30-01-1857: David Ferguson returns to Scotland.

In April 1853 James and David Ferguson arrived in Australia aboard the “Tamerlane” from Greenock, Scoland, and immediately began establishing the Ferguson & Urie plumbing, slating, and glazing business with their partner James Urie from premises in Curzon street, North Melbourne.

Davids involvement in the business was short and in 1857 he decided to return to Scotland.

In late October 1856, he and his brother James had received ‘word from home.’ What that information was has never been ascertained. An advertisement was placed in the Victorian Government Gazette on Friday 30th of January 1857 indicating his partnership is “dissolved by mutual consent” and the partnership would continue under the same name of “Ferguson & Urie” between James Ferguson and James Urie. Witness to the document was James Urie’s brother in law Alexander Young.

David returned to Scotland and re-joined his father (James Ferguson Snr, 1777-1866) in the Plumbing, Slating and Glazing Business in River Street Wallacetown. In 1859 James Ferguson Snr was declared bankrupt, but this was not the demise of his business. When James Snr died in 1866 it would appear that David carried on the business as sole proprietor.

In 1871 or earlier David contracted “phthisis abdominalis” (An archaic medical term for a form of Tuberculosis) and so began his slow and painful demise. Probably fully aware of his imminent death, he sold the company to long time employee, John Meikle, on the 20th January 1872.

Nine weeks later David died a bachelor on the 26th March 1872, aged 48.

Some of the most important clues in the family history can be found in David’s last will & testament and his probate documents from 1872. He had left his two unmarried sisters Antonia & Margaret the contents of his house. He had two historic fob watches, the watch he had inherited from his father, James Ferguson Snr (1877-1866), was willed to his brother Robert who was living in Manchester. To his nephew, James Ferguson Jnr (1861-1945), the son of his elder brother James Ferguson (1818-1894) who he had come out to Australia with in 1853 to start the “Ferguson & Urie” business, he left his own fob watch with gold chain and gold nugget attached to the chain.

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It should be noted, from a family history perspective, that Davids father, James Ferguson Snr’s age 89 at the time of death, was an extraordinary feat at that time in history. In the end he actually did not succumb to ‘old age’, he died of Typhoid fever. How much longer he may have lived if it were not for Typhoid will be a mystery forever. There are other recorded instances of different generations of his descendants in Australia living to an extraordinary age.


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23-10-1856: The Ferguson brothers receive word from home.

The Argus, Melbourne, 23rd October 1856, page 1.

“MR. JAMES or DAVID FERGUSON, of Ayr, will receive word from home by calling on Thomas Cairns on board the ship Antarctic, as soon as possible”.

The Argus, Melbourne, 23rd October 1856, page 1.

What the ‘word from home’ was has never been ascertained but three months later David Ferguson would dissolve his partnership with his brother and James Urie and he return to Scotland.

See: 30-01-1857: David Ferguson returns to Scotland.

Or, had David had enough of the lawlessness and stench of Melbourne’s Streets? His elder brother James almost met his maker a year earlier when he was held up at gun point and robbed of a significant amount of money, so was this his David’s response to colonial Australia?

 

30-10-1855: Advertisement, Wanted, 5000 Duchess Slates.

In late 1855 Ferguson & Urie are still concentrating on the plumbing, slating and glazing trade, despite their minor dabble in stained glass, and they advertise locally for roofing slates. A considerable amount of these products arrived on ships as ballast.

The Argus, Melbourne, Tuesday 30 October 1855, page 7.

WANTED 5000 Duchess Slates, in the Bay. Ferguson and Urie, plumbers, Curzon-street, North Melbourne.”

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29-09-1855: The ‘Sticking up’ – James Ferguson is held up at gunpoint.

On Thursday evening, 27th September 1855, James Ferguson was held up at gun point in the vicinity of the Exhibition Building in Melbourne. The thieves threatened to shoot him if he resisted and stole  £50 pounds from him, a letter addressed to his business partner James Urie and some contracts for work. This event could have changed the course of history in many ways. If he had been shot I might not be here writing this history at all! The other thing that begs an answer is ‘what was he doing with five ten pound notes’? That was close to carrying around about $10,000 AU in your wallet [amount updated based on some great comments to this post].

 

The Argus, Melbourne, Saturday 29th September 1855, page 6.

STICKING UP – On Thursday evening, between ten and eleven o’clock, Mr. James Ferguson was attacked by two men, -one of whom was armed with a pistol, and threatened to shoot him if he made resistance, -between Queen and King streets, near the Exhibition Building, and robbed of a pocket-book, containing five £10 notes and several memorandums of contracts for work. The men also took from him a letter addressed to James Urie.”

No further information is known subsequent to this regarding the offence or perpetrators.

1855 The Sticking up 001a

Melbourne Exhibition Building in 1855

Melbourne Exhibition Building in 1855

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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28-02-1855: The 1855 Victorian Exhibition, Melbourne.

At the Victorian Exhibition in Melbourne in late 1854, the Ferguson & Urie company were awarded certificates for exhibit 69, Plumber’s work, and exhibit 455, for stained windows. This appears to be the earliest indication of the companies foray into the art of stained glass windows. The extraordinary rate of the erection of churches in the colony, and the Gothic revival in art and architecture, now becomes the driving force in the companies future direction and its part in the formation and history of the colony.

Unfortunately no further articles of significance appear in relation to the company dabbling in stained glass between 1855 and 1860. The gold rush was well under way and practically every able bodied builder and craftsman had left for the central Victorian Goldfields with a shovel over his shoulder.

The company’s next significant breakthrough and change of direction would begin in late 1861.

The Argus, Melbourne, Wednesday 28th February 1855, page 8.

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04-10-1853: The first triple advertisement, Melbourne.

The Ferguson & Urie, Slating, Glazing, and Plumbing company placed a triple advertisement in the Melbourne Argus advertising Lattice Glazing, Lead windows for churches, zinc spouting, piping and revolving cowls for chimneys and tin roofing tiles from their Curzon street premises near the north east corner of the Benevolent Asylum.

The Argus, Melbourne, Tuesday 4th October 1853, page 8.

 

 

 

 

 

 


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