AIGS/FHC Member's - Family Trees

August (Ernest) Heinrich KLEMKE

Male 1837 - 1909  (72 years)


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  • Name August (Ernest) Heinrich KLEMKE 
    Birth 25 Jan 1837  Keria ? Kyria ? ; Prussia Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Occupation labourer 
    Death 31 Aug 1909  Victoria, Australia Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Person ID I46  FHC023 - Chapman Tree
    Last Modified 28 Sep 2022 

    Family Annie Mary (Mary Anne?) BETTS,   b. 1842, Bothwell ; Tasmania Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 24 Oct 1913, Germantown (now Grovedale) ; near Geelong, Victoria, Australia Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 71 years) 
    Marriage 1863  Victoria Australia Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Henry August KLEMKE,   b. 1866, Germantown (now Grovedale) ; near Geelong, Victoria, Australia Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Mar 1939, Fizroy, Victoria Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 73 years)
     2. Wilhelmina KLEMKE,   b. 1864, Suspect Germantown; Victoria, Australian Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1881, unknown Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 17 years)
     3. Albert Ernest Alfred KLEMKE,   b. (unknown), Suspect Germantown; Victoria, Australian Find all individuals with events at this locationd. (unknown), uncertain Find all individuals with events at this location
     4. Florence Christina KLEMKE,   b. 1871, Suspect Germantown; Victoria, Australian Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1928, unknown Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 57 years)
     5. Annie Matilda Anna KLEMKE,   b. 1873, Suspect Germantown; Victoria, Australian Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1911, unknown Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 38 years)
     6. Emily Ernestine Eliza KLEMKE,   b. 1875, Suspect Germantown; Victoria, Australian Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1950, unknown Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 75 years)
     7. Eliza Agnes KLEMKE,   b. 1877, unknown Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1965, unknown Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 88 years)
     8. George Herman KLEMKE,   b. 1881, unknown Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1945, unknown Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 64 years)
     9. Carl Julius KLEMKE,   b. 1883, Suspect Germantown; Victoria, Australian Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1961, unknown Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 78 years)
     10. Alice Mary KLEMKE,   b. 1879, unknown Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1953, unknown Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 74 years)
    Family ID F15  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 7 Oct 2022 

  • Notes 
    • Ernst Heinrich Klemke had been observing many people leaving their Homeland for other Countries as increased population, poor economic conditions, religious and political persecutions and reprisals were making life difficult. Along with many others Ernst also wanted to avoid conscription into the Prussion Army. Relatives and Countrymen had written letters home telling of good fortune and opportunities in Australia. So on the 2nd June 1855, 18 year old Ernst Heinrich Klemke sailed from the Port of Hamburg with 130 other immigrants on the barque (barque means boat) ‘Alster’, a vessel of 130 tons, bound for Melbourne.
      The voyage took over three months with conditions on board being notoriously bad, with poor food and accommodation. The Captain of the ‘Alster’ was H Piening and the cargo contained a piano and spirits.
      When the bargue ‘Alster’ finally arrived at Port Phillip on the 10th of September 1855 the port was crowded. Victoria was at the height of the Gold Rush, sailing ships, schooners, barques and steamers lay at anchor as many crews had abandoned ship deserting to the gold fields of Bendigo and Ballarat. Passengers and crew of the ‘Alster’ were given grim reminders of the reasons for British Settlement in the Colonies where penal hulks such as ‘Deborah’, ‘President’, ‘Sacremento’ and ‘Success’ anchored in Hobsons Bay with work parties of convicts labouring off the Breakwater on construction of a Pier and in quarries along the foreshore.
      A new life
      Ernst first set foot on Australian soil at Williamstown where he spent his first night in the pubs and houses along the waterfront. Ernst set his compass for the German village of Germantown, four miles from Geelong. Ernst obtained work at the Mt. Duneed Flour Mill as a ‘Miller’ where in a paddock at the old Mt. Duneed Flour Mill site is a large sandstone block on which once stood the motor which drove the Flour Mill, a relic of the past. Eight years after starting work at the flour mill Ernst married a local girl named Annie Betts who was born in Bothwell in Van Diemen’s Land in 1842. Annie’s father was transported to Australia as a convict for stealing, the parents of Annies mother were also convicts transported to Australia for stealing sheep. Ernst and Annie lived in a cottage near the corner of Heyers and Torquay Roads not far from St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. They began a family of 10 children Wilhelmina, Henry, Alfred, Florence, Annie, Emily, Agnus, Alice, George and Carl where all 10 children attended the Grovedale State School. The family later moved to a small farmlet of five acres in the Dennys area on the west side of Torquay road where they grazed a few milking cows, grew vegetables and owned a horse and cart. The family prospered and later acquired a further 18 acres of land. Ernst started working at the Brearley Brothers Tannery at Marshalltown where a photograph was taken of the men outside the factory that shows Ernst with a full wild beard with a strong stocky build. Ernst enjoyed a jovial and amiable disposition and loved to hunt rabbits and other game in season such as quail taking his sons with him and supplying the local hotels with their catch and enjoying a few beers after a hard days work. In 1901 the Commonwealth of Australia came into existence and Ernst received his Letters of Naturalization on 18 June 1901 becoming an Australian Citizen. Eight years later on 31 August 1909 at the age of 72 Ernst Heinrich Klemke passed away. [1]
    • MIGRATION TO AUSTRALIA

      Ernst Heinrich Klemke had been observing many people leaving their Homeland for other Countries as increased population, poor economic conditions, religious and political persecutions and reprisals were making life difficult. Along with many others Ernst also wanted to avoid conscription into the Prussion Army. Relatives and Countrymen had written letters home telling of good fortune and opportunities in Australia. So on the 2nd June 1855, 18 year old Ernst Heinrich Klemke sailed from the Port of Hamburg with 130 other immigrants on the barque (barque means boat) ‘Alster’, a vessel of 130 tons, bound for Melbourne.
      The voyage took over three months with conditions on board being notoriously bad, with poor food and accommodation. The Captain of the ‘Alster’ was H Piening and the cargo contained a piano and spirits. [1]
    • NEW LIFE

      Ernst first set foot on Australian soil at Williamstown where he spent his first night in the pubs and houses along the waterfront. Ernst set his compass for the German village of Germantown, four miles from Geelong. Ernst obtained work at the Mt. Duneed Flour Mill as a ‘Miller’ where in a paddock at the old Mt. Duneed Flour Mill site is a large sandstone block on which once stood the motor which drove the Flour Mill, a relic of the past. Eight years after starting work at the flour mill Ernst married a local girl named Annie Betts who was born in Bothwell in Van Diemen’s Land in 1842. Annie’s father was transported to Australia as a convict for stealing, the parents of Annies mother were also convicts transported to Australia for stealing sheep. Ernst and Annie lived in a cottage near the corner of Heyers and Torquay Roads not far from St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. They began a family of 10 children Wilhelmina, Henry, Alfred, Florence, Annie, Emily, Agnus, Alice, George and Carl where all 10 children attended the Grovedale State School. The family later moved to a small farmlet of five acres in the Dennys area on the west side of Torquay road where they grazed a few milking cows, grew vegetables and owned a horse and cart. The family prospered and later acquired a further 18 acres of land. Ernst started working at the Brearley Brothers Tannery at Marshalltown where a photograph was taken of the men outside the factory that shows Ernst with a full wild beard with a strong stocky build. Ernst enjoyed a jovial and amiable disposition and loved to hunt rabbits and other game in season such as quail taking his sons with him and supplying the local hotels with their catch and enjoying a few beers after a hard days work. In 1901 the Commonwealth of Australia came into existence and Ernst received his Letters of Naturalization on 18 June 1901 becoming an Australian Citizen. [1]
    • PLACES LIVED IN VICTORIA

      Ernst and Annie lived in a cottage near the corner of Heyers and Torquay Roads not far from St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. They began a family of 10 children Wilhelmina, Henry, Alfred, Florence, Annie, Emily, Agnus, Alice, George and Carl where all 10 children attended the Grovedale State School. The family later moved to a small farmlet of five acres in the Dennys area on the west side of Torquay road where they grazed a few milking cows, grew vegetables and owned a horse and cart. The family prospered and later acquired a further 18 acres of land. [1]

  • Sources 
    1. [S30] pamela klemke, immigration place Australia.