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James Cawte, son of Stephen Cawte, was born in 1849 at Cornwell,
Southampton, England. As a very young boy James joined the
Royal Navy and worked as a “Powder Monkey” aboard the Royal Navy
ship “Vincent”; loading gunpowder into his ship’s cannons.
Eventually, his ship was either damaged or sunk, while in the
waters of the United States during the American Civil War;
resulting in his discharge from the Royal Navy in 1860. It was
then he began working as a gunner in the Confederate Army.
Cawte is said to have been actively engaged with the Confederate
Artillery at the Battle of Gettysburg, a turning point in the
Civil War that saw the injury, death or capture of some 44,000
soldiers and having shipboard experience, he was later
transferred to the Confederate Navy. James Cawte has not yet
been found on the National Park Service registers and
information relied upon comes from family descendants like his
great grandson Barry Kenyon of Gilberton, later descendants and
oral history.
After the war Cawte was said to have again returned to the sea
and like many others ended up migrating to Australia. He is said
to have resided at Balmain, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales
before eventually settling down in South Australia. He had been
attracted to the copper mines around Wallaroo, South Australia
and being so poor they could not afford transportation, the
family was said to have walked all the way from Adelaide to
Wallaroo.
In 1874 James was again working as a seaman when he married
Adelaide Maria Harradine at the St. Mary’s Church in Wallaroo,
South Australia on Yorke Peninsula, a busy shipping port for
grain and copper; on July 14, 1874. James stated at the time he
was 25 years of age and Adelaide Maria was said to be 22. James
and Adelaide had nine children, Ellen Fredericka born on July
16, 1875 at Wallaroo, baptized on August 29, 1875; James
Frederick born November 11, 1877 at Wallaroo, baptized on
December 23, 1877; Maria Ann on January 26, 1880 at Wallaroo,
baptized on January 31, 1881 ; Emma Eatte on March 12, 1883 at
Alberton and died in 1884 at Sydney, New South Wales; Lillian M.
born in 1885 at Glebe, New South Wales; William born in 1887 at
Newton, New South Wales and died in 1887; Charles Chapman born
in 1892 at Newton; Elizabeth Florence May born in 1894 at Newton
and Alfred B. born in 1899 at Newton. James Frederick in turn
married Mary Elizabeth Dalby had three sons, Frederick George
Nelson Cawte born in Wallaroo on December 3, 1899; Vincent
Charles Cawte born in Wallaroo on January 7, 1902 and Sydney
James Cawte born on February 22, 1916. Frederick George Nelson
Cawte also had a son, John Ewart Cawte, born on July 7, 1925.
In 1883 James and the family left South Australia and settled
down in a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales; it’s thought
because he had relatives living there and Sydney being closer to
the sea provided a better opportunity for his employment as a
seaman. In 1889 though, James and the family again pulled up
stakes and relocated, back in South Australia, settling in at
Port Pirie.; again, near the sea.
James’s sixth child, Charles Chapman Cawte, married Ivy Evelyn
Greaves on March 7, 1913 at the Methodist Minister’s home in
Port Pirie and when World War I erupted the following year,
Charles enlisted on April 20, 1914. Known as Private Cawte
number 237, he trained in Melbourne for the 9th
Australian Light Horse Regiment; serving at Galliopoli, being
wounded in battle and discharged on October 31, 1915; returning
home.
Relatives of Cawte related he always walked with a limp, the
result of a gunshot wound received during the war. Mr. Kenyon
had a deep interest in the Civil War, but none of his relatives
ever spoke much about their time at war or of Cawte’s
involvement in it.
James Cawte died on
October 12, 1919 at seventy-four years of age and was buried on
October 24, 1919 in the family plot in the Common Protestant 1
Section of the Port Pirie Cemetery in Wallaroo, South Australia;
grave number 2, 168; where his two daughters had settled. A Rev.
Moyes conducted his services for the Symonds Funeral Parlor.
Other headstones in the plot include his daughter Florrie,
George Osborne, son of C. & N. Winning who died on December 13,
1909 and someone named Freddie who died at Wallaroo in 1898. |
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Barry Kenyon, Prospect E., South Australia
Dr.
John Cawte, grandson, Malabar, New South Wales
Gordon Beach, Victoria, Au.
John Heiser, Gettysburg National Park
Monty Smith, Port Pirie District Family History
group
Nick Woods, Wallaroo
Port Pirie Cemetery Records
Port Pirie Family History Group
“The Advertiser”, newspaper, Port Pirie South
Australia |