Adolphus Zwar a detailed life story
2.11.1854 6.7.1934
The first child of Michael and Agnes Zwar
Melbourne
Gustavus Adolphus Zwar was born near Melbourne on 2nd Feb 1854.
We are not sure exactly where, but I assume that his mother stayed
with her parents, the Zimmers at Dry Creek, (Thomastown) for his
birth, as she did for the birth of her second child, Anna. Rachel
Roberts (his daughter) thought he may have been born at Brunswick.
Michael Zwar had worked there for Hoffmanns at their brickworks,
and it is said he carted bricks for the building of the Sarah Sands
hotel, which opened in 1854. Michael had also bought land in Brunswick
in 1851 but had sold it the following year.
Broadford
In 1855 Michael bought land at Broadford. His wife Agnes stayed
with the Zimmers until sometime after Anna, the second child was
born, then she, Adolphus and Anna went to Broadford to rejoin Michael.
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School
(I am not sure where Adolphus went to school. I guess he
would have started school about 1860. There were then no Government
schools as we know them today. There was a National Schools Board,
which registered the different schools, mainly run by the churches
as well as some individuals interested in education. Michael Zwar
applied with several others to the Government for finance towards
a German school in Broadford but the application was refused, as
there were not enough students.) ..from George Carlos.
The Broadford history records:
The Rev. William Singleton asked
that their school be brought under the National School Board and
in July 1857, No. 48, a Church of England school with Julius Armstrong
as Head Teacher, was opened. Next year there were 27 children
attending and the school received 115 pounds a year from the Government,
the money being mainly for the teachers salary.
(Page 95 BROADFORD A Regional History).
However in the same Broadford history book the younger brother
of Adolphus, John Zwar writes (page 26),
I started to go to school at 6
years of age. The school was run by a Mr. W. E. Hammersley. The
school room was attached to his house where his daughter, Miss
Hammersley lives today.
This was one of the first schools in Broadford. The Broadford
history records that,
One of the earliest schools was
that of Mr. Hammersley in High Street, to the north of
Sunday Creek bridge, and although he died at an early age the
school continued to function.
One could assume from the above that Michael Zwars oldest
children also attended Mr. Hammersleys school.
(The Crowls have some schoolbooks which belonged originally
to the younger children of Michael and Agnes Zwar, such as Agnes,
Mary, Henry and Ada. These books are all inscribed State
School no. 1125 Broadford.
This school opened in 1873, years after Adolphus would have finished
school.)
The Broadford history records that the Church of England school
closed in July 1873 and John Wright
the Head Teacher applied for and was appointed to the new school,
No. 1125 Broadford. This was a brick building thirtysix
feet by eighteen feet and had accommodation for about seventy
children, with a staff of three. (Page 95).
I recall one of the Broadford descendants saying that their ancestor
went to a private school, and one day the name changed to the State
school but nothing else changed! The school continued with the same
head teacher and students. (Someone else may be able to confirm
this .. .Kevin Z).
It is apparent from the above that the oldest Zwar children went
to Mr. Hammersleys school and the youngest children went to
the Broadford State School No. 1125.
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Farm and country life
As the oldest of 11 children Adolphus learned to carry responsibility.
He worked hard to help keep the farm going.
Adolphus is famous in the family for the courage and initiative
he showed in an incident with his father. Father was suffering late
one night from enjoying too much of the fruit of the vines they
had growing on the property. Father cursed the vines and expressed
the strong view that they would all be better off if they were ripped
out. He cursed the wine in the casks and the suffering it brought.
Adolphus did not wait for a second opinion. Late though it was in
the night he went out and yoked up the draft horse and pulled out
all the vines. Then he holed all the wine casks. There was an awful
commotion the next morning when father woke up and saw how well
his wishes had been carried out during the night while he slept!!
John Zwar was 5 years younger than Adolphus but he records incidents
in their early days:
My father and mother now came
to live here and father split slabs and built a house which is
still standing at the Ranch. .... When I was four
or five years old I can remember the black fellows coming begging
for food. They were a nuisance to the people because they got
too lazy to catch their own food. One black with his wife used
to come very often and ask for a Goulburn cut of bread
which meant a big thick one. A Melbourne cut meaning
a thin one. ... there were great numbers of kangaroos about.
When I was a boy the Round Hill now
owned by Mr. Holden was covered with honeysuckle trees. They were
about 30 feet high with a round top about 20 feet across with
the exception for a few light lightwood trees there were no other
kind growing. It was a lovely sight when they were in bloom. Opossums
would very often come from long distances to feed on the leaves
and we used to go on moonlight nights and catch them and
make rugs with their skins. Also native cats, a small animal not
quite the size of a rabbit. They were brown with white spots over
the back about the size of a shilling. There were a few quite
black with those white spots. They were beautiful little creatures
but very rare. They lived on birds, crickets and grasshoppers.
There were also native bears all over the place but an epidemic
broke out amongst them and the native cats and they all died.
There were hundreds of these nice trees about but when the seed
fell and the young ones came up the cattle ate them and the old
trees dying there is now nothing but a bare hill.
The Tales of a Grandfather John William Walter Zwar (1934)
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Kimberley
Adolphus bought land just up the road from the Zwar family home
before he was married. He married Annie Gilbert in January 1888
and the same year they built the house they named Kimberley.
It was mainly a dairy farm but they also ran some sheep. Adolphus
ran sheep on the Sheoaks property, a grazing piece of
land on the Melbourne side of Broadford.
John Zwar (Canberra, 1982) recalls that the three brothers Adolphus,
John and Charles worked together in a partnership for some time
as Zwar Bros. They grew oats and cut it into chaff and
exported it to South Africa during the Boer War. They grew a lot
of oats.
Rachel Roberts described her father as,
A quiet and reserved man. He didnt
seek the limelight. A big man. Honest and hard working. Kind.
Well liked. Generous with wood and eggs.
(from an interview).
Rachel also described her mother Annie as
a marvelous woman and a great help to Adolphus. Clever.
Good at Fancy Work and Handcrafts.
They had four daughters, Agnes, Ivy, Olive and Rachel, the last
one born in the first month of the year 1900.
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Retirement in Melbourne
About 1920 Annie and Adolphus sold out and
retired to Moonee Ponds in Melbourne. His daughter Rachel recalled
that Adolphus enjoyed life in retirement, going to see others at
the cattle markets and playing drafts with a friend.
His cousin, Mrs. Ziebell (nee Zimmer) lived at Thomastown and was
quite impressed with Dolphs lifestyle in retirement. He
was flash
had servants, big home. He brought a bag of lollies
when he came from Moonee Ponds. ( in an interview with
K Z 8.9.1977)
John Zwar (Canberra) remembers hearing them say that Adolphus
died holding Annies hand. It was 6th July 1934
and he was 80 years old. They had been married 46 years.
A newspaper of the day recorded:
The death has occurred suddenly of Mr.
A. Zwar at his home, Learmonth Street, Moonee Ponds. Born at Brunswick
in 1854 (then known as Philiptown) Mr. Zwars parents selected
land at Broadford when he was aged two years. Later he bought
land adjoining the old home property, and worked it for many years.
Fifteen years ago he sold this large grazing property and retired
to Moonee Ponds to live. Mr. Zwar was a brother of Mr. A. M. Zwar,
M.L.C., and of Mr. H. P. Zwar, M.L.A. He leaves a widow and four
daughters (Mrs. 0. Brown, Mrs. A. H. Lowe, Mrs. L. A. Johnstone
and Mrs. E. J. Roberts). The funeral took place in the Broadford
Cemetery.
Annie survived him by eight and a half years and she died on the
29th January 1943.
Compiled by
Kevin P Zwar
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