Difference between revisions of "Henry Hammon"

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Henry Hammon was living in [[Creswick]] in 1854 and was in the contingent of diggers who left [[Creswick]] for the [[Eureka Stockade]].<ref>Wickham, D., Gervasoni, C. & Phillipson, W., ''Eureka Research Directory'', Ballarat Heritage Services, 1999.</ref>
 
Henry Hammon was living in [[Creswick]] in 1854 and was in the contingent of diggers who left [[Creswick]] for the [[Eureka Stockade]].<ref>Wickham, D., Gervasoni, C. & Phillipson, W., ''Eureka Research Directory'', Ballarat Heritage Services, 1999.</ref>
 
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[[File:GILL ST - Refreshment Shanty-wiki.jpg|1000px|thumb|right|Samuel Thomas Gill, ''Refreshment Shanty, Ballarat,'' 1854, watercolour and gum arabic on paper. <br>Art Gallery of Ballarat, gift from the Estate of Lady Currie, 1963.]]
 
According to John Graham: ''The Creswick contingent set out on 30 November 1854 from a grog shanty at Long Point, [[Creswick]] led by an Hanovarian band playing the Marseillaise. It proceeded along the densely crowded Clark's Flat, where stump orations were delivered and licenses burnt. Firearms were eagerly sought, and crowbar and pick-handles came into requisition. The scratch army swelled as it passed along the Black Lead and the centre of town until it reached 400 to 500. Provisions, horses and ammunition were commandeered as they walked four deep towards Ballarat, but 'a heavy thunderstorm not only drenched their bodies but cooled their ardour', and not many reached the [[Eureka Stockade]]. The following day around 200 departed. One of these was [[Henry Hammon]]''. <ref>Graham, John A. ''Early Creswick: The First Century'', Arbuckle, Waddell Pty Ltd, Melbourne, 1942, p58.</ref>
 
According to John Graham: ''The Creswick contingent set out on 30 November 1854 from a grog shanty at Long Point, [[Creswick]] led by an Hanovarian band playing the Marseillaise. It proceeded along the densely crowded Clark's Flat, where stump orations were delivered and licenses burnt. Firearms were eagerly sought, and crowbar and pick-handles came into requisition. The scratch army swelled as it passed along the Black Lead and the centre of town until it reached 400 to 500. Provisions, horses and ammunition were commandeered as they walked four deep towards Ballarat, but 'a heavy thunderstorm not only drenched their bodies but cooled their ardour', and not many reached the [[Eureka Stockade]]. The following day around 200 departed. One of these was [[Henry Hammon]]''. <ref>Graham, John A. ''Early Creswick: The First Century'', Arbuckle, Waddell Pty Ltd, Melbourne, 1942, p58.</ref>
  

Revision as of 21:53, 6 August 2017

Background

Hamman was born at Kent, England in 1829. Hammon married Elizabeth Coates on 16 June 1856. His second marriage was to Isabella Peter on 18 January 1870. Hammon died in 1907, and is buried at Creswick Cemetery. [1]

Goldfields Involvement, 1854

Henry Hammon was living in Creswick in 1854 and was in the contingent of diggers who left Creswick for the Eureka Stockade.[2]

Samuel Thomas Gill, Refreshment Shanty, Ballarat, 1854, watercolour and gum arabic on paper.
Art Gallery of Ballarat, gift from the Estate of Lady Currie, 1963.

According to John Graham: The Creswick contingent set out on 30 November 1854 from a grog shanty at Long Point, Creswick led by an Hanovarian band playing the Marseillaise. It proceeded along the densely crowded Clark's Flat, where stump orations were delivered and licenses burnt. Firearms were eagerly sought, and crowbar and pick-handles came into requisition. The scratch army swelled as it passed along the Black Lead and the centre of town until it reached 400 to 500. Provisions, horses and ammunition were commandeered as they walked four deep towards Ballarat, but 'a heavy thunderstorm not only drenched their bodies but cooled their ardour', and not many reached the Eureka Stockade. The following day around 200 departed. One of these was Henry Hammon. [3]

Post 1854 Experiences

After the Eureka Eureka Stockade Hammon returned to his store at Creswick. [4]

Newsworthy

A Norman Lindsay nephew, Norman Wilkes, lately won the Military Cross. He is a grandson "of the late Henry Hammon, of Creswick (Vic.), where the Lindsays originated. ... [5]

See also

Further Reading

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


References

  1. Wickham, D., Gervasoni, C. & Phillipson, W., Eureka Research Directory, Ballarat Heritage Services, 1999.
  2. Wickham, D., Gervasoni, C. & Phillipson, W., Eureka Research Directory, Ballarat Heritage Services, 1999.
  3. Graham, John A. Early Creswick: The First Century, Arbuckle, Waddell Pty Ltd, Melbourne, 1942, p58.
  4. Wickham, D., Gervasoni, C. & Phillipson, W., Eureka Research Directory, Ballarat Heritage Services, 1999.
  5. 06 September 1917.

External links



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Caption, Reference.