7th Generation  

Samuel Hort c.1828

& Caroline nee Carey

Artwork of Marty Bell

 

England to Australia

My Great Great Grandparents

 

Samuel Hort was born c.1828 the son of John and Ann Hort nee Fry. He was baptised at Badminton in Gloucestershire on the 14th March 1830.

Caroline Hort nee Carey was baptised at Badminton on the 3rd October 1830 the daughter of John and Diana Carey nee Clark.

Caroline's parents John and Diana had married on the 8th December 1828 at Hawkesbury Gloucestershire.

UK 1841 census showed the Carey's were living at Little Badminton. John was 45years and an agricultural labourer, his wife's name here is spelt as Deanna, her age given as 35years. Two daughters were listed at home on this census night, Caroline (our ancestor) aged 9years and Charlotte 6years, and a John Clark aged 70years, Diana's father. It is not known if John and Diana Carey had other children?

UK 1851 Census Carloline's father John, mother Diana her sister Charlotte aged 16yrs and lodger William Durnal 70yrs were still in the village of Little Badminton.

UK Census 1861 John Carey was a widow by this time aged 67yrs and occupation Ag Labourer, his daughter Charlotte  unmarried. Also living with the family were lodgers John Watt and Mark Godwin . The address at this time seems to be next door to Badminton Farm at Chapel of Ease Established Church  ( A strange address?)

 

Link to Little Badminton                           Link to Hawkesbury

Move from Badminton to Sopworth Wiltshire

Marriage: Prior to his marriage Samuel Hort moved from Badminton to the village of Sopworth just over the border into Wiltshire, He married Caroline Carey from Little Badminton on the 15th February 1851, in the Parish Church of Sopworth. The Curate Robert Dyer performed this marriage by the rights and ceremonies of the Established Church. They were both of full age. Samuel was a bachelor, his occupation was given as a labourer, and Caroline was a spinster. The two witnesses at this marriage were Matilda Hort and Joseph Baylip.

LinksLink to Badminton                          Link to Sopworth

Making the Decision to leave England

The year after their marriage and the birth of their first child John, Samuel and Caroline made the decision to leave England. This big step must have been made with a great deal of anxiety. The thought of maybe never seeing their families again must have made the decision even harder. One wonders why this young family wanted to leave their homeland? Was it because of the terrible unemployment situation, poverty, poor wages and rising taxes, or the promise of hope for the future with better conditions in this new country Australia? Samuel and Caroline would have known the risk of a sea voyage. It was generally believed when a couple left Britain with young children under five years of age, there was always the chance of a child dying on the voyage. Families with older children had fewer worries.

For Samuel and Caroline, who was very pregnant at this time and their small son John, the journey from their home to the docks at Plymouth would have been an adventure in itself. Being a laborer Samuel wouldn't have had the money to go far from home before. Would they have traveled by coach, or were they lucky enough to have gone by rail? My Great Great Grandfather John was the first child born to Samuel and Caroline in Wiltshire in 1851, and Caroline was pregnant again with their second child before leaving England.

Searching through shipping indexes for the arrival of Samuel and Caroline Hort  took a lot of patience. After checking all different spellings for the surname Hort, I at last found them arriving under the spelling of Hart.

Voyage Of the Time & Truth

 One wonders at the thoughts going through the minds of Samuel and Caroline as they boarded the ship the ‘TIME & TRUTH’ at Plymouth docks on the 17th September 1852. They gave their ages as Samuel 22years, Caroline 21years and their son John one year old.

The ‘Time & Truth’ was a 576ton Barque, a small sailing vessel; her hull was sheathed with yellow metal to keep it free from weeds and barnacles. She was built at Sunderland in 1852, and was completed shortly before this voyage. She was owned by Mitchinson, and belonged to the Port of London. The ship’s Master was James Dodds, and the Surgeon Superintendent was T.Girdlestone.

Newspaper Report: A sunny autumn morning dawned for the departure of the 281 emigrants who embarked on the ‘Time & Truth” for her first visit to Port Phillip Victoria Australia. Warm southwesterlies brought days of 64°-70°F as she sailed along the lovely south coast of Plymouth. The weather remained mild making the first few uncomfortable days at sea more bearable for the emigrants.

The journey took three and a half months, during which time Caroline gave birth to their daughter Jane. (Jane's marriage certificate states she was born 'At Sea, Atlantic Ocean.') The thought of giving birth on one of these early voyages was a feat in itself.

The voyage was not without its troubles. Infectious diseases such as dysentery, and whooping cough and other chest ailments, made life uncomfortable and even dangerous in the crowded steerage compartments. Six children died from these illnesses. On arrival at the port of Geelong on the 5th January 1853, ‘Time & Truth’ was immediately quarantined along with its passengers until cleared by the Colonial Surgeon. It was five weeks before the "Time & Truth’ sailed out.

Web Link : More about Geelong Victoria

 

“Gertrude”

A likeness to the

“Time & Truth”

Searching for a photograph of the ‘TIME & TRUTH’ was to no avail,  the ship Gertrude at right was similar in tonnage and design, and was built in 1852 the same year as the Time & Truth, by the

same ship builders.

 

 

Samuel & Caroline's Life in Australia

It is not known where the Hort's lived in Geelong or what Samuel did for work, but I believe he was more than likely employed as a labourer, as this was his given occupation in Sopworth England, and he, like so many others may have tried his luck on the goldfields?

In 1856 while living at Geelong, Samuel and Caroline had their third child, a second daughter they called Matilda.

 

 The Horts had moved to the Oakleigh/Dandenong area by 1859 as their forth child Frances's birth was recorded at Dandenong. Their fifth child and second son Albert was born in 1860, followed by William in 1863, and Thomas in 1864 at Ferntree Gully. Four more daughters followed all born at Dandenong, Annie 1866, Caroline 1868, Charlotte Alice 1871, and Jessie was born in 1874. They now had a family of eleven children.

In 1875 Samuel's occupation was recorded as a painter. This year was a sad time for the family, two of their small children were struck down with Bronchitis and Pneumonia. Matilda aged 7yrs died on the 2nd of March, and her baby brother William died on the 12th March aged 9 months. They were buried 9 days apart on the 4th and 13th of March at Oakleigh Cemetery. Having no family close by to share their grief must have made this a very lonely time for Caroline and Samuel.

Web Link : More about Dandenong / Oakleigh area 

Deaths of our Hort Pioneers

Caroline Hort passed away on 17th October 1894 at the Alfred Hospital Melbourne aged 64yrs. She had died from Cellulitis of the breast and Pneumonia, and is buried in the Church of England section, row E/12, of the Dandenong Cemetery.

Three years after his wife's death Samuel who was then 70yrs of age moved to Western Australia. On Samuel's death certificate I found he had died of heart failure and chronic Bronchitis on the 22 December 1902, at Greenmount Western Australia, and had lived in Western Australia for 6yrs prior to his death. Samuel is buried at Guilford Cemetery along with his son Thomas, and daughter in-law Louisa.

Headstone Transcription

Dandenong Cemetery

 

IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR DEAR MOTHER CAROLINE HORT

DIED I7th OCT 1894.

AND ALSO OUR DEAR FATHER SAMUAL HORT

HUSBAND OF THE ABOVE DIED 22nd  DEC 1902 AGE 76YRS

INTERRED GUILFORD CEMETERY WESTERN AUSTRALIA.

ALSO OUR DEAR BROTHER ALBERT HORT

 

8th Generation

Samuel & Caroline Hort's Family

Links: Click on the underlined names below to see more details of each family.

 

1. John Hort 1851-1923 m. Mary Jane Knight (My great grandparents)

 

2. Jane Hort 1852-1930 m. William Millett

 

3. Matilda Hort 1856-1863

 

4. Frances Hort 1857-1890 m. Alfred James Pope

 

5. Albert Hort 1859-1905 unmarried

 

6. William Hort 1863-1863

 

7. Thomas Hort 1864-1944 m. Louisa Amelia Dallimore (2) Elizabeth Murray

 

8. Ann Hort 1866-1916 m. Alfred James Pope

 

9. Caroline Hort 1868 -? m. Robert J. Williams

 

10. Charlotte Alice Hort 1871-1936 m. William Henry Randles

 

11. Jessie Matilda Hort 1874-1935 m. Edmond G Exley

 

Other Links

John & Jane Hort 1851-1923

(My great grandparents)

Descendants Chart 1830 - 2003

Chart showing all descendants of the above families

Hort Site Map

Hort Families 1660-1805

Hort Book

Hort Name

Places of Hort Interest Gls & Wilt England

Geelong Victoria

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Dreamwork DesignsArtwork of Marty Bell

Copyright © 2006 Barbara Hollis