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Jamaica-born Gertrude Colleton, daughter of Frederick Colleton and great-granddaughter of Admiral Richard Graves. Melbourne, November 1866.

Jamaica-born Gertrude Colleton, daughter of Frederick Colleton and great-granddaughter of Admiral Richard Graves. Melbourne, November 1866.

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Jamaica-born Gertrude Colleton, daughter of Frederick Colleton and great-granddaughter of Admiral Richard Graves. Melbourne, November 1866.

by GAUL, John

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Armadale, Victoria, Australia
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About This Item

Albumen print photograph, carte de visite format, 101 x 61 mm (mount); verso imprinted 'Photographed from life by Gaul, 75 & 77 Swanston St., Melbourne' and with an extensive inscription in ink: 'Gertrude Sophia Jane Plantagenet Colleton, only child of Frederick Nassau William Graves Colleton and great-grandchild of Admiral Richard Graves of Hembury Fort, County Devon. / Taken November 1866'; both the print and mount are in very good condition. In the wake of abolition - but especially after 1838, when slaves were finally emancipated in British colonies and slave-owners received compensation - there was a significant influx into the Australian colonies of families and individuals who brought with them accumulated wealth that was the legacy of slave ownership, especially in the Caribbean, North America, or Mauritius. For almost 200 years, from the mid-seventeenth to the early nineteenth century, the Colleton family, originally wealthy wool merchants from Exeter in Devon, played a major part in the establishment of slave codes and the administration of the slave/plantation system in the New World - in Barbados, Jamaica and South Carolina. The surname Colleton is among the most prominent of those associated with the history of slavery in these places. Gertrude Sophia Jane Plantagenet (Colleton) McEwen (1845-1917) was an indirect beneficiary of the wealth and entitlement that had been created for her family through generations of slave ownership. She was born in Jamaica on 21 August 1845, the daughter of Frederick Nassau William Graves Colleton (Lieutenant 2WI Regt., Fort George) and Jane Alves (Dyer) Burke. We do not know precisely when, or with whom, or under what circumstances Gertrude arrived in Melbourne, but this portrait of her by Gaul tells us she was certainly in Melbourne by the end of 1866. In Melbourne in 1874 she married Charles William McEwen (b. 1851 in Great Boughton, Cheshire). The couple later settled in Sydney, where we believe Charles may have become a partner in the Wynyard auctioneer business of James Rodd & Co. (see New South Wales Government Gazette, 21 June 1899). Gertrude died in Woollahra, Sydney in 1917. Charles - six years her junior - outlived her: he died in Parramatta in 1921. Their only child, William Frederic Augustus Calveley Colleton McEwen, was born in Williamstown, Melbourne in 1877, and died in North Sydney in 1957.

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Details

Bookseller
Douglas Stewart Fine Books AU (AU)
Bookseller's Inventory #
41181
Title
Jamaica-born Gertrude Colleton, daughter of Frederick Colleton and great-granddaughter of Admiral Richard Graves. Melbourne, November 1866.
Author
GAUL, John
Book Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1

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About the Seller

Douglas Stewart Fine Books

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2022
Armadale, Victoria

About Douglas Stewart Fine Books

Douglas Stewart Fine Books is an antiquarian bookseller based in Melbourne, Australia. We buy and sell books both locally and around the world, working closely with clients to understand their collecting priorities and to source appropriate material. Our clients include libraries, galleries, museums, private collectors and fellow members of the trade.

Douglas began buying and selling books in 1995, while still in high school. He is a member of the major international trade associations, and his business is conducted according to their high ethical standards. For many years Douglas has been a Board member of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Antiquarian Booksellers (ANZAAB); he is also a Mentor for the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers.

Douglas is currently the President of ANZAAB.

Our stock at Douglas Stewart Fine Books is diverse: we have rare books across all fields, but our strengths are in travel and exploration – particularly of Australia and the Pacific – and Australian art. In addition to rare books, we deal in all types of heritage material, including photographs, manuscripts, maps and globes, and fine art. Every month we issue a new online catalogue of New Acquisitions, and recommend that you join our email list to be the first to see what's available. Please do not hesitate to contact us regarding any works you see online – we are always happy to assist with your enquiries.

We love meeting new people and welcome visitors to our shop, which is open six days a week. If you cannot make it to Melbourne, you can find us at major fairs in London, New York, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, Toronto, San Francisco, Boston, Hong Kong or Sydney. We're pleased to invite you to any of these exhibitions as our guest.

Last, but not least, we buy books – from important single items to entire libraries – and we'd be pleased to provide advice on the best way to sell your collection.

Douglas Stewart Fine Books

Glossary

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Verso
The page bound on the left side of a book, opposite to the recto page.
New
A new book is a book previously not circulated to a buyer. Although a new book is typically free of any faults or defects, "new"...
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