Genealogists often get the question, "Where is your family from?" With this week's theme, you could explore an immigrant ancestor, but you could also think about the origin of other aspects of your family. Who was the first person in your family to settle in a particular town? If you have a long line of people with the same occupation, talent, etc, who was the first person you know who did it?
It was a question such as this that really set the ball rolling for genealogical research in my family. A social studies homework question at primary school.
“How many generations has your family been in New Zealand?”
Well, they didn’t all come at once and they didn’t all come from the same places either. How do you calculate that? Are you meant to count just from the first ancestor BORN in New Zealand (or wherever) or do you count their parents who were the immigrants?
Family |
Emigration
Year |
From Where |
Arrival Port |
Cooper |
1841 |
Somerset,
England |
Wellington |
Barratt |
1842 |
Surrey,
England |
Wellington |
Bartlett |
1842 |
Somerset,
England |
Nelson |
Laney |
1842 |
Hampshire,
England |
Nelson |
Fuller |
1860 |
Surrey,
England |
Lyttelton |
Davys |
1862 |
Somerset,
England |
Auckland |
Hall |
1876 |
Cavan,
Ireland |
Auckland |
Vose |
1879 |
Kent,
England |
Lyttelton |
Timms |
1929 |
Warwickshire,
England |
Auckland |
So, pretty much England and depending on which line 4-5 generations since the first NZ born ancestor in most families – but only 2 generations in another.
Most branches of my family emigrating to New Zealand came
as a family, bringing their children with them. Only one branch was a newly
married couple who would start their family in Canterbury and the most recent
branch to emigrate brought a single woman travelling alone.