Eliza Brown (settler)

Eliza Brown (1811 – 24 April 1896) was an early settler in colonial Western Australia whose letters to her father record the hardships of her family. She accompanied an exploration to Champion Bay in 1851, her account of the journey being published.

Early years

Eliza was the daughter of William Bussey of Cuddesdon, South Oxfordshire, a "gentleman of considerable means".[1]:ix

When Eliza was 13, her mother was committed to an asylum for the insane after she had attempted to take the life of a friend. "She attempted this by leaving the room and returning with an axe".[2]

In 1836, she married Thomas Brown, who was a road surveyor. A son Kenneth was born on 19 August 1837 and Vernon was born in 1839.[3]

Emigration

Thomas Brown disclosed the reason why the couple considered emigrating in a letter to William Bussey in 1850:[4]

I never had a wish to leave prosperity in England where I always felt comfortable and happy for the chance of what might be done in any other country. My sole object in coming hither was for the improvement of Mrs Brown's health and spirits, she was often very miserable and particularly in the winter season and often expressed a wish that I would remove to some warmer climate, and took a particular fancy to Swan River which she has never deviated from, always liking the Colony and seeing better hope than I ever did. Her health and spirits were certainly much benefited which makes me not regret the change although it has plunged me into pecuniary difficulties.

The Browns obtained advice from friends Samuel Waterman Viveash and William Tanner, who had already settled in Western Australia.[5]:4 In November 1840, the Browns emigrated to Western Australia, arriving on the Sterling in March 1841, having travelled in a steerage cabin with 14 other emigrants. Eliza started writing letters to her father during the voyage.

Grass Dale

The Browns purchased from Revett Henry Bland a farm called Grass Dale, near York. A son Aubrey was born in 1841 at York.[3] Eliza wrote to her father about this:

July 8th. Bedtime arrived before I had concluded my letter on the 3rd. I had therefore put the writing aside intending to finish on the following morning, then a little Boy arrived during the night, resembling Kenneth for vigour and healthfulness but disabling me for resuming the pen again so early as intended, and wholly frustrating my intention of writing dear Emma and Matilda at present.

Quoting historian Geoffrey Bolton:

[They] lived in a thatched shed warmed in winter by the pan of coals. The hundred kilometres separating her from Perth to the Avon Valley seemed limitless to a woman nursing a small child. She was, she wrote.....'without the common necessities of life'.[6]

In 1843, Maitland was born.[7][lower-alpha 1] There was a depression in Western Australia and they struggled financially. “Costs remained high, but the price of stock fell.” They were indebted to Eliza's father who had loaned them money or guaranteed loans.[5]:6,8 Thomas had to resort to cutting sandalwood to earn a living.[5]:6–9 On 15 December 1844, their son, Vernon, drowned in the River Avon.[8] Another son was born in 1845, and named Vernon.[3] and Matilda was born on 25 November 1847.[9]

Education was also a problem for Eliza, she wrote:[5]:6

The coming to this country has a great disadvantage for children in one respect, the dearth there is of good instruction. I had hoped and have endeavoured to teach my children until they might be put into abler hands, but the increase of family diminished my opportunities and energies....to be enabled to do much if any good with the elder ones..

Champion Bay

In 1850, Brown joined a party exploring the Champion Bay district. Brown selected 40,000 acres (160 km2) on the Greenough River, and the following year established a homestead there, which he called Glengarry. Eliza was left to manage the farm at York.[1]:xi

A daughter Janet was born in 1850.[3]

In May and June 1851, Eliza herself rode with her husband and others to Champion Bay, and was persuaded by the Governor to write her account of the journey, which was published in the Inquirer.[10] She explained to her father why she joined the journey to Champion Bay:[1]:xi

The object of this is for me to see whether I could make up my mind to go and reside there with the family, and I look upon it as a wondrous privilege to be allowed a choice in the matter.

Fremantle

The Browns did not move to Champion Bay because in May 1851, the Governor appointed Thomas as a Member of the Western Australian Legislative Council and they moved to Perth.[1]:xi [lower-alpha 2] In October 1851, Brown was appointed acting Police Magistrate in Fremantle, during the absence of Thomas Yule. Brown accepted the position and he and Eliza and family moved to Fremantle. Grass Dale was let.[5]:18 He was appointed Resident Magistrate for Fremantle the following year, and from 1856 was also Perth's Collector of Customs.[5]:16–17

Later years

Eliza returned to England in 1859 to see her father before he died, taking Aubrey with her.[5]:38[lower-alpha 3] In October 1862, Thomas Brown was transferred to the position of Resident Magistrate at Geraldton. He held the position until his death the following June.

After Thomas died fortune had little kindness for Eliza. She was to spend many years as a rather lonely figure, living for part of the time at Guildford,[lower-alpha 4] occasionally with her grown children and their families.[lower-alpha 5][1]:139

In 1876, she gave evidence in the case involving her son Kenneth who had been charged with murder after shooting his second wife. The defence tried to show he was insane and Eliza gave evidence of the insanity of her mother.[12]

She died on 24 April 1896.

Edith Cowan was her granddaughter.

Letters

Eliza's legacy is her letters to her father. These “form a valuable addition to early accounts of the Swan River Colony, describing it in its second decade of existence.” [1]:ix The letters begin aboard ship in 1840 and cease in 1852.[1]:x

The letters were edited for the book "A Faithful Picture" by the Browns' great-grandson and writer, Peter Cowan.[1]

Notes

  1. The wording of the announcement was: “Birth.-On the 17th inst., at Grass Dale, the lady of Thomas Brown, Esq, of a son.
  2. He resigned in about August 1851.[11]
  3. She departed on 4 October 1859 on Robert Morrison and returned on 9 November 1860 on Lord Raglan.[3]
  4. In a house called the "Parsonage".
  5. quoting from Peter Cowan's epilogue.

References

  1. A Faithful Picture, the letters of Eliza and Thomas Brown at York in the Swan River Colony 1841-1852, edited by Peter Cowan, introduction by Alexandra Hasluck, Fremantle Arts Centre Press.
  2. Western Australian Times, 23 May 1876, p.2.
  3. Erickson, Rica [comp] The Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australia pre 1829-1888, p. 357.
  4. Letter from Thomas Brown, Grass Dale, to William Bussey, 21 December 1850.
  5. A Unique Position, a biography of Edith Dircksey Cowan 1861-1932, Peter Cowan, University of Western Australia Press, 1978.
  6. Geoffrey Bolton: Land of Vision and Mirage, Western Australia since 1826, UWA Press, 17.
  7. Inquirer, 2 August 1843, p.2.
  8. Inquirer, 8 January 1845, p.2.
  9. Inquirer, 8 December 1847, p.2.
  10. Eliza Brown; “Narrative of a Journey from York to Champion bay, in the Colony of Western Australia, during the Months of May and June 1851, Inquirer, 3–10 December 1851.
  11. Perth Gazette and Independent Journal of Politics and News, 5 September 1851, p.2.
  12. Western Australian Times, 23 May 1876, p.2.
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