Charlotte Emily Watson (Lloyd)
|
- http://archival.sl.nsw.gov.au/Details/archive/110350095
Charlotte Emily Watson, Mrs John Sanderson Lloyd, ca. 1870 / photographer John Hood, Glenelg- CREATOR
John Hood - DATE
ca. 1884 - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
- 1 photographic print - 10.4 x 6.2 cm - carte de visite
- SOURCE
Presented by Miss R. M. Lloyd Pic.Acc.573 - COPYING CONDITIONS
Out of copyright: created before 1955 - GENERAL NOTE
Transferred from P1/Watson, Charlotte (BM), July 2010
Digital order no:a4366013 - SIGNATURES / INSCRIPTIONS
"Charlotte Emily Watson, wife of John Sanderson Lloyd, mother of Henry Sanderson Lloyd" -- in ink on the reverse
Charlotte Emily Watson came to Australia in 1939.
Her Parents - Charlotte Eliza Watson (nee Float) and Henry Watson arrived in South Australia in March 1839. The party consisted of Henry Watson's father William and mother Martha, wife Charlotte and two children - Charlotte Emily (2 years) and Louisa (6 months). He kept a diary of the journey. They brought with them a prefabricated house from Henry Manning's London company. They later built a brick facade and added a brick paved verandah. The house was situated on Pennington Terrace, North Adelaide and called Walkley Cottage. Henry Watson was a chemist and druggist at North Adelaide and also a Quaker. He came out to South Australia to join his brother in law John Barton Hack as a merchant and partner in the firm Hack, Watson and Company.
LLOYD.-On the 8th January, at Lefevre-terrace, suddenly, of heart failure. Charlotte Emily, the wife of John Sanderson Lloyd, aged 68 years.
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/5035415
Her Parents - Charlotte Eliza Watson (nee Float) and Henry Watson arrived in South Australia in March 1839. The party consisted of Henry Watson's father William and mother Martha, wife Charlotte and two children - Charlotte Emily (2 years) and Louisa (6 months). He kept a diary of the journey. They brought with them a prefabricated house from Henry Manning's London company. They later built a brick facade and added a brick paved verandah. The house was situated on Pennington Terrace, North Adelaide and called Walkley Cottage. Henry Watson was a chemist and druggist at North Adelaide and also a Quaker. He came out to South Australia to join his brother in law John Barton Hack as a merchant and partner in the firm Hack, Watson and Company.
LLOYD.-On the 8th January, at Lefevre-terrace, suddenly, of heart failure. Charlotte Emily, the wife of John Sanderson Lloyd, aged 68 years.
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/5035415
The South Australian Register of 18 June 1886 lists that Elders auctioned “Givendale Estate, near Balhannah, containing 385 acres, at £5 9s, per acre”.
The new owner was an accountant who lived in Adelaide, John Sanderson Lloyd. He transferred ownership to his wife, Charlotte, and leased sections of the land to tenant farmers. In 1898 Lloyd divided the land, retaining the section with the stone home, some 84 acres on part section 93. In 1898 Frederick Petersen and his wife Bertha (formerly Schultz of Summertown) leased the land. This land was purchased in 1902 by Henry Trevenen and his wife, Eva’s brother, William Pether. The remaining sections of the land were leased and eventually sold , after Charlotte Lloyd’s death in 1905
The new owner was an accountant who lived in Adelaide, John Sanderson Lloyd. He transferred ownership to his wife, Charlotte, and leased sections of the land to tenant farmers. In 1898 Lloyd divided the land, retaining the section with the stone home, some 84 acres on part section 93. In 1898 Frederick Petersen and his wife Bertha (formerly Schultz of Summertown) leased the land. This land was purchased in 1902 by Henry Trevenen and his wife, Eva’s brother, William Pether. The remaining sections of the land were leased and eventually sold , after Charlotte Lloyd’s death in 1905