Edward Harrigan, 18031891 (aged 87 years)

Name
Edward /Harrigan/
Birth
Note: Listed as Edward Wade
Burial of a brother
Death of a brother
Christening
Note: Listed as Edward Haragan. Father listed as Edward Haragan.
Birth of a half-sister
Death of a half-sister
Birth of a half-brother
Birth of a half-sister
Birth of a half-sister
Birth of a half-brother
Marriage of a parent
Christening of a half-brother
Baptism of a half-sister
Christening of a half-sister
Christening of a half-brother
Residence
Note: In 1825 Edward was working for his step father Jonathan Brooker at Campbelltown, NSW
Death of a father
Source citation:

Footnote: Julie Webster

INDI:EVEN:SOUR:_FOOT: Julie Webster
Marriage
Birth of a daughter
Christening of a daughter
Death of a maternal grandmother
Burial of a maternal grandmother
Birth of a daughter
Christening of a daughter
Birth of a son
Christening of a son
Census
Note: Living at Fairy Meadow in a wood house owned by Edward. 5 people were residing there
Death of a wife
Burial of a wife
Marriage of a daughter
Marriage
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a son
Christening of a son
Marriage of a son
Death of a mother
Note: Citation of original death certificate
Burial of a mother
Note: Citation of original death certificate
Birth of a daughter
Christening of a daughter
Birth of a daughter
Christening of a daughter
Death of a daughter
Burial of a daughter
Death of a half-brother
Cause: James died from Paralysis. He was attended by Dr W. Smith Thomas.
Note: The death informant was his wife Elizabeth. The death was registered at Wollongong on the 26th of April 1880. Source: copy of death certificate.
Burial of a half-brother
Note: Witnesses to the burial were G. W. Commins and John Williams.
Marriage of a son
Marriage of a daughter
Marriage of a daughter
Death of a brother
Cause: William died from old age and natural decay
Note: He was sick for 8 days before death and was attended by Dr Eras Wren. The death information was his son James Brooker who was living at Lake Albert. The death was registered at Wagga Wagga on the 2nd of November 1885. Source: Death Certificate.
Burial of a brother
Cemetery: Wagga Wagga Cemetery, Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, Australia
Marriage of a daughter
Death of a half-brother
Cause: John died from Gastritis and Debility. He was attended by Dr. B.J. Newsmarch.
Note: The death informant was John's nephew W. McKenzie, who was living at Wilds Meadow. The death was registered on the 9th of December, 1886 at Robertson, NSW. Source: copy of death certificate.
Burial of a half-brother
Note: Witnesses to the burial were C. Tildsley and A. Kirkland.
Death of a sister
Cause: Sarah died from old age and debility
Note: At the time of her death, Sarah was living with her grand daughter and her family at Argyle Street, Picton. The death information was John Warters, the husband of her grand daughter. Source: Death Certificate.
Burial of a sister
Note: Picton Anglican Cemetery is located on the grounds of St Marks Church of England, Picton.
Death of a daughter
Burial of a daughter
Death of a half-sister
Death of a half-sister
Cause: Mary died from Chronic Rheumatic Gout and Hepatitis. She was attended by Dr M. O'Connor.
Note: The death informant was her son Henry Angel, who was living at Wagga Wagga. The death was registered at Wagga Wagga on the 30th of September 1890. Source: copy of death certificate
Burial of a half-sister
Note: Witnesses to the burial were John Croft and A. Brooker. Source: copy of death certificate. Grave Location: ANG-R-6-0025
Death
Cause of death: Edward died from senility and epithelioma of the lip. He was attended by Dr J. Jarvie Hood.
Note: The death information was his son William Harrigan who was living at Fairy Meadow. The death was registered at Wollongong on 10 July 1891. Source: death certificate supplied by the National Centre of Biography, ANU.
Burial
Cemetery: Church of England Cemetery, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
Note: Funeral Notice in Illawara Mercury, Saturday 11 July 1891

Funeral Notice in Illawara Mercury, Saturday 11 July 1891
THE Friends of Mr. E. HARRIGAN, of Balgownio Lane are respectfully invited to attend his FUNERAL to move from his late residence, THIS DAY (SATURDAY), at .2 o'clock, for the new C. E. Cemetery, Wollongong.

Note: Burial witnesses were Joseph Makin and A. Latter. Source: death certificate supplied by the National Centre of Biography, ANU.
Obituary
Note: By the death of Mr. Edward Harrigan, of Fairy Meadow, on Friday last, the oldest Australian native living up to that time, so far as we are aware, passed away.

By the death of Mr. Edward Harrigan, of Fairy Meadow, on Friday last, the oldest Australian native living up to that time, so far as we are aware, passed away.

References to this gentleman having appeared in the Mercury from time to time of late years, many of our readers are therefore familiar with the fact that he was in all probability the oldest native in all Australia, as well as in reality the oldest in the Illawarra district.

He was born in Sydney on the 20th August, 1803, or only fifteen years after the founding of the colony in 1788 by Governor Phillip. The part, of the then future great city where he was born was what eventually became Phillip-street.

In the early days of the boy, his parents removed from Sydney to Campbelltown. At that time Sydney was only a bush township of small magnitude, and possessing little of the convenience and advantages of civilisation. And as regarded Campbelltown, it was considered in those days a far interior locality, with its wooded wilderness and hordes of aboriginal inhabitants.

At Campbelltown young Harrigan resided until he was fifteen years old, having in the meanwhile attended a night school for about six months. This was the only schooling he ever received, and in those days, and under such circumstances, any youth was fortunate to have even so much advantage in the way of education.

At that early age, or about seventy-two years ago, he went as a lad with a party of cedar sawyers to work in the ranges above what afterwards was termed Bulli. There he remained for several years, and with the whole party suffered privations and hardships of which modern residents of the colony can form no conception.

The cedar, when sawn on the eastern side of the range, had to be carried shoulderwise up to the tableland, whence it was conveyed to Sydney, via Campbelltown or Liverpool in the crudest of manner, and over the roughest of bush made tracks.

Some few months after his arrival at the Bulli ranges he made his way to where Wollongong afterwards sprung into existence. His object was to endeavor to procure some food from a small vessel that was known to trade now and again to that place for cedar. He travelled through the bush along the coast, but was doomed to bitter disappointment. On arrival at the future site of Wollongong, he could not find either the vessel he was looking for nor any white inhabitant.

Disappointed and almost famished, he had to return to the haunt of the party in the mountain, and as the stock of food there, such as it was, was done, he had to make his way at once as best he could to Campbelltown, where the supplies were not much better.

Having attained to manhood, he in course of time applied to Government for a grant of land, and his request having been complied with, he selected the piece of land at Fairy Meadow, where with the exception of a few years, he resided until his death.

About forty-two years ago he joined a friend of his (the late Mr. Henry Angel, of Wagga Wagga), in taking up a large piece of land near Hay for squatting purposes. He remained there for about three years, but squatting not being congenial to his inclinations, he relinquished it, and returned to his favorite Illawarra once again. And there he stayed all the remaining years of his life.

Of Mr. Harrigan, it has to be said that he was one of the most honest minded and guileless of men. He was of a most retiring disposition, and in simple manner and demeanor was the very type of the now almost bygone race that pioneered the settlement of this colony, which generally means the settlement of all Australia, as far as such has been done.

It is almost needless to state that he was strong and healthy in a marked degree. He was twice married, and leaves a widow, two sons, three daughters, thirty-two grand-children, and twenty-two great grand-children.

About a year ago he suffered from a severe attack of bronchitis, from which he never fully recovered strength, and a cancer having formed on his lips hastened his end. Thus lived and thus died a man who, though humble and retired at Fairy Meadow, was in a historic sense perhaps the most remarkable man in all Australia during the last few years of his existence.

A goodly number of persons paid their last respects to the deceased on Saturday by following his remains to the Church of England new cemetery, at Wollongong, where the Rev. T. O. Ewing, R.D., officiated.

Original publication: Illawarra Mercury (Wollongong, NSW), 14 July 1891, p 2.

Family with parents
father
Teague Harrigan, notice to depart NSW 1817
17711825
Birth: about 1771Cork, Ireland
Death: about 1825Port Dalrymple, Tasmania, Australia
mother
17751859
Birth: 17 December 1775 23 21 St Margaret’s, Westminster, Middlesex, England
Death: 17 December 1859Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage
elder sister
Sarah Wade and Nathaniel Boon Marriage entry
17931887
Birth: 22 September 1793 22 17 Mount Pitt, Norfolk Island
Death: 5 July 1887Argyle Street, Picton, New South Wales, Australia
2 years
elder brother
17951795
Birth: 1795 24 19 Norfolk Island
Death: 1795Norfolk Island
2 years
elder brother
17961885
Birth: 10 December 1796 25 20 Norfolk Island
Death: 9 October 1885Lake Albert, New South Wales, Australia
3 years
elder brother
17991799
Birth: before 1799 28 23
Death: 1799Sydney Cove, New South Wales, Australia
2 years
elder brother
18001803
Birth: about 1800 29 24 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: October 1803Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
4 years
himself
18031891
Birth: 20 August 1803 32 27 banks of the Tank Stream, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 9 July 1891Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
Mother’s family with Jonathan Brooker
stepfather
Jonathan Brooker's Grave Headstone
17601833
Birth: 1760Kingston, Surrey, England
Death: 14 March 1833Airds, New South Wales, Australia
mother
17751859
Birth: 17 December 1775 23 21 St Margaret’s, Westminster, Middlesex, England
Death: 17 December 1859Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage10 February 1817St Lukes Church of England, Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia
-10 years
half-sister
4 years
half-brother
John Brooker Birth and Baptism Record
18091886
Birth: 24 June 1809 49 33 Windsor, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 7 December 1886East Kangaloon, New South Wales, Australia
18 months
half-sister
18101889
Birth: 7 December 1810 50 34 Hawkesbury District, New South Wales, Australia
Death: May 1889Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
2 years
half-sister
Mary Brooker marriage to Christopher Ledwidge
18121890
Birth: 28 November 1812 52 36 Hawkesbury District, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 29 September 1890Spring Vale, Lake Albert, New South Wales, Australia
18 months
half-brother
18141880
Birth: 30 May 1814 54 38 Airds, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 15 March 1880Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
Family with Jane Wood
himself
18031891
Birth: 20 August 1803 32 27 banks of the Tank Stream, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 9 July 1891Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
wife
18201916
Birth: 1820St Patrick St, Cork, Ireland
Death: 17 January 1916Tarrawanna, New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage17 August 1854St Michaels Church of England, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
8 years
daughter
Alice Clara Harrigan Christening 1862
18621956
Birth: 5 August 1862 58 42 Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 17 January 1956Corrimal, New South Wales, Australia
-2 years
daughter
Louisa Emily Harrigan Christening 1860
18601889
Birth: 22 March 1860 56 40 Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 13 January 1889Crystal Street, Petersham, New South Wales, Australia
-4 years
daughter
18551893
Birth: 1855 51 35 Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 28 October 1893Tarrawanna, New South Wales, Australia
3 years
son
William Harrigan and Elizabeth Williamson Marriage.jpg
18571948
Birth: 22 December 1857 54 37 Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 4 September 1948Spring Farm, Paynes Lane, Tarrawanna, New South Wales, Australia
Family with Mary Ann Webber
himself
18031891
Birth: 20 August 1803 32 27 banks of the Tank Stream, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 9 July 1891Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
wife
17971854
Birth: about 1797
Death: 7 February 1854Dapto, New South Wales, Australia
Marriage Marriage1833St Michael's Church, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
5 years
daughter
18371915
Birth: 11 June 1837 33 40 Dapto, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 20 December 1915Home of Peace, Marrickville, New South Wales, Australia
2 years
son
18391929
Birth: 28 May 1839 35 42 Fairy Meadow, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 12 May 1929Merewether, New South Wales, Australia
-3 years
daughter
18351870
Birth: 15 December 1835 32 38 Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
Death: 7 August 1870Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
Birth
Christening
Residence
Marriage
Census
Marriage
Death
Burial
Obituary
Birth

Listed as Edward Wade

Christening

Listed as Edward Haragan. Father listed as Edward Haragan.

Residence

In 1825 Edward was working for his step father Jonathan Brooker at Campbelltown, NSW

Census

Living at Fairy Meadow in a wood house owned by Edward. 5 people were residing there

Death

The death information was his son William Harrigan who was living at Fairy Meadow. The death was registered at Wollongong on 10 July 1891. Source: death certificate supplied by the National Centre of Biography, ANU.

Burial

Funeral Notice in Illawara Mercury, Saturday 11 July 1891
THE Friends of Mr. E. HARRIGAN, of Balgownio Lane are respectfully invited to attend his FUNERAL to move from his late residence, THIS DAY (SATURDAY), at .2 o'clock, for the new C. E. Cemetery, Wollongong.

Burial witnesses were Joseph Makin and A. Latter. Source: death certificate supplied by the National Centre of Biography, ANU.

Obituary

By the death of Mr. Edward Harrigan, of Fairy Meadow, on Friday last, the oldest Australian native living up to that time, so far as we are aware, passed away.

References to this gentleman having appeared in the Mercury from time to time of late years, many of our readers are therefore familiar with the fact that he was in all probability the oldest native in all Australia, as well as in reality the oldest in the Illawarra district.

He was born in Sydney on the 20th August, 1803, or only fifteen years after the founding of the colony in 1788 by Governor Phillip. The part, of the then future great city where he was born was what eventually became Phillip-street.

In the early days of the boy, his parents removed from Sydney to Campbelltown. At that time Sydney was only a bush township of small magnitude, and possessing little of the convenience and advantages of civilisation. And as regarded Campbelltown, it was considered in those days a far interior locality, with its wooded wilderness and hordes of aboriginal inhabitants.

At Campbelltown young Harrigan resided until he was fifteen years old, having in the meanwhile attended a night school for about six months. This was the only schooling he ever received, and in those days, and under such circumstances, any youth was fortunate to have even so much advantage in the way of education.

At that early age, or about seventy-two years ago, he went as a lad with a party of cedar sawyers to work in the ranges above what afterwards was termed Bulli. There he remained for several years, and with the whole party suffered privations and hardships of which modern residents of the colony can form no conception.

The cedar, when sawn on the eastern side of the range, had to be carried shoulderwise up to the tableland, whence it was conveyed to Sydney, via Campbelltown or Liverpool in the crudest of manner, and over the roughest of bush made tracks.

Some few months after his arrival at the Bulli ranges he made his way to where Wollongong afterwards sprung into existence. His object was to endeavor to procure some food from a small vessel that was known to trade now and again to that place for cedar. He travelled through the bush along the coast, but was doomed to bitter disappointment. On arrival at the future site of Wollongong, he could not find either the vessel he was looking for nor any white inhabitant.

Disappointed and almost famished, he had to return to the haunt of the party in the mountain, and as the stock of food there, such as it was, was done, he had to make his way at once as best he could to Campbelltown, where the supplies were not much better.

Having attained to manhood, he in course of time applied to Government for a grant of land, and his request having been complied with, he selected the piece of land at Fairy Meadow, where with the exception of a few years, he resided until his death.

About forty-two years ago he joined a friend of his (the late Mr. Henry Angel, of Wagga Wagga), in taking up a large piece of land near Hay for squatting purposes. He remained there for about three years, but squatting not being congenial to his inclinations, he relinquished it, and returned to his favorite Illawarra once again. And there he stayed all the remaining years of his life.

Of Mr. Harrigan, it has to be said that he was one of the most honest minded and guileless of men. He was of a most retiring disposition, and in simple manner and demeanor was the very type of the now almost bygone race that pioneered the settlement of this colony, which generally means the settlement of all Australia, as far as such has been done.

It is almost needless to state that he was strong and healthy in a marked degree. He was twice married, and leaves a widow, two sons, three daughters, thirty-two grand-children, and twenty-two great grand-children.

About a year ago he suffered from a severe attack of bronchitis, from which he never fully recovered strength, and a cancer having formed on his lips hastened his end. Thus lived and thus died a man who, though humble and retired at Fairy Meadow, was in a historic sense perhaps the most remarkable man in all Australia during the last few years of his existence.

A goodly number of persons paid their last respects to the deceased on Saturday by following his remains to the Church of England new cemetery, at Wollongong, where the Rev. T. O. Ewing, R.D., officiated.

Original publication: Illawarra Mercury (Wollongong, NSW), 14 July 1891, p 2.