Friday, 24 April 2026

The Story of William McCabe

This is the story of my maternal 1st cousin 2x removed, William McCabe (1885-1959), a man whose life carried him from Ireland to industrial Scotland, through the upheaval of the First World War, and finally across the world to North Queensland.

Our common ancestors are:  Patrick Muckian and Sarah McCann, my maternal 2x great grandparents.

William McCabe
(photo cropped from family group photo shared by my maternal 3rd cousin Trevor White)


From Ireland to Queensland

William’s life was not one of fame or public distinction, yet it was rich in the things that mattered most: family, work, endurance, and the courage to begin again. Born in Ireland in the late nineteenth century, he grew up in Newry, married there, spent his early married years in Scotland, served during the First World War, and eventually brought his family to Queensland. 


When the records of his life are gathered together, they tell not only the story of one man, but of a family shaped by labour, loss, war time service, migration, and perseverance.


Beginnings in Dundalk, Ireland

1885 Birth Record 
Source: Ireland, Civil Registration Births Index, 1864-1958


William McCabe was born on the 11th of May 1885 in Dundalk, County Louth, Ireland. He was the middle child born to Patrick McCabe and Mary Muckian. William's birth record places the family in Chapel Lane and records his father, Patrick McCabe, as a tailor. 


It is only a small detail on paper, yet it evokes so much — a modest working household in late nineteenth-century Ireland, practical, hardworking, and centred on making a living day by day.


At some point during William’s early childhood, the family moved about thirteen miles north to Newry, a town connected with both Counties Armagh and Down. By about 1887, when his younger sister Mary Jane was born there, that move had already become part of the family story. 


It was the first of several changes of place that would mark William’s life, though at the time it would simply have meant that home had shifted from one town to another.


Growing up in Newry

1901 Census of Ireland
Source: Census of Ireland 1901/1911. The National Archives of Ireland.

By the time of the 1901 Census of Ireland, William was sixteen years old and living in the South Ward of Newry, in County Armagh, Ireland with his parents and siblings. He appears in the census simply as a son in the household, one of the children still at home.


There is something quietly moving about that census entry because it captures William not in some dramatic moment, but in the midst of ordinary family life. It shows a working household in which everyone contributed. It appears that the whole family was employed in some capacity in factories connected with the linen trade of County Down.


William’s father Patrick was recorded as a tailor, while William’s mother and his two sisters worked as flax spinners. William’s own occupation is difficult to read and seems to say rover / cashier. A rover worked in a textile factory, operating machinery that drew out and twisted fibres into thinner, stronger rovings. The reference to cashier is less certain, and it raises an interesting question — perhaps William also helped in some way with his father’s work and collected payments from customers.


The “House and Building Return” section of the 1901 census adds another layer to the family’s circumstances. The McCabes were living in a one-room stone dwelling with a slate, iron, or tile roof and one front window. The five family members were living in what was classed as a third-class house at No. 5 Moore’s Lane, South Ward, Newry. So often, it is these simple records that bring an ancestor closer because they preserve the texture of everyday life.


Marriage to Elizabeth Rocks

1910 Marriage Record
Source: Ireland, Civil Registration Marriages Index, 1845-1958

On the 3rd of January 1910, William, aged 24, married Elizabeth Rocks at the Catholic Cathedral in Newry, County Down. On the marriage record, William’s occupation was given as labourer, a description that would follow him through much of his adult life. 


The word - labourer - may look plain on the page, but it reflects the working world William belonged to: physical labour, uncertain opportunities, and the steady effort required to support a household.


Elizabeth, often later recorded as Lizzie, would share all the major turns in his life from that moment onward. Their marriage in Newry marked the beginning of a partnership that would carry them through relocation, war, sorrow, rebuilding, and migration. 


Early family life in Scotland

1911 Scotland Census
Source: National Records of Scotland 1911 Census 652/29/21 p.21 of 20

By the time of the 1911 Scotland Census, William and Lizzie were living in Coatbridge, Lanarkshire, Scotland. William was recorded as a labourer employed in the tube works, likely the Central Tube Works which was just a street away. This census record places the young couple firmly in the industrial world of early twentieth-century Scotland, where work was heavy, conditions were hard, and daily life was shaped by the rhythm of the factories.


1913 Map of Coatbridge, Lanarkshire
Source: Ordnance Survey 1892-1949, Lanarkshire VII.12, National Library of Scotland


Their address was Kirk Street, surrounded by railway lines, tram lines, various iron works, electric light works, rivet, bolt and nut works, boiler works and other industrial sites. They were living in a tenement property south of Dundyvan Church, in the part of Coatbridge known as the “Slap Up” — a name that says much about the hastily and poorly built housing erected for Irish immigrant families around 1900.


The timing of that census gives it special poignancy. Only a few days later, on 7 April 1911, their first daughter, Mary Elizabeth McCabe, was born in Coatbridge. The census therefore captures William and Lizzie at the threshold of parenthood, building a life together far from Newry.


Other records from 1911 and 1912 continue that same picture. William was described as a “Stag Hill Labourer” on Mary Elizabeth's birth record, and the family address was listed as Kirk Street in Coatbridge. When their second daughter, Ann, was born in 1912, William's occupation was listed as "Tube Work Labourer" and the family was still living on Kirk Street. These were clearly years of hard work and young family life — years in which William and Lizzie were doing what so many couples did: making a home as best they could, wherever work could be found.


First World War service

When the First World War began, William was a young husband and father whose family life had only just begun to settle.  Then war came, and everything changed.



The surviving military records for William are frustratingly thin. 




There is no full service file to tell us exactly where he was posted, which battalion he served with, or what his movements were during the war years.




Why the record trail may be thin

The absence of a clear service file for William would not be unusual. Many First World War soldiers’ records do not survive. The National Archives’ surviving collections (held at Kew in England) are the well-known WO 363 “burnt documents” and WO 364 pension records, both only partial remains of the original record sets. The National Archives also notes that hospital material survives only in a limited and representative form in MH 106.


So, for William, his story has to be pieced together from smaller surviving fragments — his medal index card, nominal index entry, pension ledger record and family certificates.


Called back to service

On the 22nd of August 1914, only weeks after Britain entered the war, William was drawn back into military service with the Royal Irish Fusiliers. His regimental number was 8384.


William’s regimental number is an important clue. It appears to belong to the pre-war regular numbering sequence of the Royal Irish Fusiliers, rather than to the numbering pattern of a new wartime volunteer. Numbers around his number of 8384 fall in the late 1904 to early 1905 enlistment window, with nearby surviving examples showing men joining in January 1905. That fits him very well as a pre-war regular soldier who later passed into the Army Reserve, rather than a brand-new wartime recruit in August 1914.


This would also help explain why, on the 1914 birth certificate of his son William Joseph, he was described not only as a labourer but also as a Private in the Royal Irish Fusiliers Reserve.


1914 Birth Record - son William Joseph McCabe
Source: Ireland, Civil Registration Births Index, 1864-1958


That matters because it explains why he could be recorded as entering service on 22 August 1914 while already being described as a reservist. He was most likely being recalled to the colours after earlier regular service, rather than entering the army for the first time.


William's medal roll index helps bring his war service into clearer focus.


UK WW1 British Army Medal Roll Index Cards 1914-1920
Source: The National Archives, Kew, England

It appears to show that William was entitled not only to the British War Medal and Victory Medal, but also to the 1914 Star. That is an important detail, because the 1914 Star was awarded only to men who served in France or Belgium between 5 August and 22 November 1914.


William’s qualifying date is given as 22 August 1914, which places him in an overseas theatre of war at the very beginning of the conflict. Rather than being kept back in Britain or Ireland, he seems to have been sent abroad almost at once, during those first desperate months of the war. 


As mentioned previously, his regimental number suggests that he was probably not a brand-new recruit, but a former regular soldier recalled from the reserve. These small pieces of military evidence change the shape of his story. It suggests that William’s war began with immediate service overseas.


“Now in hospital in England”

A family record adds a striking and very human counterpoint to the medal card. When William’s son was born in 1914, the birth certificate described William both as a labourer and as a Private in the Royal Irish Fusiliers Reserve, adding the poignant note that he was “now in hospital in England.”


1914 Birth Record - son William Joseph McCabe
Source: Ireland, Civil Registration Births Index, 1864-1958

Read together, these records suggest a clearer sequence than first seemed possible. William appears to have gone overseas early in the war, and then, sometime afterwards, been returned or evacuated to England and admitted to hospital. The reason is still unknown. It may have been illness, exhaustion, or wounds sustained in those opening months of the conflict. The surviving records do not tell us. But they do show that his war service was already disrupted almost as soon as it began.


For the regiment itself, the timing is interesting. The 1st Battalion, Royal Irish Fusiliers was in England in August 1914, and landed in Boulogne on 23 August 1914.  So if William was said to be “now in hospital in England” in late 1914, that points more naturally to his being attached to the 1st Battalion stream, rather than simply sitting with the reserve battalion in Ireland.


A brief return home during war time 

The hospital stay may also explain the existence of this family photograph taken in 1915.   

McCabe Family Portrait c.1915 (shared & dated by my maternal 3rd cousin Trevor White)

Elizabeth McCabe nee Rocks is seated on the left holding baby William Joseph.
William McCabe is seated on the right with the two eldest children,
younger daughter Annie in the middle & older daughter Mary Elizabeth on William's lap.


William appears in this family photograph with Elizabeth, their two daughters, and baby William Joseph who appears to be a few months old. This significantly narrows the possible date of this photo - it must have been taken in early 1915. It is a precious image, because it captures a brief interval when the family was together again.


Perhaps William had been granted leave after his stay in hospital. Perhaps he was home while recovering before being sent back to duty. Whatever the exact circumstances, the photograph preserves a moment of reunion in the middle of uncertainty. It is not hard to imagine what that return must have meant: the relief of seeing Elizabeth again, the comfort of home, the joy of holding his children, and, behind it all, the knowledge that the peace of that moment might not last.


When he had to leave again, William would have carried with him the familiar sorrow known to so many wartime families — the ache of parting, the uncertainty of return, and the heaviness of leaving wife and children behind once more.


Sadly, the little baby in that photo did not survive much longer.  William Joseph McCabe died in Newry on the 10th of March 1916. It is impossible not to feel the weight of that loss.  Lizzie had already endured the fear and uncertainty of William's absence.  Then, in the middle of the war, she and William also lost their infant son.  I cannot help wondering how long it took for William to learn of that heartbreaking loss.


A memory of France

Decades later, a newspaper report from 1939 recorded William saying that the Home Hill Militia belonged to the 31st Battalion, and that he had seen that battalion "go over the top" in Frances.


1939 Newspaper Item - Speech by William
Townsville Daily Bulletin Fri 30 Jun 1939 p5


It is a brief remark, but a telling one.  If accurate, it strongly suggests that William did indeed serve on the Western Front, returning there after his brief stay with his family, and that he carried a vivid memory of seeing Australian troops attack.  The surviving military paperwork is frustratingly thin, but this later recollection has the feel of lived experience.  It hints that William's war in France was not something abstract, but something he had seen with his own eyes and still remembered many years later.


Sometimes it is these later fragments - a comment in a newspaper, a story repeated in passing - that preserve what the official record leaves unsaid.  It is one of those small later recollections that may preserve a truth the official records have only partly revealed.


That claim made by William is historically plausible.  The 31st Battalion fought on the Western Front from 1916 to 1918, and several battalions of the Royal Irish Fusiliers also served in France during those years.  If William served with the 1st Battalion Royal Irish Fusiliers for example, the strongest overlap may have been on the Somme and Amiens front in 1918, though an earlier encounter in northern France cannot be ruled out.


It is a brief remark, but a telling one. If accurately reported, it strongly suggests that William did indeed serve on the Western Front, returning there after his brief stay with his family, and that he carried a vivid memory of seeing Australian troops attack. The surviving military paperwork is frustratingly thin, but this later recollection has the feel of lived experience. It hints that William’s war in France was not something distant or abstract, but something he had seen with his own eyes and remembered many years later.


The war did not end neatly


UK WW1 Pension Ledgers & Index Cards 1914-1923 - card 1
Source: Forces War Records

William’s pension record adds another quiet but important layer to his story. It shows that he was discharged from the Royal Irish Fusiliers on 22 April 1919, and that afterward he was living at 10 Thomas Street, Newry, County Down.


By then the war was over, but its effects had not ended. His pension ledger records a disability assessed at less than 20 per cent, enough for the authorities to award compensation. The exact nature of that disability is not given, so it cannot yet be tied with certainty to his hospital stay in 1914 or to any later period of service. Even so, it tells us something important: William did not come home untouched.


The record also notes that he had three children under sixteen. In one sense, it is simply an administrative detail. In another, it brings the whole document back into the world of family life. This was not just an ex-soldier filing a claim. This was a husband and father trying to rebuild ordinary life after years of disruption and danger.


Returning to Newry

For William, the return home must have carried mixed emotions. The war was over, and he was back with his family, but the household had already known sorrow. Their little son had died in 1916, and only a short time before William’s discharge, in March 1919, his mother Mary Elizabeth Muckian had also died in Newry.


So his return from war was not simply a homecoming. It was a return to a family changed by loss.


Still, life moved forward, as it so often had to. In the years after the war, William and Elizabeth’s family continued to grow. Their son James Gerard was born in 1920, Patrick Dermott in 1921, Kathleen Ameldia in 1923, and William Raymond in 1926.


These births suggest a family rebuilding itself after the upheaval of war — quietly, steadily, one child and one year at a time.


Leaving Ireland behind

1928 UK & Ireland Outward Passenger Lists
Source: The National Archives, Kew, England -  UK and Ireland, Outward Passenger Lists, 1890-1960


In 1928, less than a decade after the war ended, William and Elizabeth made the life-changing decision to leave for Australia.


The outward passenger list records them departing England on 21 July 1928 aboard the Orama, with William described once again as a labourer. Their last address was recorded as 10 Thomas Street, Newry, the same address that had appeared during the war years. Travelling with them were their children.


That detail matters. This was not the journey of a single young man leaving home in search of adventure. It was a whole family setting out together, carrying with them all the hope, uncertainty, risk, and determination that migration required.


By the time they arrived in Queensland thirty-five days later, on 3 September 1928, they had crossed not only oceans, but one whole chapter of life into another.


A new life in Queensland, Australia

William’s uncle, Owen McCane (Muckian) — my great-grandfather — sponsored the family and paid for William, Elizabeth, and their children to emigrate.


After arriving in Brisbane, the McCabe family travelled north to Owen McCane’s farm near Gumlu in North Queensland. They stayed there for a short while before settling in the nearby Home Hill district.


It was here that William entered a very different working world. Far from the streets of Dundalk and Newry, and far from the tube works of Coatbridge, he became part of life in North Queensland. By the 1940s he was working at Inkerman Mill, one of the mills that helped shape the sugar industry of the Burdekin.


There is something remarkable in the arc of that life: born into an Irish tailoring household, labouring in industrial Scotland, serving in wartime, and then finding himself in the cane-growing district of Queensland. 


Yet for all those changes, the thread running through William’s life remained much the same — work, family, and the determination to keep going.


The family’s Australian story continued to grow. In 1932, another son, Kevin McCabe, was born at Home Hill. That same year, William’s father Patrick died back in Dundalk, a reminder that even as new roots were being put down in Queensland, the old Irish ties were never entirely left behind.


Final years at Home Hill, Queensland

William Joseph McCabe died on 26 February 1959 at Home Hill, Queensland, aged seventy-three. 


His death certificate lists the causes of death as left ventricular failure, aortic valve incompetence, coronary atheroma, atherosclerosis, and gross pulmonary fibrosis. The language is formal and clinical, but behind those medical terms lies the story of a man whose life had been shaped by years of labour, responsibility, and endurance.


Burial Plot of William and wife Elizabeth
Home Hill General Cemetery


He was buried at Home Hill General Cemetery. The journey that began in Dundalk in 1885 had ended in Queensland in 1959 — a life that stretched across countries, industries, war, and migration.


Remembering William McCabe

William McCabe’s story is not one of fame or public recognition. It is something much more familiar and, in many ways, more moving than that. 


He was a son, husband, father, labourer, soldier, migrant, and mill worker. He belonged to that great number of ordinary men whose lives were built through effort rather than acclaim, and whose legacy endures through family.


The records he left behind are only fragments when taken one by one, but taken together, they tell the story of a life marked by resilience. 



From Chapel Lane in Dundalk to Thomas Street in Newry, from Coatbridge to the Royal Irish Fusiliers, and from the ship Orama to Home Hill, William’s was a life that crossed borders and generations.


His story reminds me that family history is often found not in grand public achievements, but in the quieter evidence of endurance — in addresses repeated across records, in occupations written plainly on certificates, in a family photograph taken during wartime, and in the courage it took to begin again on the other side of the world.


Monday, 20 April 2026

Spotlight On ... Working For A Living

The Bonny Cravat Inn: where generations of my family worked for a living.

When I think about the different ways generations of my family worked for a living, some stories gather around a farm, a trade, an occupation or a small piece of land. This story however gathers around an inn.


The Bonny Cravat Inn at Woodchurch, Kent, in England became, for generation after generation on the paternal side of my family, a place of work, endurance, and family continuity.  It was not simply somewhere my ancestors appeared briefly in the record.  It was a workplace woven through the lives of the Ramsden, Fullagar, Hukins, and later Bourne families for well over a century.


  The Bonny Cravat Inn, Woodchurch, Kent
— a place where generations of the Ramsden, Fullagar, and Hukins families worked for a living.

Source: “The Bonny Cravat, Woodchurch” by Oast House Archive, via Geograph, licensed CC BY-SA 2.0.


This was no ordinary inn.  By the time members of my family began keeping it, the Bonny Cravat was already old.


Edward Hasted, writing in his History of Kent and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent (Volume 7 of the 1798 second edition), noted that Phebe Goble of Woodchurch, by will in 1692, left a charitable bequest of £2 per year to the poor to be paid by her heirs forever, from a farm called the Bonny Cravat, “now an ale-house”. 


I love that passing reference because it gives such an early glimpse of the place.  Long before it became part of my family story, it was already there in village life in the 17th century.


The building that stands today belongs mainly to the later part of the inn's story. The National Heritage List for England lists the present Bonny Cravat as a Grade II building dating from about 1800, and the Woodchurch conservation material notes it as a prominent inn in the village, opposite the church.  So, the business itself is much older than the surviving structure. 


That feels fitting somehow.  The place of work endured, even as the people and the building changed around it.


The list of Bonny Cravat Innkeepers and Publicans sourced from the Woodchurch Local and Family History site using records compiled by the Woodchurch Ancestry Group.

When I first came across this list of innkeepers and publicans associated with The Bonny Cravat, I did not just see names in sequence. I saw husbands and wives working side by side, widows carrying on after loss, sons following fathers, brothers taking their turn, and one village inn becoming part of my family’s working life across generations.


Woodchurch 1902 - The Bonny Cravat Inn on the left
Source: Woodchurch Local and Family History site 

A family workplace in the heart of Woodchurch

One of the things that stands out most strongly in the record of innkeepers is the repeated evidence of partnership.

My paternal 7th great-grandparents George and Mary Ramsden née Eastland were both part of the inn’s story. 

So were my paternal 6th great-grandparents John and Elizabeth Fullagar née Potter

In a later generation came my paternal 4th great-grandparents John and Elizabeth Fullagar née Bourne

Then, decades later, my paternal 3rd great-grandparents James and Susannah Hukins née Fullagar took their place there too.


Again and again, the same pattern repeats. Not simply a publican, but a couple. Not only a man’s occupation, but a household economy.  An inn like this was never run by one person alone.  There were customers to serve, stock to buy, food and drink to prepare, rooms and fires to manage, accounts to keep, neighbours to receive, children to raise, and all the ordinary messiness of life going on in the background.


This record makes that shared labour unusually visible.  The women were clearly part of the story, often carrying on after a death because there was no real alternative.  That is one reason the widows stay with me so strongly in this story: 

Mary Ramsden née Eastland

Elizabeth Fullagar née Potter.  

Elizabeth Fullagar née Bourne. 

Mahala Bourne-Rolfe née Chacksfield.

Their names are not mere interruptions in a male line of innkeepers.  They are part of the real substance of the story.  Each represents a woman who kept both household and business together at a difficult moment, because the work still had to be done.  Family history so often lets a woman slip into the background, but here they stand plainly in view.


The long family connection - Ramsden, Fullagar, Hukins, Bourne.

The first recognisable names on the list of innkeepers are direct ancestors -

  • George Ramsden, my 7th great-grandfather, kept The Bonny Cravat for thirteen years from 1706 to 1719. 
  • After his death, Mary Ramsden née Eastland, his widow and my 7th great-grandmother, continued from 1719 to 1720. 


Later came direct ancestors and distant cousins from the Fullagar and the Hukins families. For close  to 90 years, from 1734 to 1820, the running of the Bonny Cravat passed largely between these two families.


Listed innkeepers from the Fullagar and Hukins families are highlighted with hearts


The Fullagars carried a long stretch of the inn’s history. 

  • John Fullagar, my 6th great-grandfather, appears for twelve years from 1734 to 1746.
  • After him came Elizabeth Fullagar née Potter, his widow and my 6th great-grandmother, who ran the inn for four years.
  • The inn then passed to John Fullagar, son of John and Elizabeth and my 5th great-grandfather, from 1750 to 1758.   He would not have worked alone either.  His wife, Sarah Fullagar née Gilham, my 5th great-grandmother, would have been part of that working household.  Sarah was the granddaughter of George Ramsden and Mary Ramsden née Eastland, the first of my ancestors connected with the inn, so the knowledge and habits of innkeeping may well have run through the family as naturally as any inheritance.
  • Later, the inn returned again to yet another John Fullagar, my 4th great-grandfather and son of John and Sarah Fullagar née Gilham.  He ran the inn for twenty-one years from 1782 to 1803.
  • Elizabeth Fullagar née Bourne, his wife and my 4th great-grandmother, continued running the inn for thirteen years after the death of her husband, from 1803 to 1816. Once again, no doubt she had been working alongside her husband during his years at the inn.
  • The son of John Fullagar and Elizabeth Fullagar née Bourne, Thomas Fullagar, then took over from his mother in 1816 and ran the inn for four years.  Thomas, whilst not a direct ancestor, was my 3rd great-granduncle.
  • Samuel Fullagar appears from 1856 to 1865.  Again, whilst not a direct ancestor, he was my 3rd cousin 4x removed, great great-grandson of the first of my Fullagar ancestors who ran the inn - John Fullagar and Elizabeth Fullagar née Potter. 


The 
Hukins family formed another thread. 
  • John Hukins, my 5th great-grandfather, kept the inn for seventeen years from 1758 to 1775, and he too was almost certainly supported by his wife, my 5th great-grandmother, Elizabeth Hukins née Howe.
  • John was followed by his brother James Hukins for seven years from 1775 to 1782.  Whilst James was not a direct ancestor of mine, he was my 5th great-granduncle. 
  • Decades later the inn returned to both the Hukins and Fullagar families through James Hukins and Susannah Hukins née Fullagar, my 3rd great-grandparents, who were there for thirteen years from 1824 to 1837.  
Susannah was the sister of Thomas Fullagar, and the daughter of John Fullagar and Elizabeth Fullagar née Bourne. James was the grandson of John Hukins and Elizabeth Hukins née Howe.  By then the family connections around the inn had become dense and interwoven.


Another view of the Bonny Cravat Inn at Woodchurch,
the village inn that remained part of my family's working life for generations.

Source: “Bonny Cravat – Front Road, Woodchurch” by Brian Chadwick, via Geograph, licensed CC BY-SA 2.0
.


Another branch of that wider story - Bourne - appears in the 1850s. 

  • Edmund Bourne, my 2nd cousin 4x removed, ran the inn for four years from 1852 to 1856.  He entered the Bonny Cravat story through marriage to Mahala Rolfe née Chacksfield, the widow of Henry Rolfe. 


What makes this part of the story especially striking is that Mahala had already been keeping the inn on her own for three years after her first husband Henry’s death. (Henry Rolfe had been the innkeeper from 1845 to 1849, undoubtedly supported by Mahala). Again, Mahala was not simply a name bridging one male innkeeper to another. For those years after the death of her first husband, she held the business together in her own right, before Edmund married her and joined the next phase of the inn's working life. 


Although Mahala was not a blood relative of mine, she belongs with the other widows in this story who kept the Bonny Cravat going when life could easily have pushed everything off course.


The work behind the names

What I love most in stories like this are the small details that remind us what the work may actually have looked like. 

  • A Kent Archives publication, drawing on Woodchurch parish records for 1765, notes that John Hukins, innkeeper at the Bonny Cravat, was paid “beer for buryings” at local wakes. That tiny detail is one of my favourites because it brings the inn to life. It reminds us that this was not simply somewhere people came to drink. It was part of the village’s social fabric — present even at moments of mourning.


That wider role matters. 

  • In villages like Woodchurch, an inn was rarely only a drinking house. It was a meeting place, a landmark, somewhere people heard news, settled arrangements, and crossed paths with neighbours. Standing opposite the church, the Bonny Cravat sat right at the centre of village life.


There is another layer to that history too — one that gives the Bonny Cravat a darker edge.

  • Local tradition links the inn with smuggling in the eighteenth century, and that its strange and memorable name may have come from a French vessel remembered as La Bonne Crevette or La Bonne Corvette, in contradiction to the information in Hasted's text


Inns such as the Bonny Cravat sat where so many worlds met: respectable village life, hard-earned daily labour, travel, gossip, business, and sometimes things less lawful. 

  • Smuggling was rife in Kent in the eighteenth century and continued into the nineteenth, and by the 1820s the district around Woodchurch was associated with men from the gang led by George Ransley, better known through the history of the Aldington Gang. In October 1826 Ransley and others were captured, and the gang’s members were later tried on capital charges.


During the years when James and Susannah were running the Bonny Cravat, they would almost certainly have known of the local smuggling world, even if only through village talk. 

  • Stories remembered later say that the Bonny Cravat itself was sometimes used as a courtroom, and that proceedings connected with captured smugglers were held there. Perhaps that is a village memory rather than hard fact, but even as memory it is vivid and revealing. It suggests how closely public life, danger, and daily work could intersect in one place.


There are other old tales attached to the inn as well.

  • One says the cellar, still used for beer, once connected by tunnel to the nearby church, perhaps with origins reaching back to the Reformation. Another recalls condemned smugglers being hanged outside the inn after trial. Whether every detail survives exactly as it happened or not, these stories cling to the Bonny Cravat because it was clearly one of those places where village life was lived at close quarters — not neatly or gently, but vividly.


An honest reminder about risk

One detail in particular stops this story from drifting into nostalgia. The Bonny Cravat was not just some picturesque old public house or quaint place where my family members lived and worked.  It was also the place where debts had to be met, and where the rougher edges of local life came right up to the door.

  • In 1837, James Hukins appeared in connection with relief for insolvent debtors, a reminder that keeping an inn was never a guaranteed road to security. Family history can sometimes make an old inn sound comfortably picturesque, but for the people living it, it was work tied to risk, debt, and uncertainty.


I think that is central to the story. The Bonny Cravat was a place of continuity and family labour, yes — but it was also part of a precarious economy in which fortunes could shift quickly.  Bills still had to be paid.  Stock still had to be bought.  Losses could mount.  A bad run could undo years of effort.


By the end of 1837, my 3rd great-grandparents, James and Susannah, found themselves in dire circumstances and were in severe financial trouble. They could no longer continue at the inn and a mere two years later they were preparing to emigrate.  


From Woodchurch to Australia

One part of this story did not end in Woodchurch.


When my 3rd great-grandparents James Hukins and Susannah Hukins née Fullagar left the village and emigrated to Australia in 1839 with their family, the Bonny Cravat story took on a longer reach. In one sense, the inn itself was left behind.  But in another, the habits and knowledge shaped there travelled with them.


I find that continuity especially moving, because the family's connection to public-house life did not disappear in Australia. Two of their sons — my 2nd great-grandfather Adolphus Hukins and my 2nd great grand-uncle John Hukins — were both running pubs in Australia in the 1850s.


There is something remarkable in that. A family shaped for generations by the life of one village inn in Kent carried that working knowledge across the world. What had been learned at Woodchurch was not lost.  It became part of the family's Australian story as well.


Seen that way, the Bonny Cravat was more than a village inn attached to one side of my family tree. It was a workplace woven deeply into my family's life, part of a tradition of labour that crossed generations and, eventually, continents.


Sources and notes

With thanks to the local historians and record keepers whose work helps bring places like the Bonny Cravat back into view:

This post draws on a family document, Innkeepers and Publicans of The Bonny Cravat, based on material from the Woodchurch Local and Family History site and records compiled by the Woodchurch Ancestry Group.

This post also uses Edward Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, 2nd edition, volume 7 (Canterbury: W. Bristow, 1798), in the Woodchurch section under “Charities,” which preserves an early reference to the Bonny Cravat as an ale-house.

Additional context comes from Kent Archives, Issue 15 (Autumn 2019), which quotes a 1765 Woodchurch parish record noting John Hukins, innkeeper at the Bonny Cravat, being paid for supplying “beer for buryings.”