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Joseph Beale (1801 - 1857)

Joseph Beale
Born in Mountmellick, Queen's County, Irelandmap
Ancestors ancestors
Husband of — married 4 Nov 1824 in Cork, County Cork, Irelandmap
Husband of — married 14 Mar 1832 in Mountmellick, Queen's County, Irelandmap
Descendants descendants
Died at age 56 in Richmond, Victoria, Australiamap
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Profile last modified | Created 15 Aug 2013
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Biography

Eldest son of his father's second marriage.

Emigrated to Australia with two of his sons (Joseph and Francis) - arrived Port Phillip, Victoria in December 1852. Briefly went to Hobart (Van Diemans Land) in 1853 then to Victoria to the goldfields and finally back to Melbourne[1].

Joseph died in Melbourne on 15th June, 1857[2].

His wife Margaret (Davis) and the rest of their children had sailed to Tasmania from Ireland and arrived in Launceston in 1855.

He was the subject of the book "The Earth Between Them - Joseph Beale's Letters Home to Ireland from Victoria 1852-53" by Edgar Beale (his great-grandson James Edgar Osborne Beale 1916-89), published Sydney 1975 by Wentworth Books (The Wentworth Press, 48 Cooper St, Surry Hills 2010)[3].

Considerable numbers of records and photos related to this Beale family are held at the Society of Australian Genealogists (SAG) in Sydney as 'The Beale Papers'[4].

"The story of Joseph Beale (1801-1857)"[5]

The first Quaker to arrive in Mountmellick was William Edmundson who settled in Rosenallis near Mountmellick in 1659. He was accompanied by a group of young Quakers from the North, including Thomas Beale, his wife and son Joshua. The Beale family line continued in Mountmellick with john, another Joshua and William who was born in Annagrove in 1765 in the house that was built by Thomas Beale. William and his father were cotton manufacturers in Irishtown. William died in 1818 and his sons Joseph aged seventeen and his brother William aged thirteen helped their mother to manage the business. When Joseph assumed ownership, he diversified into wool, brewing and flour milling. Joseph became an expert in wool and traded with France and England. His reputation stood high in business and in the community generally. At age 25 he married Elizabeth Lecky from Cork. Sometime after their marriage, Joseph was obliged to travel on business to England in 1825. After his departure, Elizabeth became very ill with measles and died after the birth of her daughter before the anticipated period. She was buried in the Friends Burial Ground in Rosenallis. Joseph arrived home a widower and father of a baby daughter Elizabeth. He was now 24 years old. Five years later he went to Enniscorthy on business where he met Margaret Davis, a beautiful girl who was well educated in the Quaker Boarding School in Mountmellick. She had knowledge of Latin and Greek and later had the ability to run schools. The couple married in Enniscorthy in 1832 and Margaret settled into Annagrove House where she established a lifelong close bond with her seven-year-old stepdaughter Elizabeth. Joseph, in 1836, built a large house “Derrycappagh” to accommodate his growing family. Their second child died in infancy and in 1843, croup killed two of their baby sons in five days. Derrycappagh the once pleasant happy home became a sad and lonely place. Joseph, Margaret and their family moved to Monordreigh near Barkmills, two miles from Mountmellick, where Joseph owned a house and mills. The children were happy there listening to the cheerful sounds of the mill stones grinding and looking at the machinery at work. In 1848 another child died in infancy. Four of their children were now dead. When grain was available, the mill ground Indian corn to feed the starving people. Joseph Beale continued to provide employment unprofitably as long as he could and keep his mills going. Margaret was a skilled embroiderer and set up a cottage industry where she taught women to create embroidery pieces that she and her friends could sell to help the poorest women and girls. The embroidery was called Mountmellick Work and is known and practiced throughout the world. Margaret set soup kitchens with the help of her daughters and these Quaker kitchens became the model for use throughout the island. The Quakers contribution extended far beyond their relative numbers, about 3,000 in all. They succeeded in distributing £200,000 worth of relief throughout the country. The years since the famine dragged on and Joseph decided to emigrate to Australia where the wool industry was thriving. Margaret and the younger children were to remain with hope of selling Monordreigh. Joseph, his son Joseph 16 and Francis 15 together with Joseph’s faithful servant Dan Kennedy and Dan’s son James sailed on “The Sarah Sands” from Queenstown to Melbourne on 28th September 1852 and arrived in Melbourne on Christmas Day 1852 and in December 1854 Margaret and her six children, with her faithful nurse maid Mary Brophy and Mary’s daughter Charlotte sailed on The Eagle from Liverpool to Melbourne arriving in April 1855.It was indeed, and to quote Margaret’s words, it was a very happy meeting. Sadly, Joseph died suddenly after attending the Quaker meeting house only two years after their reunion. The book “Joseph Beale, the reluctant immigrant from Mountmellick to Melbourne” published in September 2019 tells the story of the journey through the lives of Joseph and Margaret and their children and some of their grandchildren. It also includes the contents of the twelve letters which Joseph writes to Margaret while on board ship and after his arrival in Melbourne.

Sources

  1. http://bios.quakersaustralia.info Quaker arrivals before 1862 A-B
  2. https://my.rio.bdm.vic.gov.au/efamily-history/5e6319b3a2c8b523490fcc8b/results?q=efamily BEALE Joseph Death <mother> - <father>, William QUEE wife:DAVIS, Margaret aged56 1857 2791/1857
  3. https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/11486540 The earth between them : Joseph Beale's letters home to Ireland from Victoria, 1852-53 / edited and introduced by Edgar Beale. Book; Book/Illustrated - 1975 Beale, Joseph, 1801-1857. In Copyright Summary: Letters from Joseph Beale to his wife from his ship between Cork and Melbourne plus an account of his experiences in Victoria. Comments and notes have been added by the editor. Includes index and bibliography. Title: The earth between them : Joseph Beale's letters home to Ireland from Victoria, 1852-53 / edited and introduced by Edgar Beale. Author: Beale, Joseph, 1801-1857. Other Authors: Beale, Edgar, (ed.) Tylee Memorial Collection Published:Sydney : Wentworth Books, 1975. Carrier Types:volume Physical Description:125p., 8p. of plates : facs. on endpapers ; 22cm. 1 v. Notes Index. Bibliography: p. 123-125. Target Audience: Adult
  4. https://www.sag.org.au/Beale-Papers
  5. https://www.mountmellickdevelopment.com/articles.html

Acknowledgments

Thank you to Ian Jeanneret for creating WikiTree profile Beale-377 through the import of CS Maxwell Ancestors.ged on Aug 13, 2013. Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Ian and others.





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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Joseph by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Joseph:

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Rejected matches › Joseph Bailey (1799-)

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