Caroline Elizabeth Newcomb

Caroline Elizabeth Newcomb (5 October 1812 - 3 October 1874) was a British emigrant pioneer squatter with Anne Drysdale. The town of Drysdale, Victoria, is named after her partner. She inherited the property when Anne died. She later married the Rev. James Davy Dodgson.

Caroline Elizabeth Newcomb
Caroline Elizabeth Newcomb
Born5 October 1812 (1812-10-05)
London
Died3 October 1874 (1874-10-04)
Brunswick, Victoria
NationalityBritish
Other namesCaroline Elizabeth Dodgson
Known forpioneer squatter
SpouseRev. James Davy Dodgson
PartnerAnne Drysdale

Early life

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Newcomb was born in London in 1812. Her mother isn't known and she was taken in by her grandmother when her British father, Samuel Newcomb, died. Her father had been a commisar in Iberia. In 1833 she arrived in Tasmania which was then known as Van Dieman's land.[1]

Pioneer life

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Newcomb had emigrated to Tasmania to benefit her health and she first lived in Hobart Town. She was employed as a governess by the Batman family. John Batman was rich having sold 7,000 acres for £10,000. In 1835 he was grounded by illness that meant he could only walk with difficulty.[2] He is now known for founding Melbourne set out with his wife, his children and their governess to Port Phillip in 1836.[3]

In the following year she became known to Dr Alexander Thomson and his family and in the March 1837 she moved to their house in Geelong.[1] She was replaced as Batman's governess by Nichola Anne Cooke.[2]

Three years later Anne Drysdale arrived at Port Phillip in March 1840 and soon after became a guest of Dr Thomson. He had offered to help her and a run. She and Caroline became friends and, when Anne decided on Boronggoop as the site for her run, they also became partners. Anne was an experienced farmer and twenty years senior to Caroline.[1] A cottage, built for them, was completed in August 1841 and they established a home together with a piano, a garden and paths. Anne had a high regard for Newcomb noting that she was the "most clever person I have ever met with. There seems to be magic in her touch".[4] The Armstrong family and others entered their employ.[1]

 
Charles Laing's 1849 design for Coryule, near Drysdale on the Bellarine Peninsula

As Boronggoop was held by licence, Drysdale was anxious to own a freehold property. By 1843 they had established an outstation, Lap Lap, on Reedy Lake, and had heard of the run Coryule, near modern Drysdale. On 18 July they settled the sale of the property from Mr. Austin and they engaged the architect Charles Laing who in 1849[5] designed the stone house Coryule,[1] overlooking Port Phillip Bay.[3] In June 1852 Anne Drysdale suffered a stroke and, after a period of invalidity, died May 1853. Caroline inherited the property. She was elected a member of the first Portarlington Road Board and became its secretary.[3] On 27 November 1861, Caroline married the Methodist Rev. James Davy Dodgson (1824-1892)[6] at the recently built Wesley Church in Lonsdale Street, Melbourne. Newcomb would accompany her husband on Methodist circuit work.[3]

Newcomb died at the Wesleyan Parsonage in c, on 3 October 1874 after two weeks of illness.[1] She was buried beside Anne Drysdale.[3] Her will was disputed by her sister and her family. She had left instructions that her husbund should receive all of her estate and he was the sole executor. Her husband went to court in an equity case known as "Dodgson v. Clare" and he was successful.[6] In 1880 her widowed husband was the President of the 1880 Victoria conference.[7]

Her and Anne's house, Coryule, is extant and is said to be the best example of, her architect, Charles Laing's work.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Tout-Smith, Deborah. "Caroline Elizabeth Newcomb, Pioneer Pastoralist, Victoria (1812-1874)". Museums Victoria Collections. Retrieved 3 October 2017. This source incorporated text content that is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence
  2. ^ a b Brown, P. L., "John Batman (1801–1839)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 2023-09-30
  3. ^ a b c d e Brown, P. L.; Martin, Jean I. "Caroline Elizabeth Newcomb (1812–1874)". Newcomb, Caroline Elizabeth (1812–1874). National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 3 October 2017. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  4. ^ "Ladies of Boronggoop | Ergo". ergo.slv.vic.gov.au. Retrieved 2023-09-30.
  5. ^ a b O'Brien, J. L., "Charles Laing (1809–1857)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 2023-09-30
  6. ^ a b The Victorian Reports. Council of Law Reporting of Victoria. 1880. p. 137.
  7. ^ "Engraving of her husband". natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-09-30.