Thursday 25 January 2024

The Story of Adolphus Crittenden Hukins / Memories ... January 26

This post tells the story of my paternal Great Grand Uncle, Adolphus Crittenden Hukins  1849 - 1897.
I'm publishing this post on the anniversary of his birth.


 Anniversary of a Birthday   

(For my 'Family Anniversaries' page)



Today is the anniversary of the birth of my paternal Great Grand uncle, Adolphus Crittenden Hukins.  Even though he was born so very long ago and obviously I never got to meet him, he holds a special place in my heart as he was born on the day we know as 'Australia Day'.

Australia Day is the official national day of our country, although this day wasn't adopted as Australia Day until 1935 so my great grand uncle would never have known about it.

  • Adolphus Crittenden Hukins was born on January 26th in 1849.

"What a fabulous name!" I hear you say.  My thoughts exactly!

'Adolphus' was his father's first name and yet despite extensive research, I have not been able to find evidence of any other Adolphus in the previous four generations of that family!  I'm at a loss to know why he was named so.

The Hukins family had been living in the the county of Kent in England since at least 1700 (I haven't been able to get any further back) and the stock standard Christian names in the family had been John, James or Richard.  Where on earth 'Adolphus' came from will likely remain a mystery.

'Crittenden', on the other hand, was the first name of his father's brother (who tragically died soon after the family's arrival in Australia), and the surname of his father's grandmother, Elizabeth Crittenden.  The Crittenden family had been living in Kent since at least the early 1600s so there was a long family history of the name as a surname.  In Adolphus's case however, it had become his middle name.

  • Adolphus Crittenden Hukins was the son of Adolphus Hukins (an English immigrant) and Mary Ann Farley (an Irish immigrant).

  • He was born in Sydney, New South Wales.


  • I have not been able to find a birth record for Adolphus Crittenden, but I have however been reliably informed by distant cousins that he was indeed born on this date.      

  • I was able to track down a transcript of his baptism record.  That gives the date of his baptism as March 4, 1849, just over a week after his birth.

  • The transcript of the baptism record also shows that Adolphus Crittenden was baptised in the parish of St. Lawrence, one of the four parishes that existed at that time in Sydney, located in the southern portion of Sydney.

  • Adolphus was the first of 13 children born to Adolphus and Mary. 

  • The first of his siblings was born in 1850 when Adolphus was one year old, and the last of his siblings was born in 1869 when Adolphus was 20.

  • By the time Adolphus Crittenden had turned 1 year old, the family had moved from Sydney to the small township of Jamberoo, outside Kiama, on the southern coast of New South Wales.  It was there that his father bought land and established a farm.

  • The very early years of Adolphus's childhood would have been spent living and working on his father's farm, and probably helping out on the farms of his grandfather and two of his uncles, which were close by.

  • Adolphus Crittenden's father (I'll refer to him as Adolphus Senior from now on) also became an inn-keeper, following in the footsteps of quite a number of family members from previous generations back in England.  By 1855 he was running a pub named 'Four In Hand' in the town of Kiama, which was about 11 kilometres away from the family farm.  

  • It seems that Adolphus Senior had kept the farm, but the family had moved to Kiama to live.  Adolphus Crittenden would have been 6 years old when the family moved into town.

  • Unfortunately, Adolphus Senior did not experience great success as a publican, and financial troubles raised their ugly head quite early on.  In 1858 insolvency proceedings were bought against Adolphus Senior and he lost the pub.  Adolphus Crittenden would have been 9 years old when all this was happening.

  • By the time Adolphus Crittenden was in his early teens, his father was in trouble with the law, mostly because of public drunkenness.  Then, by 1873, Adolphus Senior lost the family farm following a damages claim bought against him.  Adolphus Crittenden was 24 at this time, but it's likely he had already left home and had begun his own life. 

  • By 1877 Adolphus Crittenden was living in Albion Park, north-west of Kiama, and working as a horse-breaker.

  • He was no longer known by his full Christian name, Adolphus Crittenden.  He was now known as Crit or Chris.

  • Adolphus Crittenden (Crit / Chris) Hukins became quite well-known across the Illawarra Region as a steeplechase rider.  He was apparently quite a familiar contestant at jumping events in all the metropolitan and country shows across the region and beyond.

  • In 1892 Adolphus Crittenden paid quite a hefty price for a horse with a good track record in jumping hurdles.   £200 would have been a very large sum of money in those times, but obviously Adolphus Crittenden was confident he investing wisely.





  • Adolphus Crittenden became quite the successful show jumper / steeplechase rider, winning first place many times riding his horse named 'Mingoola'.  The following newspaper item shows the Grand Jumping Contest results from the Bowral Show in March of 1897 and A.C. Hukins is listed as the winner of that event.

  • Tragically, he died quite unexpectedly just a few months later, on the 20th of October, 1897.

  • Death notices appeared in quite a number of newspapers across the Illawarra region and in the city of Sydney.

  • The following short notice appeared in several newspapers including  The Maitland Weekly Mercury (30 Oct 1897 p12)The Wagga Wagga Express (23 Oct 1897), The Sydney Morning Herald (21 Oct 1897 p6), and The Sydney Mail & New South Wales Advertiser (4 dec 1897 p1164). 



  • This appeared in The Freeman's Journal (30 Oct 1897 p20).



  • This notice appeared in the Bowral Free Press & Berrima District Intelligencer, but this time Adolphus was named as Mr. A. C. Hukins


  • This notice appeared in The Sydney Mail & New South Wales Advertiser (4 Dec 1897 p1164), giving some insight into how he was thought of in the general community.




  •  An obituary was published in both the Bowral Free Press & Berrima District Intelligencer (30 Oct 1897 p2) and  The Kiama Independent & Shoalhaven Advertiser (23 Oct 1897 p2).  His name was recorded as Mr. Crit Hukins in the Bowral Free Press article and as Mr. Chris Hukins in the Kiama Independent.





  • As the obituary states, Adolphus Crittenden suffered quite a lot towards the end.  Such a terrible way to go and all because a splinter got lodged under one of his fingernails!


  • His death certificate states he suffered from "traumatic tetanus" for 3 days.


  • Adolphus Crittenden Hukins was buried at the Church of England Cemetery in Albion, New South Wales.  I have not yet been able to find the exact location of his last resting place.

  • As an aside note:  For those who might be wondering what happened to Mingoola after his owner's death ... well the poor horse died the following year!  The following newspaper item states that he "dropped dead .... while exercising"!  






Friday 12 January 2024

Memories ... January 13

  Anniversary of a Birthday   

(For my 'Family Anniversaries' page)



Today is the anniversary of the birth of the wife of my paternal granduncle, and this post is part of my Family Anniversaries / Memories page.

I don't often include spouses of my relatives in these 'Memory' posts, but I'm making an exception in this case because of a very special photo in my family tree photo collection.  It is one of my favourites!

This is the only photo I have of Vera Coleman and it is in fact a photographic postcard:

Vera Agnes Connors nee Coleman



Henry James Coleman
Vera's brother

This photo was put on a postcard which was sent to her brother Henry (known as Harry) James whilst he was away serving in World War 1.  





It's a particularly poignant shot I think, as it seems to depict a young lady deep in thought ... possibly concerned about the fate of her younger brother and wondering if she will ever see him again.  

  • Vera was born on the 13th of January 1897 in the town of Ballina in New South Wales.

  • She was the eldest of 10 children born to James Coleman and his wife Catherine Finn.

Cyril Ernest Connors
Vera's husband

  • At the age of 25, Vera married my granduncle Cyril Ernest Connors in Murwillumbah, New South Wales in 1922.  Cyril had also served in WW1 with the 6th Australian Light Horse Regiment and the Camel Corps.  He had seen action at Gallipoli and then in Egypt, and had been wounded many times.  Cyril had returned home safely in 1918 and had been working in the Murwillumbah area. 

  • They went on to have six children.
          - Thomas James was born in December of 1922.
          - Moya Delene was born in February of 1925.  Sadly, she died a mere 8 months later.
          - Claire Catherine came along in 1926.
          - Cyril Joseph was born in 1929.
          - Bruce Bernard was born in 1930.
          - John Linus came along in 1934.
          - Margaret Mary came along in 1936.  By this time, Vera was aged 39.

  • According to Census data from 1930 to 1936, Vera and Cyril began their married life living in the Alstonville / Wollongbar area of New South Wales where Cyril worked as a dairy foreman.  By 1937 however, they had moved to Camden Park Estate, near Menangle in New South Wales, where Cyril worked at the Macarthur-Onslow property as a Studmaster.

  • Tragically, Vera's husband died of a heart attack in 1942 when Vera was 45 years old.  He had just re-enlisted for service in WW11 and was attached to the Camp Staff at Raymond Terrace in New South Wales.

  • Vera was left widowed with children ranging in ages from 20 to 6.  I'm not sure how Vera managed to support herself and her youngest children, but I would think she received much needed support from members of her own family.
Thomas James Connors,
eldest son of Vera & Cyril


  • At the time her eldest son was serving in WW2, so that would have been an added anxiety.  Thomas James Connors had enlisted just months before the death of his father and served in Borneo and New Guinea, before being discharged in May of 1946.


  • According to the 1943 Census, she was living with her eldest son Thomas James Connors on Esmonde Street in East Lismore.  This information doesn't paint the whole picture however.




  • In 1943, when Vera moved into the house on Esmonde Street, her eldest son Thomas was the only child of voting age and was therefore the only child included in the census (as he was serving however, he would have rarely been home that year).  Of course, he was not the only child of Vera's living in the house.
          - Claire Catherine would have been 17
          - Cyril Joseph would have been 14 years old
          - Bruce Bernard would have been 12
          - John Linus would have been 9 years old
          - and Margaret Mary would have been 6.

  • The 1943 to 1949 census documents show that Vera continued living on Esmonde Street in East Lismore with her children.

  • By 1954 however, Vera had moved from Lismore to Lidcombe.  By this time, it appears that only Vera's eldest son and daughter had moved out, while the other four still lived with Vera in Lidcombe.

  • Vera continued living in Lidcombe and passed away in 1985, aged 88.  She was survived by 5 of her children as not only her daughter Moya had passed at the age of 8 months, but her son Bruce died in 1973.


  • Vera was buried at the Rookwood cemetery alongside her son Bruce.



I'm joining Amy Johnson Crow's 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2024 Challenge with this post.


This time I'm catching up with the prompt for Week 3  - ''Favourite Photo".

You can join by blogging or posting on social media with the tag #52Ancestors.

Check out Amy's FB pages:  Generations Cafe  or  Amy Johnson Crow.