Showing posts with label Mant family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mant family. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 July 2014

52 Ancestors #41 Henry John Mant

Henry John Mant was born in Freshford, Somerset, England on 25 February 1801. He was the eldest son of Henry Mant and Sarah Newton.

On 24 November 1817, in Bath, Henry John Mant signed a document  agreeing to be a 'Clerk to his father in profession of an Attorney at Law and Solicitor in Chancery for five years'. Thus began his legal profession. His father had his offices in Green Park Buildings in Bath. During part of 1804 and 1805, when Henry John Mant was a young child, Jane Austen lived with her family in Green Park Buildings in Bath. In her diary Jane records her father paying 30 pound to Henry Mant to rent No. 3 Green Park Buildings.

Green Park Buildings, Bath
The buildings were destroyed in The Blitz during the Second World War.

A search in Google for Henry John Mant shows references to documents witnessed by Henry John Mant as a solicitor. He appears to have been in at least two partnerships during his career - one with William Adair Bruce Attorneys & Solicitors which was dissolved on 31 December 1840 and Mant & Harvey Solicitors. His rooms were at 2 Wood Street, Queen Square in Bath and he had another address at 8 Northumberland Buildings, Bath.
2 Wood Street, Bath

On 15 February 1827, Henry John Mant married Catherine Mary Capper (1804-1861) in Bath. The 1841 census shows the family living at Middle Hill House, Ditteridge (near Bath) while the 1851 census has them living at Shrub Hill House, Box (near Bath). Henry and Catherine had nine children - Catherine Ellen Mant (1827-1903), Louisa Maria Mant (1828-1878), William Henry Mant (1830-1907), Georgina Sarah Mant (1833-1885), Frederick Duncan Mant (1835-1896), Mary Ethel Mant (1838-1911), Walter Heron Mant (1841-1918) and Adela Nona Mant (1844-1930). Five of the children - Catherine, William, Frederick, Mary and Walter migrated to Australia.

Henry John Mant died in Bath on 4 June 1858 and his wife, Catherine, died in Bath on 6 May 1861. Both Henry John and Catherine were buried in the crypt at St Saviour's Church, Bath.

Henry and Catherine were my great (x3) grandparents.

52 Ancestors #40 Catherine Ellen Mant

Catherine Ellen Mant was born in Bath, Somerset, England on 8 December 1827. She was the eldest daughter of Henry John Mant and Catherine Mary Capper. Her father was a solicitor in Bath. Census records show that the family lived in villages close to Bath - at Shrub Hill House, Box in 1841 and Middle Hibb House, Ditteridge in 1851. Catherine was 23 at the time of the 1851 census which shows that three of her sisters were listed as 'scholar at home' and were listed with their father. However the 1851 census shows other children living with their mother at Shrub Hill House in Bath. The family therefore appeared to have more than one residence in 1851. The two locations were not far from each other. The census indicates that the children all received an education.

On 30 March 1851 Catherine married John William Hillcoat in Bath. On 8 November 1851 Catherine and John left Plymouth aboard the ship, Adelaide, for Australia, arriving at Port Adelaide on 1 February 1852.

Catherine and John spent five or six years in South Australia where John experimented with farming opportunities, particularly raising and selling cattle, sheep and horses. Catherine gave birth to four children during this time - Catherine Anna Louisa Hillcoat (1852-1907), Henry Edgerton Hillcoat (1854-1919), Georgina Fanny Alicia Hillcoat (1855-1942) and Arthur William Mant Hillcoat (1856-1943). The family then returned to England, possibly at the end of 1857 or early 1858. In June 1858 Ethel Maria Hillcoat (1858-1943) was born at 40 York Terrace, Everton, Liverpool, the address of her grandfather Rev. H B W Hillcoat. As John William Hillcoat had been declared insolvent in South Australia it was possibly a wise move to leave the colony and start afresh elsewhere, so when they returned to Australia in 1859 the family settled in New South Wales.

The family's new home in Australia was at Maitland where the family was to make a new start. On 17 September 1859 the following advertisement appeared in the Maitland Mercury and Hunter River General Advertiser advising of the proposed establishment of a school for young ladies by Mrs Hillcoat.
EDUCATION.
MRS. HILLCOAT begs to intimate to the inhabitants of Maitland and the neighbourhood that it is her intention to OPEN an ESTABLISHMENT for the EDUCATION of YOUNG LADIES, at her residence, Box Cottage, Devonshire-street.
The course of instruction will comprise the usual branches of an English Education, with French, German, Music, Singing, Drawing, and Dancing.
Terms per Quarter:
    For Pupils under 12 years of age.... £1 10s.
    Above that age.... £2 3s.
    Day Boarders .... £3 15s 
    For Boarders, per annum £40 to £50.
EXTRAS
French, German, Music, Singing, Drawing, and Dancing.
References kindly are permitted to the undermentioned gentlemen :
    The right Rev. the Lord Bishop of Adelaide. Edward Broadhurst, Esq., Q.C.
    The Rev. J. R. Thackeray.
    Robert McDonald, Esq., Commercial Bank, Maitland. 
    Mr. Edward Peter Capper.
Payments to be made quarterly in advance; and a quarter's notice will be required previous to the removal of a Pupil.
The duties of the School will commence on the first Monday in October, 1859

Subsequent issues of the newspaper included advertisements showing the development of the school and term dates until 1868 when the family relocated to Queensland.

While in Maitland Catherine gave birth to three more children - Reginald Edward Rowe Hillcoat (1860-1925), Florence Ella Violet Hillcoat (1864-1963) and Leslie Cecil Brougham Hillcoat (1866-1937).

In the Gympie area John became involved with goldmining companies and then purchased two properties. One more son, Harold John Burke Hillcoat (1869-1939) was born. In 1871 John described the home that was being built for his family as  'a plain cottage of three bedrooms and a sitting room, just large enough to contain my family (eleven in all)'. Later the family would have moved into a homestead on either Ashley or Wodonga.

Catherine and John eventually moved to Sydney, probably to Longueville on the Lane Cove River, where they lived in a house named Ormah in Sydney. 

Catherine died at Longueville on 7 June 1903. 

Catherine Ellen Mant was my great (x2) grandmother.