Highlites from Australia 


Issue No. 5
De Bootje Gazette
October 2003

The War Records of William Warren DeBoo and Alfred Edward DeBoo

As readers of previous issues of this Gazette will know, we have presented military records and references for DEBOO men who served over the past two hundred years. We know that relatives and namesakes proudly served in the wars involving Britain, Canada and the USA. There is the famous story of a Dutch de Boo fellow who marched bravely off to war, then marched back again with a bullet in his head - where it stayed for the rest of his life. And then there is the story of WWII German prisoner-of- war, Johan de Boo, being captured by Canadians soon after his escape back to the Netherlands...

Now, thanks to Aussie cousin Susan Cooke, we proudly present summaries of two Australian lads: William Warren DeBoo, a 30-year-old carpenter from Lauceston, Tasmania, and Alfred Edward DeBoo, a 26-year-old farmer from Mundulla, South Australia. Their WWI records for service years in the "Australian Imperial Force" were obtained from: WWI Personnel Records Service, National Archives of Australia, PO Box 7425, Canberra Mail Centre ACT 1610.

Each file contains about a dozen or so documents from their enlistment times to the dates of discharge. Their signatures are seen on several papers. Both spell their name DeBoo, and both names have been mutilated by army clerks: In William's case, they try hard to turn him into a De'Boo. Alfred Edward is reinvented as a DeeBoo by one startled scribe (that 'Boo' part really seems to foster creativity!). Both fellows were sons of immigrants from Poplar (Eastend London) with pedigrees to the Deboo families at Holme in the Fens of East Anglia (see Issue No. 4, De Bootje Gazette).

The following brief summaries feature highlights gleaned from their records. Both suffered injuries, but they returned home after the cessation of hostilities.

 

 

William Warren DeBoo

At the time of enlistment (3 January 1916) at Melbourne, he was residing at Launceston in northern Tasmania. His father (James) was dead and his mother (Sarah Ann Moore; remarried as Mrs. S.A. Warren) was living at Lefroy, Tasmania. His certificate of medical examination on enlistment states that he was age 30 years 4 months, 5' 5 1/2" tall, weighed 127 lbs, had brown eyes and brown hair. He was a member of the Church of England, and declared fit for active service. He was assigned to the 24th Battalion and embarked from Australia for England on 21 March 1916.

Private W.W. DeBoo (serial no. 4401) proceeded 'overseas to France' with his unit on 5 September 1916. At various times during 1916 and 1917 he was hospitalized as 'sick.' But on 22 September 1917 he was wounded in action. Within two months he had rejoined his battalion and was 'back 'on the field.'

On 10 June 1918 he was gassed; an unclear note on file for 28 June suggests he was wounded (gassed again) on this date. There is a letter on file advising his mother. Pte. DeBoo was invalided back to the Royal Hospital at Woolwich, England, on 18 August 1918. The records show hospitalization at various English locations ,including Guildford, Dartford, and Weymouth. He "marched" back to his unit in France via Southamton-Le Havre, rejoining them on 12 July 1918. His "Casualty Forms" indicated that he was again returned to England because of the effects of the gassing. Hospitalization continued for most of the next year, the last weeks at Bulford. He was released on or about 15 June 1919, and arrived back at Melbourne on 5 September 1919. He was discharged on 28 October 1919. He had spent his combat service entirely in France for which he received several medals.

 

 

 

Alfred Edward DeBoo

Just a few months later, on 11 April 1916, the records show the enlistment of Alfred Edward DeBoo (born 1889) at Adelaide. His parents were Ephraim William (1856-1939) and Ruth Naomi (nee Riches; 1858-1936) DeBoo of Mundulla, South Australia. Ephraim William, his grandfather, came to Australia in 1875 from Poplar, eastend London.

Amazingly, there are other similarities in the records for Alfred Edward and William Warren: Alfred Edward was also short and slight (by today's standards) - he also weighed 127 lbs at enlistment. He was a bit shorter than W.W. at only 5'5" in height, and a bit younger at 26 years, 4 months, of age. He also had brown eyes and dark hair. He was a Methodist, and worked as a share farmer.

He too embarked for the war theatre in France - with the rank of private and serial number 5331, He embarked on 12 August 1916, disenbarked the "Ballarat" at Plymouth on 30 September 1916. After a short period in England where he was sick with mumps, he was taken on strength with the 27th Battalion in France on 12 February 1917. He spent considerable time at hospitals in Belgium and France, including for influenza, during 1917 and 1918. He also was victim of a gas attack and invalided back to to England with other 'wounded in action' in August 1918. He lost 10 days pay for being away without leave 28 Nov. to 3 Dec. 1918 - the only 'offence' on the record.

Pte. A.E. DeBoo returned to Australia on the "Ceramic" after three years and 11 days of service, 2 years and 215 days abroad. He was awarded medals and honorably discharged on 21 April 1919. He died on 3 May 1958 according to this file.


World War I was a busy time for our DEBOO soldiers...Richard De Boo of Canada served as a medical orderly in France and Belgium; we know Albert Deboo of Poplar, England, died in battle; and we show George Deboo of Thorney, England, in WWI uniform in the UK Section of this Issue. Do you suppose they might have met their Aussie cousins?

- RFD

Life on the Australian Goldfields in the 19th Century

Emma Deboo was my great-great grandmother. Until a couple of years ago, all I knew about Emma was her birthplace, the names of her parents and a number of her siblings.

Emma married David Milne, a Scottish goldminer, at Ballarat East in 1859. Her marriage certificate provides a lot of information about her. It records her place of birth as Poplar (East London) and gives her parents’ names as William Deboo, a ship caulker, and Mary Ann Rollings (actually Rawlings but the Presbyterian minister may have mistaken the name because of Emma’s Cockney accent). She was aged 27, which gave her a birth date in 1832. I have never located a baptismal record for Emma, but I found a census entry for the family in 1841. They were living at Poplar, and her father William gave his birthplace as “within the county” meaning Middlesex. I now know that this is incorrect, and that he was born at Holme in Cambridgeshire.

When I was first connected to the internet at home, I ran a search on the two most unusual names on my family tree. Searching for Deboo turned up the De Bootje Gazette. I went straight to the English pages, and to my delight discovered David Horwill’s article mentioning my great-grandmother’s disappearance from the records in the 1850’s. I sent an email immediately advising that she had immigrated to the Australian state of Victoria, and had descendents, and that I also knew that her nephew Ephraim had settled in Adelaide a generation later.

Emma Deboo witnessed her brother George’s marriage in London in 1852. She married David Milne at Terrible Gully, Ballarat in 1859. I am still pursuing an arrival date and port of entry for Emma into the colonies. Many passengers were simply never listed on the ship’s records. There is a record of her husband’s arrival, because he was an indentured farm labourer, and had his passage paid. David Milne had to work on a farm in rural Victoria to pay it off.

Emma settled on the Ballarat goldfields. -In the severe drought of 1837, a group of Scottish squatters left the Geelong area and headed north in search of superior sheep and cattle pastures. They became the first white men to see the land on which the town of Ballarat would emerge. William Cross Yuille camped adjacent Black Swamp (now Lake Wendouree), and established the 'Ballaarat' station in March 1838 around present day Ballarat and Sebastopol.

A settlement developed at Buninyong and it was there, on August 8, 1851, that blacksmith Thomas Hiscock, found the first gold of the Ballarat goldfields. By 1853 there were some 20 000 prospectors working the field. In that year alone 9926 kg of gold were shipped out on the police-protected gold escort to Melbourne with another 77 700 kg transported from 1854 to 1857. The first gold battery in Australia was established at Ballarat in 1854.

In the meantime, the settlement of Ballarat (originally spelled 'Ballaarat') had begun to emerge as a service centre to the diggings. Ballarat West was proclaimed a township in 1852 and the first town land sale occurred that year. Initially a 5-km stretch of canvas tents, it began to develop more substantial buildings with the addition of a proper hotel in 1853, an official post office building in 1854, the commencement of work on Christ Church Anglican Cathedral that same year, the erection of two churches in 1855, and a gaol and hospital in 1856.

Ballarat became a municipality in 1855. Ballarat East became a municipality in 1857 and both were declared boroughs in 1863. The area prospered due to the demand for goods, services, administration and mining machinery. The arrival of the railway from Geelong (Australia's first country railway) in 1862 further enhanced marketing, commercial and social possibilities. It was into this bustling environment that Emma arrived some time in the 1850’s, commenced married life, and bore her children.

Infant mortality on the gold fields was higher than 19th century average, due to poor living conditions, lack of sanitation, polluted water supplies and poverty. Emma was very lucky to raise four out of five of her children to maturity. The burial records for some of the goldfield settlements show that many families were not so fortunate. Emma’s children were all born at Ballarat:

1. David William was born in 1860. He died in Melbourne in 1882.

2. John was born in 1862. He was still alive when Emma Deboo died in 1891 but not mentioned at all on David Milne’s death certificate.

3. Emma Margaret was born in 1865. She is believed by her descendents to be the only one of her generation to marry. Emma Margaret and her husband William Thomas Heywood had 6 children. Emma Margaret died during WWII.

4. George Tainsh was born in 1869. He was the informant on his Father’s death certificate in 1908, living at Hotham, which is now known as North Melbourne.

5. Albert Edward was born in 1871 and died in 1875.

The Eureka Rebellion.. This is probably Ballarat's most famous incident. Wherever a gold rush occurred in Victoria, a gold commissioner was appointed to the area to provide law and order but also to collect, from the miners, a monthly licence fee. Contention over this fee was but one of several grievances felt by miners throughout the goldfields. However, at Ballarat, these resentments became highly focused when they were entangled with a series of local incidents which culminated in the Eureka Rebellion: one of the most famous events in the history of colonial Australia. By late 1854 many of the miners were refusing to pay the licensing fee of one pound per month, which was enforced whether a miner found any gold or not. The fee was collected by the extremely unpopular Victoria Police, who inspected licenses and arrested and fined anyone found to be without one.

At a major meeting of miners held on 11 November at Bakery Hill, the Ballarat Reform League was established. Inspired by Chartist aims, the miners sought universal suffrage, voting by ballot, annual parliaments, the payment of political representatives, the abolition of the licensing system, revision of laws relating to crown land and changes to the administration of the goldfields.

On 27 November, a miners' deputation to Lieutenant-Governor Hotham requested the release of three imprisoned miners. He declined but supported their desire for enfranchisement, reminded them that constitutional moves were afoot to achieve this outcome, said he would appoint their chosen representative to the legislative assembly and told them they could voice their grievances about the licensing system at a proposed commission of inquiry into the matter.

Another mass meeting was planned for the 29th so that the delegation could report back to the miners. Hotham was told by the police commissioner to expect trouble and troops were dispatched to the area. Ominously, there was a skirmish as they entered Ballaarat on the evening of the 28th.

The delegation reported favourably about their meeting with Hotham but the miners decided to burn their licences at a public bonfire on Bakery Hill and to protect anyone facing arrest for being without one. That day the diggers, probably for the first time, sported their now famous blue flag adorned with the stars of the Southern Cross.

On the 30th, Commissioner Rede ordered a licence check. The police were rebuffed with stones and shots were fired. Rede called on the military and arrests were made. The miners elected Peter Lalor, a prominent figure of the Reform League, as their commander-in-chief. About 500 men took an oath to 'fight to defend our rights and liberties' and set about erecting a stockade on the Eureka claim.

Within a couple of days the numbers defending the stockade had dwindled to 150 untrained men. It appears that they did not expect to be attacked. However, in the early hours of 3 December, 152 infantry, 30 cavalry men and their officers, and 100 police approached the stockade by a surreptitious route. They charged the camp, where many still slept, and overcame resistance within about 15 minutes. It seems clear the troops employed excessive force and gratuitous violence, needlessly destroying property and tents. This may be to do with the fact that six of their numbers were killed. Peter Lalor claimed 22 miners died and another 12 later recovered from substantial wounds. 120 prisoners were taken, although some of the leaders escaped, including Lalor who went into hiding until a general amnesty was declared (he later became a Victorian Member of Parliament). Most were released but 13 were accused of high treason. Of these 12 would later be acquitted and proceedings were dropped against the 13th. The editor of the Ballarat Times received a six-month prison sentence for three counts of seditious libel.

Lieutenant-Governor Hotham appointed the promised commission of inquiry into the gold fields on 7 December. In March 1855, it recommended the abolition of the licensing fee and the establishment of a Miner's Right document which cost one pound per annum and which gave prospectors the title deed to their claim.

There is no record of David Milne’s involvement in the Eureka Rebellion, so we cannot say to what extent Emma was affected these stirring events. She had two small sons to worry about at that time, so we can only hope that she was not too close a bystander.

Emma’s four surviving children, David, John, Emma Margaret and George moved to the state capital, Melbourne. I don’t know what occupations Emma and her husband David pursued for the rest of their lives, as alluvial gold was soon exhausted. Small-scale shaft mining was gradually replaced by more ambitious deep-lead mining enterprises, and between the late 1850s and 1875 (when the mines there started to close), produced far more gold than the Ballarat East fields. Emma died at Ballarat in 1891, after which her husband David moved to Melbourne. It would require some more research to discover whether they spent their entire married life at Ballarat.

Ballarat Identities. -Distinguished public figures who started their lives at Ballarat were Prime Minister of Australia James Scullin, Premier of Victoria Sir Henry Bolte, distinguished long-distance runner Steve Moneghetti and one of Victoria's first female poets, 'Jennings Carmichael'.

American writer Mark Twain visited Ballarat in the 1890s and gave lectures in the Mechanics Institute in Sturt Street. He also used the city as a setting in his works, while future US president, Herbert Hoover, made an unsuccessful search for gold to the north of Ballarat in 1905. Another goldfields visitor was the famous Lola Montez who danced her 'sensational' Spider Dance at Ballarat in 1855. For this she was denounced by Ballarat newspaper editor Harry Seekamp, prompting her to attack him with a whip! A lively place, Ballarat!

-Susan Cooke, Canberra, ACT

 

Visit to Australia - October to November 2002

It was only in the last couple of years that the discovery was made concerning a great uncle, Ephraim William De Boo. Although I knew when and where Ephraim had been born and who his parents were, he did not appear on the 1881 census and I had no idea what had become of him.

By means of publicity through the De Bootje Gazette, Susan Cooke in Australia was able to tell me more about Ephraim. She revealed that he had emigrated to South Australia around 1876, married and had seven children. Yet another branch added to the family tree, and the total of known cousins of my father easily passed the 50 mark.

Bob DeBoo made contact with one of Ephraim and Ruth's great grandchildren, Annetta DeBoo and lined up a family reunion at her house in October 1999. This event was a great success with many descendants present. It was with this in mind that I contacted Annetta to try and arrange a similar event for the visit of my wife, Brenda, and I to Australia in late 2002.

Emails passed back and forth before our departure (and even after we had arrived in Australia). Our holiday was organised to ensure that we met as many relatives, distant and close, as possible during our five week stay, which began in Perth. From there we embarked on the Indian Pacific train to Adelaide, arriving at the unearthly hour of 6.30 am on Sunday morning. Despite the early hour, my cousin Diana and her husband were there to greet us and take us to their home in Elizabeth where we were to stay for the next nine days.

There were various sites to be seen and visits to be made, but most importantly, the arranged get together at Annetta's was now in the final stages of planning. This was to take place on the following Sunday and eagerly looked forward to. Another bright sunny hot day greeted us and about 12 noon Tony, Diana and Kay (Diana's mother), Brenda and I set out for the southern side of Adelaide.

On arrival we were informed that many of the expected visitors would not be able to make it to the gathering. But as compensation, Annetta's brother, Viv and his wife Margaret, arrived and what a marvellous collection of material including photos they brought with them. Much time was spent poring over the photos and looking at all the research Viv had done in tracing the descendants of Ephraim and Ruth. Although some of the details were recorded, there was just too much to get down in the time available. However, an exchange of information was agreed before we all reluctantly parted.

Since that time, some preparatory work has been undertaken on revising the family trees and the hope is that in the fullness of time it will be possible to show all the descendants of Ephraim and Emma (nee Drake). They had nine surviving children, all of whom married and all, bar one couple, had children.

- David Horwill, Sunbury-on-Thames, Middlesex, UK

 

Our Australian Arm

 

Previous reports in this DEBOO Family Newsletter have highlighted our pioneering ancestor, Ephraim William DeBoo (1856-1939), who came to South Australia on the good ship Erato in 1876. Ephraim was a ship's caulker at Poplar in the busy East End of London. His own ancestry connects to the 17th-18th C Deboo families at the Fens village of Holme south of Peterborough, England.

In 1879, he married Ruth Naomi Riches. They first settled in the

small rural town of Templars, north of Gawler on the northern plains of South Australia, and he worked there as a labourer and later as a farmer.

In 1879, he married Ruth Naomi Riches. They first settled in the small rural town of Templars, north of Gawler on the northern plains of South Australia, and he worked there as a labourer and later as a farmer. Today, Templars consists of two houses and a church. If you blink after seeing the roadsign "Templars," you are likely to miss the town completely. The area is rich in farming activity, with the countryside covered with wheat, barley and oats.


(click on pictures for larger versions)

Ephraim and Ruth had seven children: Frederick Ebenezer (1880 -1959; Viv's & Annetta's grandfather), Eva Marie (1882 -1936), William Saul (1883 - ?), Emma (1885 - ?), Edith (1886-1968), Henry Seamen (1888 - ?), Alfred Edward (1889-1958; his WWI records are summarized in a companion essay in this Issue). Over time, the family moved frequently, and the children were born at various rural towns around Adelaide.

Our father, Frederick Vivian (1912-1989 ), purchased a truck, and eventually found his way to the Goolwa area on the southern coast of South Australia. With his father and brothers, he worked as part of the team building the barrages on the lower reaches of the Murray River.

It was the search for employment again that took Frederick Vivian and his truck to thesteel town of Whyalla in the 1940s where he worked in the cartage trade. We were born and raised at Whyalla. Eventually, we moved to the city of Adelaide for our studies and for employment.

Today, our arm of the DeBoo family is scattered widely over South Australia.

- Annetta DeBoo (Adelaide) & Viv DeBoo (Victor Harbor), South Australia


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