My father,
Bede William Connors, born in 1924 and died in 2016, is buried at
Bowen General Cemetery. His burial place reflects the later Queensland chapter of the family story: railway work, marriage, community life, and a long connection with Bowen.
Seen together, these burial places read almost like a migration map:
Ireland → Tumut → Berry → Gympie → Bowen
That simple line hides many lives, but it shows the broad movement of the direct Connors family over several generations.
Tumut and Wagga Wagga: the early New South Wales cluster
The strongest early family cluster appears around Tumut and Wagga Wagga.
Several members of the Connor family are linked with Tumut cemeteries. James Connor 1859-1923, William Connor 1864-1959, and Michael John Connor 1873-1942 were buried at Tumut New Cemetery, although Michael has no grave marker. Edward George Connor 1876-1898 was buried at Tumut Pioneer Cemetery, but under the name George Edward Connors, and his exact plot is unknown. Their father William is also connected with Tumut Pioneer Cemetery, again with the plot unknown.
The Wagga Wagga connection is more poignant. Patrick Connor 1853-1876, Sabina Ellen Connor 1861-1876, and John Connor 1868-1876 all died in 1876 during a typhoid outbreak in Wagga Wagga. Their burial places are unknown. That one cluster of deaths suggests a devastating family episode, made even more difficult by the lack of known grave locations.
There is something especially stark about those entries: three young lives, one outbreak, no identified burial plots. In family history, absence can sometimes speak as loudly as a headstone.
Berry, Gerringong and the South Coast
The South Coast also appears in the Connors burial map.
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Connor Family Plot at Harley Hill Cemetery - Thomas Edgar Connor / Connors, wife Susannah and their son William |
Thomas Edgar Connor 1850-1910, my great-grandfather, rests at Harley Hill Cemetery, Berry. His son William Adolphus Connors 1878-1906 was also buried there, showing the family presence and connection to the Berry district.
Nearby, Mary Harding née Conners 1818-1897, a paternal 2x great-grand aunt (sister of our Irish immigrant William Conners), was buried at Gerringong Cemetery.
This South Coast cluster shows that the family did not move in one single direction. Some branches remained in or returned to New South Wales coastal districts, while others moved north or inland.
Northern Rivers and the spread northward
Another noticeable pattern is the number of Connors family members buried in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales.
James Alfred Connors 1884-1907 is associated with Barham Street Memorial Park Cemetery, East Lismore, though the burial plot is unknown.
Cyril Ernest Connors 1888-1942 was buried at Alstonville Cemetery,
and Frederick Augustus Connors 1890-1967 at East Ballina Cemetery.
In the later generation, Leo Connors 1921-1921, the infant son of George Thomas Connors, was buried at East Lismore General Cemetery in an unmarked grave.
This small entry is one of the saddest in the list: a baby who lived and died in 1921, remembered now through family research rather than a visible marker.
The Northern Rivers burials suggest another family pathway: movement through Lismore, Alstonville and Ballina before some members of the family became more firmly associated with Queensland.
Gympie: a strong Connors family resting place
For the twentieth-century Connors family, Gympie Cemetery stands out as a major burial place.
George Thomas Connors, my paternal grandfather, is buried there.
Several of his children are also buried at Gympie: Beryl Agnes Connors, Thomas Richard Connors, Christina Grace Hettrick née Connors, Olga May Ryan née Connors, and Betty Patricia Hodgins née Connors.
This makes Gympie one of the strongest family burial clusters in the whole Connors line. It reflects more than a cemetery location; it marks a place of family settlement and continuity.
Queensland branches: Bowen, Beaudesert, Ipswich and Brisbane
The Queensland burial places show how widely the family spread in the twentieth century.
My father, Bede William Connors 1924-2016, is buried at Bowen General Cemetery, marking his long association with Bowen.
His brother George Thomas Connors 1914-1990 is buried at Beaudesert Cemetery,
while Colin Vincent Connors 1908-1992 is buried at Warrill Park Lawn Cemetery, Willowbank, Ipswich.
Their aunt Mary Ellen Bates née Connors 1874-1947 was buried at Nudgee Cemetery & Crematorium in Brisbane.
These burial places show the family widening across Queensland: not just one town, but a network of places shaped by work, marriage, family obligations and later-life settlement.
Sydney and the modern memorial landscape
Some Connors relatives are connected with Sydney cemeteries and crematoria.
Bridget Ellen Coombes née Connor 1857-1946
and Elizabeth Ann Sharp née Connor 1870-1949 were both buried at Woronora Memorial Park, Sutherland.
Percy Jerome Connors is associated with Rookwood Crematorium, Sydney, through cremation. Contact with the Crematorium revealed his ashes had been spread in the Rose Garden, but there was no plaque to identify his final resting place.
His entry reminds us that cremation can complicate burial research. A person may have been cremated, their ashes scattered, placed in a niche, interred in a family grave, or recorded in a crematorium register without a traditional headstone.
As burial practices changed, so did the kinds of memorials left behind.
War, memory and a grave far from home
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Left: Connors E. S. inscribed on the Wall of Honour at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra. Right: Connors E.S. inscribed on the Villers-Bretonneux Memorial in France. |
One of the most striking entries is Erice Sylvester Connors, born in 1892 and killed in 1916. He is remembered on the Australian War Memorial plaque in Canberra and at the Villers-Bretonneux Memorial in France.
His memorial places are different from the family graves in Tumut, Gympie or Bowen. They place him within a national and international story of war loss. For families, these memorials can become symbolic graves: places of remembrance when the person did not return home to be buried among kin.
His resting place belongs not only to the Connors family story, but to the wider story of Australian families who lost sons, brothers and uncles far from home.
The missing graves
A recurring theme in the Connors burial record is uncertainty. Several entries are marked as unknown, location of burial plot unknown, no grave marker, or unmarked grave.
These include early ancestors, infants, young adults, people who died during an outbreak, and relatives whose names were recorded in variant forms. Their absence from the visible cemetery landscape does not mean they were forgotten by their families. It means the surviving record has gaps.
There are many possible reasons why a burial location may be unknown today:
A family may not have been able to afford a permanent headstone. A grave may once have had a simple wooden marker that decayed over time. Cemetery records may have been lost, damaged, poorly kept, or destroyed. Some graves may have been reused, altered, disinterred, or affected by cemetery redevelopment. In some cases, a person may have been cremated, with ashes scattered or placed somewhere not easily traced. Environmental factors — flood, erosion, fire, weathering, vegetation, termites, or ground movement — may have damaged markers or made inscriptions unreadable. Incorrect death records, surname variations, reversed given names, or spelling changes can also hide a burial in plain sight.
The Connors family has examples of many of these research challenges. The surname appears as Conner, Connor, Conners and Connors. Edward George Connor was buried under the reversed name George Edward Connors. Others have known cemeteries but no known plots. Some have no grave markers. Some have only a place of death, not a confirmed burial place.
These uncertainties are not failures in the family story. They are part of the story.
What the burial places reveal
Taken together, the Connors burial locations reveal several patterns.
The earliest known roots remain in Ireland.
The first strong Australian cluster appears in Tumut and Wagga Wagga, where the family lived through settlement, work, illness and loss.
A second cluster appears around Berry and the South Coast.
The family then spreads through the Northern Rivers, with burials at Lismore, Alstonville and Ballina.
By the twentieth century, Gympie becomes a major family resting place.
Later burials show the family extending across Queensland, including Bowen, Beaudesert, Ipswich and Brisbane.
Other branches lead to Sydney, Woronora, Rookwood, and even to the battlefields and memorials of France.
This is not just a list of cemeteries. It is a map of family movement. It shows where people settled, where children died, where epidemics struck, where work and marriage took people, and where memory was preserved — sometimes in stone, sometimes in records, and sometimes only in the careful work of descendants piecing the fragments together.
Remembering the unmarked
The most moving entries are not always the grandest memorials. Sometimes they are the smallest notes: unmarked grave, no grave marker, location unknown.
Those phrases remind me that family history is not only about finding names. It is also about restoring presence. A grave without a headstone still belongs to someone. A missing plot still marks a life. A person buried under a variant name is still part of the family line.
By gathering these burial places together, the scattered Connors family becomes visible again. From Ireland to Tumut, from Berry to Gympie, from Bowen to Villers-Bretonneux, these resting places form a quiet geography of belonging.
Some graves can be visited. Some can only be imagined. But each one holds a place in the family story.
A more detailed look at the final resting places
The table below gathers the known burial and memorial places of my direct Connors ancestors and all their siblings. (I have also created a Google Doc containing this table with photos of final resting places: Connors Line )
It also records the silences in the family trail — unmarked graves, unknown burial plots, missing markers, and relatives remembered only through cemetery records, family research or memorial inscriptions.
(Burial locations compiled from family research notes. Surname spellings vary across records, including Conner, Connor, Conners and Connors.)