George Littlehales

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Reinforcements - Troops Arriving from Melbourne, Ballarat Heritage Services Picture Collection.
Memorial to those who died as a result of the Eureka Stockade located in the Eureka Stockade Memorial Gardens. Photography: Clare Gervasoni 2013.
Littlehales Gravestone in Ballaarat Old Cemetery
To the memory of Captain G.R. Littlehales 12th Regiment who died February 12th 1855 aged 29 years and 9 months also of Privates William Webb and Felix Boyle who died from the effects of gun shot wounds received in discharge of duty on the 3rd December 1854 also of Private John Hall who died December 31st 1854.
Courtesy Ballarat Heritage Services.

Background

Born in 1825 to parents Charles Littlehales (1784-1868) and Anne Carter (1796-1879) George Richards Littlehales was baptised at St Maurice's Church, Winchester, Hampshire on 23 July 1825.In 1851 according to the English Census he was a Lieutenant in the 12th Regiment and residing at 17 Kingsgate Street, Winchester.[1]

Goldfields Involvement, 1854

On page one of the Pay and Muster lists for the 12th Suffolk Regiment (which are extremely difficult to read) Captain G. R. Littlehales is listed with Captn H. Queade (1854 - 5). The lists also indicated that Littlehales was from Southby,Pa? 19 May? [2]

Captain Littlehales, of the 12th Regiment died on 12 February 1855, according to the Muster Lists of that Regiment for the first quarter of 1855. Unfortunately, there is little detail apart from the recording of his death and the information that he had no will. This death cannot be found in the Victorian Death Registrations. According to correspondence from the Trustees of the Ballarat General Cemetery to the Chief Secretary on 11 June 1856 No. 56/947 (corroborated by advertisements in the local journal) a wooden monument was erected first and then a stone put up when the soldiers memorial was erected later in the 1880s.[3] His memory is commemorated on a significant grave in the Ballaarat Old Cemetery, in the enclosure with those of soldiers Webb and Boyle who lost their lives during the Eureka Riots.

A large font was donated to Christ Church Cathedral, Ballarat " by his loving parents " ..... " in memory of G.R. Littlehales ". This still stands in the Cathedral today.

In Winchester Cathedral, England, two Littlehales' family graves lie in the flagstones within the floor, just above the stone of Jane Austen, and one month old S. A. youngest daughter of the late Reverend George Austen. The inscription on Captain Littlehales' stone reads as follows, "Also of Captain George Richard Littlehales of the 12th Regiment of Foot Who died in Camp at Ballarat, Victoria, Australia. The 12th February 1855 and was there buried. Aged 31 years".[4] Although Littlehales "died at the Camp at Ballarat" it is not certain whether or not he was a participant in the battle of Eureka. The extraordinary painting by Abbott depicts the early grave that was erected to Captain Littlehales. From the inscription inside Winchester Cathedral it is known that he died and was buried in Ballarat. The original tombstones in the Ballaarat Old Cemetery were replaced at a later date with those that stand today.

Post 1854 Experiences

George Richards Littlehales will was probated 1 October 1879 Registry Office, Canterbury, England by his brother Eldred Harry Littlehales (banker) for three thousand pounds.[5]

See also

Military

Further Reading

Corfield, J.,Wickham, D., & Gervasoni, C. The Eureka Encyclopaedia, Ballarat Heritage Services, 2004.


References

  1. Dorothy Wickham, research, Ancestry.com
  2. Dorothy Wickham, notes 1996
  3. Notes and Research, Dorothy Wickham 1996
  4. Notes from Marie Murray 1990s
  5. Dorothy Wickham, research, Ancestry.com 2019

External links