Bedervale

Bedervale, Braidwood, circa 1910

Bedervale in Braidwood, NSW is a grand colonial homestead listed as a building of historical significance by the Heritage Council. The house was designed by John Verge, a very well known Australian architect, and was completed in 1842.

Bedervale is owned privately but the contents were purchased by the National Trust of Australia (NSW) to maintain the interior collection. The garden is also historically significant as it contains many plantings dating from the 19th century and the orchard contains older varieties of fruit trees. There is also a cemetery on the estate which has historical importance.[1]

John and Jane Coghill

John Coghill circa 1810

John Coghill was born in 1785 at Wick in Scotland.[2] In 1814 he married Jane Grean who was born in Lisbon in 1797. She was the daughter of Francis and Jane Grean. At the time of their marriage he was 29 and she was only 17.[3] In 1820 he became Captain of the convict ship "Mangles" of which he was part owner. He made four voyages between New South Wales and England over the next six years. In 1826 he sold his ship and decided to settle on the land.

By now he was the father of four children. David Francis was born in 1816, Jane Charlotte in 1819, Elizabeth (who inherited Bedervale) in 1822 and Mary Ann in 1825. Emma, his youngest daughter, was born a year after he retired from the sea in 1827.[4]

He had already obtained land near Berrima and in 1826 after he sold his ship he became part owner of Kirkham near Camden and resided there as manager for about ten years. During this time he purchased 5,600 acres (23 km2) near Braidwood and ran sheep and cattle there but it was not until about the mid-thirties that he commissioned John Verge to build Bedervale on his property. The house was completed by 1842. During the time it was being built he purchased Strathalan near Braidwood where the family lived from 1837[5] before going to Bedervale. In 1843 he also bought Braidwood Farm later called Mona.[6]

The eldest daughter Jane Charlotte had already married Donald Campbell Simson in 1839[7] and was living in Victoria before the family moved to their new house. Unfortunately shortly after they moved to Bedervale their third daughter Mary Ann died in 1844. The death notice stated that she died after a long and painful illness.[8] The year after her death the family decided to go to England and Europe. David, their only son was left in charge of the property and the couple went abroad with their two daughters Elizabeth and Emma.

It was during this trip that Elizabeth met Robert Maddrell who was at that time studying Medicine at the Heidelberg University.[9] The couple married in 1848 in Kensington, London.[10] Unfortunately while they were abroad their son David died at Braidwood. While checking stock he became ill in late July 1847 and in early August he died.[11] Both the Coghill and Maddrell families returned to Bedervale. Elizabeth and Robert Maddrell lived at a nearby cottage at Braidwood Farm for several years and assisted the Coghills with the management of the farm. In 1853 John Coghill died at the age of 68 and the Maddrells inherited Bedervale.[12]

Robert and Elizabeth Maddrell

Elizabeth and Robert Maddrell who inherited Bedervale after John Coghill's death in 1853

Robert Maddrell was born in 1819 in Ballamaddrell on the Isle of Man. His family had been landowners there for generations.[13] He became a medical student at Heidelberg University and a student of chemistry.[14] In 1848 he had a paper published in a journal of the Chemical Society of London.[15] When he arrived in Sydney with Elizabeth he was uncertain about his future as he did not know if John Coghill intended to include him in the management of Bedervale. At first he was considering taking a post he had been offered as a Professor of Chemistry at the recently established University of Sydney.[14] However Coghill did welcome him as an assistant and his future was as a grazier at Braidwood instead of an academic in Sydney.

When Elizabeth and Robert inherited Bedervale in 1853 they had two children Robert John Coghill Maddrell (who inherited Bedervale) born in 1849 and Emma Jane born in 1851. After they moved into Bedervale they had four more children, Henry Francis born in 1854 Isabella Ann born in 1858,[16] Alice Maude in 1963[17] and Charles Braidwood born in 1865.[16] Besides their children Robert and Elizabeth cared for other residents at Bedervale. Jane Coghill, Elizabeth’s mother, lived there until her death in 1884.[18] Janes sister Elizabeth Wilmott, a widow, also stayed with the family from 1845[19] until her death at the age of 86 in 1877. She was buried in Braidwood Cemetery.[20] Until 1861 Elizabeth’s youngest sister Emma (see photo above) also lived at Bedervale. In that year she married in St Andrew’s Church Braidwood, Houlton Voss who was from Goulburn.[21] Unfortunately their third daughter Alice Maude died in 1876 at the age of 13.[22]

Robert and Elizabeth owned Bedervale for almost 50 years and during that time the property expanded markedly. The original acreage was increased to 33,000 acres[9] and a new system of tenant farming was introduced. In 1860 Robert Maddrell commissioned Ardill, a surveyor, to draw up a plan of small acreages suitable for farming and these were rented out. The scheme continued until 1930 when the farms were put on the market.[23]

Robert and Elizabeth were both involved in the Braidwood community. Robert was a local Magistrate and Chairman of the Committee of the first school in the area. He was also Chairman for the Pastoral and Agricultural Association.[24] Both of them had a strong interest in the Anglican Church and they gave large sums of money to the building of St. Andrews Church.[25] Elizabeth died in 1897 at the age of 75.[26] and Robert died three years later in 1900 at the age of 81. Both were buried in the Braidwood Cemetery.

Robert divided his estate into three for each of his sons.[27] In his will he left considerable amounts of money[28] for his two surviving daughters Emma Jane who had remained single and Isabella who had married Percy Douglas in 1881.[29] Robert John Coghill Maddrell his eldest son, inherited Bedervale.

Robert and Katie Maddrell

Katie and Robert Maddrell circa 1900 at about the time Robert inherited Bedervale

Robert John Coghill Maddrell was the eldest son of Robert Maddrell and was born at Bedervale in 1849. In 1873 he married Katie Laura Knapp who was the daughter of Edward James Howes Knapp and Rosina Aaron.[30] Edward Knapp was a well-known surveyor and had in his youth conducted several important surveys with Robert Hoddle, the explorer, around southern NSW in about 1828.[31]

After their marriage the couple lived in Mona Cottage Braidwood[32] where they had eleven children.[16] Robert inherited Bedervale in 1900 when he was 51 years old. At that time none of their children had married so many of them went with the couple to live at Bedervale.

Robert died in 1927 at the age of 77. He was survived by his wife Katie and ten of his eleven children.[33] One of his children Percy had died the previous year of pneumonia in a Sydney Private Hospital.[34] Katie lived for another ten years and resided at Bedervale until her death in 1937.[16] The property remained in the family until 1973.

Bedervale Today

In 1973 the Maddrells sold Bedervale to Margaret and Roger Royds who also have ancestors who settled in Braidwood very early. The house and gardens are open to the public (by appointment) and are listed on the National Trust of Australia (NSW) website.

References

  1. Heritage Council of NSW, "Bedervale" Online reference http://www.heritage.nsw.gov.au/07_subnav_01_2.cfm?itemid=5045345
  2. Ellis, N. 1989 “Braidwood Dear Braidwood”, N. N. and N. M. Ellis, Braidwood, NSW, p. 39.
  3. Maddrell, Roslyn 2009 "The Tenant Farmers On Monkittee 1859-1930: Braidwood", Hypercet Printing, p. 8.
  4. Zada, S. 1994 “Memories of the Bramley and Coghill Families”, Melbourne, Chart of Descendants
  5. Roxburgh, R. 1980 “Early Colonial Houses of New South Wales”, Lansdowne Press, Sydney p. 511.
  6. Ellis, N. 1989, pp. 40-41
  7. Zada, S. 1994, p.304
  8. Sydney Morning Herald, 15 May 1844, p. 3.
  9. 1 2 Ellis, N. 1989, p. 41.
  10. United Kingdom Births Deaths and Marriages, June 1848, Vol 3, p. 253.
  11. Maddrell, Roslyn 2009, p. 9.
  12. Maddrell, Roslyn 2009, p. 9-10.
  13. Maddrell, Roslyn 2009, p. 10.
  14. 1 2 Ellis, N. 1989, p. 72.
  15. Maddrell, Robert 1848 “On the Metephosphates”, Memoirs and Proceedings of the Chemical Society of London, vol 3, pp. 273-80.
  16. 1 2 3 4 New South Wales Births Deaths and Marriages
  17. Sydney Morning Herald, 26 July 1876, p. 1.
  18. Sydney Morning Herald, 25 June 1884, p. 12.
  19. Maddrell, Roslyn 2009, p. 8.
  20. The Heraldry and Genealogy Society of Canberra, 1998 “Monumental Inscriptions Braidwood Cemetery”, p. 47.
  21. Sydney Morning Herald, 26 April 1861, p. 1.
  22. Sydney Morning Herald, 26 July 1876, p. 1
  23. Maddrell, Roslyn 2009, p. 4.
  24. Ellis, N. 1989, p. 112 and p. 156.
  25. Maddrell, Roslyn 2009, p. 56.
  26. Sydney Morning Herald, 25 December 1897, p. 1.
  27. Maddrell, Roslyn 2009, p. 58.
  28. Sydney Morning Herald, 6 November 1900, p. 7.
  29. New South Wales Births Deaths and Marriages.
  30. New South Wales Births deaths and Marriages
  31. Ellis, N. 1989, p. 26.
  32. Birth notices in the Sydney Morning Herald between 1874 and 1891
  33. Obituary of Mr R. J. C. Maddrell, Sydney Morning Herald, 28 February 1927, p. 12.
  34. Death Notice, Sydney Morning Herald, 30 August 1926, p. 10.

External links

Coordinates: 35°28′18″S 149°48′45″E / 35.4716°S 149.8124°E / -35.4716; 149.8124

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