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Alice May Kensit (1886 - 1965)

Alice May Kensit
Born in Narrawa, New South Wales, Australiamap
Ancestors ancestors
Wife of — married 30 Jan 1918 in Crookwell, New South Wales, Australiamap
Descendants descendants
Mother of [private daughter (1910s - 2000s)], [private daughter (1920s - unknown)], , [private daughter (1920s - unknown)] and
Died at age 78 in Goulburn, New South Wales, Australiamap
Problems/Questions Profile managers: Julie Rourke private message [send private message] and Vicki Collins private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 30 Apr 2014
This page has been accessed 275 times.

Biography

When Alice May Kensit was born on December 6, 1886, in Narrawa, New South Wales, Australia, her father, Henry, was 40, and her mother, Martha, was 32. [1]

She married Francis Brown on January 30, 1918, in Crookwell, New South Wales, Australia. [2]

She died on April 15, 1965, in Goulburn, New South Wales, Australia, at the age of 78.

Occupation

Occupation:
Place: Home Duties
Event: Wedding
Type: Newspaper Article
Date: 8 Feb 1918
Place: Crookwell, New South Wales, Australia
Note: The Burrowa News (NSW : 1874 - 1951) Page 1S of 6
Friday 8 February 1918
 Orange Blossoms
BROWN-KENSIT.
On Wednesday, January 30, a very
pretty and interesting wedding was cele
brated at the Church of England, Crook
well, when Mr. John Brown, of Jerrara,
was married to Miss Alice May Kensit,
youngest daughter of Mr Henry Kensit,
of 'Woodford,' Narrawa. The bride
was given away by her eldest brother
(Mr Wm. Kensit) In the absence of her
father, who was ill.
Kev. C. W. Clarke officiated.
At the conclusion of the service a recep
tion was held in the Crookwell Literary
Institute.
The happy couple left the same day for
Sydney. Crookwell 'Gazette.'
Event: Wedding
Type: Newspaper Article
Date: 24 Feb 1918
Place: Crookwell, New South Wales, Australia
Note: Sunday Times (Sydney, NSW : 1895 - 1930) Page 13 of 24
Sunday 24 February 1918
WEDDING BELLS
BROWN KENSIT. On January 30 a wedding was celebrated at the Church of England, Crookwell, when Mr. John Brown, of Jerrara, was married to Miss Alice May Kensit, youngest daughter of Mr. Henry Kensit, of Woodford, Narrawa. The bride was given away by her eldest brother, Mr. Wm. Kensit, in the absence of her father, who was ill. Rev. C. H. Clarke officiated. The reception was held in the Literary Institute Hall.
Event: Pastoral Review and Graziers' Record, 18 December 1957, pp 1459 & 1461
Type: Mentioned in Percy Cecil Kensit Obituary
Date: 18 Dec 1957
Place: Narrawa, New South Wales, Australia
Note: Kensit, Percy Cecil (1888-1957)
Further to the brief announcement last month of the tragic death in a car accident of Mr. Percy Cecil Kensit, of Aubyn Vale, Narrawa, N.S.W., it was no surprise to those who were his friends to know that he died as he had lived—doing a kindness. With all his quiet demeanour, courtesy, and ever-ready smile he had a great strength of character and determination, fixed to a standard of the highest integrity in every phase of his social and business dealings. He indeed was an individualist, who set an example to others, and it was characteristic of him to offer on that fateful day of 5th November to drive some of the station employees into Crookwell. The accident occurred on the way home, just near the station entrance at a sharp bend in the creek, the bank of which had been washed away in the previous year's flood.
Percy Kensit was born at Woodford, Narrawa, in 1888. He was one of the family of six sons and six daughters of the late Henry Kensit, J.P., who came to Australia in 1846 and took up Woodford in the late '60s. He was a brother of Mrs. John Ferry, the Ferrys being a distinguished family of weavers, with interests in the woollen mills of France, Belgium, and Holland. Last year marked the celebration by the Ferry family of the 110th anniversary of their firm's silk spinning industry, which produces the most exquisite craftsmanship devoted very largely at times to the manufacture of Royal Robes. Those used by King Edward VII at his Coronation were made by the Ferrys, as indeed were many others required by the monarchies of Europe. During one of his visits to England the late Mr. Kensit was presented by the Guild of Cloth Weavers with a complete set of English Coinage minted in gold.
After serving with the 53rd Infantry Battalion, A.I.F., on the Somme and elsewhere in the 1914-18 World War he and his brother Sidney V. settled down to build up a valuable wool growing flock based on Coonong blood and a large commercial herd of cattle, favouring for the latter the Devon-Shorthorn cross, as expounded to their father by James Marsden, from whom Henry Kensit had purchased Aubyn Vale in 1905. P. C. and S. V. Kensit's Aubyn Vale Stud of Devons became very well known from its inception in 1934 until during the last war, when man power troubles brought showing to an end. It is still doing good business, however, with its stud cattle.
Between them the Kensit brothers put together over 20,000 acres in the Narrawa-Crookwell district and also had Sylvia Vale, near Crookwell and Rock Lodge at Cooma. Percy Kensit was a conscientious member of the Masonic Club, and for many years was a member of the Crookwell A. & P. Society, the Crookwell Picnic Race Club, and the R.S.L. Some evidence of the esteem in which he was held was seen at the combined military and masonic funeral service accorded to him at Narrawa.
The late Mr. Kensit loved horses and expressed his sportsmanship in breeding and racing thoroughbreds in partnership with his brother, Sid, or with his wife. These horses included Star Bloom, Blue Lilac, Man of Law, Moondale, Hinges, Rail Sled, etc.
Mrs. Kensit, who survives her husband, with their 17 year old daughter Barbara, was Miss Dulcie Booth, of Narrawa. Only three weeks before his own death Percy Kensit's brother-in-law William Kelly, of Corringle, had passed away. His five brothers survive him, being William Kensit, of Baan Baa; Harry, of Sydney; Sidney, of Reidsdale; Frederick, of Llandillo; and George, who resides in the old family home of Woodford. Three of his sisters are living and three predeceased him. The latter were Mrs. Wm. Kelly, of Rugby; Mrs. G. Gay, of Boorowa; and Mrs. Mary Sheppard, of Wheeo Homestead. The surviving sisters are Mrs. John Gay, of Wheeo; Mrs. Frank Brown, of Wheeo; and Mrs. A. H. Wheelwright, of Rosedale, Rugby.
Family Search ID KVJ8-4V6

Alice was born in 1886. She passed away in 1965.

Sources

  1. NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages (1999), 36758/1887 KENSIT ALICE M HENRY MARTHA GUNNING.
  2. NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages (1999), 1466/1918 BROWN FRANK KENSIT ALICE M CROOKWEL.




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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Alice by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Alice:

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Comments: 1

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Kensit-107 and Kensit-8 appear to represent the same person because: They are the same person with the same birth, death and marriage dates. I tried to link Kensit-8 to my Frank Brown but I couldn't manage to do it correctly and created another Alice Kensit instead.
posted by Vicki Collins

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