown, north of the Murray, was exciting. Withfivesons and three daughters, spreading out from their property "Windermere" in the Diggora district seemed the natural thing to do.
    For Richard, securing the property "Altcar" north-west of Moama, was the culmination of a long journey which he had started in north Cornwall asaboy. Together with his father, Richard snr., and five older brothers (two other brothers had arrived in Australia earlier) Richard disembarkedin1852 at Port Phillip from the ship 'Bombay'. It had been a tragic journey, with his mother and young sister dying in an accident on board astheship neared the Victorian coastline.
    After a period of farming with his father and brothers at Dowling Forest (where Richard snr. is buried) near Ballarat, and working on theEurekagoldfields, Richard and wife Margaret (who had been a teacher on the diggings) moved north. Other Ham families moved north also, to Lascelles(nearSwan Hill and later to Queensland) and Lockington, where Richard's brother William settled. By all accounts it was an arduous journey toDiggorawith a son Richard Percy being born in the wagon on the way.
    So it was that three of Richard's sons and a married daughter, Margaret (Mrs Robert Docherty) moved to the Moama - Tatiala district. George andhiswife Flora lived at "Altcar" on the corner of Thyra and Hams Roads; Edwin and his wife Jenny (Reid) took up another Crown land grant at"Glenburnie"in the Tataila parish, with Frank and his wife Gertrude (Cable) on the property "Ilsley Park", nearby on the banks of the Murray River.
    Richard Percy stayed in the Diggora district, eventually retiring into Rochester. Norman farmed at Bamawm and at Griffith, NSW. The othertwodaughters married in the Elmore-Rochester area. Alice became Mrs Roger Shotton and Mabel became Mrs Bill Bodger.
    [the article has more information about their lives]

    Event Memos from GEDCOM Import...

    Note
    Richard was on the goldfields with his brothers William and Henry Mountjoy, and his uncle Henry, and his cousins Samuel and David. The gold returnswere listed in the Geelong Advertiser - "the escort brought the following quantities of gold from Ballarat to Geelong"
    April 14, 1852:
    David Ham, 62oz. 14dwt.
    William Ham, 58oz. 10dwt.
    April 21, 1852:
    Henry Ham, 109oz. 10dwt.
    May 3, 1852:
    David Ham, 41oz. 13dwt.
    October 6, 1852:
    William Ham, 71oz. 14dwt
    October 23, 1852:
    William Ham, 52oz. 4dwt.
    David Ham, 47oz. 9dwt.
    David Ham, 32oz. 9dwt.
    Samuel Ham, 57oz. 11dwt.
    Samuel Ham, 66oz. 6dwt.
    November 2, 1852:
    David Ham, 119oz. 10dwt.
    Henry Ham, 107oz. 18dwt.
    William Ham, 88oz. 4dwt.
    William Ham, 47oz. 2dwt.
    October 6, 1853:
    Henry Ham, 50oz. 5dwt.
    H. M. Ham, 137oz. 10dwt.
    Richard Ham, 96oz. 10dwt.
    October 13, 1853:
    William Ham, 73oz. 10dwt.
    Henry Ham, 33oz. 15dwt.
    H. M. Ham, 110oz. 10dwt.
    Totals for between April 1852 and October 1853:
    Samuel, 123oz. 17dwt.
    David, 303oz. 15dwt.
    Henry, 301oz. 8dwt.
    Richard, 96oz. 10dwt.
    Henry Mountjoy, 248oz.
    William, 391oz. 4dwt.
    They were paid nearly £4 per ounce for the gold, so they would seem to have made some good money which enabled them all to purchase land and buildhouses over the next few years. They were on the goldfields in the very early days when it was much easier to find gold than in the later years ofthe gold rushes.

    1856 Electoral Roll of Victoria:
    Ham, Richard, South Geelong, freehold Noble St., Ashby Division.

    Roll of Victorian Voters at the Federal Referendum 1899:
    Ham, Richard, Pannoomilloo, farmer.

    "Early Pioneers of Rochester Area":
    HAM BROS., Richard, Henry and William , selected separate blocks at Diggora in 1872. Ex-councillor W.S.C. Ham, M.B.E., R.P. Ham and Mrs Bodger, whostill live in the district, are children of the original settlers.

    "Then ... the Water Wheel Turned" by Fae Stevens & Elizabeth O'Brien, 1967:
    Told by Mrs Bodger, of Rochester, who was born at Pannoo-Milloo in 1886.
    Her father Richard Ham and his wife and four children faced the long trek by covered waggon from Dowling Forest near Ballarat in 1874, comingthrough the Whipstick, then almost a trackless forest. Clearing timber to start cultivation was the first task, and mother and a five months oldbaby in the pram helped each day in gathering up the lighter scrub and firing the heaps. This baby was the late Percy Ham.
    The Ham families were very musical and helped form a choir.
    The Ham family owned the only buggy in the district for some time and often loaned it for local weddings. A fine vineyard was planted in an acre ofsandy soil and yielded grapes of fine flavour and quality. The original property still remains in the Ham family, and Mrs Bodger considers it someof the best wheat growing land in the district.
    Ed and Cliff Ham, sons of Henry, also farmed in Pannoo-Milloo and only recently the property was sold. Cliff Ham was a councillor for 36 years andin 1952 was awarded the M.B.E.
    The Pannoo-Milloo post office was opened in the Ham residence in 1877 and until it closed in 1923, this office was in the hands of only twofamilies, Hams and Hanleys. Mrs Park (mother of Roy and David) herself a member of the Ham family, was in charge for many years.

    "Pioneers of the Echuca and Moama Districts, pre 1925":
    The prospect in the 1870's for Richard Ham and his family of new land becoming available from the Crown, north of the Murray, was exciting. Withfive sons and three daughters, spreading out from their property "Windermere" in the Diggora district seemed the natural thing to do.
    For Richard, securing the property "Altcar" north-west of Moama, was the culmination of a long journey which he had started in north Cornwall as aboy. Together with his father, Richard snr., and five older brothers (two other brothers had arrived in Australia earlier) Richard disembarked in1852 at Port Phillip from the ship 'Bombay'. It had been a tragic journey, with his mother and young sister dying in an accident on board as theship neared the Victorian coastline.
    After a period of farming with his father and brothers at Dowling Forest (where Richard snr. is buried) near Ballarat, and working on the Eurekagoldfields, Richard and wife Margaret (who had been a teacher on the diggings) moved north. Other Ham families moved north also, to Lascelles (nearSwan Hill and later to Queensland) and Lockington, where Richard's brother William settled. By all accounts it was an arduous journey to Diggorawith a son Richard Percy being born in the wagon on the way.
    So it was that three of Richard's sons and a married daughter, Margaret (Mrs Robert Docherty) moved to the Moama - Tatiala district. George and hiswife Flora lived at "Altcar" on the corner of Thyra and Hams Roads; Edwin and his wife Jenny (Reid) took up another Crown land grant at "Glenburnie"in the Tataila parish, with Frank and his wife Gertrude (Cable) on the property "Ilsley Park", nearby on the banks of the Murray River.
    Richard Percy stayed in the Diggora district, eventually retiring into Rochester. Norman farmed at Bamawm and at Griffith, NSW. The other twodaughters married in the Elmore-Rochester area. Alice became Mrs Roger Shotton and Mabel became Mrs Bill Bodger.
    [the article has more information about their lives]

    Richard married Margaret CRONK on 9 Sep 1863. Margaret was born about 1845; died on 15 Dec 1918 in Pannoomilloo, Victoria, Australia; was buried in Dec 1918 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Margaret CRONK was born about 1845; died on 15 Dec 1918 in Pannoomilloo, Victoria, Australia; was buried in Dec 1918 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia.
    Children:
    1. Grace Margaret HAM was born on 16 Jul 1864; died on 23 Nov 1871; was buried on 23 Nov 1871 in Dowling Forest Cemetery, Dowling Forest, Victoria, Australia.
    2. William Richard HAM was born on 15 Oct 1866; died in 1871; was buried on 18 Apr 1871 in Dowling Forest Cemetery, Dowling Forest, Victoria, Australia.
    3. Alice HAM was born on 13 Jul 1868; died on 13 Sep 1950.
    4. 2. Edwin Henry HAM was born on 27 Jul 1870; died on 1 Jul 1945.
    5. George William HAM was born on 8 Oct 1872; died on 22 Oct 1948 in Echuca, Victoria, Australia.
    6. Richard Percy HAM was born on 8 Dec 1874; died on 3 Jul 1964 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia.
    7. Margaret Emma HAM was born on 15 Oct 1876 in Pannoomilloo, Victoria, Australia; died on 28 Sep 1940 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia.
    8. Maud Beatrice HAM was born on 27 Feb 1879 in Pannoomilloo, Victoria, Australia; died on 22 Jul 1879.
    9. Frank Alexander HAM was born on 3 Jun 1882 in Pannoomilloo, Victoria, Australia; died in 1944.
    10. Jessie Mabel HAM was born on 4 Nov 1886 in Pannoomilloo, Victoria, Australia; died on 4 May 1972 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia.
    11. Norman Allan HAM was born on 2 Nov 1888 in Pannoomilloo, Victoria, Australia; died in 1939 in Bendigo, Victoria, Australia.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Richard HAM was born about 1800 in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England (son of William HAM and Ann BARRETT); died on 16 Apr 1879 in Dowling Forest, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 18 Apr 1879 in Dowling Forest Cemetery, Dowling Forest, Victoria, Australia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 4 May 1800, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England
    • Census: 6 Jun 1841, Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England
    • Census: 5 Jan 1851, Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England
    • Immigration: 14 Dec 1852, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
    • Residence: 1856, South Geelong, Geelong, Victoria, Australia

    Richard married Grace MOUNTJOY on 25 May 1826 in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England. Grace was born about 1804 in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died on 25 Nov 1852 in At sea on board 'Bombay'; was buried in Nov 1852 in At sea. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Grace MOUNTJOY was born about 1804 in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died on 25 Nov 1852 in At sea on board 'Bombay'; was buried in Nov 1852 in At sea.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 6 Jun 1841, Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England
    • Census: 5 Jan 1851, Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England

    Notes:

    Her death certificate states that she died of general debility. Ann had died at age 5 from Hydrocephalus only six weeks before.

    Children:
    1. Grace Mountjoy HAM was born about 1826 in Herdacott, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died in 1855 in Geelong, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 11 Jul 1855 in Eastern Cemetery, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
    2. William HAM was born about 1828 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died on 9 Jul 1915 in Richmond, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 10 Jul 1915 in Coburg Cemetery, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
    3. Henry Mountjoy HAM was born about 1830 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died on 29 Nov 1906 in Pannoomilloo, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 30 Nov 1906 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia.
    4. Joseph HAM was born about 1833 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died on 2 Oct 1917 in Queensland, Australia.
    5. Mary HAM was born about 1833 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died in 1833 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; was buried on 28 Feb 1833 in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England.
    6. John Thomas HAM was born about 1835 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died on 13 Oct 1877 in Bungaree, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 19 Oct 1877 in Ballarat New Cemetery, Ballarat, Victoria, Australia.
    7. 4. Richard HAM was born about 1836 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died in Aug 1926 in Warragamba, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 30 Aug 1926 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia.
    8. Elizabeth HAM was born about 1838 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died in Dec 1852 in Geelong, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 28 Dec 1852 in Eastern Cemetery, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
    9. Mary HAM was born about 1840 in Lymsworthy, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died in 1860 in Victoria, Australia.
    10. Emma Jane HAM was born about 1844 in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died in 1854 in Chilwell, Geelong, Victoria, Australia; was buried on 5 Apr 1854 in Eastern Cemetery, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
    11. Ann HAM was born about 1847 in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England; died on 13 Oct 1852 in At sea on board 'Bombay'; was buried in Oct 1852 in At sea on board 'Bombay'.