ALTHOUGH ALL OF LANCELOT'S CHILDREN HAVE A LINK, ONLY DETAIL
RELATED TO HENRY HAS STARTED
Lancelot Sanderson
(
3rd)
was born on 28th
January
1802 at Bolam in
the parish of Gainford,
County Durham, England, as the first son
of Lancelot Sanderson (2nd)
by his second wife, Ann
Singleton. He probably
received a formal education, as he was literate and his father left provision in
his will for the younger brothers’ educations. As
a youth he may have been apprenticed in the trade of butchering, as he gives his
occupation as a butcher. Although after some years in Australia
he states he is a carrier.
On
the
20
thDecember
1821
he married Ann Bond
at Staindrop. Ann was eleven years his senior. Their only child, Lancelot
(
4
th)
was born
1823
. Ann died two
years later at Ingleton on
24th
June
1825
.
After the death of his wife and then his father in
1827
, Lancelot appears
to have decided to migrate to
Australia
. Whether from necessity we are not sure.He and Elizabeth Stamp, also from the parish of Staindrop,
travelled to
London
where they were married at St
George Church,
Bloomsbury
on
27
th
March
1828
.Their son, George
later claimed his father was ‘the black sheep’, although George
had a reputation as being somewhat of a joke, and it is not certain
whether this was his idea of a joke.Lancelot’s grandson, Frederick Sanderson claimed that according to the family
his grandfather ‘married beneath his station’.Perhaps this could explain why Lancelot
and Elizabeth were married in
London
and not in Staindrop
where they both lived and why their son referred to Lancelot as ‘the black sheep’.
The ship
‘Caroline’ departed
London
on
the
19
th
April
1828
with Lancelot and
Elizabeth listed as steerage passengers.Lancelot’s son from his first marriage, Lancelot
(
4
th)
did not accompany them.For reasons unknown he remained in
Durham
, where he died on
the
22
nd
July
1828
at Marshall Green.Perhaps he had always been sickly or he was ill at the time of their
departure and it was thought he would not survive the long sea journey.Being mainly a cargo ship, the 'Caroline’ carried only a small number of passengers,
among the cabin passengers are listed a Mr
and Mrs Howden and their two children.Obviously Lancelot and Jonathan Howden
got to know one another during the five month voyage and after the ship
arrived in
Sydney
on
the
12
th
September
1828
, Lancelot went
to work for him.
The
1828
Census states Lancelot
Sanderson “a servant to Jno. Howden of Elderslie,
Upper Minto
”.Jonathan Howden
had apparently leased land at Elderslie from John Cox.William A. Bailey in his book, ‘Uplands
Pasture.A History
of Crookwellshire’
quotes the following from letters
written by Jonathan Howden
which are now held by the Mitchell Library of NSW.“The
direct
route between
Bathurst
and Goulburn
was being used by travellers.It bore some miles to the east of Crookwell.In February
1829
John Howden
of Elderslie on the
Nepean
River
near
Camden
indicated
his intention in a letter to a friend in
England
of travelling the
route with Rev Hassall
to see the country and also to
purchase fifty heifers.In June the same year he wrote that he had set up Lance Sanderson with
six men and seventy six head of cattle to fix
a station about two hundred and
fifty miles from Sydney.He said that it was at the junction of the rivers Abercrombie
and Crookwell.Those rivers
do not join but it may be presumed
that the site was somewhere near the junction of the Abercrombie
and
Lachlan
beyond Bigga or the junction of the Crookwell
and the
Lachlan
beyond
Narrawa.”
It is doubtful that
Elizabeth
accompanied Lancelot
on this expedition especially
as their first child, Ellen
had been born on
the
2
nd
April
1829
at Elderslie.Their second child, Jane was born at ‘Noanorah’
on
the
18
th October
1830
.WhetherLancelot
was still in the employ of Jonathan
Howden it is not known,
but ‘Noanorah’ at the Cowpastures,
was a
3,000
acre grant to John Dickson
on
10
th June
1816
, a proportion of which was acquired by llomas
Barker in the
1830
's. Thomas
Barker also owned 'Mummel'
on the Goulburn Plains. Lancelot's
third child, George, was
born at 'Mummel' on
22
nd January
1833
, so perhaps Lancelot
may have now been employed by Thomas
Barker.
T
heir fourth
child, Hemy, was born at
Newcastle
on
2
nd October
1834
and their four other children at Morpeth.
Mary Anne
on
the
24
th August
1836
, she died on
16
th
February
1842
aged
6
years. The date,
17
th February
1840
, on the memorial headstone in Morpeth
cemetery conflicts with the burial register of St
James Church Morpeth.
Williarn Robert Sanderson
commissioned the stone in
1891
when his young daughter died and as his sister, Mary
Ann, had died before he
was born and nearly fifty years had intervened before the stone was erected, his
mistake is understandable. John born on
23
rd
September
1838
, died at Avisford, Meroo River on
17
th February
1856
aged
17 112
years. John died an accidental death from drowning and
according to the coronial inquiry
he was found drowned and intemperance a contributing factor. Avisford
is between Mudgee and Hill
End, so it is highly possible John had gone to seek his fortune on the
goldfields, as the gold rush was in full swing at this time. Joseph
born on
28
th July
1841
and William Robert
on
11
th September
1845
.
The Electoral Rolls of
1859
1860
lists Lancelot's residence as
Queens
Wharf
, Morpeth,
which he held leasehold. Morpeth in
the
1850
's was
a thriving river town, it was the first port of call for dozens
of immigrants to Australia, as well as boasting three paddle wheel
steamers which provided a daily service between Morpeth
and Sydney. Perhaps Lancelot conducted
both his carrying and butchering from his residence at
Queens
Wharf
.
Lancelot
died at Morpeth,
probably at his residence, on
17
th October
1861
from Bright's disease (a disease of the kidneys). He had
been diagnosed with the disease
16
months prior to his death. He was buried at St
James Church of England
Cemetery at Morpeth on
18
th October
1861
. His will bequeaths all his leasehold, freehold and real
estate he held, both here in
Australia
as well as any held in Hilton
Durham
England
, also any monies, securities for monies, household
furniture, drays, horses, harness and farming utensils to his wife, Elizabeth
Sanderson.
Elizabeth
was widowed for four years before she succumbed to Bronchitis after being ill for a fortnight. She died at the
residence of her daughter and son in law, Alexander and Jane Wilkinson in
High Street
West Maitand
on
22
nd May
1865
. She was buried on
24
th
May
1865
beside her husband in the Morpeth
cemetery.
Alexander Wilkinson and George
Sanderson were the executors of
Elizabeth
's will. In
1867
several letters passed backwards and forwards between
Alexander Wilkinson and Anthony Sanderson, Lancelot's
brother who remained in
England
. A right of way on the Hindbury
Farm in
Durham
England
was in question and the settlement was protracted. Both Lancelot
and
Elizabeth
's wills and their children's birth certificates where wanted
by the solicitors for die Duke of Chester, who was making the claim, to prove
the tide.
11
m
in its self must have proved difficult as registration of births in
Australia
did not begin
until
1856
whereas in
England
it began in
1836
. They may
have made do with baptism certificates as their six surviving children were all
born well before
1856
. Another of Lancelot's
brothers, Robert, had also
died and apparently left cottages on Hindbury
to the four sons of Lancelot and
Elizabeth. Title
deeds of these cottages were to be
with the farm so as to cut down the expense of separate deeds. The
problems were eventually solved and the matter concluded when the Duke bought
the estate. Then beneficiaries received a share of
500
pounds wt.