The Bruyns of Brown Street (7)—Ellen Esther Bruyn

In exploring the history of the land and house which Elizabeth and I purchased in Dungog a few years ago, I have already noted the early landholders for this property, and investigated the life of Daniel and Sarah Bruyn and their family after Daniel purchased the land in 1858.

When Daniel died intestate in 1882, all of his property was made over to his son, Daniel Justin Bruyn, whose life has already been canvassed. A few months later, we find that the land he received from his father in Brown St had been purchased by his sister, Ellen Bruyn. This is her story.

Ellen Esther Bruyn was born in in the later months of 1839 in Smethwick, Metropolitan Borough of Sandwell, West Midlands, England, the second daughter of Daniel Joseph Bruyn, a Blacksmith (1796—1882), born in Roscommon, Ireland, migrated to England, and Sarah Helen Nichols (1807—1882), whom he married on 5 Feb 1837 (to 4 May 1882) in West Bromwich, Staffordshire. Ellen was the fourth child born to Daniel and Sarah; a further three children were born in subsequent years.

The family travelled to France in about 1845, where two of those children were born, including Daniel Justin Bruyn. After a rise of unrest in France, they returned four years later to England. They came to the Colony of New South Wales in 1856 as assisted migrants. Daniel and Sarah arrived in the Colony on board the Commodore Perry on 1 May 1856 with their children Margaret, Ellen, Elizabeth, Daniel and Sarah. (The eldest child, Joseph, travelled to the Colony a few years later.)

We have seen that Ellen had a sizeable inheritance on the death of her brother, Daniel Justin Bruyn. He had accumulated cash and property over the years, with a thriving business as a Grazier on the lands that he had purchased to the northwest of Dungog. That was given over to her, added to the land that was already under her name.

Map of the Parish of Tillegra showing
the property owned by Ellen Bruyn

An 1894 survey map for the Parish of Tillegra contains Lots which are registered in the name of Ellen Bruyn: Lots 100 (45 acres), 101 (40 acres), 3 (39 acres), 147 (80 acres), and 148 (45 acres)—a total of 249 acres. This land was located immediately next to land in north-eastern section of the many Lots owned by Ellen’s brother, Daniel Justin, so it is reasonable to suppose that it formed a part of the one large farm stretching along much of the Dungog—Tillegra parish boundary.

So Ellen had a large portfolio to oversee, what with her own land and the land she had received on the death of brother Daniel. She managed this property well over the following decades, using the land to maintain a strong economic position throughout her life. Ellen continued to live in the house in Brown Street where she had spent the latter years of her childhood as well as the early decades of her adult life.

At some point late in the 1890s or, more likely, in the first decade or so of the 20th century, a substantial brick dwelling was built on this site, replacing what was an earlier family home. The 1913 Electoral Roll for Dungog lists “Bruyn, Ellen, Dungog, domestic duties” as a resident. A photo (undated, perhaps in the 1910s?) shows Ellen in her mature years in the garden at the front of this house.

The double brick house on the land in Brown St, where the Bruyn family had lived since the 1850s. The lady in the (undated) photo is Ellen Bruyn, who had owned the land since 1883.
The house appears relatively new; could this be early in the 20th century, or even a few years earlier?

The exterior of the house looks relatively unchanged even today. The sweeping curve of the verandah bricks and the path from the front fence leading to an offset entry can be seen. At the other end of the front verandah, it is evident that there are some people standing there, although identification of individuals is not possible. The front garden reflects a substantial investment of time and care from Ellen over the years.

Ellen was a single woman who never married. There are clear indications that Ellen’s bachelor brother, Daniel Justin, had lived in a room in this house over the years before he took his own life in 1912. Daniel had been a well-respected member of the Dungog community. Ellen herself was evidently very involved in charitable and community matters locally—the distribution of funds from her will indicated this very clearly.

The 1883 Conveyance passing the title of the property
from Daniel Bruyn to his sister Ellen

A Conveyance dated 31 May 1883 between Ellen Bruyn of Dungog, Spinster, and Daniel Justin Bruyn of Dungog, Blacksmith, indicates that Allotment No. Seven of Section No. Five and Allotment No. Six of Section No. Five were sold for the sum of two hundred pounds. Ellen would live there as the owner of the house for almost half a century, until her death in 1927. That property had been made over to Daniel Jnr soon after the death of his father, Daniel Snr, and he subsequently put it up for public auction.

Ellen must have pleased to be the owner of the house that she had been living in for years, as well as the adjacent block of land. Why she had to pay this amount to her brother when she was just as much a child of Daniel and Sarah as he was, is a mystery. The gendered bias in 19th century society would, of course, have meant that the property of the father would normally pass to his son after his death, unless another course of action was specified. Obviously, such an alternative had not been set out by Daniel Snr. So Daniel Justin Bruyn inherited the family home in Brown St, and then his sister Ellen Bruyn bought it off him.

Ellen’s signature on the 1883 Conveyance

Ellen lived in the houses on this property for many decades—from the 1860s until her death in 1927. Over this time, she would have seen the town of Dungog grow and develop over the years. In her study of towns and buildings in the region, Grace Karskens writes that Governor Darling “published regulations for town planning in 1829 which directed that streets be laid out in a grid pattern, and emphasised uniformity and regularity, wide streets, half-acre allotments, and that buildings were to beset well back” (Dungog Shire Heritage Study: Thematic History, 1986, p.51). This set the pattern for numerous country towns, including Dungog.

This neat, orderly development continued for some decades. Karskens notes that “the second half of the nineteenth century was generally a boom-time for the major towns in Dungog Shire, and thus also a period of physical consolidation and community growth” (p.63).

The pattern that she observes in the 1860s was certainly evident in Dungog: “neat, solid government buildings, such as police stations, watch houses, post offices and court houses, all built to indicate a civilized and well-ordered society. Rows of stores and offices were built by merchants, professional people, banks and businessmen along the main streets, slowly filling up the grids laid down by surveyors forty years before.” (p.63).

Karskens cites an unidentified press clipping held in the Newcastle Local History Library when she observes that “during the 1850s, Dungog, like Clarence Town, benefited from a position on the route to the Peel River and Gloucester goldfields, and this was repeated during the 1880s with the finds at Wangat (within the Shire), Whispering Gully and Barrington” (p.80).

An 1887 map showing the area of NSW designated as coalfield

She reports that “an anonymous correspondent writing in 1888 listed the town’s businesses as including three banks, four hotels, four large general stores, three butchers, three bakers, a coachmaker, wheelwrights, three blacksmiths, a hairdresser, a fancy tailor, boot makers, three saddle and harness makers and four churches, a weekly newspaper and ‘a School of Arts a credit to any town’.” (p.81). Included among those three blacksmiths, of course, was Daniel Joseph Bruyn, Ellen’s father.

Growth in the town continued year by year. Karskens notes that “Dungog Cottage Hospital was opened in 1892 in a small (two-roomed) ornate Italianate brick building in Hospital Street at the western end of town” (p.82) and in the following year the town was proclaimed a Municipality and elections were held for councillors for the first Dungog Municipal Council. The new council would have responsibility for services in the town of Dungog and the rest of the newly-formed shire.

Along Dowling St, the new buildings included the Roman Catholic Church and Presbytery (1880s, now Tall Timbers Motel and the Information centre), an Italianate Post Office (1874, with a less dramatic facade added some decades later), the Oddfellows Hall (1881, now the Dungog Medical Practice), the ornate CBC bank and residence (1884, now a private residence), Centennial Hall (1888, now a cafe), the Bank Hotel (an 1891 conversion of a former residence), the Skillen and Walker Terrace (1895, four two-story shops-and-residences with a central archway), the School of Arts (1898, now the Historical Society), and the Angus and Coote building (1911).

Dowling St, Dungog, early in the 20th century

After the death of her father in 1883, Ellen Bruyn had bought the land in Brown Street where the family had lived for around 30 years. As the town continued to grow, a number of significant buildings were erected near to this residence. On the corner of Brown and Dowling Sts, Dark’s Store was built in 1877 and expanded in each of 1896, 1900 and finally in 1920. It came to be called “the hall of Commerce” and housed the largest store in Dungog. Opposite this was the striking Coolalie, built in 1895 as the home of Henry Charles Dark.

The Court House Hotel (later renamed the Settlers Arms), the earliest hotel in Dungog

In Brown Street itself, Dungog’s oldest hotel, the Court House Hotel, now the Settler’s Arms (pictured above), had been trading since the 1850s. On the top of the hill, the Roman Catholic Convent of St Joseph was built in 1891, a Parish Hall in 1913, and a new Church in 1933, six years after Ellen died. As a devout Catholic, she would have been a regular attendee at the Church on Dowling St and, in later years, at Parish events in the Hall on Brown St. On the eastern end of Brown St, the James Theatre was opened in 1918; to the west of the Bruyn residence, a large and impressive Memorial Hall (now the RSL club) was built in 1919.

The James Theatre, Dungog, in the 1950s
(from https://www.newcastleherald.com.au/story/
1208160/dungog-cinema-celebrates-100-years/)

(The information about these buildings is taken largely from Michael Williams’ 2011 publication, Ah, Dungog! A brief survey of its charming houses and historic buildings.)

So the hypothesis that Elizabeth and I have developed is that, after she had bought the property in Brown St in 1883, with the older family home on it, Ellen Bruyn had a new double-brick house built on Lot 6.

Which opens the next stage as the story continues … … …

and see earlier blogs at

The Bruyns of Brown Street (5)—Daniel Justin Bruyn

In exploring the history of the land and house which Elizabeth and I purchased in Dungog a few years ago, I have already noted the early landholders for this property, and investigated the life of Daniel and Sarah Bruyn and their family after Daniel purchased the land in 1858. When Daniel died intestate in 1882, all of his property was made over to his son, Daniel Justin Bryan, whose life we now consider.

Daniel Justin Bruyn was born in France. His parents, Joseph and Sarah, had married in 1837 in West Bromwich, Staffordshire, where four children were born in the years 1837 to 1842. The family travelled to France, perhaps seeking to use there the skills that Daniel Snr had as a Blacksmith. Two children were born there; Mary died within a year, Daniel Jnr was born on 26 May 1847, at Graville, Le Havre, Seine.

After four years the family returned to England because of the unrest relating to industrialisation. Another daughter was born; the family then migrated to the Colony of New South Wales in 1856 and settled in Dungog, where Daniel purchased land and established his Blacksmith business.

Daniel Justin Bruyn was eleven years of age when his father purchased the land in Brown St; presumably he lived with the family there for some time after they moved into the building that was erected there, at some stage between 1858 and 1866, as noted previously.

Grevilles 1872 Post Office Directory lists both Daniel Bryun, Blacksmith, of Brown St, Dungog, and Joseph Bruyn, farmer, “near Dungog”. Joseph was the firstborn son of Daniel. At some point after this, Daniel Justin Bruyn began to purchase land holdings to the north of Dungog.

Daniel Justin Bruyn

On 11 Sept 1879, Daniel Justin Bruyn is listed as selecting 234 acres in Dungog, Al. No. 76-37754, C.P. No. 73–9338. On 19 April 1883 Daniel Justin Bruyn made application to be registered as “Proprietor by Transmission” of land in Dungog, as the Administrator of the intestate estate of Daniel Bruyn, deceased. The land was 3 acres, Lots 1, 2, and 3, of Section 32, Town of Dungog; this was on the northern side of Hooke St, between Abelard and Eloisa Streets. (There are residential building on these lots today.)

On 1 September 1892 Daniel Justin Bruyn made application for 79 1/2 acres at Tillegra; on 1 February 1893, 78 3/4 acres was granted to him. On 20 October 1892 he made application for 77 acres at Dungog; on 1 February 1893, 65 1/4 acres was granted to him. It is also reasonable to assume, from a piece of evidence noted below, that Daniel had a room in the house at Brown Street where his sister lived. That was his base when he was in town, it would seem.

In a series of Electoral Rolls (1895, 1900, 1904) Daniel Justin Bryun, Grazier, is listed as living at Sugarloaf. In 1905, he is listed as having 15 horses and 190 cattle (and no sheep) on his property at Sugarloaf Creek.

A survey map of the area, dated 9 January 1894, designates seven properties in his name running along the northern boundary of the Parish of Dungog, adjacent to the Parish of Tillegra, to the south of the current Sugarloaf Road, and west of the Longbrush Gully. Another survey map for the Parish of Tillegra places him as owner of a further fourteen Lots running in parallel to his Dungog Parish holdings.

In the Parish of Dungog, running east to west, Bruyn owned Lots 128 (50 acres) and 134 (73 acres), adjacent to each other; then stretching west from them, Lots 52 (234 acres), 50 (40 acres), 136 (40 acres), 53 (120 acres), and 151 (65 acres). This final Lot was the penultimate Lot before the boundary with the Parish of Lewinsbrook, covering the area between Dungog and Gresford. The total acreage of these seven Lots is 622 acres.

The holdings of Daniel Justin Bruyn in the Sugarloaf region, running along the northern boundary
of the Parish of Dungog

In addition, on the other side of the Parish boundary, in the Parish of Tillegra, there is another, more extensive, collection of Lots in the name of Daniel Justin Bruyn. Running east to west, he owned Lots 48 (40 acres), 129 (49 acres), 37 (40 acres), 38 (40 acres), 49 (80 acres), 106 (114 acres), 4 (99 acres), 149 (40 acres), 119 (40 acres), 137 (40 acres), 138 (40 acres), 55 (78 acres), 145 (40 acres), and 55 (78 acres)! The total acreage of these Lots is 818 acres.

The holdings of Daniel Justin Bruyn in the Sugarloaf region
on the southern border of the Parish of Tillegra,
adjacent to his holdings in the Parish of Dungog

The Sugarloaf Creek meanders its way through the easternmost half of the Lots in the Parish of Tillegra. A survey map declares that all of these Lots were part of a larger area, Gloucester Coldfield, that was proclaimed on 3rd June 1879. Together, the 1,440 acres of these Lots form a very significant landholding. To the east of Daniel’s landholdings, another series of Lots totalling 249 acres bear the name of his sister, Ellen Bruyn.

In the Dungog Chronicle of 30 August 1898, p.3, a notice appeared relating to a proposed “public meeting for the purpose of petitioning the Minister for Works, through the Member for Durham, to construct a road between Gresford and Dungog”. There are 14 signatories to this notice, including that of Daniel J. Bruyn, indicating that “a public meeting [is] to be held at the Council Chambers on THURSDAY NEXT, at 8 p.m.”

As one owning property in the Sugarloaf Creek area, Daniel Bruyn obviously had a vested interest. It is clear that the petition for the construction of this road was successful, as a road today does wind its way through the beautiful hills in the area between Gresford and Dungog, and through some of the land once owned by Daniel Justin Bruyn.

Scenery on the Sugarloaf Road from Dungog to Gresford, 2024

Not only did Daniel Justin Bruyn die a wealthy man, however; he died also a highly-regarded and well-respected member of the Dungog community. His obituary (see below) indicated that he was a Trustee of the Dungog Hospital, a Municipal Alderman, a Justice of the Peace, a longterm committee member of the A. and H. Association, and one of the founders of the Dungog School of Arts. He followed the local cricket team with enthusiasm, and owned a number of horses that he raced in the local area.

On 17 November 1891, the Government Gazette (p.9023) contained a notice from the Department of Lands of the appointment of Joseph Abbott, George Alexander McKay, Vincent Carlton, John Robson, and Daniel Justin Bruyn, as “Trustees of the land at Dungog, viz. portion 135, parish of Dungog, county of Dungog, dedicated 15th September 1891, for hospital site”.

Notice from the NSW Government Gazette of 7 Nov 1891

The Dungog Cottage Hospital was opened on Hospital Hill in 1892 and the site, now much expanded, has provided local hospital and medical services since that time.

The Dungog Cottage Hospital building

On 21 July 1893, the Government Gazette (p.5663) contained a notice of the election of Frederick Agustus Hooke, Dingadee, Dungog; Daniel Justian [sic.] Bruyn, Brown-street, Dungog; Henry Charles Dark, Dowling-street, Dungog; Joseph Abbott, Dowling-street, Dungog; John Robson, Dowling-street, Dungog; and John A. Jones, Dowling-street, Dungog, as Aldermen of the Municipal District of Dungog.

1893 Government Gazette announcement

Then, on 8 February 1896, the Government Gazette (p.1022) contained a notice of the election of Frederick Augustus Hooke and Daniel Justin Bruyn, as Aldermen of the Municipal District of Dungog. Three years later, on 13 February 1899, the Government Gazette (p.1415) contained a notice of the election of Frederick Augustus Hooke, Daniel Justin Bruyn, and John McLauchlin, as Aldermen of the Municipal District of Dungog.

Extracts from the Dungog Chronicle of 1896 and 1989, announcing the election of Alderman for the Municipality of Dungog

On 4 May 1901, the Maitland Mercury (p.3) reported that Daniel Justin Bruyn was amongst a list of “gentlemen appointed to them commission of the Peace” (that is, as a Magistrate, or a Justice of the Peace).

On 22 September 1886, Daniel Justin Bruyn had made his last Will and Testament “whereby he gave devised and bequeathed all his property of whatsoever nature and wheresoever situate to his sister Ellen Bruyn absolutely and appointed the said Ellen Bruyn the sole Executrix thereof”. On 1 November 1912 Daniel Justin Bruyn died, and that will came into effect. So Ellen received a significant amount of property, as we have seen.

The Register of Coroner’s Inquests for 2 November 1912 lists an inquest for Daniel Justyn Bruyn of Dungog, held by Walterus Le Brun Brown, J.P., which notes that “cash or property possessed by deceased” was “probably over £10,000”. That equates to around $1.45 million in 2023.

to be continued … … …

*****

See earlier posts at

and subsequent posts at