Birth Cert. No. 14360 Born Talbot VIC |
Birth Cert. No 21714 Born Talbot VIC |
Cert No 13460/1925 Married in Leeton NSW |
Born: Hornsby NSW |
He may have died before 1762 because he is not mentioned in his father's Will dated 1 April 1962 |
Born St Martin in the Fields, London |
Born St. Phillips, Sydney NSW |
Birth Cert. No. V1830101411C/1830 Christened 15-11-1830, St Phillips, Sydney NSW |
Married at St Johns, Darlinghurst, Sydney NSW. Described in her marriage announcement in the Sydney Mail as: The eldest daughter of Frederick Garling Esq. of Wooloomooloo |
Born Camden NSW Corporal died Vimy Ridge, France in WW1. Remains never recovered. Posthumously awarded the Military Medal for 'Bravery in the Field" |
Birth Cert. No. 9066/1874 Known as an adventurer. Athelete and Rugby Player. WW1 Service Number: 629502 Rank: Corporal Unit: 47th Battalion Canadian Infantry (British Columbia Regiment) Service: Canadian Military Forces Conflict: 1914-1918 Date of Death: 05/05/1917 Place of Death: Cause of Death: Age at Death: 42 Cemetery or Memorial Details: 23. Vimy Memorial, France Next of Kin: Son of Clarence W.H. and Katharine Garling, of Sydney, Australia; husband of Julia Gertrude Garling, of 732, 9th Street East,North Vancouver |
Married in Vancouver BC Canada |
Born King St, Holborn, London. Died in Dowling St, Woolloomooloo, NSW |
The Observatory Hotel in George Street, Sydney is built on the site ofFrederick Jnr's home. Some of the ruins have been preserved and can be viewed by patrons. Death Cert. No 1560 Garling, Frederick (1806-1873), painter and customs officer, was born on 23 February 1806 in Holborn, eldest of the seven children of Frederick Garling and his first wife Elizabeth, nee Spratt. his father was appointed Crown solicitor of New South Wales (the second free lawyer to be sent to the colony) and he and his family, including Fred- erick junior, left England in October 1814 aboard the Francis and Eliza. After being captured by pirates off Madeira, the ship finally arrived at Sydney on 8 August 1815. All sources state that Garling was self-taught as a painter. Nevertheless, at the age of twenty-one lie was apparently appointed artist on an exploratory expedition, albeit a brief and impromptu one, to the Swan River (Western Australia) under Captain James Stirling, in HMS Success, irregularly authorised from Sydney by Governor Darling at Stirling's insistence. The expedition arrived in March 1827 and the attractive pencil arid watercolour views taken on the eleven-day expedition along the Swan which are attributed to Garling must have reinforced Stirling's argument that the place would be a most suitable site for a colony. Some of these (unsigned) sketches and finished watercolours are now in the collections of the Art Gallery of Western Aus- tralia and the National Library, e.g. View of the Flat,, Swan River Taken from Fraser's Point (1827, AGWA). They formed the basis of prints after the English marine painter William John Huggins and a painting by Dr Frederick Clause (q.v.). Back at Sydney, Garling accepted the position oflanding waiter with the Customs Office at £250 a year, but he con- tinued to paint watercolours, mainly of Sydney and the harbour, such as View of Sydnes Cove (c. 1838, DG). In 1829 he married Elizabeth, eldest datighter of Lieutenant Ward of the 1st Regiment and niece of General Hawkshaw of the East India Coy's service. Married in St Phillip's Church, Sydney; they had seven sons and four daughters. The family was living in Market Lane by September 1842 when the German painter Jacob Janssen (q.v.) lodged with them. In 1847 Garling was promoted acting landing surveyor. Again this seems not to have affected his painting activities. At the first exhibition of the Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia, in 1847 Garling senior lent eight- een works, including two by his son: A Wharf in Darling Harbour and The 'Britomart' off Sydney Head', Signallingfor a Pilot. His View of Sydney from the North Shore was lent by the engraver William Baker (q.v.). 'Garling we look upon as one of our best marine painters', noted the Sydney Morning Herald of26 July 1847, 'though he has still some lessons to learn. He understands the build ofa ship well and he gives us something more than a bare likeness of a ship-be paints a picture-he has some knowledge of breadth of effect, but there is a stiffness in the water and a want of toning in his pictures, which he ought to struggle against. . . His landscapes are not to be compared with his marine views. In 1856 before a parliamentary select committee, and in 1859 before a board of inquiry, he gave detailed evidence on the state and working of the Customs Department. One of Garling's marine paintings was offered as a prize in the Fords' Sydney Art Union in 1848 along with works by George Edwards Peacock, Joseph Fowles (qq.v.) and other Sydney artists. In 1849 he was listed in the catalogue of the second exhibition of the Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia as a practising artist of Macquarie Street, Sydney. By the time of this exhibition, to which Mr Jobson lent Garling's The 'Oliver Cromwell' in a Gale, he was considered a native-born artist. The Sydney Morning Herald of 2 June 1849 commented that The 'Oliver Cromwell' was 'The only bit from the pencil of a gentleman who, born and educated in the colony, is more particularly identified with colortial art, It is a pleasing drawing, free and easy, but the water is somewhat deficient in trans- parency and colour'. After these early exhibitions Garling's paintings were rarely shown publicly, although in 1870 his Flying Squadron was shown at the Sydney Intercolonial Exhi- bition and won a highly commended certificate as the work of an amateur colonial artist. Moore states that Garling earned his living at the Cus- toms House throughout his life, having only early morn- ings and weekends to spend on his painting, yet he was again listed as a professional artist (at 26 Campbell Street) in 1867. he certainly produced a very large corpus ofwork arid "'as inidoubtedly Syducy's most prolific marine painter. According to Moore, Garling painted every ship which visited Sydney: 'when a new vessel anchored in the harbour he would take the earliest opportunity to go out in his rowing boat, drop a kellick, and make a sketch. His pictures ships are said to be faithfully drawn, with not a rope out of place'. Romantic watercolour landscapes, such as An Australian Bush Fire near Erminton [the family property] (1840s), Railway Viaduct, Evening and The Tank Stream (1842, ML) have been attributed to Garling. Few are signed. He provided at least one original sketch (Porcupine Anteater) from which an en- graving was published in the Illustrated Sydney News, and he wrote undistinguished verse. Frederick Garling died in Sydney on 16 November 1873, having shown a watercolour, At Manly Beach, non-competi- tively with the Agricultural Society of New South Wales only a few months earlier. At least three of his sons- Frederick Augustus, William (qq.v.) and Clarence- also painted. Information: Frank McDonald |
Marriage Cert. No. V18294683 3B |
Born in Holborn, London Died at Aspinall Lodge, Sydney NSW Burial: Devonshire St Cemetery, Sydney NSW ================================ The Devonshire Cemetery was situated where Sydney Central Railway is now located. The remain of the buried were relocated at Rookwood cemetery complete with headstones, some were also relocated to St Stephens Camperdown. I have the MIs for Camperdown and searched for Frederick Garling without success. Devonshire St Cemetery was also called Sandhills and Sydney Burial Ground - Central Railway Station is on the original site. All the headstones were removed to Botany (I think) when Central was built, but there is a book available with listings of all the headstones at the time, with their inscriptions. I don't know the name of the book, but it is available through libraries. The Devonshire St Cemetery site is now under the Central Railway station complex in Sydney. The hreadstones and remains were moved to Botany Cemetery when the railway was being built in the 2nd half of the 1800's, and those headstones still exiting after the years are now in the 'Pioneer Park' section ofthe cemetery near Bunnerong in southern Sydney, near Botany Bay. |
Concise Guide to the State Archives (Courts of ReQBsts - G) : Crown Solicitor's Office -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROWN SOLICITOR'S OFFICE Judge Jeffrey Hart Bent nominated "two respectable solicitors", W.H. Moore and F. Garling, who were to receive a salary of £300 per annum asan inducement for them to become the first non-convict solicitors in the colony. It was hoped they would supplement their private practicesby assisting the Crown in the procedure of the Courts of Judicature. Moore arrived on 27 January 1815. The list of Civil and Military appointments of that year had Moore as Solicitor to the Crown, appointed bythe Crown. Mr Justice Bent delayed the assembling of the new Court ofCivil Judicature, supposedly awaiting the arrival of Garling (8 August 1815). In 1815 Frederick Garling was offered the position of Deputy-Judge Advocate following the death of J.H. Bent. Garling was immediately confronted by Justice Bent who refused to release his brother's records of the Criminal Court and it was not until Macquarie censured Bent that Garling received access. Moore built up a lucrative practice and prospered in his commercial transactions but his career as a public servant was very chequered' - in1816 Macquarie withdrew his salary and indulgences etc. Not only did he continue to let the Crown down in criminal cases but was instrumental in maintaining a perpetual state of muddle in the Crown Solicitor'sOffice. Earl Bathurst in the despatch of 1 January 1817 censured Macquarie and ordered him to reinstate Moore with all privileges. A despatch dated 17 July 1827 informed Darling of the appointment of athird Judge and intended appointment of a Solicitor General, such changes rendering it possible to dispense with the office of Crown Solicitor. By 1829 Darling realised that some change was necessary in the interests of the Crown and of justice in the colony. He sought advice and theideas of the Attorney-General, Baxter, and Solicitor-General, Sampson. Sampson suggested the employment of a person with a general acquaintance with law principles and a thorough knowledge of practice and duty of an attorney with a salary of £200 per annum. However it was Baxter'ssuggestion that the work was more than clerical and demanded a Crown Solicitor at £500 per annum, that was accepted. Sanction was given by a Minute of the Executive Council 18 June 1829. Meanwhile Garling and Moore, who wished to return to their original £300 per annum, were refused by Darling on the orders of the Under-Secretary. Moore, in a letter to Sir George Murray 13 October 1829 claimingretrospective salary, stated that the £300 per annum was only an inducement to leave and practice in New South Wales as a stipendiary magistrate. In 1830 he wrote to the Governor complaining of the increasing amount of work since the death of the Solicitor-General and reQBsting a clerk; Murray approved the appointment of a clerk. In 1833 Colonial Secretary Macleay wrote to Moore outlining the role of Crown Solicitor: (a) upon instructions from the Attorney-General to send a list to the gaols naming prisoners to stand trial and the date;(b) subpoena witnesses for the defence as well as prosecution, and keep a written record of subpoenas; (c) prepare briefs for the SolicitorGeneral in court and give assistance to the Attorney General whenevernot in attendance with the Solicitor General. By 1834 Bourke found it necessary to suspend Moore from the position of Crown Solicitor due to neglect of duties. Later that year Bourke's action was ratified by the Crown and Moore's annuity was to cease as ithad in 1830-32. In 1835 Bourke announced that Mr F. Fisher was to be appointed Crown Solicitor pending confirmation, with a salary of £500 per annum withoutclerk or stationery. However Fisher wanted to forego all private practice and receive £800 per annum. Lord Glenelg by a despatch of 26 February 1836 informed Bourke that Fisher's appointment and his reQBst for£800 per annum were acceptable to the Crown. However by September of that year because of pressure of business Bourke found it necessary toemploy two clerks on behalf of the Crown Solicitor at a combined £220per annum. In 1839 Gipps made reforms in the office of the Crown Solicitor. The office was divided into Criminal and Civil and was established as such by a Minute of the Legislative Council dated 23 July 1839. In an attempt to conserve Colonial funds two Crown Solicitors were employed at a combined salary of £900 per annum. Mr Moore Dillon became a Criminal Crown Solicitor at £800 per annum, and Mr G.J. Turner became Civil Crown Solicitor at £400 per annum at the same time maintaining their private practices. These arrangements were approved by Lord John Russell in a despatch of 2 July 1840. Turner resigned in 1850 and was replaced by William Billyard. The Crown Solicitor was a legal officer of the Judicial Establishment responsible to the chief law officer, the Attorney General. After 1856the Attorney General became a political appointment. In 1873 the Department of Justice was established. These two departments combined in 1901 with the Crown Solicitor remaining under the cONrol of the Attorney General. The Crown Solicitor acts as solicitor for, and legal advisor to, the Government. As such his Office provides services to Ministers of the Crown, the various areas of the Executive Government, other public bodies and authorities, persons in the service of the State requiring legalassistance arising in the course of their official responsibilities, and other persons in respect of whom the Office may from time to time be authorised to act. Such legal services include the conduct and defence of all manner of litigation; appearances before and conduct of cases in the Courts and before other tribunals; the conduct of criminal and quasi-criminal prosecutions; the completion of purchases, resumptions and other conveyingtransactions; and the preparation of agreements, cONracts, deeds and all kinds of legal documents and forms. The Crown Solicitor advises onmatters involving the legal interpretation of statutes, regulations and by-laws, and generally on any QBstion of a legal nature submitted to him by the Government or any Government department or agency for which he acts. The Crown Solicitor's Office also provides assistance to Royal Commissions, Government inquiries and coronial inquiries as well as providingfacilities for debt recovery. Concise Guide to the State Archives (Courts of ReQBsts - G) : Governor's Court -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNOR'S COURT For further information see published Guide No. 20. The Charter of Justice cONained in letters patent of 2 April 1787 provided for the establishment of Civil and Criminal Courts in the Colony.The Civil Court to be called the Court of Civil Jurisdiction was the direct antecedent of the Governor's Court. A new Charter of Justice under letters patent of 4 February 1814 revoked that part of the letters patent granted in 1787 relating to the establishment of the Court of Civil Jurisdiction and established three courts of Civil Judicature - the Governor's Court, the Supreme Court andthe Lieutenant Governor's Court. The Governor's Court comprised the Deputy Judge Advocate and two members appointed by the Governor, or alternatively, any two of them, the Deputy Judge Advocate being one. The Court was empowered to hear and determine all pleas where the sum in dispute was not more than £50 sterling with no right of appeal. A similar Court, the Lieutenant Governor's Court, was established in Tasmania. The Governor's Court was first assembled in May 1815 and from 1817 also assembled twice a year at least at Parramatta and Windsor for the trial of causes. Under the Act 4 Geo. IV c.96 the new Charter of Justicegranted on 13 October 1823 created a Supreme Court with jurisdiction over all pleas "civil criminal or mixed". Such cases as were incomplete in the Governor's Court as at the end of its last term in May 1824 were taken over by the Supreme Court as part of its jurisdiction. 1. Precepts and warrants, 1815-24, CGS 4559 (City 4/7856). 1 vol. Precepts, which were issued by the Governor for each session of the Court, conferred legal validity on the sitting of the Court. The precepts, which were addressed to the Judge Advocate, direct his attendance at the Court as a member. They are signed by the Governor and designatethe date, the time and the place at which the Court is to be convened. The precept also names the other two members to comprise the said Court. Upon receiving the precept, the Judge Advocate issued a warrant to the Provost Marshal instructing him to summon the other two members of the Court to attend. The warrant, which was attached to the precept, also specified the date, the time and the place of the Court. 2. Rules and orders, 1814-24, CGS 4560 (City 4/7857A-B). 2 vols. Volume 4/7857B comprises the Rules and Orders of the Governor's Court drawn up by the Judge Advocate, Ellis Bent, before his death in 1815. In this manuscript volume there are 67 numbered rules, including thoseconcerning the admissibility of attorneys to practise, regulations concerning the issuing and returning of writs, the keeping of court records, the execution of judgments, the giving of sureties for appearance, provisions for trial in actions where the sum sued for did not exceed £5, rules for pleading, and so forth. Each rule was given a short title which is cONained in the margin. Bent's rules remained officially in force through the Judge Advocacy of Garling and until Wylde introduced a simplified procedure in 1817, although minor changes prior to this were reported in the Sydney Gazette. Judge Advocate Wylde's annotated printed copy of the Rules and Orders,cONaining additional rules in his own hand and notes on which of the original rules were "not in operation" in October 1821, is to be foundin the Mitchell Library. GARLING, FREDERICK [1775-1848], Solicitor, son of Nicholas Garling, a London architect, practised in London in New North Street, Red Lion Square, as an attorney in the Court of King's Bench and a solicitor in the Court of Chancery until 1814. In February of that year he and another London solicitor, W. H. Moore [q.v.], were selected to go to Sydneyto conduct cases before the Court of Criminal Jurisdiction and the newly-established Supreme Court and Governor's Court. Both Garling and Moore had been recommended to the Colonial Office by J. H. Bent, and while Garling, on Bent's suggestion, was designated the first of the two crown solicitors, each was given a salary of £300 as an inducement to undertake the risks of the voyage to New South Wales. When Ellis Bent died on 10 November 1815 the office of deputy-judge-advocate fell vacant. Next day Macquarie appointed Garling a magistrateof the colony and by commission dated 12 November appointed him acting deputy-judge-advocate. The appointment of Garling, instead of J. H Bent, to this office was a result of Bent's quarrel with Macquarie, but it ment that there was only one free solicitor practising in the colony; while holding the position of deputy-judge-advocate. Garling allowed emancipist solicitors to practise in the Governor's Court and the Criminal Court. Three criminal courts were held during his term and the severity of the sentences passed by two of these courts was made a subject of inquiry by Commissioner Begge. Garling acted as deputy-judge-advocate 'with zeal, impartiality and integrity' according to Macquarie, until 5 October 1916 when John Wylde arrived and took up the duties of the office. Garling then reverted to the position of crown solicitor, in addition to which he enjoyed a large private practice. This appointment of an attorney-general and a solicitor-general in 1824 meant that the government did not, for a time, need to engage eitherGarling or Moore, and in 1828 the office of crown solicitor was abolished. When it was revived in August 1829, Garling was not reappointed, although until 1832 he was improperly listed on the schedules of thecivil establishment under the designation of crown solicitor. In March 1824 Brisbane appointed Garling clerk of the peace for the County of Cumberland. As such he attended all the Quarter Sessions held at Sydney, Parramatta, Campbelltown and Windsor, and was specially empowered to file information in the name of the Attorney-general. In January 1830 he was appointed crown prosecutor for the Courts of Quarter Sessions, and he acted in the double Capacity of clerk of the peace and crown prosecutor and Quarter Sessions until September 1837. In October he was succeeded by George Holden as crown prosecutor. He remained clerk of the peace until January 1839 when his retirement was sanctioned by Governor Gipps on account of his old age and infirmity. On 9 June 1828 Garling's first wife Elizabeth, nee Spratt, to whom he was married at Bloomsbury, London on 14 April 1801, died at the age of52. By this marriage there were five children, Frederick, Nicholas, Sophia, Elizabeth and Jane. On 15 September 1835 Garling married Sarah Olivia, third daughter of Thomas White Wilkinson of the Ordnance Department, and formerly of the King's Own Regiment. Sarah Garling died inSeptember 1840. Garling himself died on 2 May 1848, aged 73, and wasburied two days later in the Devonshire Street Cemetery. During his term as crown solicitor Garling was not considered to be professionally retained in the service of the colonial government. Although he never acted against the Crown, he enjoyed a large private practice, freQBntly appearing in court on behalf of his clients. In September 1824 when W. C. Wentworth and Robert Wardell raises the QBstion of the right of local solicitors to appear before the Supreme Court, Garling spoke in defence of that right, which was upheld by Chief Justice Forbes. There were two particularly important trials in which Garling acted as a barrister. He appeared for J. T. Campbell in October 1817 when Campbell was tried by the Criminal Court for a libel on SamuelMarsden, a trial which was criticised at length by J. T. Bigge in order to illistrate the incompatible duties exercised by John Wylde, the deputy-judge-advocate. Garling gave important evidence to Bigge, who recommended him conditionally for the post of attorney-general in Van Diemen's Land, although he also made adverse comments on his financialembarrassments and delinQBncies. In 1822, in the case Burn v. Howe and Fletcher, which essentially concerned the powers or the magistrates in New South Wales, Garling appeared for the magistrate, William Howe. Garling ceased practising as a solicitor after his appointment as crown prosecutor for the Courts of Quater Sessions. He was unable to discharge the duties of both clerk of the pease and crown prosecutor efficiently, not because he was lazy or lacked ability, but because the twooffices could not effectively be combined in the one person. He was generous and public-spirited, and served on several committees, including those of the Female and Male Orphan Institutions, the Native Institution, the Bible Society, the Sydney Dispensary and the Benevolent Society. He was interested in agriculture and horticulture, was granted1200 acres by Macquarie in 1819, was a foundation member of the Australian Racing Club, and a shareholder in the Bank of New South Wales. |
Married in Bloomsbury, London |
Married in St Matthews Church, Windsor, NSW |
Born Manilla NSW Died Redfern, Sydney NSW |
Born St. Phillips, Sydney NSW Died Bowen North Qld |
Birth Cert. No. V183325217/1833 Garling, Frederick Augustus (1833-1910), sketcher, surveyor and settler, was born in Sydney on 29 June 1833, eldest son of the painter Frederick Garling and Eliza- beth, nee Ward. Educated at St James's Grammar School in Phillip Street under Rev. Thomas Bodenham, Garling left school at an early age to work for the wine and spirits merchant Harold Selwyn Smith. After some dramatic ex- periences at sea as a cabin boy, in 1861 he joined up with a survey party to Queensland led by his cousin, Clarendon Stuart (q.v.). According to his obituary, it was the illus- trations of S. T. Gill (q.v.) which decided him on pursuing a life in the bush. As his younger brothers William (q.v. ) and Clarence (whose surviving works appear to have been ex- ecuted from the 1870s) took art lessons in Sydney with S. T. Gill, it is probable that Frederick Augustus was also Gill's pupil. Garling settled in Queensland. In 1863 he joined a Survey expedition seeking country suitable for stock in northern Queensland. In 1866, as a member of Frederick Walker's survey to the Gulf of Carpentaria preparing the route for the overland telegraph, he kept a journal (now lost) and drew many sketches, one of which shows Walker's grave on the Leichhardt River. This was drawn on 19 November 1866, just after the expedition's leader was buried, and is one of his two known surviving works (both p.c.). The remainder of Frederick Augustus Garling's life was spent on the land. He played an active role in civic affairs in the township of Bowen, where he died, unmarried, on 5 March 1910. INFORMATION: Bill Kitson. |
Born "Ardee" Kite Street Orange NSW Died from cardiogenic shock, 2 days after aortic aneurysm in Royal North Shore Hospital St Leonards NSW. Burial Northern Suburbs Crematorium 22-7-1985 Ashes scattered over Pittwater NSW. |
Preferred to be called Peter. Baptised in Church of England Named after his uncle Peter Fletcher who looked after him whilst his father was fighting in WWI. |
Married at Manly Presbyterian Church, at time of marriage Peter was a Forrester at Gilgandra NSW & Margaret a Teacher at Manly NSW. Margaret married Arthur Fredrick Morris Brown, previously marred to her sister Barbara McVicar (deceased) at Mona Vale Uniting Church on |
Born at St Mary Colechurch, London |
Born St Lawrences Sydney NSW Died Waverly, Sydney NSW |
Birth Cert. No V1846484 31A/1846 Selected part of Fort Bourke in the early nineties- Mudgee mail 10-Nov-1938 |
Marriage Cert. no. 3458 Married at St Paul's, Murrurundi NSW. As she was under the age of 21 the marriage required her to obtain the consent of her guardian G. G. Brodie. |
Birth Cert. No. 22850/1881 Served in Boer War Number: 3231 Rank: Trooper Unit: 3 NSW IMPERIAL BUSHMEN Fate: State: NSW Murray Page Number: 153 |
Married in Nundle NSW |
He may have died before 1762 because he is not mentioned in his father's Will dated 1 April 1762 |
Born at St Martin in the Fields, London |
Born Sydney, NSW. Awarded LLM. |
Married at Kincoppal, Rose Bay, Sydney NSW |
Born (William St) Sydney NSW Died Sydney NSW |
Birth Cert. No. 3224/1884 Buried with first wife Mary in Temora Cemetry: Portion 1, Section 15. Served as Sgt in 4th B A Bde 3/7/16-8/7/19 in AIF during WW1, reached the rank of sargent in 2 DAC. Also registered on Honour Roll for Army WWII S# N439703. Gerald is the only man I have ever met who could sum large columns of money (LSD) , mentally, whilst conducting a conversation at the same time. |
Married at St James Church, Plumstead, Kent, England |
Married at Attunga Via Tamworth NSW |
Born Coonamble NSW Died in childhood during a diptheria epidemic at Gilgandra NSW |
Birth Cert. NO. 32620/1905 Death Cert. No. 11653/1914 |
Born Walgett NSW |
married in Sydney NSW |
Born Gilgandra NSW. Died Artamon, Sydney NSW. Cremated Northern Suburbs Crematorium. |
Born Gilgandra NSW. Served Army WWII s#'s N103478 & NX38045. |
Cert No 4830/1943. Married at North Sydney, NSW |
Born Chatswood, Sydney NSW |
Born Camden NSW Died Hornsby, Sydney NSW |
Birth Cert. No. 8321/1872 Death Cert. No. 25695/1941 |
Married in Forbes NSW |
Born Mudgee NSW |
Born Mudgee NSW |
Cert No 16431/1928 Married in Chatswood, Sydney NSW |
Born Camden NSW Died Woollahra NSW |
Birth Cert. No. 8123/1870 Death Cert. No. 31137/1942 010. New South Wales Senator appointed: Henry Garling (Nat) Date: 15 December 1921 Cause: Resignation of Hon Herbert Pratten (Nat) Term expired 15.12.22. Defeated at election held on 16.12.22. At one time Councillor, Woolahra Council. |
Married at Waverly, Sydney NSW |
Born at St Andrews, Holborn (unconfirmed) |
Notes for HENRY GARLING: Date said to be about 8 Feb 1789 is date of baptism. Marriage to Isabella BAILEY must be checked for accuracy, as identities not confirmed. |
Born St Andrews, Holborn (unconfirmed) |
Married in Redbourne, Hertford (unconfirmed) |
Born in Young NSW |
Cert No 164/1936 Married in Sydney NSW |
Born Mudgee NSW Ashes buried Eastern Suburbs Memorial Park, Sydney NSW |
Served at Lieut. 5th M G Bn 22/3/15-5/4/19 Army S# N76658 |
Married in Gilgandra NSW |
Born Dubbo NSW Died Gilgandra NSW |
Death Cert. No. 7968/1918 |
Born in Vancuver, BC Canada |
Born Mudgee NSW |
Birth Cert. No. 32624/1898 |
Married in Ashfield, Sydney NSW |
Born in Casino NSW, baptised Presbyterian Casino NSW 1941. Grew up as a very athletic child in western NSW. Left home at the age of 16, when awarded a Telecommunications Traineeship with the Post Master Generals Dept. Assigned to the Long Line & Country Installation Division No 6 installing telephone exchanges in southern NSW. Resigned from position of Senior Technician in 1964 and accepted a position as Telecommunications Engineer with Standard telephones and Cables Pty Ltd, designing public telephone exchanges. When computer controlled exchanges were on the drawing boards, he transferred to the STC domestic EDP Dept., as a Sytems Analyst to gain computer experience. He decided to stay with computing as a career and spent from 1969 to 1971 developing STC's manufacturing systems using BOMP on IBM mainframes. Pioneered Structured Programming Techniques and Database design in theearly days of Software Engineering in Australia. Moving through a progression of computing positions, primarily using IBM mid-range mainframe computers, starting with Adler Business Machines, Clark Equipment, Tyree Westinghouse, Red Tulip and Simon Engineering. When he retired in 1996 because of bad health Ian had reached the position of South East Asian Regional IT Manager. Being multi-skilled in software, hardware, and network engineering, together with extensive computing administration experience, he was coaxed out of retirement by SOCOG for the 2000 Olympics, accepting a contract as one of their Technology Managers working at the Cecil Park Shooting Venue. He had another heart attack soon after and now leads a very sedate life, dabbling in computers when the opportunity presents itself. Major interests are fishing, lawn bowls and computer graphics. Currently he is Webmaster for the NSW Fishing Clubs Fishing Clubs Associationand the Publicity Officer for Toukley RSL Bowling Club. Previously hehas been past president/office bearer for Parramatta Leagues Club Fishing Club for over 17 years and was past Junior Vice President of Wentworthville RSL Memorial Bowling Club. |
Married at Alexander Memorial Presbyterian Church, Ryde NSW |
Born Cootamundra NSW |
Maried at Cabarita, Sydney NSW |
Birth Cert. No. 28986/1904 |
Married Gulgong NSW |
Born at Hobartville, Richmond NSW |
Cert. No. 2131/1904 Married at St Leonards, Sydney NSW |
Born Gilgandra NSW Died Sydney NSW |
Owned an apartment at the Astor, Macquarie Street, Sydney NSW. Was a Lieutenant in 113 Aust. Gen. Hospital Corp. Army S#'s NX133569 &NX70606. Benefactor (A$4M) to the State Library for the Garling Room. |
Birth Cert. No. 2542/1903 Born Coonamble NSW |
Cert No 15949/1925. Married in Woollahra,Sydney NSW |
Cert No 1397/1931. Married at Randwick, Sydney NSW |
Born Coonamble NSW |
Cert No 19434/1928 Married in Gilgandra NSW |
Reportedly died in India |
Born Bloomsbury, London |
Born in Sydney NSW |
Born at Westminster, St Pauls, Covent Garden, London |
Born at St Mary Colechurch, London |
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