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Henry Brown was born in 1845 in the
city of Darmstadt, Hesse, Germany
and was born Gustavus Loehr, son of Lawrence
Loehr, a teacher employed by Frederick Krupps, the
founder of steel and armaments industry in Germany
and
mother
Marguerite. Krupps sent Lawrence to Oxford to further his studies
and Lawrence was married in England and went back to
Germany. When the Franco-Prussian war broke out Loehr
and his family fled to America. A brother of Henry
Brown Gustavus was killed in the San Francisco
earthquake, and a daughter is supposed to have become
famous as a singer at the Metropolitan Opera House in
New York.
Gustavus (or Brown) is said to have
joined the Union during the Civil War at age about
sixteen years of age and served on Union gunboats as a
ships cook. After the war he was on an American gunboat
that was cruising the South Seas, and when the ship made
port at Eden, Australia
supposedly aboard the “Albert”. Gustavus and his friend jumped
ship and deserted; changing his name to Henry Brown.
His friends name was Pruss, a very early German pioneer
of Bega. Henry Brown was about 20 years old when he
arrived in Australia and he and Pruss set up a coach
building factory in Bega; Pruss teaching Henry
blacksmithing, which he went on to perfect. Henry was a
noted blacksmith and several of his gates and iron-mongery
are still extant in Bega.
Henry Brown was Prussian in manner, cold,
and efficient. He was a barrel-chested man, short of
stature with black hair and beard and sharp brown eyes
and had a great love of horses and racing. He
maintained his American nationality and always
celebrated the 4th of July with a tremendous
firing of guns, letting off of detonators and heavy
drinking. He had a magnificent bass baritone voice and
sang every Sunday in the little Anglican church in Bega.
Henry Brown married
Catherine Moon in Bega in 1871.
Catherine was a sweet gentle lady, fair
with grey-blue eyes like her Scottish grandmother, and
always had a gentle smile at everyone’s beck and call,
and was a respected midwife. Henry and Catherine had ten
children, all born in Bega;
Margaret J. born in 1872, Laurence
Frederick born in 1874, Henry L. born in 1875,
William L. born in 1877, Charles Edward born in 1880,
Robert W. born in 1882, Ethel E. born in 1884, Bertha C.
born in 1888, Stanley H. born in 1890 and died in1895
and Kenneth G. A. born in 1892.
Henry Brown died on December 11, 1899, at age 53, of a
heart attack; certificate number 12247.
He was
buried in the old Bega Cemetery, which is now situated
under the present day Bega High School. An act of the
New South Wales parliament was needed to re-use the old
cemetery, after a new cemetery was developed further out
of town in 1904. The old cemetery was closed because
of its proximity to the centre of town, and several
typhoid and other disease outbreaks, which were blamed
by local doctors on the ‘run-off’ from the cemetery into
household water sources; like wells in the peoples
backyards.
In the book of
transcription of monuments in the new Bega Cemetery,
Henry Brown’s gravestone with that of his wife, who died
in 1925, and his sons Kenneth who was killed in action
in France in 1917 and Stanley, aged 4 who died in 1895,
were all found. It is suspected that Henry however, is
still buried under the school and when his wife died all
the other names were simply added to her gravestone.
Burials were still made in the old cemetery until the
1930’s; if a partner or family plot was there, so it is
interesting that Catherine didn’t get buried there with
him. He may have been retrieved, as some families did
that, but there is no record yet as to who was
‘replaced’ in the new cemetery. Some of the headstones
of the pioneers were retrieved from the bull dozer who
flattened the old area, but not everyone. I have been
told there are some very nice granite and marble
footpaths in older gardens around Bega, that are
souvenirs from the old graveyard. It appears Henry Brown
is the only American Civil War veteran buried in
Australia where a public building substitutes for his
headstone.
A son of Henry Brown also became a
well-known blacksmith, and lived to well over 100 years
of age. A photograph of his 100th birthday in
Goulburn, where his daughter lived, is in the Bega
Historical Society collection. Another of his sons
became a Municipal Councillor and Mayor of Bega for a
period. |
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Margaret Gribbin, Descendant
Anne Hughes,
Librarian, Bathurst, New South Wales
Bega
Cemetery Records
Bega High School
Records
Cathy
Lundberg, Public Liaison Officer, Bega
Darmstadt
Historical Society, Hesse, Germany
Lesley Buchan, Family
History Group of Bathurst, New South Wales
Sandra Florance,
Research Officer, Bega Valley Historical Society,
New South Wales
Stanley
Charles Edward Brown, letter on family history, Bega
Pioneers Museum, NSW
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