Saturday, March 21, 2020

43.3.2.4.1 The Family of Dr William Moore Miller




The Family of Dr William Moore Miller




Dr John Moore Miller was the son of Thomas Miller and Elizabeth Moore.

He was born in 1820 at Black Town Madras, India, one of three children.

His siblings were

Jane Paske Miller                        1818 – 1878
Elizabeth Miller                                      1820

His mother died in India, in 1821.

His father was Captain Thomas Miller, of the 46th Regiment which served in New South Wales in 1815.   Thomas married Elizabeth Moore in Sydney in June 1915.

 

The first question is “How was Elizabeth Moore in Sydney in 1815?”

  After their marriage the 46th went to India.


1814–1818
1/46th [South Devonshire]
Sydney; Newcastle; VDL
from Cowes; to Madras






Elizabeth was the daughter of John Moore, a solicitor from London and his wife Martha Ann Field.  She was born 1785 in London.  The children were

1.      Elizabeth Moore                       1785 – 1821  India  m Capt Thomas Miller
2.      William Henry Moore               1789 -  1854  NSW  m  Mary Ann Hanks
3.     Frederick Moore                        1790
4.     Ann Field Moore                      1792 -  1877  NSW m William Cordeaux
5.     Thomas Matthew Moore           1795  - 1854  NSW
6.      Martha Louisa Moore                1801  - 1895  Sale VIC.  Her mother died shortly afterwards

Martha died before 1802, and John Moore remarried Mary Camper Hasselden


With Mary his children were:
Mary Catherine Moore               1802  -   1827  in India
Charles Dodwell Moore             1804  -   1834 -  NSW 
.
John Moore died in London in 1813.
Mary Campen Moore was still alive in 1818.

At that time her daughter was married, and shortly afterwards her son came to Australia to join his step brothers.



The Australian Dictionary of Biography provides some important clues, as to this family.

WILLIAM HENRY MOORE, (1788?-1854), solicitor, was the elder son of John Moore, a London solicitor, and his first wife Martha (Ann) Field. He served his clerkship with his father and in 1810 was admitted an attorney of the three superior courts at Westminster. For most of 1813 he acted as under-sheriff of London and Middlesex in place of his father who had died in January that year, and in February 1814 was recommended by Jeffery Bent for appointment as one of the two unconvicted 'solicitors of the Crown' whom Bathurst proposed to send to New South Wales, to overcome earlier difficulties with ex-convict attorneys there.
With Frederick Garling Moore was chosen and each was promised a salary of £300 from colonial funds as compensation for leaving England and undertaking the risks of practice in the colony. They were at first called 'stipendiary Solicitors', and later 'Crown or Government Solicitors', although they had 'no Public or Official Duty to perform' and were never considered 'as professionally retained in the service of the Colonial Government'.Recommended to Governor Lachlan Macquarie for 'every Privilege and Protection … extended to the Civil Colonial Officers of the Higher Classes', Moore sailed in the Marquis of Wellington with two sisters and a brother, and arrived at Sydney on 27 January 1815.

 On 11 May he was admitted to the courts as the first free solicitor in the colony. He showed a strong partiality for anti-emancipist politics. In February 1816 he joined Rev. Benjamin Vale in seizing the American schooner Traveller as a legal prize under the Navigation Acts, was suspended by Macquarie for 'insolence and insubordination' and denied every indulgence that had been extended to him. A year later Macquarie reported him to London as the 'Chief mover and promoter of a Memorial' to the House of Commons 'to convey Charges of the Most False and Malicious nature against me' and for forging signatures to this petition. After somewhat heated correspondence with the Colonial Office in November 1819 Moore apologized for his actions, and was then reinstated and given his indulgences and arrears of pay. Under Governor Sir Thomas Brisbane Moore was more cautious; though opposed to Henry Grattan Douglass in his controversies with the Parramatta magistrates he avoided improper participation in the affair, and in September 1825 was appointed King's coroner or master of the Crown office with an additional salary of £300, but he narrowly escaped censure for organizing the exclusives' dinner to celebrate Brisbane's departure.
Under Governor (Sir) Ralph Darling Moore acted for nearly a year as attorney-general after the resignation of Saxe Bannister in October 1826, and he assured the governor that he had acted legally in the Sudds-Thompson affair; however, Darling was critical of his capacity and in December 1827 suspended him as 'Crown Solicitor' for supporting resolutions at a Turf Club dinner which the governor thought insulting. Moore's willing support for Darling's opponents seems out of character and he strongly protested his innocence. In a lengthy review of the disputes in the colony the secretary of state disapproved Darling's action in removing him. Moore's post of 'Crown Solicitor', in the sense in which the term was applied to him, was abolished, and the subsidy originally authorized by Bathurst was withdrawn. In 1852 Moore successfully petitioned the Legislative Council for compensation and was awarded £1800.
In 1829 the office of crown solicitor in the modern sense of the term, previously held by Thomas Wylde, was revived, and Moore was appointed to it at a salary of £500, but without the right of private practice. In conducting the business of the Crown in the Supreme Court he was often outmatched by able opponents such as Robert Wardell and William Charles Wentworth and, though Moore sought the position of solicitor-general, Darling repeatedly stressed his incompetence, adding that he was 'certainly not disposed to serve the Government', was 'one of the most idle Men living' and urged his dismissal. In response to these mounting complaints of negligence, unnecessary delays and unintelligible reports, in June 1831 Governor (Sir) Richard Bourke was ordered to inquire into the solicitor's conduct.
 In January 1832 Bourke reported that Moore had been 'culpably neglectful on several occasions', but he hoped that the arrival of the new attorney-general, John Kinchela would improve Moore's work. However, in 1834 the resentful letters which he wrote after being rebuked for refusing to prepare briefs led to his final suspension and his attempts to obtain an annuity were unsuccessful, though in 1842 he was appointed by the Supreme Court to examine persons applying for admission as attorneys. 
Protected by Bathurst's promises and assured of a monopoly of private practice by Bent's refusal to admit ex-convict attorneys in court, Moore had built up a very lucrative private law office and by 1822 Commissioner John Thomas Bigge could report to the Colonial Office that Garling and Moore had been 'very fully remunerated' for the expense of moving to the colony.
At first Moore's brother, Thomas Matthews, had been his clerk and as a partner he had Edward Joseph Keith in 1825-27, his stepbrother Charles Dodwell Moore in 1828-34 and George S. Yarnton in 1841-42.Moore had many other interests. In 1836-42 he was a director of the Commercial Banking Co. of Sydney, in 1837 became a shareholder in the Marine Insurance Co., a committee member of the Royal Exchange, and in 1842 chairman of the Union Assurance Co. In and around Sydney he acquired much land, some of it leased to tenants and some, at the corner of George and King Streets, he sold in 1834 at up to £55 10s. a foot.
His chief farm, which he bought from Simeon Lord in 1824, was at the seven-mile (11 km) post on the Liverpool Road. From his properties in County Camden in 1838 he sent sheep overland to Adelaide and went there himself to sell them. In 1842 Moore offered himself unsuccessfully for appointment as town clerk of the new Sydney Municipal Council, claiming the special qualification of having had business associations with the Corporation of London. Next year, with liabilities exceeding his assets of £66,000, he was declared insolvent. Much of his country land had to be sold and his library of eight hundred volumes was offered at auction. His certificate of discharge is not officially recorded but it appears from recitals in a conveyance registered in 1853 that it was allowed by the Supreme Court on 8 July 1845.
At his death on 13 October 1854 in College Street, Sydney, he left his remaining city land to his sister Ann, widow of William Cordeaux, and some £2300 of goods and shares to his wife Mary, née Hanks, whom he had married on 13 August 1844 at St James's Church, Sydney, and who died on 5 November 1871, aged 65.

From that information, William had a sister, Ann, a brother Thomas Matthew Moore, and step-brother Charles Dodwell Moore.
He arrived in 1813, to take up his appointment and brought with him, his brother and two sisters.
Those were Elizabeth and Ann, and his brother Thomas.  

From information in wills, it is revealed that his sister Martha, came to Australia in 1836.  She left an annuity to her niece,  Elizabeth Ann Miller.  Elizabeth was the daughter of her sister Elizabeth, who married Capt Miller.

From records, Charles Dodwell Moore came to Australia in 1821




Thomas Matthew Moore  d  1854

Died June 24th, 1854 at Leppington, the residence of his sister, Thomas M. Moore, Esq., J.P. of Maneroo, in the 60th year of his age.

New South Wales Government Gazette (Sydney, NSW : 1832 - 1900), Tuesday 15 August 1854 (No.100), page 1780

In the Supreme Court of New South Wales.  ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION.
In the Will of Thomas Matthews Moore, formerly of Maneroo, and lately residing at Leppington, near Liverpool, in the Colony of New South Wales, Esquire, deceased. - ;
NOTICE is hereby given, that William Henry Moore, of the City of Sydney; solicitor, and Mrs Ann Cordeaux, of Leppington aforesaid,; widow, the Executor and Executrix named said appointed in and by the last Will and Testaments of the abovenamed Thomas Matthews Moore,  deceased, intend, after the expiration of fourteen days from the publication hereof, to apply to the Supreme Court of New South Wales, in its; Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction, that Probate of I said Will may be granted to them.—Dated the  fifteenth day of August, 1854.

NORTON, SON, & BARKER,   Proctors for the Applicants.

Martha Louisa Moore d 1895

There died on Friday at Mr E. L. Bruce's residence, a lady who had a somewhat remarkable career. Miss Martha Louisa Moore, was born on March 26th., 1804 so was 92 years of age when she died. Her father, Thomas Moore, was a well known London lawyer and under sheriff of that city.
Having practised his profession in France for some years, his house in London was at the time of the great revolution, the resort of many French refugees, to whom he was a good friend. Miss Moore emigrated to Sydney in 1836, to join her brothers and her sister, who had preceded her in 1813.
One of these brothers was a lawyer, and at one time Attorney General of New South Wales, the other a squatter. Becoming tired of an inactive life, Miss Moore then resolved to establish a ladies' school in Sydney. This became the best known institution of the kind in the colony, and for many years (1843 to 1864) was attended by pupils from all parts of Australia and New Zealand, by whom she was greatly beloved and esteemed.

She then made up her mind to retire and live with her niece, Mrs Whittakers, of Tubbut station, on the borders of New South Wales and Victoria. She lived there for seven years, and then joined her grand niece, Mrs E. L. Bruce, at Bairnsdale, with whom she lived until the time of her decease.
During her residence in Sale she was a regular attendant at St. Paul's Church until she became too feeble to make the journey. For some time past the Rev. Canon Watson was in the habit of going out to "Mia Mia," and holding a service, which Miss Moore could attend. The funeral took place on Saturday at the Wale cemetery, the Rev. W. G. Hindley reading the service at the grave.
PROBATE has been applied for to the will of Martha Louisa Moore, of Sale, spinster, which was executed on the 1st October, 1890. The will directs that cattle on land at Tanjil, together with furniture, is to go to her grand niece, Mary Atkinson Bruce. £100 is bequeathed. to Eyre Lewis Bruce, for his services as executor. The income of the remainder is left to her niece Louisa Ann Whittakers. An annuity of £20 is bequeathed to Elizabeth Ann Miller, another niece, residing in England, and the residue on the death of Louisa Ann Whittakers to the latter's children. The property (says the " Times") is valued at £1700 real estate in Victoria, and personal £1552.

Thomas Matthew Moore d 1854
Thomas returned for a period of time to England, leaving in 1817.  He later returned and took up his leases.


William Cox, Robert Campbell, Thomas Moore and William Henry Moore, the early landowners in the Cooks River valley, used their properties for primary production, timber-getting and grazing, rather than private residences. Farm buildings were constructed to house their labourers, but in each case, the owner's residence was elsewhere.

The Sydney Gazette, 17 July 1803; Thomas Moore's farm extended across much of today's Marrickville and Petersham.

He died at the residence of his sister Ann.



Ann Moore d 1877

She married in 1818, William Cordeaux, who was appointed the Deputy Commissioner General.
At Leppington, on Wednesday, 7th instant, William Cordeaux, Esq., late Deputy Assistant Commissary General.

William Cordeaux (1792-1839), land commissioner, was born on 9 October 1792 at Crambe, Yorkshire, the son of Richard Cordeaux, a veterinary officer who served in the Peninsular war and at Waterloo. He joined the British army commissariat service in Spain as a clerk in November 1810, became a deputy-assistant in January 1814, served in Flanders in 1815 and was placed on half-pay in February 1816. He was appointed to the Commissariat Department in New South Wales in May 1817 and arrived in Sydney next January in the convict transport Friendship.
He was placed in charge of the provision section at commissariat headquarters in Sydney and became involved in Commissioner John Thomas Bigge's investigation into the department. Lachlan Macquarie instructed him to take charge of the commissariat after the arrest of Commissary Frederick Drennan in April 1819 and he was called as a witness during the inquiry. A convict, Caro Lissour, accused Cordeaux of accepting wheat which was not storable, theft of goods, and passing store receipts under fictitious names. He was not convicted, although in January 1825 he was censured by the governor for having received into store at Liverpool salted meat later declared unfit for use.
In 1820 he accompanied John Oxley and Bigge on a tour from Bathurst to Lake Bathurst, and in July 1821 took charge of the commissariat at Liverpool. He returned to England on duty for a brief visit in 1823-24 to elucidate points concerning Drennan's accounts. On 23 July 1825 he was appointed a joint commissioner for apportioning the territory, and later in the year a justice of the peace, but he also continued as a deputy assistant commissary general on half-pay until 1833.
The duties of the commissioners were to divide the territory into counties, hundreds and parishes, to make a valuation of all the waste and unoccupied land in each county; and to reserve in each a tract of land comprising a seventh part in extent and value as the Clergy and School Estate. He and the other commissioners were accused of being very slow in their work, and their positions were abolished on 1 November 1830, their function being taken over by the surveyor-general. Cordeaux was also a director of the Bank of Australia and a member of a Protestant committee in opposition to National schools and secular education. During his time in office he received considerable land grants and made his home at Leppington, his Liverpool estate. Mount Cordeaux was named after him in 1828 by Allan Cunningham.
Cordeaux was married to Ann Moore on 19 September 1818 at St Philip's, Sydney. She was the sister of William Moore solicitor, and had arrived in the colony in the Marquis of Wellington in February 1815. William Cordeaux died at Leppington on 7 August 1839; his widow died on 9 September 1877, aged 86.

Charles Dodwell Moore d 1834  NSW
He arrived in 1821, on the Marshal Wellington.  He died on the estate of his brother-in-law, at Leppington.  He was in partnership with his step-brother in a legal firm.







Mary Catherine Moore died in 1827 in India.  James was in the military and served in India
She married James Grant in 1818 under special licence, and her mother was a witness.
.




Children identified include

Louisa Ann Grant                                  1820 - 1911           m   William Whittaker NSW
Mary Grant                                            1821 - 1841
John Grant                                             1823 -  1823
James Grant                                           1826-1827        d India  

James and his mother were buried together in India.

Miss Moore brought Miss Mary Grant, and Miss Grant in 1835.  It might be that her brother Thomas brought out one of the other girls, because they all were living on their aunt, Ann Cordeaux’s property, with her children, one of whom was the witness at the wedding of Louisa.

The area now known as Leppington was originally home to the Darug people. It was named after a property called Leppington Park granted to William Cordeaux in 1821. Cordeaux used convict labour to build a two-storey mansion and to work in his fields. The house burnt down in the 1940s but some of the bricks from the house were re-used at Leppington Public School.


Captain Thomas Miller

Thomas married Sibella Batley in 1824.  Thomas died in 1850, and Sibella died 1863.

They had a daughter Harriet Caroline Miller, who was born in Ireland, and she married her mother’s nephew, Rev Benjamin Batley.  Harriet died in 1900.






John William Moore Miller


Dr John William Moore Miller married Catherine Jemima Durnford, in 1870 and they had a daughter Lillian Frances Throckmorton Moore Miller in 1871 who married Arthur James Barton. 

Arthur was the son of Dr George Piggot Barton, and his wife Amelia Calkin Budd.  George was the son of Thomas Barton and Mary Graves Piggott. 


Dr Miller had married Catherine Harriet Bowman, and was the father of Kate Mary Miller who married Col Edmund Philip Bowden-Smith.  Their son was


Philip Ernest Bowden-Smith was born on 27 March 1891, the son of Ernest Bowden-Smith and Kate Mary née Moore-Miller, he was educated at Rugby School. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the 19th Hussars on 3 September 1910 (promoted to lieutenant 7 October 1911). The 19th Hussars' role on the mobilisation of the British Expeditionary Force was to provide squadrons to 4th, 5th and 6th Divisions. This is what happened o the outbreak of World War I in August 1914. Because Bowden-Smith's war service was recorded as starting on 9 September, he must have been with C Squadron, which landed with 6th Division at St Nazaire on that day.
Divisional cavalry squadrons were very active in the early days of the war, when manoeuvre was still possible. Once trench warfare set in, their role disappeared. The squadrons of 19th Hussars reformed in April 1915 and joined the 1st Cavalry Division, but mounted action was rare, and if the cavalry did see action it was usually in the dismounted role. Bowden-Smith was wounded once during the war. At various times he found himself attached to the Signal Service and as a temporary instructor at the Cavalry School at Netheravon. He ended the war in the rank of Captain
Bowden-Smith represented Great Britain at the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris, participating in both the Eventing and Jumping events. His fourth place in the individual jumping, on Billy Boy, equalled Great Britain's best result to date in the equestrian events. Riding Gipsy, he was placed 29th in the individual eventing. Great Britain did not compete in the equestrian events at the 1928 or 1932 Olympics, but Bowden-Smith was team captain for Great Britain's equestrian team at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, where they won the Bronze Medal in the team eventing. This achievement was noteworthy, given the total dominance of the German team with their superior local knowledge of the tricky course. The team was raised from the Army School of Equitation at Weedon, where Bowden had been Chief Instructor.
After the Berlin Olympics, Bowden-Smith, now a Lieutenant Colonel, became Commanding Officer of the 16th/5th Lancers at Secunderabad in India, but when the regiment began to convert to a light tank regiment, he returned to the UK in 1938 to take up a newly created post of Superintendent of the Army Equitation Centre and Remount Depot at Weedon.[9] When World War II broke out, Bowden-Smith was Inspector of Remounts, becoming Inspector of Cavalry in 1940.
Eventually, mechanisation caught up with Bowden-Smith, and he became Second-in-Command of 22nd Armoured Brigade later in 1940. This brigade was composed of yeomanry cavalry regiments of the Territorial Army which had been converted to armoured car regiments after World War I, but had been transferred to the Royal Armoured Corps and were now training in the Cruiser tank role.


On 6 September 1941, Bowden-Smith was appointed Brigadier commanding 125th Infantry Brigade in 42nd (East Lancashire) Infantry Division. The division was scheduled to become an armoured division, and 125th Brigade officially became 10th Armoured Brigade on 1 November 1941.
Based at Barnard Castle, the brigade consisted of three battalions of the Lancashire Fusiliers (1/5th, 1/6th and 9th), which became 108th109th and 143rd Regiment Royal Armoured Corps respectively. As an armoured brigade in the cruiser role, 10th also had a motor infantry battalion (13th Highland Light Infantry) under command. However, 10th Armoured Brigade left 42nd Armoured Division in May 1942, the motor battalion was withdrawn, and on 25 July the brigade was redesignated 10th Tank Brigade. The role of a tank brigade was infantry support, so the brigade moved to the 'Dukeries' area of Nottinghamshire, where RAC units trained with infantry tanks. Bowden-Smith had his HQ at Carlton-in-Lindrick with the regiments dispersed to Thoresby HallWelbeck Abbey and Rufford Abbey.
On 17 October 1942 the brigade was placed under the command of 48th (South Midland) Division. This was a reserve formation, and 10th Tank Brigade was given the role of holding and training reinforcements for other tank units.

The brigade maintained Lancashire Fusilier traditions, marking Gallipoli Day on 25 April and celebrating Minden Day on 1 August 'in traditional style. Each unit held a ceremonial parade and march past'. When rumours began to circulate in August 1943 that 10th Tank Brigade was scheduled for disbandment, Members of Parliament for the Lancashire towns complained about the loss of their TA battalions. In August 1943 a recruiting team persuaded about 60 other ranks of the brigade to volunteer for the Parachute Regiment if the brigade disbanded. The brigade moved to Wensleydale in September, with Brigade HQ at Bedale, but shortly afterwards the impending disbandment was confirmed and the brigade came under direct War Office control. Bowden-Smith left on 6 October 1943, and the Brigade HQ and regiments disbanded in November.
Bowden-Smith was now posted to Delhi to join the staff of the new South East Asia Command (SEAC) under Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten. He served on SEAC staff until 1946 when he retired

Bowden-Smith was an ADC to the King 1944–46, was awarded a CBE (Military) in 1946[2] and was appointed Colonel of the 16th/5th Lancers in 1950. He was an active Colonel of the regiment until he relinquished the post in 1959, and was also active in horsebreeding and foxhunting.
Brigadier Bowden-Smith died suddenly on 28 April 1964 at Wokingham. His surviving family were his two sisters, Marjorie Bowden-Smith and Doris Boden. His funeral was at St John's, Woking, on 1 May. A memorial service was held at St. Michael's Church, Chester Square.





Anthony Durnford’s Horse “Chieftain”

Anthony Durnford’s sister accepted the responsibility of his horse, Chieftain, when it was returned to England in 1879.

"Chieftain was brought home by the 24th Regiment to us at Cosham Park.  He is now lent to Mr Whalley-Tooker of Hinton House[1], Horndean, and ridden, as his favourite hunter, by one of his loving brothers”, Catherine wrote.

The owner of Hinton House, at Horndean was Mr Hyde Salmon Walley-Tooker JP, who served in the 3rd Hampshire Regiment, between 1856 and 1897.   He was born 8th November 1857 in Shropshire.  In 1882 he married Rosalie Mary Standish, only daughter of  Col. C. H, Dowker

The gesture of the 24th Regiment to bring him back to England, speaks of the respect that they must have held for Lieut-Col. Durnford.  They were ordered back to England in July 1879 and on 27th Aug they embarked at Durban on the 'Egypt'. 

They were commanded by Colonel R T Glyn, their strength at that time being 767 privates, 11 drummers, 36 corporals, 46 sergeants and 24 officers.
They arrived at Portsmouth on 2nd Oct and went into barracks at Gosport.







[1] — Hinton Daubnay, Horndean, Hampshire. Hinton Manor was originally a 17th century farmhouse on the Hinton manor estate. Originally called Hinton Farm, it is now a Grade II listed building. The manor belonged to the Hyde family in the seventeenth century until mid-18th century when it descended to the Tooker family. In the later part of the 19th century, the Hyde Salmon Whalley-Tooker family inherited and their main dwelling was Hinton Daubney, although this house was named as Hinton Manor on the 1st edition 25” OS map, 1868, while the present Hinton Manor House was still named Hinton Farm. First shown on the1810 OS 1” map and then the  Greenwood map of 1826, by the 1st ed 25” OS map, 1868, indicates a formally designed divided rectangular area with low hedges, to the SE of the house. Substantial farm buildings lie to the north and an extensive belt of conifer trees to the SW, to the left of the entrance track/drive. A reservoir is also shown in the SW corner of the site. Progressive OS maps maintain much the same pattern in the gardens with the reservoir being named by the 3rd ed OS map, 1909/10 and a glasshouse has appeared.

44. The Extended Family of Anthony, Edward and Arthur Durnford


One thing about the British family unit in the late 1800's, was that it formed part of a very strong social structure.  Women were chosen to marry men of "good" standing.


The Victorian Era in Britain was dominated by the reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901). Although it was a peaceful and prosperous time, there were still issues within the social structure. The social classes of this era included the Upper class, Middle class, and lower class. 
Those who were fortunate enough to be in the Upper class did not usually perform manual labor. Instead, they were landowners and hired lower class workers to work for them, or made investments to create a profit. This class was divided into three subcategories: Royal, those who came from a royal family, Middle Upper, important officers and lords, and Lower Upper, wealthy men and business owners (Victorian England Social Hierarchy).









Lieut- Colonel Edward Durnford

He was well known as the brother of Colonel Anthony Durnford, and the one person who undertook years of research in the hope of obtaining answers, not, as most seem to believe, just to prove that his brother had followed orders, and had been wrongly saddled with the blame for the disaster, but to try to fathom the extent of the mysteries surrounding the various events that occurred post 22nd January 1879.

But there was a lot more about Lieut-Colonel Edward Congreave Durnford than the role of his brother's advocate.

He entered the Royal Marines in 1851 and appointed to the Royal Marine Artillery in 1852.  During the Crimean War he served on HMS James Watt in the Baltic and was present at the siege of and surrender of the Forts of Bomarsund in the Åland Islands off the south-west coast of Finland
He served briefly with the 2nd Company of the Royal Sappers and Miners. 
He was later appointed to the command of mortar-boats and served during the bombardment of Sweaborg on August 9, 1855.  For this service he was mentioned in dispatches and received the Crimean War medal.

He served with the Baltic Expedition in 1855, and was in command of a mortar in the flotilla during the bombardment of Sveaborg.” 
He subsequently served on HMS Forth until 1856. 
In 1862 he was promoted to Captain.  From Sept. 1867 to May 1870 he was Staff Captain, Royal Marine Artillery and appointed to Superintendent of Artificers.  He was in charge of all public works in progress at Eastney Barracks and Fort Cumberland.  He was promoted to Brevet-Major in 1872 and promoted to (honorary) Lieutenant-Colonel on May 8, 1877 at his retirement.  He served a total of 26 years in the Royal Marines. 
Both his Royal Marines Sword and his uniforms are on display at the Maritime Museum at Greenwich.  Edward took after his Great Uncle, Elias Durnford, and made sketches, two of which are on display at the Maritime Museum, drawn 1854 of the Forts of Bomarsund.

Not once in his quest for answers,  of the day's battle, he did question anything but the contents of reports and statements,  that emanated from those involved, and the discrepancies made to the authorities, the media or to Parliament, and he did so after careful examination of the records of the relevant "Blue books".

He asked lots of questions, clearly as he had lots of "Whys".

Most of the why's ended up in the material contained within the Isandlwana Papers, but there was also a lot of material that he sourced that was irrelevant to the requirements associated with a review of the Official Narrative.  His material was however, particularly important to his niece, Frances.

Edward appeared to not be fully aware of the extent of the work being carried out by the Senior Royal Engineers, however he was no doubt aware of certain steps that were being undertaken.
In fact, it seems that between himself and Colonel Luard, they independently took steps to try and thwart Frances Colenso's enthusiastic approach at seeking answers.  One she felt, was solely being undertaken by herself.

He also continued asking questions of Lord Chelmsford as late as August 1886.  Quite surprising though because when compared to the story written about Lord Chelmsford's life, in 1939, from his papers, some rather interesting facts were revealed.


Col. Edward Durnford and his wife Julia Penrice


1.            Major John Penrice JP of Norfolk Artillery. Photographer, author of the English glossary of            the Quran 1873
2.            Capt Thomas Penrice Esq High Sheriff of Glamorgan, 16th Lancers
3.            General Sir George Colt Langley KGB  m Maria Penrice  His brother in law and uncle
4.            Colonel Arthur Walton Onslow.              Bengal Army  m Isabella Penrice        
5.            Colonel Henry William Evans              9th Regiment Bombay Native Infantry                                                                                                   married Caroline Penrice          
6.            Capt Herbert Newton Penrice              Royal Engineers Tunnelling machine Inventor             
7.            Rev Charles Berners Prenice               Rector of Plumstead Parva, Norfolk
Son in Law   


Capt Arthur Lydekker JP whose father was Gerard Wolfe Lydekker, Solicitor whose brother Richard Lydekker was a writer, geologist and writer.    Arthur married Julia Mabel Durnford. 


Nephews

1.                Sir William Bousfield  (Doctor of Law)                 m  Blanche Isabel Onslow  his niece
2.                Captain George Burchell Graham       `of 33rd Regiment  m  Florence Maud Onslow his niece
3.                Rear Admiral Herbert Arthur Onslow RN
4.                Col. Gerald Charles Penrice Onslow  Lieut Colonel and Brevet Colonel Royal Engineers
5.                Lt-Col Richard Cranley Onslow Indian Army Deputy Judge Advocate-General
6.                Major Lionel Langley
7.                Lieut Colonel John Penrice Langley CBE            Royal Field Artillery
8.                Lieut Colonel Henry Theodore Penrhys Evans   (East Lancashire Regiment)
9.                Major George Alfred Penrhys Evans      9th Lancers  Governor of Arbour Hill Prison Dublin
10.             Major Thomas Julian Penrhys Evans, Royal Marines Light Infantry. commander of the troops                                                   St Helena. 
11.             Dr. Oliver Conrad Penrhys Evans M.D.



Sir William Bousfield[i] (9 July 1842 - 7 August 1910) was a barrister and public servant.

Born in London, Bousfield was admitted to Merton College, Oxford in 1862. He graduated with a degree in law and history and then entered the Middle Temple and was called to the bar in 1868, but never practised. In 1870 he married Blanche Isabel Onslow.

He took a particular interest in women's higher education and was chairman of the Girl’s Public Day Schools Trust. He became a member of the Kensington Board of Guardians, and chairman of Committee of Central Poor Law Conferences for England and Wales. In 1874 he was appointed to the committee of King's College Hospital. With Sir Charles Trevelyan and Timothy Holmes FRCS he founded the Metropolitan Provident Dispensaries Association to provide medical facilities for the poor.

Bousfield was elected to the London School Board in 1882 to represent Chelsea, and was re-elected in 1885. He retired from the board in 1888 due to ill health, although he maintained connections as representative of the City and Guilds of London Institute on the joint committee on manual training. He was also chairman of the Representative Managers of London Board Schools and of their successors the Representative Managers of London County Council Elementary Schools.

In 1904-1905 Bousfield was Master of the Worshipful Company of Clothworkers, and was knighted in 1905 for his service to educational administration in London. He died at his London residence, 20 Hyde Park Gate, in August 1910, aged 68.

Onslow Family Relatives

Lt.-Gen. Henry E. Doherty Companion, Order of the Bath (C.B.)  married Anne Eliza Onslow, daughter of Sir Henry Onslow, 2nd Bt. and Caroline Bond   
   
Denzil Roberts Onslow MP for Guildford between 1874 and 1885 

Moore Family Relatives - Uncle

Major John Arthur Moore[ii]                   
He gained the rank of officer in the service of the Royal Navy.1 He was a director of the Honourable East India Company.1 He was invested as a Companion, Order of the Indian Empire (C.I.E.)

John Arthur Henry Moore-Brabazon was born on 13 June 1828. He was the son of Major John Arthur Moore and Sophia Stewart Yates.. He married Emma Sophia Richards, daughter of Alfred Richards, in February 1879. He died on 11 January 1908 at age 79.

 He was given the name of John Arthur Henry Moore at birth. He was educated at Addiscombe Military Academy, Addiscombe, Surrey, England. In 1866 his name was legally changed to John Arthur Henry Moore-Brabazon. He gained the rank of Major in the service of the Bengal Staff Corps. He held the office of High Sheriff of County Louth in 1872.  He gained the rank of Honoury Lieutenant-Colonel. He lived at Tara House, County Meath, Ireland. He lived at Tallyallen, County Louth, Ireland

 Sir Richard Charles Acton Throckmorton[iii], 10th Bt. was born on 26 April 1839. He was the son of Sir Robert George Throckmorton, 8th Bt. and Elizabeth Acton.  

He married, firstly, Frances Stewart Moore, daughter of Major John Arthur Moore and Sophia Stewart Yates, on 23 January 1866. He married, secondly, Florence Helen Brigg, daughter of John Fligg Brigg and Martha Ann Adelaide Lockwood, on 30 July 1921. 

He died on 28 April 1927 at age 88.     He gained the rank of Captain in the service of the 87th Foot. He succeeded to the title of 10th Baronet Throckmorton, of Coughton, co. Warwick [E., 1642] on 21 December 1919


Edward Durnford's Nephews

Major John Penrice[iv] (Great Yarmouth, 5 December 1818 – 1892) was a British soldier, photographer, and the author of an English glossary of the Quran (1873) based on the edition of Gustav Leberecht Flügel (1834).

His father John Penrice Sr. (1787-1844) was a captain in the King's 15th Hussars.  He had young brothers and sisters including, Thomas Penrice of Kilvrough (b.1820), Captain Herbert Newton Penrice of the Royal Engineers whose tunneling machine was used during the Crimean War and Rev. Charles Berners Penrice.

A captain, then major (1855) in the Norfolk Artillery, Penrice exhibited calotypes and waxed-paper architectural and landscape views in the 1854 and 1855 Photographic Society exhibitions in London and in the 1855 London Photographic Institution exhibition.

It is said, he had "a complex character, Penrice eventually became a justice of the peace in Norfolk. In 1844, on the death of his father, he sent twenty-five major paintings from Wilton House, the family home near Yarmouth in Norfolk, to Messrs Christie and Manson. Some of these are in the National Gallery, London, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. In 1861 he published The Valley of the Nile, a series of one hundred stereoscopic views taken in Egypt and Nubia.

Although Penrice’s photographs are now virtually unknown, his Dictionary and Glossary of the Koran first published in 1873 is a substantial piece of scholarship' Penrice served in Egypt and Nubia with British troops, his Dictionary and Glossary of the Koran is supposed to be an authoritative work of its kind. In the past 150 years multiple editions of the lexicon have been published.

Penrice Relatives

Sir William Wallace Rhoderic Onslow[v]

He succeeded to the title of 5th Baronet Onslow, of Althain, Lancashire [G.B., 1797] on 3 August 1876. Entered 12th Regiment 1864. Captain 3rd Battalion Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry, 1875-1882. 5th Baronet; cartulary-register 1797; D.L., Justice of the Peace; Lieutenant 12th Regiment (retired).  He held the office of Justice of the Peace (J.P.) for Cornwall. He held the office of High Sheriff of Cornwall in 1883. He gained the rank of Captain in the service of the 3rd Battalion, Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry. He gained the rank of Captain in the service of the 12th Regiment. He held the office of Justice of the Peace (J.P.) for Wiltshire. He held the office of Deputy Lieutenant (D.L.) of Cornwall.


2.  Brabazon Family

Reginald Brabazon, 12th Earl of Meath[vi]  KP, GCVO, GBE, PC (31 July 1841 – 11 October 1929) was a British politician and philanthropist.

The Honourable Reginald Brabazon was born into an old Anglo-Irish family in London, the second son of Lord Brabazon. When his father succeeded as 11th Earl of Meath in 1851, Reginald, now heir (his elder brother, Jacques, died of diphtheria in 1844), was styled Lord Brabazon.

 He was educated at Eton College and in 1863 joined the Foreign Office as a clerk, and later became a diplomat.

In 1868 he married Lady Mary Jane Maitland, daughter of the 11th Earl of Lauderdale. On the insistence of his in-laws, Brabazon refused to accept a posting to Athens (which they considered too remote) in 1873 and was effectively suspended without pay, finally resigning from the Diplomatic Service in 1877. He and his wife decided to devote their considerable energies to "the consideration of social problems and the relief of human suffering".

Both were subsequently involved in many charitable organisations. The Earl and his wife leased Ottershaw Park from 1882 to November 1883 from Sir Edward Colebrooke.

In May 1887, Brabazon succeeded his father as 12th Earl of Meath. Lord Meath was also a prominent Conservative politician in the House of Lords as Baron Chaworth, and an ardent imperialist, and was responsible for the introduction in England of Empire Day, which was officially recognised by the British Government in 1916. He was a member of the London County Council, the Privy Council of Ireland and the Senate of Southern Ireland. He was also Chief Scout Commissioner for Ireland.
Lord Meath was appointed Knight of the Order of St Patrick (KP) in 1902, Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE) in the 1920 civilian war honours, and Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO) in the 1923 Birthday Honours.

His younger daughter, Lady Violet Constance Maitland Brabazon (1886–1936), married the 4th Earl of Verulam.

There is a statue in his honour outside the Columbia Hotel near Lancaster Gate, in London. Recordings of his voice exist made in October 1910, in the form of three speeches on the Empire Movement, Gramophone Company 12" G&T black label 'Monarch' records, cat. 01040 to 01042.
He is buried in the graveyard of the Church of Ireland parish church in the small village of Delgany, County Wicklow, Ireland, along with his wife and son. There are some streets and squares in The Coombe, Dublin, named in his honour: Reginald Street, Reginald Square and Brabazon Square.

Arthur George Durnford  -  Relationships

Rev Canon Edward Moore[vii] married Victoria Devon's sister.  He became Arthur Durnford's brother in law.  Rev Dr Canon Edward Moore Principal of St Edmund Hall was an Authority on Dante 

His son from his first marriage was


Admiral Sir Arthur William Moore[viii] GCB GCVO CMG (30 July 1847 – 3 April 1934) was a Royal Navy officer who went on to command the China Station and to serve as Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth.

Arthur Moore was born in 1847 in Frittenden, Kent, the son of the Rev. Edward Moore, rector of the parish, by his marriage to Lady Harriet Montagu-Scott (1814–1870), a daughter of the fourth Duke of Buccleuch.] His father was an Honorary Canon of Canterbury, and his great grandfather was John Moore, Archbishop of Canterbury.[2]

Moore joined the Royal Navy as a cadet in 1860, at the age of thirteen.

In 1881 he was given command of the battleship HMS Invincible in the Mediterranean Fleet and in 1882 he commanded the corvette HMS Orion in the Anglo-Egyptian War. He was present at the Battle of Tel-el-Kebir. In 1884 he was appointed Flag Captain to the Commander in Chief of the East Indies Station.

He later took command of the battleship HMS Dreadnought in the Mediterranean Fleet before becoming Commandant of HMS Britannia at Dartmouth.In 1889 Moore was sent as a British representative to the Anti-Slavery Congress held in Brussels. In 1890-1891 he was a member of the Australian Defence Committee.

He was made Junior Naval Lord at the Admiralty in 1898, and Commander-in-Chief, Cape of Good Hope and West Coast of Africa Station in early 1901 leaving the UK for Cape in March 1901 on board his flagship HMS Gibraltar. In this capacity he took part in the closing phases of the Second Boer War. In 1905 he became Second in Command in the Channel Fleet and in 1906 he was made Commander-in-Chief of the China Station. His last appointment was as Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth from 1911; he retired in 1912.

When he died in 1934, Moore was buried with other members of his family at St Mary's Church, Frittenden, near the west end of the church.

Honours and awards
  • In the 1870s while on the frigate Glasgow, Moore was awarded the bronze medal of the Royal Humane Society for gallantry in rescuing a seaman who had fallen overboard.
  • 1 January 1892 - Captain Arthur William Moore, RN, is appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George for services in connections with the defences of Australasia.
  • 25 June 1897 - Captain Arthur William Moore, CMG, Royal Navy is appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in commemoration of the sixtieth year of Queen Victoria's reign.
  • 11 August 1905 - Vice-Admiral Sir Arthur William Moore, KCB, CMG, second on command of the channel fleet is appointed a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order on the occasion of the visit of the French fleet.
  • 5 February 1906 - Vice-Admiral Sir Arthur William Moore, KCB, KCVO, CMG, lately commanding HMS Caesar which accompanied the King of Norway from Norway to Denmark in November 1905 is allowed to accept and wear the Grand Cross of the Royal Norwegian Order of St Olav awarded to him by the King of Norway.
  • 16 June 1911 - Admiral Sir Arthur William Moore, KCB, KCVO, CMG, is promoted to a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath on the occasion of the His Majesty's Coronation
  • 4 July 1911 - Admiral Sir Arthur William Moore, GCB, KCVO, CMG, Commander-in-Chief Portsmouth, is promoted to a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order on the occasion of the Review of the Fleet at Portsmouth.

 Henry Charles Dudley Long[ix] -   cousin   who inherited £30,000 when his father, Victoria's uncle died in 1868son of Henry Lawes Long and Lady Catharine Long (née Walpole), inherited the Hampton Lodge Estate, Farnham & East Barnet, Surrey in 1868, 1839-70) Journal Kept by Henry Charles Dudley Long of his tour in France, Switzerland and Germany… July… September 1858 [&] Rough Notes of a Cruise to Iceland in R.Y.S. yacht "Osprey" owner J.B. Petre Esq.


Arthur George Durnford -  His cousin's son

 Henry Charles Howard[x] (17 September 1850 – 4 August 1914), was a British politician.
Henry Charles Howard was born on 17 September 1850. He was the son of Henry Howard and Charlotte Caroline Georgina Long. He died on 4 August 1914 at age 63.

 He graduated from Cambridge University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, with a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) He held the office of High Sheriff of Westmorland in 1879. He held the office of Deputy Lieutenant (D.L.) of Westmorland. He held the office of Deputy Lieutenant (D.L.) of Cumberland. He held the office of Justice of the Peace (J.P.) for Westmorland.   He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Penrith between 1885 and 1886. He lived at Greystoke Castle, Greystoke, Cumberland, England. Howard married Lady Mabel Harriet, daughter of Mark McDonnell, 5th Earl of Antrim, in 1878. He died in August 1914, aged 63. Lady Mabel, who was appointed a CBE in 1920, died in December 1942.

Esmé William Howard[xi], 1st Baron Howard of Penrith GCB GCMG CVO (15 September 1863 – 1 August 1939) was a British diplomat. He served as British Ambassador to the United States between 1924 and 1930. He was one of Britain's most influential diplomats of the early part of the twentieth century. With a gift for languages and a skilled diplomat, Howard is described in his biography as an integral member of the small group of men who made and implemented British foreign policy between 1900 and 1930, a critical transitional period in Britain's history as a world power.

He was educated at Harrow School. In 1885, he passed the Diplomatic Service examination, and was assistant private secretary to the Earl of Carnarvon as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland before being attached to the British Embassy in Rome. In 1888, he arrived in Berlin as the embassy's third secretary, and after retiring from the Diplomatic Service four years later, he was made assistant private secretary to the Earl of Kimberley, the Foreign Secretary at the time.

Having fought in the Second Boer War with the Imperial Yeomanry, Howard became Consul General for Crete in 1903, and three years later was sent to Washington as a counsellor at the embassy there. Esme Howard was married to Isabella Giovanna Teresa Gioachina Giustiniani-Bandini of Venice.

In 1908, he was appointed in the same role to Vienna, and that same year became Consul General at Budapest. Three years later, Howard was made Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Swiss Confederation, and in 1913 he was transferred to Stockholm, where he spent the whole of the First World War. In 1916, having already been appointed CMG and CVO ten years earlier, he was knighted as KCMG, becoming KCB three years later.

In 1919, Sir Esmé Howard was attached to the British delegation during the Paris Peace Conference, also being made British Civil Delegate on the International Commission to Poland. That same year, he was sent to Madrid as ambassador there, and in 1924 returned to Washington in the same role. Appointed GCMG and GCB in 1923 and 1928 respectively, he was created, on his retirement in 1930, Baron Howard of Penrith, of Gowbarrow in the historic county of Cumberland. He died nine years later aged 75.


Sir Edward Stafford Howard [xii]KCB, DL, JP (28 November 1851 – 8 April 1916), was a British Liberal politician and magistrate.
A member of the influential Howard family headed by the Duke of Norfolk, Howard was the second son of Henry Howard, son of Lord Henry Howard-Molyneux-Howard and nephew of Bernard Howard, 12th Duke of Norfolk. His mother was Charlotte Caroline Georgina Long, daughter of Henry Lawes Long and Catharine Long of Hampton Lodge, Surrey. He was the younger brother of Henry Howard and the elder brother of Lord Howard of Penrith. He was educated at Harrow School and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was called to the bar at Inner Temple.

Howard entered Parliament as one of two representatives for Cumberland East at a by-election in 1876, a seat he held until 1885 when the constituency was abolished under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885. At the 1885 general election, he was elected as MP for Thornbury until he was defeated at the 1886 election. He served briefly as Under-Secretary of State for India from April to July 1886 in William Ewart Gladstone's short-lived third administration. Howard was later Senior Commissioner of HM's Woods and Forests. He was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1900 Birthday Honours and a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) in the 1909 Birthday Honours. He served as Mayor of the town of Llanelly from 1913 to 1916  He was an Ecclesiastical Commissioner from 1914 to his death. He was also a Justice of the Peace and a Deputy Lieutenant of Gloucestershire.

Bishop Richard Durnford[xiii] 4th cousin Bishop of Chichester Cathedral or the Bishop's nephew
Rear Admiral John Durnford[xiv] Lord of Royal Navy. 

Durnford/Isaacson cousins. 

The sons of his great uncle Andrew Montagu Isaacson Durnford also were in public office, or the military.  Sometimes both.  At the time of his death two of those second cousins were in influential positions.

Frederick Andrew Durnford[xv] was a Parliamentary Agent, along with his brother and his son.
Frederick entered the Military in 1861 and became Major-commandant of the 2nd Surrey Artillery Volunteer Corps.  He was also an artist and a Parliamentary Agent.

DURNFORD, F. Andrew (fl. ... His paintings ranged from the 'Fresh Breeze' type to scenes on the French coast, e.g., 'Scene on the Coast of Boulogne, near Ambleteuse' ... His Suffolk Street exhibits contained 'On the Yorkshire Coast near Flamborough —Clearing a Wreck in the Distance' and 'A Fresh Breeze off the Coast of Norfolk' 1840.   They were shown between 1835 and 1886 at several London galleries including the Royal Academy and his brother, Alfred Charles Durnford a Lawyer who was practicing in Wisconsin, USA


A rather impressive list of relatives, all with some part to play in the life of Anthony William Durnford, and it would be inconceivable to think that not one of these who were alive in the period of 1879 to 1886, did not ask questions.





[i] Reference London Wiki  http://london.wikia.com/wiki/William_Bousfield
[ii] Reference          The Peerage  M, #56871 Person Page - 5688
[iii] Reference The Peerage                http://www.thepeerage.com/p5687.htm
[iv] Reference Wikipedia   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Penrice
[v] Reference The Peerage                                http://www.thepeerage.com/p54688.htm
[vi] Reference Wikipedia  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reginald_Brabazon,_12th_Earl_of_Meath
[vii] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Moore_(English_bishop)
[viii] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Moore_(Royal_Navy_officer)
[ix] http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp92966/henry-charles-dudley-long
[x] Reference The Peerage  http://www.thepeerage.com/p3014.htm#i30135
[xi] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esm%C3%A9_Howard,_1st_Baron_Howard_of_Penrith
                              The Peerage                        http://www.thepeerage.com/p6053.htm#i60526
[xii] Reference Wikipedia                   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stafford_Howard
               The Peerage                        http://www.thepeerage.com/p2293.htm#i22921
[xiii] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Durnford
[xiv] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Durnford

[xv] https://books.google.com.au/books?id=YArrAAAAMAAJ

Denys Brook-Hart - 1974 -93 he is listed as Lt. Col. Frederick Andrew Durnford, J.P. Surrey.
British 19th century marine painting - Page 346