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Chambers family

Chambers family

Chambers Family, Catherine Chambers (later Mrs John Barker), John Barker, Hugh Chambers, Anna Chambers (married to PW Jackson)and Mrs Catherine Chambers (wife of James Chambers). In 1861 James and Catherine owned Carlew House in North Adelaide. In 1876 Hugh and Agnes Chambers owned the house. James Chambers arrived in Adelaide in 1837 aged 26 and soon established a thriving transport business between Holdfast Bay and Adelaide and later between Port Adelaide and Adelaide. He was also the owner of the first taxi cab in Adelaide. He was friendly with McDouall Stuart and gave the explorer a lunch before the party set off to cross the continent.

Catherine Chambers

Catherine Chambers

Catherine Chambers. In 1861 James and Catherine owned Carlew House in North Adelaide. In 1876 Hugh and Agnes Chambers owned the house. James Chambers arrived in Adelaide in 1837 aged 26 and soon established a thriving transport business between Holdfast Bay and Adelaide and later between Port Adelaide and Adelaide. He was also the owner of the first taxi cab in Adelaide. He was friendly with McDouall Stuart and gave the explorer a lunch before the party set off to cross the continent.

James Chambers

James Chambers

James Chambers. In 1861 James and Catherine owned Carlew House in North Adelaide. In 1876 Hugh and Agnes Chambers owned the house. James Chambers arrived in Adelaide in 1937 aged 26 and soon established a thriving transport business between Holdfast Bay and Adelaide and later between Port Adelaide and Adelaide. He was also the owner of the first taxi cab in Adelaide. He was friendly with McDouall Stuart and gave the explorer a lunch before the party set off to cross the continent.

John Chambers

John Chambers

John Chambers.

Mrs. James Chambers

Mrs. James Chambers

Mrs James Chambers, one time owner of Carclew.

Edgar Chapman

Edgar Chapman

Edgar Chapman was a brewer, pastoralist and theatre proprietor, born at Sevenoaks, Kent in 1831. Together with Charles James Ware he acquired Fenton's brewery in Clare.They also ran the World's End Run pastoralist operation east of Burra. In 1878 Chapman financed the rebuilding and enlarging of the Theatre Royal which became Adelaide's foremost theatre

Sir Robert William Chapman

Sir Robert William Chapman

Sir Robert William Chapman (1866-1942) mathematician and engineer, first Professor of Engineering at the University of Adelaide.

Sir Robert William Chapman

Sir Robert William Chapman

Sir Robert William Chapman, Professor of Engineering at the University of Adelaide.

W. E. Chapman

W. E. Chapman

W. E. Chapman of the Register staff. The Register was originally known as the South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register and later the South Australian Register was South Australia's first newspaper. It was first published in London in June 1936 and moved to Adelaide in 1837

Charles Chapple

Charles Chapple

Charles Chapple and family.

Susanna Cheetham

Susanna Cheetham

Susanna Cheetham wife of Reverend Henry Cheetham.

Reverend Henry Cheetham

Reverend Henry Cheetham

Reverend Henry Cheetham.

Bessie Young Chennell

Bessie Young Chennell

Mrs. Bessie Young Chennell.

J.H. Chinner

J.H. Chinner

Caricature of J.H. Chinner, signed 'HWC'.

Jim Chisholm

Jim Chisholm

Jim Chisholm.

Mervyn Chinner

Mervyn Chinner

Mervyn Chinner of the Register staff. The Register was originally known as the South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register and later the South Australian Register was South Australia's first newspaper. It was first published in London in June 1936 and moved to Adelaide in 1837

Reverend Colin Chittleborough

Reverend Colin Chittleborough

Reverend Colin Chittleborough of St. Paul's Church, Port Adelaide.

Chittleborough Family

Chittleborough Family

William Chittleborough and family, Ellen, William, Robert, William Junior, Mr Chittleborough's second wife, James, John and Marion. Note: there is some confusion with B 7846. William Chittleborough's daughter is Ellen or Emma? Both photographs are dated 1860.

Chittleborough siblings

Chittleborough siblings

William Chittleborough of Reynella (left) and James Chittleborough of Hindmarsh with their sisters Mrs Sarah Ann Brown of Victoria (left) and Mrs Elizabeth Loney Bold of Reynella. The brothers and sisters from the Chittleborough family arrived from England with their parents, Maria nee Coats and James on board H.M.S Buffalo, on 28 December 1836. James (senior) died in 1854.

Clifton R. Churchward

Clifton R. Churchward

Clifton R. Churchward was born in South Australia in 1883. He joined the Port Adelaide office of the Commonwealth Customs where he was chief analyst for 37 years. After retirement he fostered an interest in the South African government when their currency changed to decimalisation. He died in 1962

Mr A. Baker-Clack

Mr A. Baker-Clack

Mr and Mrs A. Baker-Clack from Murraytown.

Chapman James Clare

Chapman James Clare

Captain Chapman James Clare, KCMG, Naval Commander of H.M.C.S. Protector during its Boxer Rebellion service in China. He suggested that the Coastwatchers organisation be established in 1919. These coastwatchers played an important role during World War II. In 1901 he was one of seven judges of designs for a new Federal Australian flag

Mr and Mrs Clark

Mr and Mrs Clark

Mr and Mrs Clark, built the oldest house still standing in Williamstown.

Annie Clark

Annie Clark

Annie Clark.

Caroline Emily Clark

Caroline Emily Clark

Caroline Emily Clark.

Henry Whickam Clark

Henry Whickam Clark

Henry Whickam Clark.

John Howard Clark

John Howard Clark

John Howard Clark.

Asmus Clausen

Asmus Clausen

Asmus Clausen (1853-1922) timber merchant and ship wright of Port Adelaide. Among his constructions is the Tower House at Hove.

Edward Erskine Cleland

Edward Erskine Cleland

Judge Edward Erskine Cleland. A newspaper cutting on the back of the photograph says: Mr Cleland, who was born at Beaumont, South Australia, 67 years ago is a son of the late Mr JF Cleland, a former Registrar General of Births, Deaths and Marriages. He was educated at Prince Alfred College, articled with Mr William Pope, and took his LL.B degree on April 25, 1890. On the following day he was called to the Bar, and soon afterwards was appointed Associate to the late Mr Justice Bundey. In 1891 he entered practice, and his career has been remarkably successful. By 1913 it was recorded that he had by far the greatest number of cases in the High Court of any counsel from this State. He was appointed a King's Counsel in December, 1912 and soon afterwards was honored by an appointment by the then Attorney-General (Mr Homburg) to go to London as one of the counsel in the dispute boundary case between South Australia and Victoria. Mr Cleland has had wide interests outside his profession among the positions he has held being those of vice-president of the Law Society, chairman of the South Australian Football League and chairman of the Kindergarten Union.

Sir John Burton Cleland

Sir John Burton Cleland

Sir John Burton Cleland.