Jennifer O'BRIEN (Private). Parents:
William Alphonsus
O'BRIEN (Bill) and
Josephine Ellen CORMACK (Ellen)
.
Children were: Luke TAYLOR,
Rebecca TAYLOR, Aaron TAYLOR,
Damien TAYLOR.
Josephine
Shirley O'BRIEN was named after Shirley who lived over the back fence in
Hopper Street. She was also known as Josephine, Josie or Josephine Shirley.
Dad got the registration back the front initially and the later correction does
not always show up Parents:
William Alphonsus O'BRIEN (Bill)
and
Josephine Ellen CORMACK (Ellen).
Children were:
Paul STABLES, Simon STABLES
, Wayne STABLES, Kylie STABLES
.
Julia
O'BRIEN. Parents:
Bernard O'BRIEN and
Margaret O'DONOUGHUE.
She was married to Unknown
BROWNLEE.
Julie
O'BRIEN (Private). Parents:
Donald Leslie Graham O'BRIEN
and
Erin SMITH.
Kate
O'BRIEN Parents:
Bernard O'BRIEN and
Margaret O'DONOUGHUE.
Kevin Arthur
O'BRIEN (Private). Parents:
William Alphonsus O'BRIEN
(Bill) and
Josephine Ellen CORMACK (Ellen).
Children
were: Annette Mary O'BRIEN,
Bernard Lawrence William O'BRIEN, Edward Vivian Hodder
O'BRIEN (Horace), Kevin John O'BRIEN,
Elizabeth Ellen O'BRIEN (Liz).
Kevin
John O'BRIEN(4)
(2) (photo)
was born on 11 Feb 1964 in Wellington.
(1807)
He died on 16 Apr 1999 in 141 Main Road Wainuiomata. peacefully from
accidental morphine overdose.
Evelyn's tribute (from funeral service)-
Dad
There's not a lot I want to say as over the years we didn't really spend a lot
of time together but I always knew you were around.
I remember the times we did see each other as I was growing up. You would come
for a visit all the time. You bought me a really cool bike for my birthday. You
took me away with you on a few occasions, let me come up and have a holiday with
you when you lived up north.
When I asked for a car you gave me yours even though it was a piece of junk but
I know the thought was there. I just want to let you know that you were my Dad
and I love you.
Maria would like to say thank you to Allison for everything she has done for
Evelyn and the support she has given her over the last week as it was a trying
time for her also. I know Kevin would be just as grateful.
Evelyn, Kevin would be proud of the way you have dealt with this week and for
the service you have given him. Just remember he had a funny way of showing people
love but I know he loved you.
He died on 16 Apr 1999 in 141 Main Road Wainuiomata.
(1808)(1809) He was cremated
on 23 Apr 1999 in Wellington.
(1810)
(1811) [kaob.ged]
peacefully from accidental morphine overdose.
Evelyn's tribute (from funeral service)-
Dad
There's not a lot I want to say as over the years we didn't really spend a lot
of time together but I always knew you were around.
I remember the times we did see each other as I was growing up. You would come
for a visit all the time. You bought me a really cool bike for my birthday. You
took me away with you on a few occasions, let me come up and have a holiday with
you when you lived up north.
When I asked for a car you gave me yours even though it was a piece of junk but
I know the thought was there. I just want to let you know that you were my Dad
and I love you.
Maria would like to say thank you to Allison for everything she has done for
Evelyn and the support she has given her over the last week as it was a trying
time for her also. I know Kevin would be just as grateful.
Evelyn, Kevin would be proud of the way you have dealt with this week and for
the service you have given him. Just remember he had a funny way of showing people
love but I know he loved you.
[ehHodder.FTW]
peacefully from accidental morphine overdose.
Evelyn's tribute (from funeral service)-
Dad
There's not a lot I want to say as over the years we didn't really spend a lot
of time together but I always knew you were around.
I remember the times we did see each other as I was growing up. You would come
for a visit all the time. You bought me a really cool bike for my birthday. You
took me away with you on a few occasions, let me come up and have a holiday with
you when you lived up north.
When I asked for a car you gave me yours even though it was a piece of junk but
I know the thought was there. I just want to let you know that you were my Dad
and I love you.
Maria would like to say thank you to Allison for everything she has done for
Evelyn and the support she has given her over the last week as it was a trying
time for her also. I know Kevin would be just as grateful.
Evelyn, Kevin would be proud of the way you have dealt with this week and for
the service you have given him. Just remember he had a funny way of showing people
love but I know he loved you.
Parents:
Kevin Arthur O'BRIEN and
Janice DICKSON.
He was married to Maria Carol BEAGLE
on 7 Feb 1981 in St Augustines Church, Petone.
(1812) He was divorced from Maria Carol BEAGLE in Hutt. He was married
to Maria Carol BEAGLE.
(1813) Children were: Evelyn Carol O'BRIEN
.
Mary
Ann O'BRIEN(1814) was born before
6 Jul 1861.
(1815) She emigrated in
1879 from Onboard ship "Opawa" to Nelson & transferred by sea to
Blenheim..
(1816) She was a Dairy-maid
for Neumann family about 1879 in Okaramio, Marlborough, NZL.
(1817) She died on 6 Jul 1957.
(1818)
She was buried on 9 Jul 1957 in Kaituna, cemetery, Marlborough, NZL.
(1819) She was from Ireland, one of several
of the family who came out.
Interview with John Wilson 17 Jan 1954. (Age 92) By permission of John Wilson.
{Note: Often, when referring to others, she mentions the relationship from the
point of view of the interviewer but is not consistent. Comments in {} are mine.}
EARLY DAYS IN OKARAMIO
"Where this house stands there once stood a tremendous birch tree - so
we literally carved our home form the bush. I can remember well how we made fires
to burn out the stumps from the virgin soil.
There was some milling timber but most of the bush was just burned. There was
a good lot of white pine though there was some rimu.
We often used to sit up till eleven o'clock making the stump fires in order
to to have a clear place to build the house near to a school.
There was no road at all only a track of slush and mud. The first time I went
to Blenheim, 4 months after I arrived here - I went in the trap belonging to
my brother-in-law (John Dickson) and it took us seven or eigth hours ploughing
through the mud.
When Alice was a baby we went to Blenheim to have her vaccination done - the
whole of Blenheim was {underwater} and we stayed at what is now Barry's Hotel.
The cook had to wade ankle deep in water to reach the oven. On the fifth day
in Blenheim we started home and Father (John Cameron Jnr) had to test the river
which was still well up in flood. I was never so thankfully set down in ny own
home.
The roads were so bad that it was four or five months before I could take two
of the children (Lizzie and Michael) to have them baptised in Blenheim. Alice
was baptised when she was quite young. I almost had to sneak away from Grandfather
and Grandmother Cameron when I wished to see the priest.
They were very strict and even the potatoes had to be peeled on saturday and
I can well remember Aunty Kitty (Kate Cameron (Nees)) being lectured for doing
that chore of the Sabbath. What always amused me however was that they were always
ready to eat the feast on the Sabbath. In spite of the bigotry of the Cameron
people the children (John Jnr/Mary's children) were brought up good Catholics
even though I had to struggle to give them an education.
Pickerings coach used to run on this road - indeed it had many an adventure.
Mr Pickering was a poor old lame man who sidled along throwing his lame leg forward
at each step.
The coach used to stop at the hotel, then owned by the Dicksons. They built it
in the first year that I came to New Zealand (1879). She (Mrs Dickson) was Grandfather's
sister. Uncle Dickson was the first one who had a trap here in the valley for
many years. later we bought that from them.
Okaramio was the horse changing place for the Pickering coach. While the coach
was changing the people had lunch at the hotel. Mr Pickering went out of the
business and Newmans followed with a mail and coach service. (These were a different
family from the Neumanns - a German family with whom I lived when I first came
to New Zealand.
They used to change horses just above the present Okaramio Bridge on what was
then Kennington's ground. The drivers had morning tea at the Jenner's on the
morning run and afternoon teas on the return run. Mr Daniel Jenner, a big man,
was the stableman for the coaches.
The roads gradually improved, and still need improving from what I hear. I
remember Grandfather (your grandfather {JC Jr}) ploughing the road so as to raise
the level enough for the children to walk fairly dry footed to school - we had
6 going at once and they had to leave about 8 a.m. each morning. Our horses were
often called in to pull people out of the mud and the deep water-filled ditches.
The first school in Okaramio was where the McLachlan's lower paddock is. A
Miss Maclean, who was a friend staying with Mrs Neumann, was the first teacher
in a little cottage school. The school that followed that stood where the church
is now, next to Rod Cameron's house.
The Rev. (Henry) Stowell was the Protestant minister who visited Okaramio.
The Cameron's (Snr) house was the 'mission station' for him who came about once
in three months. Service was held in their house by this Mr Stowell. Of course
the Cameron's were very strict church people.
We had to make our own fun. There were people around about and people on the
roads who would come in and make an evening's fun of course. Father {JC Jr} used
to play his fiddle. At Christmas we used to have a sports meeting down in the
hotel paddock. Your Grandfather {JC Jr} was on the committee which generally
organised the meeting.
There were no bridges at all in those days and Fr. Pazant used to wade through
the creeks, especially Stony Creek. The place always seemed to be under water,
sometimes for weeks at a time when it rained heavily. Of course it was a swamp
in the early days.
There used to be large fires in the burning season and often people used to
have to sit up all night to see that the buildings were safe. The stock also
had to be shifted out of the fires's way. Sometimes the bush fires would get
away and there would be a much larger burn than anticipated.
Spliiting and selling posts was almost the living in those days. After the
burn there would be all logs which were a great nuisance but however we used
to sow the grass seed amongst the timbers. Sometimes it had to gathered from
every available spot it could be. The grass seemed very slow to grow in those
days as the ground was very cold and sullen. The sheep and cattle would pick
away at the new shoots and fern. Cocksfoot, which sometimes grew to about 6 foot
high, and ryegrass could be harvested like oats.
There were sawmills everywhere - I was here when the first sawmill was built.
The 'Little Mill' was in the lower Leslie paddocks and the 'Big Mill' was up
on Kennington's. The flax mill was almost before my time - it was there in Grandfather's
(John Cameron Snr) time. It was the old (flax) mill the the Rutherfords came
to see and to have tea with us on the eave of their departure from Havelock.
Many people, afterwards famous, used to visitus, among them Mr Elvy and Mr
Redwood - the first surveyor of Okaramio. Grandfather (John Cameron Jnr) used
to guide him on the hills when he was at work.
One flood I remember when we went to Blenheim, the water was up to the horse's
belly - and when we went round by Tuamarina and came to the Wairau we were very
wary about travelling over the ford; however we crossed safely and stayed the
night at Sutton's (where miss Green now lives) at the hotel. We left next day
for Okaramio and arrived there at 4 p.m.
The flaxmills were operated by the Jaques family at Okaramio Valley and also
at where Mr. Ken Lovell now lives. The Jacques family originated from Western
Ireland and were John Cameron's good friends.
When we became a little better established I had some cows and made up to
100 lbs of butter some weeks. We did not however make any cheese, what we needed
was always bought.
The Newmans's coach stop was owned first by people of the name of Robinson
(?) then by Phil Green, a bachelor, and finally by the Jenners who remained there
until the advent of motor coaches in 1912 - the open variety with the luggage
strapped on the wide running boards."
OKARAMIO HOTEL (19 Jan 1954, 23 & 24 Jan 1954)
" The Okaramio Hotel , or the Half-Way House as it is sometimes called,
was built by John Dickson about 1879. Just after the new hotel had been built,
in 1880 a distrastously dangerous fire broke out in the felled bush near the
house and a desparate fight saved the hostelry from destruction in its infancy.
In the early days the hotel catered for sawmillers and their hands. Bob Neumann
was the chief opponent of the hotel for he thought that it would encourage a
general 'boozing spree among the mill hands'.
The old Cameron people also looked on the hotel as a very doubtful asset. The
Neumann family were so bitterly opposed to the hotel that they really hoped the
new Dickson house (the hotel) would be destroyed by fire.
Besides the mill trade there was the moving trade from the traffic on the
(newly) barely formed roads and the coaches later.
All the traffic was riding traffic, there were no traps and so on. Indeed John
Dickson owned the first trap in Okaramio. The hotel did a very good trade when
the gold fever errupted and people travelled the road all hours of the day to
Mahakipawa. The Dickson's later leased the hotel and then sold it."
MAORI
"There weren't many Maoris here in the valley when I came, though they
used to come along the road sometimes. They did have a camp (for ealing and hunting)
for a while up between Nees's place and Cameron's."
DENTIST VISIT
"The dentist made only a periodical visit to the valley. he came on the
coach and had his surgery at the Daniel Jenner's. Everyone who wanted teeth pulled
or dental attention of any time or kind would line up outside the door. Half
the time, so they say, he never gave painless but just removed teeth by sheer
brute force. No doubt this was nice for the people still waiting."
MY ARRIVAL
"I spent 7 days in the depot there in Blenheim and was there until (Bob)
Neumann of Okaramio engaged me as a domestic for his wife.
I went in a trap as far as Renwicktown, which was the terminus of the journey
made by the timber waggon from Okaramio. The second part of my journey was
made on this waggon, a heavy affair drawn by six horses.
I had seen plenty of water when I looked over the side of the 'Opawa' but
I was never so frightened of it as when we had to cross the turbulent Wairau,
then in a high fresh. However we crossed safely.
We had left Renwick about 12 noon and it was practically 4pm when we reached
Neumann's homestead in Okaramio.
We came to the valley just while the Dickson's hotel was being built. From
my vantage point on a bale of hops on top of the waggon I could see the partly
finished building. From one of the window spaces, Mr Finlay, the carpenter, put
his head out - the first head I saw in Okaramio. I can tell you I was quite a
curiosity, especially among 'the eligible young men'.
There were 7 men in the house (Neumann's) so there was plenty of cooking to
do. Iwas the 'general'. Besides this I served in the store as well although
this was not gazetted as one of my duties. I also milked one or two cows each
morning. My first days here were not idle.
The worst were the board floors which had to be scrubbed every day. The kitchen
floor and furniture were kept almost white with the scrubbing.
It was a long way from Ardmore to Okaramio but this was soon to be my new home
for in 1881 I married a man of Okaramio and have spent all my subsequent life
in this valley."
GOLD IN THE OKARAMIO VALLEY (18 Jan 1954)
"Spurred on by the discovery of gold at Onamalutu, Waikakaho, Whakamarina,
Ruapaka, Mahakipawa - Cullensville, some search was made in Okaramio. Two shafts
were sunk in the present McLachlan's paddocks but nothing was found and those
shafts have now been filled in with debris. Gold veins did and still do exist
in the hills but not in sufficient bearing value to warrant processing.
Panning was done in almost all thei sidestreams from the gullies and n Okaramio
itself.
Shafts were also sunk in the hillside above the hotel. A lot of time was spent
on looking for gold.
John Cameron (Jnr) was renting a large section in the Waikakaho and had a claim
over there.
The deep holes in the Mclachlan's paddocks which were one time claims are
all that remains of the frenzied search for elusive gold.
In the days when the Mahakipawa diggings were everything, Bob Neumann, a big
time sawmiller said 'They'll spend more gold getting gold than what will ever
come out of there'.
I remember soon feeding the lambs out of your Grandfather's prospecting dish.
The sawmillers' hands, indeed practically everybody in the valley, did some
fossicking in those days. All the gold they got didn't pay for half or even a
quarter of the labour. The Onamalutu diggings on the Maher property were supposed
to be rich but all Grandfather {JC Jr} got was 17/6 worth. I once saw a nugget
that was supposed to be dug from the Waikakaho but from what I know now, I think
it came from from a 'salted' mine. We did a good business suppying the diggings
with meat. We killed many of our sheep and bought more to kill - and then half
the diggers never paid for it ! Butter was in greatest demand at the diggings
and many a pound I made to keep things going. Grandfather {JC Jr} would leave
for Onamalutu on Monday and stay away all week."
She was married to John CAMERON (Jr) in 1881.
(1820) "Marriage was bitterly opposed
by Cameron Snr and wife on religous grounds". [JW] Children were:
Michael Joseph CAMERON, Mary Alice CAMERON (Alice)
, Elizabeth Annie CAMERON (Lizzie),
Roderick Donald CAMERON, Henry John CAMERON (John
III), Helena Kate CAMERON (Kate),
Onslow Austin CAMERON, Veronica CAMERON (Vronnie)
, Rhoda Rebecca CAMERON,
Norah Magdalen CAMERON (Madge), Miriam Lauretta CAMERON
.
Michael
O'BRIEN (Mick) was born on 20 Feb 1883 in Oamaru (regd).
(741)(1821) He was a Farm
labourer in 1910.
(1822) He died on
20 Jun 1971 in Wellington, "Abermarle", pvte Hotel, 59 Ghuznee Street,
WN.
(1823) He was buried in Karori,
Wellington.
(1824) ILMO Edna Margaret
Irving d. 31 Mar 1955 a. 38 yr
Margaret Mary O'Brien d. 22 Jul 1956 a. 67
Michael O'Brien d. 20 Jun 1971 a. 88
Till we meet again RIP He was ill with lifetime damage to skull while shunting
as railwayman aged about.
(1825) Parents:
Bernard O'BRIEN and
Margaret
O'DONOUGHUE.
He was married to Margaret Mary DOYLE
on 6 Jul 1910 in St Patricks Basilica, Oamaru.
(1826) Witnesses: Bernard Joseph O'Brien (Brother) Hakataramea and
Christine Imelda Doyle (sister) Pukeuri
Children were: William Alphonsus O'BRIEN (Bill),
Grace O'BRIEN, Edna O'BRIEN,
Patricia O'BRIEN.
Patricia
O'BRIEN (Private). Parents:
Michael O'BRIEN (Mick)
and
Margaret Mary DOYLE.
Children were:
Ian ATKINSON, Susan ? ATKINSON.
Steven
John O'BRIEN (Private). Parents:
David William O'BRIEN
and
Anna BROWN (Ann).
Susan
O'BRIEN Parents:
Bernard O'BRIEN and
Margaret O'DONOUGHUE.
She was married to Unknown
DE BURNEU.
William
Alphonsus O'BRIEN (Bill) (photo) was born
on 29 Jul 1911 in Dunsandel.
(1827)
He was living on 16 May 1958 in 1 Tutchen Avenue, Wellington.
(1803) He died on 11 Dec 1982 in Public Hospital, Wellington ex 8
Salisbury Tce WN. He was buried on 15 Dec 1982 in Karori, Wellington. He served
in the military none. in lifelong regrets for assignment to Man Power Office
..
(1828) This was source of much heartburning.
His clerical skills were used to assist with the Manpower Dept itself. This broke
his service with the Railways and he nev er really resumed his career. He was
a Railway clerk and assisted mother in hotels.
(1829) He was ill with died from pneumonia. Diabetic, chronic smoker,
alcoholic and probable manic-depressive..
(1830)
Family were there at the Hospital when he died. He was also known as
Bill. Believed to have been responsible for train smash and death early in railway
career and that ther was a court case over it.
Had a fine collection of bound volumes of WW1,WW2, aviation, shipping and military
history which Donald got after his death.
Was fond of singing around the house. One favourite was:
"In the big rock candy mountains where they never change their socks
The little streams of alcohol come trickling down the rocks";
And another:
"Aunty Mary had a canary up the leg of her drawers".
Smoked 3 packets a day Pall Mall plain
Parents:
Michael O'BRIEN (Mick) and
Margaret Mary DOYLE.
He was married to Josephine Ellen
CORMACK (Ellen) in 1938 in Basilica Hill Street, Wellington.
(1831) Children were: Kevin Arthur O'BRIEN
, David William O'BRIEN, Josephine
Shirley O'BRIEN, Donald Leslie Graham O'BRIEN,
Jennifer O'BRIEN.
Brigid
Anna O'CARROLLShe was married to Roger Stanley
HICKSON on 5 Sep 1970. Children were: Tara Anna
HICKSON, Andrew Roger HICKSON.
Mary
Jane O'CONNELL was born in 1842 in Limerick, Ireland.
(1832) She was buried in Bellmure, Murroe, Limerick Ireland.
(1833)She was married to
Timothy TROY on 19 Feb 1865 in Castle Connell, Limerick, Ireland.
(1834) Family sailed from London on "Rodney' with 5 children
on 6 Jun 1875, arrived Wellington NZL 29 Aug 1875. Total cost of passage money
$43.10 ( £21-6-0 ?) [HS] Children were: James
TROY, Johanna TROY,
Michael TROY, Mary TROY,
Patrick Francis TROY, Margaret Josephine TROY
.
Daisy
O'CONNOR(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Jack O'CONNOR and
Gertrude JELLYMAN.
She was married to
BANG.
Eddie
O'CONNOR(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Jack O'CONNOR and
Gertrude JELLYMAN.
Jack
O'CONNOR(1)
(2) died UNKNOWN. John was 98 years old when he died - death date
unknown as at 25/4/1994
He was married to Gertrude
JELLYMAN on 7 Apr 1917. Children were: Joyce O'CONNOR
, Daisy O'CONNOR, Leslie
J O'CONNOR, Eddie O'CONNOR.
Joyce
O'CONNOR(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Jack O'CONNOR and
Gertrude JELLYMAN.
She was married to
Francis DORREEN.
Leslie
J O'CONNOR(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Jack O'CONNOR and
Gertrude JELLYMAN.
He was married to
Noeline ISABEL.
Myrtle
O'CONNOR (photo) Previously widowed - had
6 of her own children
She was married to Donald Alexander
DICKSON (Alec/x or Pedro). Children were: Sally DICKSON
.
Children were: Elizabeth UNKNOWNMOSP,
'Ebby' DICKSON, 'Margie' DICKSON,
Kay UNKNOWNMOSP.
James
O'DONNELL was born before 26 Aug 1868 in Strabane, Ireland.
(1835) Parents:
John O'DONNELL and
Frances GALLAGHER.
He was married to Margaret
Josephine TROY on 26 Aug 1908 in Sacred Heart Church, Kaikoura, NZL.
(1836) Witnesses: Sylvester O'Donnell &
John
O'DONNELL was a Farmer.
(1837)
He was married to Frances GALLAGHER.
(1838) Children were: John Francis O'DONNELL
, James O'DONNELL.
John
Francis O'DONNELL was born before 28 Apr 1869 in Ireland.
(1839) He was a Blacksmith in 1897.
(1840) Parents:
John O'DONNELL and
Frances GALLAGHER.
He was married to Mary TROY
on 28 Apr 1897 in Catholic Church, Hunterville. NZL.
(1841) Witnesses: Josephine Troy & James O'Donnell (Utiku).
Leslie
Owen O'DONNELL(4)
(2) was born. Parents:
Ivan Archie STEWART
and
Verna Lillian ROWE.
Marilyn
Royce O'DONNELL(4)
(2) was born. Parents:
Walter Kenneth O'DONNELL
and
Verna Lillian ROWE.
Nathalie
Dawn O'DONNELL(4)
(2) was born. Parents:
Walter Kenneth O'DONNELL
and
Verna Lillian ROWE.
She was married to
William A. ROBINS. Children were: Richard Peter
ROBINS, Denise Sharron ROBINS,
Karen Anne ROBINS.
Walter
Kenneth O'DONNELL(4)
(2) was born.
He was married to Verna Lillian
ROWE. Children were: Marilyn Royce O'DONNELL
, Nathalie Dawn O'DONNELL.
Pam
O'DONOGHUE(24)
(2) was born.
She was married to Ross Phillip
FAFEITA.
Margaret
O'DONOUGHUE was born in 1861 in Firies, County Kerry Ireland.
Children
were: Michael O'BRIEN (Mick),
Julia O'BRIEN, Bernard O'BRIEN,
BIll (William ?) O'BRIEN, Jack (John ?) O'BRIEN
, Cis O'BRIEN, Kate O'BRIEN
, Grace O'BRIEN, Susan O'BRIEN
.
Alice
O'KANE was born on 4 Dec 1886. She died on 10 Apr 1955. nee Hall
Children
were: Peggy JEWELL.
Anne
Marie O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
John Edward O'NEALE
and
Colleen Frances FARRELL.
Barbara
Helen O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Sidney Bolton O'NEALE
and
Noleen Katrina JOHNSON.
She was married to
Brian Edward GOUGH. Children were:
Tracy Helen GOUGH, Teresa Jo GOUGH.
Betty
Harriet O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Harold Richard O'NEALE
and
Theresa Ann HODDER.
She was married to
George Frederick FUGE. Children were: Jeanette Isobel
FUGE, Donald Frederick FUGE,
Lawrence George FUGE, Elaine Ngaire FUGE,
Steven James FUGE.
Brian
O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Clarence O'NEALE
and
Anita HUTCHBY.
Brian
James O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Kenneth Alan O'NEALE
and
Norine Lesley ASHDOWN.
Carl
O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Clarence O'NEALE
and
Anita HUTCHBY.
Cecil
David O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Harry Philip O'NEALE
and
Kathleen HODDER.
He was married to
Bronwyn Gail BARNARD. Children were: David Philip
O'NEALE, Christopher Glen O'NEALE.
Christina
Marie O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Kenneth Alan O'NEALE
and
Norine Lesley ASHDOWN.
Christopher
Glen O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Cecil David O'NEALE
and
Bronwyn Gail BARNARD.
Clarence
O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Harold Richard O'NEALE
and
Theresa Ann HODDER.
He was married to
Anita HUTCHBY. Children were: John O'NEALE,
Brian O'NEALE, Terry O'NEALE
, Carl O'NEALE.
David
Philip O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Cecil David O'NEALE
and
Bronwyn Gail BARNARD.
Geraldine
Leigh O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Harry Graeme O'NEALE
and
Barbara BROWN.
Gordon
Harold O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Reginald O'NEALE
and
Muriel Joyce FOLEY.
He was married to
Karen Rae JENSEN. Children were: Michael Gordon
O'NEALE, Teresa Karen O'NEALE.
He was married
to Brenda PANTALL.
Grant
Joseph O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Philip Alan O'NEALE
and
Angela GALBRAITH.
Gregory
Mark O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Harry Graeme O'NEALE
and
Barbara BROWN.
Harold
Richard O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born on 29 Jun 1881. He died on 24 Sep 1968.
He was married
to Theresa Ann HODDER on 2 Jun 1915. Children were:
Clarence O'NEALE, Marjorie
Rosalind O'NEALE, Sidney Bolton O'NEALE,
Betty Harriet O'NEALE, Thelma Grace O'NEALE,
Phyllis Edna O'NEALE, Reginald
O'NEALE.
Harry
Graeme O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born. Parents:
Harry Philip O'NEALE
and
Kathleen HODDER.
He was married to
Barbara BROWN. Children were: Gregory Mark O'NEALE
, Melanie Gail O'NEALE,
Kerensa Ruth O'NEALE, Geraldine Leigh O'NEALE
.
Harry
Philip O'NEALE(1)
(2) was born.
He was married to Kathleen
HODDER. Children were: John Edward O'NEALE,
Harry Graeme O'NEALE, Cecil
David O'NEALE, Kenneth Alan O'NEALE,
Ronald Christopher O'NEALE, Rowan Ernest O'NEALE
.
Hilda
O'NEALE(1)
(2) died UNKNOWN.
She was married to Francis
John HODDER on 13 Jan 1920.
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