Friday, July 12, 2024

 

Kezia Rose

Kezia was my maternal great grandmother, Charles and Mary Rose’s first child, born in 1869.

Kezia died at age 70 in 1939, with an obituary published in the local paper the Huon and Derwent Times.



 

From all reports, Kezia was quite an amazing woman. For many years she worked as a Nurse and Midwife, often moving in with the new mothers for two or more weeks and delivering hundreds of babies in the Franklin area. 



One of her daughters described her as the best mother a girl could want, and others have written of the many reports of kindness and work for the families of the district. ‘She was a wonderful woman and someone to be proud of’, wrote one of her granddaughters. She also wrote, ’ I think she had a hard life as William (her husband) was ill for a long time before he died, and she had to keep the family going as best she could’.

William Cupit and Kezia Rose married at Dover in 1895.

 

Of Kezia’s life before her marriage, little is known. Possibly she remained with her parents, helping with the many brothers and sisters she had. Her youngest brother was born in 1894, the year before she married. Perhaps she worked for other families, or as a domestic servant for one family.  What is known though is that in 1886 at age 17, Kezia had a son. The Rose family then lived at Flutery’s Point, Castle Forbes Bay. Her father registered the birth. The baby boy was registered as Sir Wilfred Arnal, with the Sir written in smaller lettering. The father was stated as a carpenter, Thomas Groves. The ‘Sir’ has long puzzled me. Sometimes Latin or other words were used, perhaps indicating illegitimacy, but I cannot tie this to any term seen on any other registers. My best theory is that if her father Charles was an abusive man, perhaps he insisted that the Registrar, Mr Ruddoch, write this in, as some sort of caustic stab at his daughter and his first and illegitimate grandson. As was common then, Wilfred was almost certainly brought up by Charles and Mary as their son. A baptism record from 1888 states Wilfred was baptized with the father listed as Charles Rose, and the mother as simply Kezia.

 

I can find no Thomas Groves who might be a candidate for the father of Wilfred.

 

In 1892, Kezia had another child, Ada Roseland, this time no father was recorded, and Kezia kept her baby.  Whatever the circumstances, Kezia would have suffered from the social shame and disapproval of her peers in these isolated communities of the Huon. When she married, she brought her three-year-old to their home, and the newly wed couple raised her as their own.

Together Kezia and William raised ten children:

Ada Roseland b 1892

David William Frederick b 1895 (David’s story is called WW1 Part 3 and was blogged here in April 2018)

Martin Henry b 1897

Albert Edward Victor b 1889- known as Top

Alma Corrina Martina b 1901- known as Ivy

Coraline Ivy Victoria b 1901- Known as Corrie, she was my grandmother and a twin to Ivy.

Jane Myrtle Myrene b 1903-known as Rene

William Leslie William Russell b 1905

Gordon Stanley Livingston b 1907-known as Dick

Robin Ernest b 1910- known as Slim

 

Kezia and William’s children were all born at Dover, but by the 1914 census, they had relocated to Franklin.

 In the first decades of the twentieth century, Franklin was a bustling town. It had branches of Hobart’s big stores, busy Friday night shopping, dances, concerts and lantern shows with music supplied by bands such as the Cygnet Joy Spreaders or the Middleton Melody Makers, with moving pictures being screened regularly at the Franklin Town Hall. The late 1800’s and early 1900’s saw the construction of substantial dwellings with the availability of lathe and plaster and wallpaper. Upon renovations in recent years, the Cupit’s attractive gabled home revealed newspaper linings in the upstairs bedrooms.

                                Cupit Home, south of Franklin. Source propertyvalue.com

Franklin was the only smaller town outside Hobart to have electric lights. In 1916 a mini hydro plant behind the town on Price’s Creek, powered both industry and domestic needs. For a flat rate of a six monthly £3 fee, townsfolk could use all the power they wanted and had no metres. No one ever switched off their lights.

Owen 'Skipper' Linnell in the Price’s Creek power station circa 1920's. (photo courtesy Rob Linnell)     Franklin History Group inc     ://www.fhgtas.com/gallery.html

 

The children all attended the State School in Franklin. The local newspaper reports frequently the Cupit girls’ achievements at school and in community life, while the boys feature more in their sporting achievements. School attendance could be hit and miss in the Huon. In 1925 Glen Huon school recorded only one student on the first day of the school year. Children were expected to work alongside their parents picking fruit or look after the younger children while their mother worked. January would have been the busiest time of year for the less robust berry fruit picking. Corrie received recognition for full attendance, while, young Martin had his father threaten to pull his son out of school in 1910.

Franklin State School choir
                                            Ivy Cupit, standing on left........Corrie Cupit, standing above choirmaster

Photos taken at Frank's Cider House & Cafe (on the wall, hence the poor quality)
(Frank's Cider is wonderful) (I love the cherry)



 William had reported physical cruelty at the hand of Martin’s teacher Mr Ross. Mr Ross was vehemently defending his innocence of the excessive canning of Martin, claiming, contrary to William's, that only two cuts, through clothes, did not draw blood or severe bruising. After a full enquiry into the matter, charges were dropped. Mr Ross in fact suggested that William’s complaint may have been ‘a feeble retaliation for my reporting him for his child’s irregular attendance’.  


A young Martin Cupit outside the Huon Times Office, opposite the Lady Franklin Hotel.
It was Martin's youngest brother, Rob who (sadly) demolished the Lady Franklin Hotel and built the new one.



                   Photo: Franklin History Group inc     Lady Franklin Hotel.       www.fhgtas.com/gallery.html


 

                                     Lady Franklin Hotel.   Photo: tripadvisor.com.au

My grandmother Corrie, rarely spoke of her childhood and only ever referred to where her family lived as, The Huon, or The Channel. The one memory she once shared fondly was of her and her twin sister stealing apples and laughing at the angered orchardist from the roof of his shed. As they jumped up and down, they fell through the roof. Family writings tell of Kezia walking to church with her daughters and the local lads watching from behind the hedges!

Many published writings contain memories of these pre war years being a very happy time.

 

William was a fisherman and later ran a grocery store in Franklin. Kezia completed her training as a midwife in Hobart in 1918, probably to avoid prosecution in the untrained delivery of babies, and to increase her earning capacity as William was aging. Throughout the first decades of the twentieth century, census records always list Kezia with ‘home duties’ as her profession. This was a time that did not recognize a married woman’s profession. Her role as nurse and midwife was obviously considered as an extension of her domestic duties, and much of her care would have been unpaid for. Ada did not marry until 1925, and it was her who cared for the family while Kezia worked in her role as nurse and midwife. These women were both described as extremely hard workers by family.


                                               Kezia in her midwife uniform. Photo E Cupit- Ancestry.com

 

William died in 1925 at age sixty. Family records indicated he was unwell and possibly had contracted polio, as he had a limp. A newspaper report tells of an incident in 1924 which tells of his physical disability. William fell into the water while repairing his boat on the jetty in front of his Franklin residence, “Being a partial cripple, he was unable to get out of the water’, is reported. Eventually he was aided but had been in the water for over an hour.

William in his boat. Photo E Hardinge


                         

    Standing L to R: Kezia, daughters Rene and Ada, Walter Watson (Ada's husband), unknown, circa 1930

Kneeling: Martin and Gordon Cupit & Cecil Berhens (Ivy's husband)     Photo E Cupit, Ancestry.com 


Kezia had seventeen grandchildren and fifty-seven great grandchildren.

This does not include Wilfred’s children, the story of which needs more detective work.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bibliography:

Trove articles

Libraries Tas Names Index

‘Centenary of the Settlement of the Huon’ supplement in the Huon & Derwent Times 1936

Days Gone by in the Channel. M Lowe

Full and Plenty, an Oral History of Apple Growing in the Huon Valley. C Watson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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