Traces

Women lost in time

Traces spoke with Caroline about the process of piecing together the lives of the sisters’ female ancestors, whose stories had been lost in time.

What did you discover about the process of researching female ancestors?

Even in our preliminary discussions about our project, we were aware that there was more information about our male ancestors than there was about our female ones. We took a feminist approach and were determined to give a voice to the women in the family by working to uncover their stories, and have them stand with their male family members.

We have discovered the hidden lives of so many of our female ancestors by recognising that their stories are not recorded in the same way as their male counterparts. Unearthing their stories requires a rigorous, forensic approach, and a recognition that, as researchers, we have to think laterally regarding possible sources of information.

Among our female ancestors from just this one family, we have researched the lives of a domestic servant at Government House, who later moved on to farm life; a business woman with a property portfolio; an orchardist; three dressmakers, two of whom became teachers;

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Traces

Traces6 min read
Colonel Gibbes: Bigamist Or Impostor?
Colonel John George Nathaniel Gibbes was a British army officer who emigrated to Australia in 1834 upon his appointment as Collector of Customs for the Colony of New South Wales. My research into Gibbes’s life was featured in Traces, December 2020, i
Traces5 min read
Elizabeth Morrow Versus Colonial Misogyny
In the early 1860s, Elizabeth Morrow, like so many others, migrated to Australia in the hope of a better life. She had been a servant in her birthplace of Northern Ireland and, at first, she continued working as a domestic servant after her arrival i
Traces3 min read
What’s New Online?
• Alberta, Edmonton Burials: 97,350 records. • 1911 France Census: 18,143,989 records • 1931 France Census: 19,150,300 records. • Asia Minor Refugees, 1914–1923: 976,969 records. • Wellington City Burials: 185,902 records. • British Armed Forces Sold

Related Books & Audiobooks