(1) The sporty Carrs
I started by researching my father’s family – his mother and
father, May Queenie Carr (nee Tyson) and Edwin William ("Slip”) Carr - and my
great grandfather and great grandmother – Thomas Peter “TP” Carr and Harriett
Carr (nee Augood).
I have a lot of information about many members of this
group, especially Slip Carr and his father and brothers, who were outstanding
sportsmen. Slip represented Australia at Rugby Union and competed at the 1924
Paris Olympic Games. I decided to research and write his and their stories.
(2) The early Carrs
Then I discovered my great great grandfather and gx2 grandmother
– Henry William Carr and Maria Carr (nee Lillyman). Henry had come out to Australia
from Ireland when very young, most likely in the late 1850s, and settled in Wee
Waa, New South Wales (pronounced “we wore”). There he met and married Maria
Lillyman, an immigrant from England.
I decided to research these “first arrivers” from Europe
and the founders of the Australian family. I would write their story up to the
end of the 19thC and then move seamlessly back to project (1). Good plan.
(3) The Irish Carrs
But no. While doing that, I discovered that William Henry
Carr had several brothers and sisters who had also come out to Australia in the
19thC. There were clues to them in a mysterious letter written by an Irishwoman, Mrs
Magill, to a distant Australian relative, Fred Carr, in the early 1920s. The letter
turned up in my grandfather’s trunk in 1994 (see “How the journey started”).
Who were these Irish immigrants? I had to find out. I delved
some more, the list grew and I learnt there were still more siblings in Ireland. Also, a
gx3 grandfather and grandmother, Frederick and Elizabeth Carr. They may have
had 16 children or more.
I thought I had gone as far as I could with the Irish Carrs. But then, earlier this year, I made contact with other descendants of that
big Irish family and found out more (see "Advertising works”).
So I have some partly written manuscripts, a growing pile of research and a whole lot of new questions.
One day maybe, I will find out more about my mother’s family tree - the Camerons and Davidsons - and about the Tysons – the family of my grandmother, May Queenie Tyson.
So I have some partly written manuscripts, a growing pile of research and a whole lot of new questions.
One day maybe, I will find out more about my mother’s family tree - the Camerons and Davidsons - and about the Tysons – the family of my grandmother, May Queenie Tyson.