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Thomas Mason Francis was born on January
6, 1839 in Columbia, North Carolina. Nothing is known
regarding Thomas’s early years, but being in
Massachusetts at the outbreak of the Civil War, Thomas
decided to join the U.S. Navy in 1862 at Boston,
Massachusetts and served as an ordinary seaman aboard
the USS “Colorado”, under Captain Bailey, doing blockade
duty at Pensacola, Florida. Thomas had family who also
served in the Civil War; supposedly in the Confederate
Army; reputedly a brother. He served initially
transporting the wounded to hospitals.
The “Colorado” was the first of many
ships to sail under that name and was a steam screw
frigate, launched on June 19, 1856 by the Norfolk Navy
Ship Yard and was commissioned on March 13, 1858; with
Captain W. H. Gardner in command. Putting to sea from
Boston, Massachusetts on May 12, 1858, the “Colorado”
cruised the waters off the island of Cuba, preventing
the practice of British cruisers stopping and searching
ships they encountered; until she returned to Boston in
1861.
On June 3, 1861 the “Colorado” was
recommissioned and again left from Boston,
Massachusetts to join the Gulf Blockading Squadron on
June 18th, 1861. On September 14th
an expedition under Lieutenant J. H. Russell from the
“Colorado” took control of the Confederate schooner
Judah, at the Pensacola Navy Yard in Florida, believing
it to be preparing for service as a privateer; and
spiked one gun of the battery. On December 11th
another small schooner was captured at Pilot Town and
the steamer “Calhoun”, or “Cuba”, was taken off the
South West Pass at the mouth of the Mississippi River,
on January 23, 1862.
Francis was also a participant in the
Battle of New Orleans, Louisiana from April 25th
through May 1, 1862. After that Francis transferred to a
Union gunboat operating on the Mississippi River and
took part in the bombardment and capture of Port Gibson
and Port Hudson, from May 1st through July 9,
1863. From there he went to Vicksburg, Virginia and then
south to New Orleans, Louisiana where he transferred to
a merchant ship which transported wounded soldiers to
hospitals in the north.
After the war Francis was discharged at
New York and again returned to the sea on another
merchant ship. While serving as Mate on the barque
“Howland” out of Boston, Massachusetts, the ships
Captain took ill and later died while they were in
Surinam; the second smallest country of South America on
its north coast. Due to the circumstances, Francis was
required to take command of the vessel and successfully
returned it to its home port. Afterwards, he continued
going to sea, visiting Bristol, England, the Mauritius
Islands and Melbourne, Australia; where he disembarked
from his ship in 1866. From Australia Thomas sailed east
to New Zealand on another ship, remaining until 1873,
eventually returning to New South Wales, Australia.
Upon returning to Australia, Francis took
up work as a carpenter, working on houses, barns and
bridges in the Cobar, Dubbo and Gilgandra areas of New
South Wales. On May 12, 1888 Francis married 25 year old
Eva Emma Judd at Dubbo, New South Wales and used the
address of his son, John T. Francis in Dubbo, until
1927; when he was found living in Gilgandra. Thomas and
Eva had ten children; Ruth Emma born in 1888, Thomas
Alva Edison born in 1890, John Truitt in 1891, James
Samuel in 1892, George Truitt in 1893, William Truitt in
1895, Elenor Mary in 1898, Charles Truitt in 1899,
Walter Alwin in 1903 and Eva Mona born in 1904. Thomas
used the name “Truitt” many times in naming his
children, naming them in honor of his mother’s maiden
name. Thomas also once served as a local Justice of the
Peace for Gilgandra.
Thomas Mason Francis died at the age of
89 at Gilgandra, New South Wales, on December 7, 1927
and was buried in the Gilgandra General Cemetery, in the
Church of England Anglican Section, Row H, Grave
Allotment 13 the following day, December 8, 1927.
Thomas’s wife Eva eventually died too, in 1949, at the
age of 86. Thomas lay for many years with no headstone
to mark his grave, until 1989, when a proper headstone
was acquired from the American Veterans Administration
in Washington D.C. and erected to honor his memory.
Thomas is said to have had great-granddaughters and a
great-grandson still living in the area; Mrs. Pat
Kilburn, a school teacher in Tamworth, New South Wales,
Mrs. N. Nagle in Pymble, New South Wales, Mrs. C.
Weston in Gunnedah, New South Wales and Mr. Alwyn Wilson
in Drummoyne, New South Wales. |
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Birth, Marriage and Death Records, New
South Wales
Deborah Allen , Administration Officer,
Gilgandra Shire Council
Department of the Interior, Washington,
D.C.
“Dictionary of American Naval Fighting
Ships”, 1963
Gilgandra General
Cemetery Records
National Archives, Washington, D.C.
National Personnel Records Center , St.
Louis, Missouri
North Carolina Office of Archives and
History, Raleigh, North Carolina
Mrs. Pat Kilburn, great-great
granddaughter
Reg McDonell,
Gilgandra, New South Wales
Sands Directory
Veterans Administration Records,
Washington, D.C. |