The News
New Book - Anna's Journey PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 09 November 2009 00:00

A new book has been published about the life of Anna Bage (nee Godwin), wife of the colonial Engineer Edward Bage. The is published by Dawn Peel, price 30 AUD. Full details can be found at http://dawnpeel.com. Dawns website reads:

"Sailing up the River Gambia in 1846; spending time as the only white woman living in Monrovia the capital of Liberia in 1849 - these were two experiences which awaited the child born in a rectory in County Cork, Ireland in 1820. Anna Godwin had an adventurous spirit, a passion for human rights, and an extended family which all contributed to her unusual life.

At the age of 26 years Anna accompanied her brother, an army surgeon, to the West African colony of The Gambia. Upon her return she accepted a teaching post in the newly created republic of Liberia, where she spent nine miserable and lonely months. The story then moves to Sierra Leone where she lived for a further two years. Before her marriage there to the Colonial Engineer Edward Bage in 1852, she worked briefly re-settling men and women who had been intended for slavery and re-captured by the British from slave ships off the coast. Anna’s time spent in West Africa was forty years before Mary Kingsley published her books about her travels in the region, which were then such a novelty. After leaving Sierra Leone, (on a voyage which embraced being nearly shipwrecked in the Atlantic, and the unexpected early birth of a son at sea) the family moved to Australia where they lived in Geelong during the goldrush era, and then in isolated Colac before finally settling in favoured professional suburb of East St Kilda. Here Anna was to mix with many of the people who influenced the direction of Victoria in its formative years as an independent colony. At that time she was also involved with demanding charity work amongst the poor in neighbouring Prahran.

Anna Bage’s concerns for her extended family remained a part of her life and show the way the heart of a migrant in Australia was constantly torn between two hemispheres. Six of her brothers served in the British military, so her story also touches briefly on the Ashantee wars of the 1820s, the Sikh Wars, the Maori Wars and the Crimean campaign.

The story of her life, which provides a window on widely differing colonial societies, ends with her death in East St Kilda in 1891. Although Anna and husband Edward did not achieve prominence, several of her descendants inherited her independence and initiative and did make notable contributions to Australian society"

 
New member added to the BAGE DNA project PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 06 November 2009 12:59

Hurray! We now have our first member (other than myself of course) joining the BAGE DNA Project.

It will take a little time before the new members' DNA results are in but it will be interesting to see if these results provide any clues or links to other families.

Of course what a DNA project really needs is a reasonable number of samples which can be compared against each other. Would you be interested in taking part in the project? I realise that DNA testing is still relatively expensive but FamilyTreeDNA do have an offer on at the momnet and you can obtain a 37 marker test for $119.00.  

Remeber that DNA can lead to discoveries not possible with conventional genealogical methods.