Shivaun's Family Tree Website

 

Masts of HMS Warrior 1860

Tellefsen family

* * *

 Part 2: Tellefsen Descendants

 

Children of August and Margrethe

 

Johan Christian (1850 - ?) was born 31 October 1850 in Norway and baptised 08 November the same year in Vestre Moland Parish. His parents were August Bernhard Tellefsen and Margrethe Christine Speilberg. Nothing else is known of him. He might have died in infancy or been brought up by relatives in Norway.

 

Twins Augusta Birgithe and Margrethe Christine were born 02 January 1852 and baptised the next day in Vestre Moland Parish. The immediacy of the baptism suggests they may not have been expected to live long. Nothing else is known of them. They might have died in infancy or been brought up by relatives in Norway.

 

Children of August and Martha

 

Emily Louisa (1860 - 1915) was born 21 January 1859. She married George Walter Moore (1860 - 1926) in Cardiff in 1888. He was a clerk and then later a coal exporter. He was obviously very successful as he left £32, 989 in his will (worth almost £1,000,000 in today's money). They had three children: Dorothy Winifred (1889 - 1955), Eric Charles Tellefsen (1890 - 1953) and Nina Margaret (1893 - 1986). 

Dorothy travelled in her late 30s to visit Eric in Canada in 1928 and then went to Jamaica the following year. She married William Robert Mitchem in 1940. They had no children and she died in Cardiff 04 April 1955, leaving £12,000 in effects (£340,000). 

Eric emigrated to Canada in 1910 on board the SS Montcalm. His intended destination was Loon Creek, Saskatchewan, where he intended to farm (admitting on his immigration form that he had never farmed before!). He was granted land in Kindersley in 1914 and married Mary Muirhead c1916, who had come out from Scotland. They had three daughters: Janet Louise, Dorothy Mary and Pattie Tellefsen. They later moved to another farm in Shellbrook although he ended up renting the land to Mary's family as he was not much of a farmer, according to a relative! Eric returned by himself to visit his family in Cardiff for Christmas in 1926. He died 07 November 1953 in Shellbrook, leaving the princely sum of £58 (in England) to his widow! Mary died 08 June 1987 and they were both buried in South Hill Cemetery, Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. 

Nina married medical practitioner William Vincent Gabe (1891 - 1958) in 1919 and they had one son: Leslie George Anthony (born 1924). They lived in Dinas Powis and William died 07 January 1958. Nina married his brother Howell Woodwell Gabe (1884 - 1975) later that same year. Howell was a surgeon who had been awarded a military OBE during WWI. Nina died in Swansea 04 March 1986, aged 92.

 

John Edward August (1861 - 1908) was born in 1861, He started work as a shipbroker's clerk and after his father's death in 1892, he took over the family business, Tellefsen & Co, which also dealt in timber and insurance brokerage. In September 1892, John was promoted from 2nd Lieutenant to Lieutenant in the 2nd Glamorganshire (Cardiff) Volunteer Artillery, which had been formed the previous year. John married Caroline 'Nina' de Stoker in 1884. Nina was apparently born in Galatz (Galați), Romania, and spent her early years in the District Infant Orphan Asylum in Snaresbrook, Wanstead, Essex where she was known as 'Grace'. She was later adopted by John and Frances Sankey and John's nephew Thomas Sankey would later marry John's sister-in-law Maria Tellefsen. 

Nina and John never had any children. They moved to London c1895, most probably because John wanted to establish a London branch of Tellefsen and Co, which operated out of 101 Leadenhall Street. John became part of the 1st London (City of London) Volunteer Artillery Corps. He resigned his commission a year later, as reported in The London Gazette. John and Nina lived in north London, where his mother spent some time with them. He retired 31 December 1897 after his partnership with Hjalmar Gerhard Lorange and William Henry Green was dissolved by mutual consent (the partnership carried on as Tellefsen and Co). John and Nina moved to Devon, possibly for health reasons. Exmouth was known for its views and medicinal salts. John died in Exmouth 06 June 1908. Nina continued to live there and died in Cliff End Nursing Home, Exmouth, 11 November 1936.

 

Maria Elizabeth (1861 - 1951) was born in 1861. She married Thomas Sankey 27 December 1890 in Cardiff. Thomas had been a shipbroker's clerk before his marriage. In the 1920s he was British Pro-Consul in St Malo, France and it is very likely he had held junior positions in that consulate since his marriage. They never had any children of their own but adopted Vivian Mabel Grey when she was young. Vivian had been born in 1895 in Southsea, Hampshire, England, but it is not known what happened to her biological parents nor how the Sankeys came to know of Vivian (adoptions were not legalised until the 1920s). Vivian married Harold Parker and then later Thomas Salt, both in France, and she died in 1983 in Sussex, England. Thomas died in France in 1929. Where Maria lived in the intervening years is not known but she died in Bexhill-on-Sea, Sussex in 1951.

 

Theodore Charles (1863 - 1895) was born in 1863 and left Cardiff sometime after 1871. There is no official record of him anywhere until 1893. He departed London on board the SS Jumna and arrived in Townsville, Queensland, 30 November after an 'uneventful voyage', according to 'The Brisbane Courier'. He had probably first come to Australia years earlier. A report in 'The North Queensland Register' 25 January 1893 stated that a Mr T.C. Tellefsen had provided the prize for the Ladies' Bracelet race at the Urandangie Christmas race meeting. Four ladies entered horses! Urandangie was - and still is - a tiny settlement between Mount Isa, Birdsville and Longreach. The next record of him unfortunately was a report in 'The Courier Mail' 05 February 1895:

HUGHENDEN, February 4 [Monday]

Tellepin Charles Tellepson [sic], formerly book-keeper at Bunda Bunda [station], committed suicide by cutting his throat on Saturday at the No. 2 Bore on Telemon station. The deceased, who was well connected in England, had been drinking, and left Hughenden on Thursday. Constable Brown had the body interred where it was found.

Bunda Bunda was a very large cattle station north of Julia Creek and Telemon Station was west of Hughenden. Both towns are about 250 km (155 miles) apart. Perhaps Theodore was sacked from Bunda Bunda, went a long way to drown his sorrows and in a melancholy, drunken state decided to kill himself. It is not known if (or how) his family heard the news.

 

Ernest Bernard (1865 - 1924) was born in 1865. In the 1881 census he was listed as a scholar but it is not known where he went to school. He appears on no England, Wales or Norway Census after 1881. He did have a business partnership with Charles Ernest Howard, 'Howard and Tellefsen', acting as shipbrokers, coal exporters and colliery stores furnishers at 53 Mount Stuart Square, Bute Docks, Cardiff. They dissolved the partnership by mutual consent 31 December 1892. Ernest died in Bristol 23 August 1924, aged 59. [1]

 

 


Footnotes

[1] England and Wales Census 1841, 1851, 1861, 1871, 1881, 1891, 1901, 1911, Salter's Commercial Directory 1880, Great British Army War List 1893  (Ancestry.co.uk and Findmypast.com);  General Registry Office (GRO) certificates; www.Familysearch.org; Norwegian digitised parish records (Norwegian National Archives http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:kb_read); Bristol Mercury newspaper archive (http://newspapers.bl.uk/blcs/); Home Office records, The National Archives (www.nationalarchives.gov.uk); 'A Victorian Shipowner: A Portrait of Sir Charles Cayzer, Baronet of Gartmore' (1978) Augustus Muir and Mair Davies, published by Cayzer, Irvine and Company Limited; Cayzer Family Archive (Registered Charity Number: 1122921); London Gazette (www.london-gazette.co.uk); Guide to Exmouth (www.exmouth-guide.co.uk); Cardiff's Norwegian Church website (www.norwegianchurch.250x.com/); Registers of Immigrant Ships' Arrivals 1848-1912 (www.archives.qld.gov.au); digitised Australian newspaper collection (http://trove.nla.gov.au); Queensland Births Marriages and Deaths index (www.bdm.qld.gov.au); digitised Welsh newspaper collection (http://welshnewspapers.llgc.org.uk/en/home); 'Tales of Bush Graves: A Study of Bush Grave Sites in North-west Queensland' by Anne Alloway and Roberta Morrison (2012); wikipedia