Granny (right) with Polly Harely (sister) and Jim Orr (brother) |
My memory is always of Granny and Aunty Ethel, for from my
earliest days they always lived together. Among my earliest memories are those
of a trip I did with Nana and Pa Marsh in the Austin A40 to spend a night or
two with Granny and Aunt Ethel on their farm at Seelands, outside Grafton. I
must have been three or four at the time. From their house you could see the
Clarence River and the railway line ran through their farm. Now, when I look
Seelands up on ‘whereis.com’ it shows up on the opposite side of the river to
the railway line but possibly Seelands refers to the area on both sides of the
river.
I don’t know when they moved to Grafton, but that is where
they both lived for most of the time I knew them. From their house we could
look over a creek to see the prisoners in Grafton gaol working in the prison
gardens.
They were both ‘proper’ ladies, always well dressed, sat straight,
and Aunty Ethel was quite particular about the way the house was kept. Mum and
Dad made it quite clear before we ever visited that we were expected to be on
our best behaviour for the occasion. Whenever we began to get a little restless
we were allowed to go out into the garden to work off some excess energy.
Granny and Ethel would often spend time with Nana and Pa,
especially at Christmas. One memory of Granny is that of her on hands and knees
scrubbing Nana’s veranda. This memory was of Granny well into her eighties. Another
is of her sitting on a platform that had been made for Nana to allow her to
reach the rotary clothes line Dad had made for her. Nana was rather short as a
result of a deformity she had caused by a childhood illness. Granny held a switch
in her hand and David and I would try to run in close to Granny and out again
without being tagged by the switch. She remained physically active until the
last couple of years of her life and retained her full mental abilities until
the end.
Granny was born Eliza Orr, the daughter of William who had
emigrated from Canada. The story is that William was the engineer on the first
steam ship that sailed into Sydney Harbour but I am not sure that this tale
would stand up to close historical scrutiny. It seems one day William had a
little too much to drink and spent the night as a guest of the local policeman.
While enjoying the policeman’s hospitality he urinated on the officer through
the bars of his cell. Which may explain why he spent some time in Fiji.
Granny spent some of her childhood in Fiji where William
managed a sugar can plantation. Another unsubstantiated piece of the family
history is that William took the first horses to Fiji. This is something Dad
told me that he had heard but he was not sure if it were true.
Granny married William Davis and they had three children;
Roy, Ethel and Lucy. Roy served with the army in France in World War 1 where he
was gassed and wounded. After the war he married Alma McLennan, Pa Marsh’s cousin.
They had one daughter, Maree (may not be spelt correctly) who served in the
WRAAF in World War two and later married Don Day who also served in the RAAF.
Don became a minister in the Wran Government of NSW. Ethel married a McNeil.
They had no children and her husband died before I was born. Lucy was my Dad’s
mother.
William died before Lucy was born and Granny determined she
would not marry again until her children were raised. Initially she lived in a
shack with a dirt floor on a farm owned by her brother-in-law, Lavendar Davis
(known as Lav). Years later, after my grandparents married, they bought the
neighbouring 80 acre farm. To earn a little money Granny walked the 8 to 10
kilometres into Maclean carrying eggs, chickens and other produce to sell.
She eventually married Grandfather Carter who died before I
was born. The Carters owned a 40 acre farm that was diagonally across the road
from my grandparents. When Mum and Dad married they took over this farm and I
grew up in the house that my great grandmother had lived in. Dad was to
eventually buy this farm from Granny. It had been left to him in Grandfather
Carter’s will on condition that he buy it from Granny at a price that was set
at the time the will was written – quite a favourable price when Dad finally
bought it.
The story is told that when one of her nieces – a Davis girl
– wore a two-piece swimsuit that showed the smallest amount of midriff Granny
called her a hussy. She was a staunch
Methodist but according to my Uncle Stan – who married Dad’s sister Aileen –
would enjoy the occasional shandy. Her faith remained strong throughout her
life and her Bible was constantly beside her during the final years of her life
when she suffered a succession of illnesses.
Granny lived by this prayer that I believe was in her Bible
when she died.
‘My Lord walks with me today, and
His power is in every single thing I do. Today His glorious Presence will be at
my right hand. As I take hold of my tasks there will be added strength within
me. As I face perplexities there will be unexpected solutions. As I face my
relationships with others, there will be a love beyond my own, making those
relationships sweet and beautiful. Nothing will meet me today that He will not
be in and together we will go through it. His glorious Presence will be at my
right hand.’
Granny was a wonderfully kind lady who was greatly loved by
her family. She overcame hardship, as did many of her generation, to create a
better world for her family. A true pioneer, a positive role model, a woman of
faith.
No comments:
Post a Comment