52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks (2020)
Week 4 | Close to Home
A short and poignant response to this week’s theme that
tells the story of Annie Davey, sister of my maternal grandfather and niece of
Susan Betts, the subject of last week’s post.
The only surviving photo of Annie Davey, circa 1960 |
As a toddler, Annie lived with her parents Henry and
Elizabeth (nee Betts) and older brother, Ernest Frank, on Ada Street, in the
Stoneleigh Estate in Lutwyche where Henry had purchased two lots in 1891. As she neared the end of her school days, the
family moved to King Street, Lutwyche (now Maygar Street, Windsor), a distance
of only about 500 metres from the home on Ada Street. Annie and her parents lived in this home
until the end of World War I, when they moved to Union Street, Nundah, about
5km away.
It is likely that Annie attended Bowen Bridge school, but
this has not been confirmed. Social life
for the family appear to have centred on the activities of the Independent
Order of Rechabites, a temperance organisation of which Henry was a member and
which had a junior group and possibly the Salvation Army.
Annie came of age during the turbulent years of the First
World War. At a time when her thoughts
would likely have been turning to courtship and marriage, life would instead have
been a series of farewells as her brother and other young men in her social
circle enlisted in the AIF and left Australia to fight in the Middle East and
Europe; her daily routine punctuated with the appearance of familiar names in casualty
lists in the daily newspapers.
As for numerous women of this generation, Annie did not
marry. For many it was because they lost
a beau in the war; for others it was the simple (and sad) fact that the war
significantly reduced the number of eligible men. There is family folklore that Annie lost a
beau, however, no evidence has been found (yet) to confirm that this is the
reason she didn’t marry or who the young man might have been.
Instead, continued to live at home with her parents, Henry
and Elizabeth (nee Betts) Davey. After
her mother passed away in 1926, she continued to care for her father until his
death in 1945. A few years before Henry’s death, Henry and
Annie made one last move, to 52 Buckland Road, Nundah, again a move of less
than 500 metres (and still within 5km of her first home on Ada Street).
Upon Henry’s death, Annie inherited the home and lived there
for almost another 40 years. In her last
few years, she moved into a nursing home, across the river in the Redland
Shire, the biggest move she had made in the 90 odd years of her life. She died in the Princess Alexandra Hospital
in July 1985, aged 92 years and was cremated at Mt Thompson.
The Davey home at 52 Buckland Road, Nundah, Qld |
Although she remained physically close to home (in fact, in a
series of family homes within a 5km circle) for the majority of her life, she
unfortunately did not remain emotionally close to home. A connection to her surviving family members, the
children of her brother, was largely lost and her nieces and nephews did not
become aware of her passing until well after the funeral and were unable to
mark the occasion. As a consequence, she
bequeathed her home (and estate) to Annie’s “dear friend Edna Irene Brumpton …
in appreciation and grateful thanks for all the kindness and help she has bestowed
on me during our years of Happy Friendship”.
Edna sold the home to developers and it has long since been replaced by
a ubiquitous brick ‘six-pack’ unit block.
A sad ending both for this home and for my great-aunt Annie, whose life had stayed close to it (and its predecessors) for so many years.
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