What a legacy!
After a morning of pulling weeds in the BB Rose Garden, which the volunteer group the Helping Hands helps maintain, the heat and humidity just got to me, so I went in search of shady graves to tidy. As usual, I became distracted and found myself once again acquainted with a group of beautiful headstones well carved by talented stonemasons. I decided to finally discover the stories behind them (or rather underneath them) and became immersed in tales of early colonial Sydney. Today's blog is about a young man who was apprenticed to a prominent man previously mentioned twice in these pages who died 150 years ago. WILLIAM JAMIESON SHERWIN William Jamieson was born in 1804 in Parramatta NSW one of ten children to William Sherwin and his common law wife, Mary Duggan. But I digress for a short while…. William Snr, was a Sergeant in the NSW Corps, arriving in Sydney aboard the “Pitt” with his first wife Ann and son, John. It wasn’t long before a scandal involving his wife a...