Difference between revisions of "Johanna Bath"

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[[File:Johanna Bath.JPG|500px|thumb|right|Johanna Bath nee Vaughan.]]
 
[[File:Johanna Bath.JPG|500px|thumb|right|Johanna Bath nee Vaughan.]]
[[File:GILL ST -Lydiard St from Bath's - 1994.21-wiki.jpg|1000px|thumb|right|Samuel Thomas Gill, ''Lydiard Street from Bath's Hotel,'' 1857, engraving on paper. <br>Art Gallery of Ballarat, purchased 1994.]]
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==Background==
 
==Background==
 +
Johanna (Joanna) Vaughan was born to Thomas Vaughan and Mary Whent. Her mother died at her birth, her father remarrying to Susannah, who cared for Johanna and whose name appears on Johanna’s death certificate.
 +
 
Johanna Vaughan emigrated from England on the barque [[Benecia]] landing with her father, step-mother and brother and sisters in November 1850. In the following September this family settled at Ballarat.  
 
Johanna Vaughan emigrated from England on the barque [[Benecia]] landing with her father, step-mother and brother and sisters in November 1850. In the following September this family settled at Ballarat.  
  
Reverend Lewis celebrated the marriage of Johanna and Thomas Bath in 1851 at Geelong. The Bath’s established The Ballarat Hotel on 1 July 1853 which by 1854 had changed its name to Bath’s Hotel. The name was again changed, to Craig’s Hotel and Craig’s Royal Hotel.<ref>John Hargreaves, ''Ballarat Hotels Past and Present'', p.2, 1943, Ballarat</ref> Around 1857 Johanna and Thomas Bath moved to a farm near Learmonth which was called Ceres. They made the voyage back to England departing on the [[Northam]] in March 1860.  
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Reverend Lewis celebrated the marriage of Johanna and Thomas Bath on 6th February 1851 at Geelong.<ref> Notes Mary Wright 2003</ref> They went to Ballarat on 1 September 1851 the day that digging for gold commenced on the Golden Point Number One Diggings. They lived in a tent for three months and Johanna was said to be the first white woman on those goldfields. They then went to Sandhurst and Fryer's Creek before returning to Ballarat in 1852 and built a property in Errard Street called Bava a combination of the names Bath and Vaughan.<ref> Notes Mary Wright 2003</ref>
 +
 
 +
The Bath’s established The Ballarat Hotel on 1 July 1853 which by 1854 had changed its name to Bath’s Hotel. The name was again changed, to Craig’s Hotel and Craig’s Royal Hotel.<ref>John Hargreaves, ''Ballarat Hotels Past and Present'', p.2, 1943, Ballarat</ref> Around 1857 Johanna and Thomas Bath moved to a farm near Learmonth which was called Ceres. They made the voyage back to England departing on the [[Northam]] in March 1860.  
  
 
Johanna’s husband, Thomas Bath, was born on 29 January 1825 at Penair near Truro, Cornwall. He worked as a butcher before serving aboard the H.M. troopship Belle Isle. As a sailor he was well travelled having visited Malta, Corfu, Gibralter, West Indies, Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. In May 1849 he arrived in Australia on the Sir George Seymour, and started a butchering business in Geelong. In 1851 Bath heard of the goldrushes and travelled to Hiscock’s Gully, near Buninyong. Early in the 1850s he established a butcher’s shop at the gold diggings at Ballarat. He did not stay on the Ballarat diggings but went to Fryer’s Creek in 1852, then to Colac and Bendigo where the Eaglehawk Diggings were opening up. By 1853 he had ceased mining and came to Little Bendigo, near Ballarat East. He bought land in Ballarat (west) and owned the Saxon Paddock on which some of the earliest cricket and football matches were played, and which was given to the Ballarat City Council. It is now known as the Ballarat City Oval. ‘Together they shared in all that conceived of the well being and progress of the Town. The church, the hospital, the art gallery … all benefitted by their thoughtful generosity and their private benefactions as well as their hospitality at both of their houses, Bara at Ballarat and Ceres  at Learmonth.’ A vestry was added to the Learmonth Church of England church in memory of Thomas and Johanna Bath in appreciation of their kindness and goodness.<ref>Dorothy Wickham, ''Women of Substance'', BHSPublishing, 2021.</ref>
 
Johanna’s husband, Thomas Bath, was born on 29 January 1825 at Penair near Truro, Cornwall. He worked as a butcher before serving aboard the H.M. troopship Belle Isle. As a sailor he was well travelled having visited Malta, Corfu, Gibralter, West Indies, Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. In May 1849 he arrived in Australia on the Sir George Seymour, and started a butchering business in Geelong. In 1851 Bath heard of the goldrushes and travelled to Hiscock’s Gully, near Buninyong. Early in the 1850s he established a butcher’s shop at the gold diggings at Ballarat. He did not stay on the Ballarat diggings but went to Fryer’s Creek in 1852, then to Colac and Bendigo where the Eaglehawk Diggings were opening up. By 1853 he had ceased mining and came to Little Bendigo, near Ballarat East. He bought land in Ballarat (west) and owned the Saxon Paddock on which some of the earliest cricket and football matches were played, and which was given to the Ballarat City Council. It is now known as the Ballarat City Oval. ‘Together they shared in all that conceived of the well being and progress of the Town. The church, the hospital, the art gallery … all benefitted by their thoughtful generosity and their private benefactions as well as their hospitality at both of their houses, Bara at Ballarat and Ceres  at Learmonth.’ A vestry was added to the Learmonth Church of England church in memory of Thomas and Johanna Bath in appreciation of their kindness and goodness.<ref>Dorothy Wickham, ''Women of Substance'', BHSPublishing, 2021.</ref>
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Reportedly both Johanna and Thomas were in Ballarat at the time of the Eureka Affair but it is thought they took no part in the uprising.  
 
Reportedly both Johanna and Thomas were in Ballarat at the time of the Eureka Affair but it is thought they took no part in the uprising.  
  
Johanna Bath died on 19 September 1900 and was buried in the Ballaarat Old Cemetery. Thomas died 27 July 1901 aged 76 years. They had both been living at 15 Errard Street North at the time of their respective deaths.
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Johanna Bath died on 19 September 1900 and was buried on 21 September in the Ballaarat Old Cemetery in grave F1 34R2. Her name is spelt Joanna on the cemetery listings. Thomas died 27 July 1901 aged 76 years and was buried at the Ballaarat Old Cemetery on 30 July 1900, reunited alongside his wife in grave F1 33R2. They had both been living at 15 Errard Street North at the time of their respective deaths.
  
 
==Goldfields Involvement, 1854==
 
==Goldfields Involvement, 1854==
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==Post 1854 Experiences==
 
==Post 1854 Experiences==
[[File:1996.59 - Doudiet - Eureka Riot 17th Octobe-wikir.jpg|1000px|thumb|right|Charles A. Doudiet, '' watercolour on paper,'' 1854, watercolour,  on paper. <br>Courtesy Art Gallery of Ballarat, purchased by the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery with the assistance of many donors, 1996.]]
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Johanna's husband, Thomas Bath, was a creditor as the result of the burning of James Bentley's Eureka Hotel, and listed as a claimant by by the Select Committee reporting Upon Ballaarat i.e. Ballarat riots - Bentley's Hotel.<ref>Select Committee Upon Ballaarat [i.e. Ballarat] riots - Bentley's Hotel, accessed 09 February 2106.</ref>
Johanna's husband, Thomas Bath, was a creditor as the result of the burning of James Bentley's Eureka Hotel, and listed as a claimant by by the Select Committee reporting Upon Ballaarat [i.e. Ballarat] riots - Bentley's Hotel.<ref>Select Committee Upon Ballaarat [i.e. Ballarat] riots - Bentley's Hotel, accessed 09 February 2106.</ref>
 
 
 
  
 
Thomas Bath also signed the [[Benden Hassell]] Petition for Compensation for being shot by the military on 28 November 1854. He gave his occupation as Hotel Keeper, residing in Ballarat. <ref>Dorothy Wickham, ''Shot in the Dark'', BHS Publishing, 1998</ref>
 
Thomas Bath also signed the [[Benden Hassell]] Petition for Compensation for being shot by the military on 28 November 1854. He gave his occupation as Hotel Keeper, residing in Ballarat. <ref>Dorothy Wickham, ''Shot in the Dark'', BHS Publishing, 1998</ref>
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Mrs Bath exhibited a pike used at the [[Eureka Stockade]], found by her on the morning after the battle. It was exhibited during the 1876 Ballaarat Mechanics' Institute Fine Arts Exhibition.<ref>Ballaarat Mechanics' Institute Fine Arts Exhibition 1876 Catalogue.</ref>
 
Mrs Bath exhibited a pike used at the [[Eureka Stockade]], found by her on the morning after the battle. It was exhibited during the 1876 Ballaarat Mechanics' Institute Fine Arts Exhibition.<ref>Ballaarat Mechanics' Institute Fine Arts Exhibition 1876 Catalogue.</ref>
  
Heer husband's obituary was recorded in the ''Ballarat Star'' in 1899. <ref>''Ballarat Star'', 4 October 1899.</ref>
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Her husband's obituary was recorded in the ''Ballarat Star''. Death of Mr Thomas Bath.
 +
 
 +
DEATH OF MR. THOMAS BATH.
 +
Mr. Thomas Bath, a native of Truro, Cornwall, and a resident, except for two or three small intervals, of the Ballarat district from the earliest days of its history in 1851, died at Ballarat on Monday morning from general break-up of the system. Mr. Bath, who was 76 years of age, landed in Victoria in 1849, and was one of the first to reach Golden Point before the great rush set in. What is how known as Craig's Royal Hotel was originally kept by Mr Bath as far back as 1854, and when he disposed of the business to Mr. Craig a few years later Mr. Bath, who had acquired considerable properly in the neighbourhood of the town-hall, which is still in the estate, turned his attention to agricultural pursuits. Ceres, his station at Learmonth, is noted throughout the state for the quality of the stock raised upon it. Mr. Bath was a very old member of the agricultural and pastoral society, and held the position of treasurer for a period of 20 years.<ref>''Ballarat Star'', 13 September 1901.</ref>
  
 
==In The News==
 
==In The News==
 +
[[File:Bathshotel200 courier.JPG|500px|thumb|right|Bath's Hotel, Ballarat.jpg.]]
  
== Claims for Losses at the Eureka Hotel ==
+
== Bath's Hotel ==
 
 
:The following is a list of the claims made to the Government for compensation in connection with the burning of Bentley's Hotel, on the 17th October, 1854. The total amount is £40,418 ls 2d, of which only £150 is recommended by the select committee to be paid, - viz., 30/ to Messrs D. & W. Wallace, and £120 to Mr [[Michael Walsh]]. A sum of £150 is also recommended to be given to Dr Carr, who is at present in the Yarra Bend Lunatic Asylum; but this amount is on account of a claim for professional services
 
to the wounded after the outbreak on the 3rd of December, and cannot properly be said to have come under the cognizance of the committee.
 
:'''List of Claims for Compensation for Losses Sustained through the Ballarat Riot, on 7th October, 1854'''
 
:[[George Waterson]], clothing and working tools, £22 ; Augustus Miell, gold, bank notes, musical instruments and music books, goldrings, and two boxes of clothing, £87 ; D. and W. Wallace, tents and clothing, £30. [[Samuel Waldock]], livery stable keeper, saddles, harness, carts, hay, corn, horses, &c. &c, £766; [[Henry Harris]], merchandise stored in the yard of Bentley's Hotel, £45 ls.; E. F. West, clothing, musical instruments, and music books, £53 ; Chas. Smith, clothing and working tools, £20; [[Michael Walsh]], tent, household goods, clothing of self and family, and injury sustained by his wife, £175 10s.; Chas. Dyte, merchandise stored in the building attached to the hotel, £416 ls; G. C. Smith, two boxes and their contents, which were stored in the hotel, stated value, £343 18s ; [[Isaac Rigby]], chest of tools and clothing, £20 ; total, £1977 10s.
 
:'''List of Creditors on Bentley's Estate'''
 
:The Bank of New South Wales, overdrawn banking account, £2,000 : the Union Bank, dishonored, bills, £1,600 ; [[Thomas Bath]], Ballarat, dishonored bill, £192 10s; F. B Beaver, Esq., M.L.A., goods sold and delivered, £2,492 8s 5d; [[Mark Folk]] and [[Isaac Lazarus]], goods sold and delivered. £106 11s ; [[John Ettershank]], [[Stephen Holgate]], [[William Eaglestone]], dishonored bills, £87 2s6d; [[John Rutherford]], [[James Tingeman]], goods sold and delivered, £516 16s 8d; [[John McGuinnes]], goods sold and delivered, £96 2s 4d; [[Charles Morgan]], goods sold and delivered, £26 3s 3d ; Patricias Wm Welch, goods sold and delivered, £506 7s ; Dr Carr, for professional services, £124. Total, £7,648 1s 2d.
 
:'''Servants' Wages, and Moneys due on Building Contracts'''
 
:[[Patrick Hanlon]], carpenter's contract work, £95; [[Michael McDermott]], do. £125; [[Donald Ross]], do, £150; J. Donnelly, do, £98 ; [[Roderick Ross]], do, £160; [[Charles Smith]], baker, balance for wages, about £110; [[George Waterson]], balance for wages, £22, and £92 10s; [[Isaac Rigby]], money due on contract for building, £200. Total, £1,042 10s.
 
:'''Bentley's Claim'''
 
"Claim by J. F. Bentley and wife, for the sum of £29,750, it being the ascertained value of the hotel, outbuildings, and stock in-trade, all of which were destroyed in the riot.<ref>Ballarat Star, 09 June 1858</ref>
 
 
 
 
 
 
:HISTORIC HOTEL SOLD: - FAMOUS BALLARAT PROPERTY.
 
:HISTORIC HOTEL SOLD: - FAMOUS BALLARAT PROPERTY.
 
:BALLARAT, Sunday.—Craig's Hotel, the oldest and best known establishment of the kind in Ballarat, has been sold by private treaty for £30,000. Mrs. T. Newton, who has been licensee for several years, was the purchaser. The property, which has been improved on up-to-date lines, belonged to Mr. Frank Herman, of the firm of Messrs. J. J. Goller and Co., merchants, Lydiard street. The price realised for the hotel, which has a historic reputation, shows a substantial advance on the price paid for the property when it was last sold some years ago.
 
:BALLARAT, Sunday.—Craig's Hotel, the oldest and best known establishment of the kind in Ballarat, has been sold by private treaty for £30,000. Mrs. T. Newton, who has been licensee for several years, was the purchaser. The property, which has been improved on up-to-date lines, belonged to Mr. Frank Herman, of the firm of Messrs. J. J. Goller and Co., merchants, Lydiard street. The price realised for the hotel, which has a historic reputation, shows a substantial advance on the price paid for the property when it was last sold some years ago.

Latest revision as of 14:15, 26 March 2023

Johanna Bath nee Vaughan.

Background

Johanna (Joanna) Vaughan was born to Thomas Vaughan and Mary Whent. Her mother died at her birth, her father remarrying to Susannah, who cared for Johanna and whose name appears on Johanna’s death certificate.

Johanna Vaughan emigrated from England on the barque Benecia landing with her father, step-mother and brother and sisters in November 1850. In the following September this family settled at Ballarat.

Reverend Lewis celebrated the marriage of Johanna and Thomas Bath on 6th February 1851 at Geelong.[1] They went to Ballarat on 1 September 1851 the day that digging for gold commenced on the Golden Point Number One Diggings. They lived in a tent for three months and Johanna was said to be the first white woman on those goldfields. They then went to Sandhurst and Fryer's Creek before returning to Ballarat in 1852 and built a property in Errard Street called Bava a combination of the names Bath and Vaughan.[2]

The Bath’s established The Ballarat Hotel on 1 July 1853 which by 1854 had changed its name to Bath’s Hotel. The name was again changed, to Craig’s Hotel and Craig’s Royal Hotel.[3] Around 1857 Johanna and Thomas Bath moved to a farm near Learmonth which was called Ceres. They made the voyage back to England departing on the Northam in March 1860.

Johanna’s husband, Thomas Bath, was born on 29 January 1825 at Penair near Truro, Cornwall. He worked as a butcher before serving aboard the H.M. troopship Belle Isle. As a sailor he was well travelled having visited Malta, Corfu, Gibralter, West Indies, Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. In May 1849 he arrived in Australia on the Sir George Seymour, and started a butchering business in Geelong. In 1851 Bath heard of the goldrushes and travelled to Hiscock’s Gully, near Buninyong. Early in the 1850s he established a butcher’s shop at the gold diggings at Ballarat. He did not stay on the Ballarat diggings but went to Fryer’s Creek in 1852, then to Colac and Bendigo where the Eaglehawk Diggings were opening up. By 1853 he had ceased mining and came to Little Bendigo, near Ballarat East. He bought land in Ballarat (west) and owned the Saxon Paddock on which some of the earliest cricket and football matches were played, and which was given to the Ballarat City Council. It is now known as the Ballarat City Oval. ‘Together they shared in all that conceived of the well being and progress of the Town. The church, the hospital, the art gallery … all benefitted by their thoughtful generosity and their private benefactions as well as their hospitality at both of their houses, Bara at Ballarat and Ceres at Learmonth.’ A vestry was added to the Learmonth Church of England church in memory of Thomas and Johanna Bath in appreciation of their kindness and goodness.[4]

Reportedly both Johanna and Thomas were in Ballarat at the time of the Eureka Affair but it is thought they took no part in the uprising.

Johanna Bath died on 19 September 1900 and was buried on 21 September in the Ballaarat Old Cemetery in grave F1 34R2. Her name is spelt Joanna on the cemetery listings. Thomas died 27 July 1901 aged 76 years and was buried at the Ballaarat Old Cemetery on 30 July 1900, reunited alongside his wife in grave F1 33R2. They had both been living at 15 Errard Street North at the time of their respective deaths.

Goldfields Involvement, 1854

Post 1854 Experiences

Johanna's husband, Thomas Bath, was a creditor as the result of the burning of James Bentley's Eureka Hotel, and listed as a claimant by by the Select Committee reporting Upon Ballaarat i.e. Ballarat riots - Bentley's Hotel.[5]

Thomas Bath also signed the Benden Hassell Petition for Compensation for being shot by the military on 28 November 1854. He gave his occupation as Hotel Keeper, residing in Ballarat. [6]

Mrs Bath exhibited a pike used at the Eureka Stockade, found by her on the morning after the battle. It was exhibited during the 1876 Ballaarat Mechanics' Institute Fine Arts Exhibition.[7]

Her husband's obituary was recorded in the Ballarat Star. Death of Mr Thomas Bath.

DEATH OF MR. THOMAS BATH. Mr. Thomas Bath, a native of Truro, Cornwall, and a resident, except for two or three small intervals, of the Ballarat district from the earliest days of its history in 1851, died at Ballarat on Monday morning from general break-up of the system. Mr. Bath, who was 76 years of age, landed in Victoria in 1849, and was one of the first to reach Golden Point before the great rush set in. What is how known as Craig's Royal Hotel was originally kept by Mr Bath as far back as 1854, and when he disposed of the business to Mr. Craig a few years later Mr. Bath, who had acquired considerable properly in the neighbourhood of the town-hall, which is still in the estate, turned his attention to agricultural pursuits. Ceres, his station at Learmonth, is noted throughout the state for the quality of the stock raised upon it. Mr. Bath was a very old member of the agricultural and pastoral society, and held the position of treasurer for a period of 20 years.[8]

In The News

Bath's Hotel, Ballarat.jpg.

Bath's Hotel

HISTORIC HOTEL SOLD: - FAMOUS BALLARAT PROPERTY.
BALLARAT, Sunday.—Craig's Hotel, the oldest and best known establishment of the kind in Ballarat, has been sold by private treaty for £30,000. Mrs. T. Newton, who has been licensee for several years, was the purchaser. The property, which has been improved on up-to-date lines, belonged to Mr. Frank Herman, of the firm of Messrs. J. J. Goller and Co., merchants, Lydiard street. The price realised for the hotel, which has a historic reputation, shows a substantial advance on the price paid for the property when it was last sold some years ago.
In the early gold digging days the old original wooden building was known as Bath's Hotel, and was the first public house to obtain a license in Ballarat. The late Mr. Thomas Bath, in later years a well known grazier, was the owner and licensee, and the contractor for its erection was the late Mr. James Malcolm, a pioneer builder of Ballarat. The poet Adam Lindsay Gordon conducted the livery stables at the rear portion of the hotel premises, and occupied a small cottage abutting. His favourite horse Cadger, whom lie rode to victory in several steeplechases, was stabled near the cottage. Reference to this racehorse is made by Gordon in his poem "How We Beat the Favourite."? In this humble little dwelling in the hotel ground was born the only child of the poet, a girl whose early death he continuously mourned. The little girl was buried in the Ballarat old cemetery."[9]

Also See

Pikemen

Further Reading

Corfield, J., Wickham, D., & Gervasoni, C. The Eureka Encyclopaedia, Ballarat Heritage Services, 2004.

Dorothy Wickham, Women of the Diggings: Ballarat 1854, BHSPublishing, 2009.

Dorothy Wickham, Women of Substance, BHSPublishing, 2021.

References

  1. Notes Mary Wright 2003
  2. Notes Mary Wright 2003
  3. John Hargreaves, Ballarat Hotels Past and Present, p.2, 1943, Ballarat
  4. Dorothy Wickham, Women of Substance, BHSPublishing, 2021.
  5. Select Committee Upon Ballaarat [i.e. Ballarat] riots - Bentley's Hotel, accessed 09 February 2106.
  6. Dorothy Wickham, Shot in the Dark, BHS Publishing, 1998
  7. Ballaarat Mechanics' Institute Fine Arts Exhibition 1876 Catalogue.
  8. Ballarat Star, 13 September 1901.
  9. Northern Star, 22 October 1923.

External links

https://bih.federation.edu.au/index.php/Ballarat_School_of_Mines

https://bih.federation.edu.au/index.php/Thomas_Bath