1911 at Burnside Cottage, Broughton, Peeblesshire, Scotland |
Agnes (Nan) is the second child of John Ormiston Graham and Catherine Greenshields Graham. She was born in St. Cuthbert's, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland in 1878.
2 Murdoch Terrace, Midlothian, Edinburgh today |
4 Thistle Place, Newington, Edinburgh today |
In 1901, at age 22, Agnes is working as a milliner, living with her family in the Morningside parish of Newington, Edinburgh, along with her parents and two more siblings, Catherine Elizabeth Smith Graham and Ellen George Joan Graham.
86 Montpelier Park, Newington, Edinburgh today |
While Scotland's overall economy during this period is stable, its working class is paid less than counterparts in England. Consequently, lots of Scots left the country looking for greater opportunities elsewhere. According to historian T.M Devine (The Scottish Nation, 1700-2007), 2 million Scots emigrated between 1830 and 1914. Among them was Agnes to Natal, her aunt and uncle David Graham and Helen Watson Greenshields Graham (South Dakota), and her uncle James Thomas Greenshields (Cape Colony).
South Africa
Agnes seems to have lived a large and far-reaching life. In 1904, she leaves her family and home in Edinburgh aboard the ship Goorkha headed for Natal, a British colony that was part of the "customs union" of South Africa as of 1898, but it is not until 1910 that Natal would become one of the provinces of the newly created Union of South Africa. A coastal province, Zulu chieftains permitted the British colonial presence after the Boers retreated from the area in 1846.Natal in 1904 was not a primitive outpost in the wilds of Africa. In fact, as the photos below reveal, it is very possible that Nan continued her vocation as a milliner in the shops of Durban during the first decades of the 20th century. However, the effects of the Second Boer War, having ended only two years earlier, must have been strongly evident.
|
|
John Ormiston Graham (father), Agnes Ormiston Graham, Catherine Smith Graham (sister), and Mary Clarkson (daughter of Margaret Greenshields Clarkson, sister of Catherine Greenshields Graham) |
Here are additional photos of the 1911 family reunion in Broughton.
|
|
Voyages
We have evidence of Nan's many transatlantic voyages while she was employed in Natal and afterwards, in the 1940s and 1950s, to visit her brother Guy's family in Massachusetts accompanied by her younger sister Catherine (Cathie) Smith Graham. In the 19th century, a trip across the Atlantic took as long as six weeks. By the end of the century, that trip was cut to one week. The Mauretania, one of the ships on which Nan sailed, achieved a record-breaking time from Southampton to New York in four days and eleven hours. From New York to Capetown would take perhaps another week.
9 April 1904 From Southampton, England to Natal aboard the Goorkha
3 May 1911 From Port Elizabeth/Capetown to Southampton aboard Garth Castle/Union Castle Mail Steamship
15 June 1912 From Natal to Southampton aboard the Briton/Union-Castle Mail Steamship (name on passenger list is "Lady A Graham"
9 Dec. 1914 From Durban/Port Elizabeth [Algoa Bay} and Capetown to London by way of East London and Plymouth aboard the Saxon/Union Castle Mail Steamship
22 July 1921 From Southampton to Natal aboard Balmoral Castle/Union Castle Mail Steamship
Nan and her sister Catherine also traveled to visit family in the U.S.:
25 July 1947 From Southampton to New York aboard the Queen Elizabeth/Cunard White Star Line
8 Oct. 1947 From New York to Southampton aboard the Queen Elizabeth/Cunard White Star Line
27 June 1952 From Southampton to New York aboard the Mauretania/Cunard White Star Line
18 May 1957 From Glasgow to Montreal, Quebec aboard the Laurentia/Donaldson Line
3 Oct. 1957 From Montreal, Quebec to Glasgow aboard Laurentia/Donaldson Line
Life in Edinburgh
108 Colinton Road |
|
|
A Collection of Photos from Family Archives
|
|
|
Agnes Ormiston Graham died in 1972 at the age of 94. She is probably buried alongside her parents in Edinburgh, perhaps in St. Cuthbert's.