I have been researching the Guy family of Madron, Cornwall for over 40 years. During that time, I have discovered all kinds of information about the family of three brothers who came to Queensland in the 19th century at different times.
As everyone knows, we don’t discover everything about a family in a single session. Usually, bits and pieces of information are found as new records are indexed or digitized. Every so often we need to step back and review what we know and what is perhaps still unknown. The question Why? should be running through our mind as we do this.
For example, I knew from an obituary that William Guy and Jane Wearne married in New York in 1875 before coming out to Queensland from the USA. My question was why didn’t they marry in Cornwall? Did they elope? Why not come straight out to Queensland and join other family members?
Remember too to look for images and photographs. This image of New York City in 1865 totally stunned me. I think I had a perspective that it would be like Brisbane in 1865. But no, it had been settled for far longer than Brisbane. The density of living even back then was amazing and that concept could only be understood by looking at a map like this.

Back to the Guy family story. Just recently these New York marriages were indexed and digitized on MyHeritage. Would this finally answer my question as to why they married in New York? While Jane had an address in New Jersey, William Guy was listed as a miner in Colorado. Obviously, he had gone from Cornwall to the USA for employment and when he was settled, he sent for Jane, and they married.
William must also have been in contact with his brother George Guy in Copperfield, Queensland. George was a successful miner and his obituary revealed that he had also mined in New Caledonia. After the decline of the Copperfield mining field, William and Jane raised their family in nearby Clermont while George took his family north to Charters Towers.

Another brother, James Guy, also came to Queensland. The only way I discovered this was a legal notice about probate in a Brisbane newspaper. He had not married and died in a mining accident. The name of his brother George Guy of Charters Towers and his mother Eliza Guy in St Just in Cornwall in the probate notice was evidence that he was part of this family. Eliza never came out to Australia but from the document trail, we know that she kept in touch with her sons.
George Guy’s wife Elizabeth Trevaskis nee Rosewarne had several siblings come out to South Australia and Queensland from St Hilary in Cornwall. In this instance I became aware of this through correspondence with others researching the same direct descendants. Researching collateral lines can provide more information on a family and even photographs if you are lucky.
Did more than one of your family members emigrate to Australia? Have you looked?
Pick one of the families you are researching and review what you know about them. Why did they come out? Was anyone else with them? Have you looked for a will or probate document? What about an obituary? Any newspaper references? Was the family mentioned in a published local history?

How many questions can you think of asking in this review? For example, what did Cornish miners look like would be one of my questions? What was it like in the mines? In the drawing to the right, I was intrigued by their mining hats and what was on the top. A candle, what else? How could they see below ground without a candle? Not sure I could go about my daily tasks with a lit candle on my head.
Now for the hard part. How many of your review questions could you answer and how much more information on the family do you have from the review process?
Researching is the part of family history that I most love. Finding out the last little detail about my families and how they lived their lives in both Australia and overseas. Research needs to be focused and that brings us back to the Why question. One family at a time, even if you have multiple families from the same place.
Try this focused approach and learn more about your ancestors. Good luck.

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