WOOD COFFILL Records – Volume 1 (1916-1945) and Volume 2 (1946-1967)
These records have been transcribed by Blue Mountains FHS volunteers have both been completed and published. They are available in both State and National Libraries as well as a few local family history centres.
There are over 1200 pages of records relating to Wood Coffill & Co burials organised by their Katoomba office from 1945 to 1967 – with 4 to 6 entries on each page! If information is recorded, the entries include full name, date of death, age, place of death (many at small private hospitals which no longer exist), date and place of burial, name and address of informant as well as the relationship. In some cases the minister’s name has been recorded.
The notes are particularly valuable to family historians, and many contain information not to be found elsewhere. Notes that the funeral company is to insert death or funeral notices include the wording and in most cases the newspapers are named such as the SMH or Lithgow Mercury. You may not have known the death was announced on 2KA – the Katoomba radio station. The vehicles booked for the funeral are also listed eg. motor hearse only or 1 hearse and 2 cars.
The upper Blue Mountains had 2 TB sanatoria at Wentworth Falls and numerous other hospitals, so entries give details such for a lady who died at Bodington Hospital “remove from hospital to Camperdown, thence to Northern Suburbs Crematorium where friends will meet”. For a person, possibly in Katoomba on holidays, and who died at the at the Palais Royale, it was “meet 11.45am train at Central and move to George Street Chapel” while in others the coffin was to be on the 6.45am train to Central then transfered to the train for Mudgee, Dubbo, Melbourne etc.
The BMFHS and Blue Mountains City Council are working together to update records and both are grateful to Tom & Fiona Brownjohn, former managers of Wood Coffill for making the records available. BMCC has updated their burial records as far as possible, and made them available on the web.
BMFHS will continue updating our headstone transcripts & taking digital photographs so more information will be available to researchers. Of great value are records of people who died in the area but whose remains were sent elsewhere by train, and some even overseas.
CEMETERY TRANSCRIPTS
Printed volumes of transcripts of all the Blue Mountains cemeteries have been available for several years. The updating of each cemetery is an ongoing activity when time and volunteers are available and obviously a slow process with so many cemeteries spread over a long distance.
Unfortunately, all of these publications are now out of print. Should you wish to follow up on Cemetery details for any of your family you are researching, please avail yourself of our research service.
The Blue Mountains Family History Society Inc first published cemetery records in 1988, under the name OUR PAST BLUE MOUNTAINEERS, soon abbreviated to OPBM in general speech. For clarity, future updates and reprints are now named “Blue Mountains Cemetery Records” with “Our Past Blue Mountaineers” as a minor heading as our 2 volumes of Wood Coffill (Katoomba) Burial Records make reference to OPBM by Volume number. Volume numbers will not be changed.
Cemetery updates are done whenever possible, however with members of advancing age, this is now very infrequent. The cemeteries are in towns along the highway from Springwood to 60km further west at Mt Victoria and then at the isolated settlements at Mt Wilson and Mt Irvine north of the Bells Line of Road.
The cemeteries were established before local municipalites and later Blue Mountains Shire were declared. The present Blue Mountains City Council came into existence in 1947 and cemeteries continued under the control of local committees until 1967. As a result there is no definitive list of those buried. Check the Blue Mountains City Council website for their list of the cemetery, section, row and plot number of known graves, including a location map. Also check our cemetery record books.
The Council has issued a unique identifying number to each burial, and these are being added to our volumes as each is updated. The first was Volume 6, the Roman Catholic Section of Wentworth Falls cemetery, updated to July 2007. The other 2 volumes of Wentworth Falls were completed early in 2008, followed by the 2 Springwood volumes. All of which are now out of print and no longer available.
Please note that the rows and grave numbers are not clearly marked in all Blue Mountains cemeteries. The Blue Mountains Family History Society is working co-operatively with the staff of Blue Mountains City Council to ensure our cemetery records include cemetery sections recently introduced, as well as row, plot number and identifying number. There are some minor changes in plot numbers from earlier editions, when a certain amount of calculated guessing was necessary.
Cemetery Publications are accurate as possible when completed. Unfortunately changes occur due to vandalism, weather, neglect and natural deterioration. Where we have a record of an earlier monumental inscription no longer legible, or missing altogether, the Society will continue to note what was visible years ago.
Vol 1 The Mounts – Mt Victoria, Mt Wilson, Mt Irvine
Vol 2 Blackheath including Megalong Valley & war memorials Published 2004
Vol 3 Faulconbridge (2001 – closed)
Vol 4 Lawson – all denominations
Vol 5 Wentworth Falls – Church of England
Vol 6 Wentworth Falls Roman Catholic to July 2007
Vol 7 Wentworth Falls – Presbyterian, Methodist, Church of Christ, Baptist & Independent
Vol 8 Springwood – Church of England, Presbyterian & Independent
Vol 9 Springwood – Roman Catholic, Methodist, Ashes Gardens, Columbarium
Vol X Katoomba General Sections, Independent Section and Various Columbarium
Vol X1 Katoomba Presbyterian, Methodist, Congregational, Baptist, Greek Orthodox and Jewish Sections
Vol 14 Leura Memorial Gardens & St Alban’s Memorials To 2000 & 2001
HISTORIC MOUNT YORK / HARTLEY VALE CEMETERY
The following is portion of the Introduction to this publication.
The Mt York Cemetery, as it was known, was not at Mt. York, but close to the base of the steep descent of the earliest route to the west, namely Lawson’s Long Alley 1823-4 in the area called Hartley Vale. At the same time, about one mile (1.5 km) further west, Pierce Collit took up land & established what became known as Collit’s Inn.
The steep track was treacherous with heavily laden packhorses or wagons often taking a day to make the descent or ascent. Collit was in an ideal location to provide welcome rest and refreshment to travellers. The later Lockyer’s Track would have finished closer to the inn, but was abandoned when Victoria Pass was opened in 1832.
The earliest burials were on Collit’s land, to the rear of the inn. Until recent years the almost 5000 square metre cemetery was on private land. In 1982 the Lithgow Local Government Area listed Mt York cemetery as a heritage area to be under the supervision of the Hartley Vale & Mt. Blaxland Reserve Trust. It is no longer on private land and freely accessible on foot in daylight hours via a laneway from Field Road.
According to the Trust’s sign at the entrance the first burial was of 8 year old George Pierce Hume in 1832. Even that fact is arguable as the Heritage Council of NSW website states “the earliest gravemarker is dated 1833 (James Watkins)”. The sign lists all burials known in 2000 and indicates known locations. Many headstones were the work of James Connor and Charles Goodluck, monumental masons of Bowenfels. Some restoration work was undertaken but deterioration continues.
There is no exact verifiable list of those buried in the Hartley Vale Cemetery. This work has been compiled from four extant lists, namely:
- A. Blue Mountains Family History Society: Our Past Blue Mountaineers, Volume 1, 1988, only source with full transcripts including Victorian poetry.
- B . F. J. Winchester et al: Lithgow Historical Society 1963 which was the basis of BMFHS’ 1988 list for earlier information
- C. Lithgow Family History Society cemetery records of 1988.
- D. Hartley Vale & Mt Blaxland Trust signage 2000.
No two lists are identical. The notes have been retained from Volume 1 of Our Past Blue Mountaineers, with some additions. Also reference has been made to New South Wales Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages and New South Wales National Parks & Wildlife Service local information held at Hartley and Lithgow Family History Society.
Weathering, vandalism and general deterioration have taken their toll. The restorative work undertaken since heritage listing has deteriorated significantly in several cases.
This publication contains Photographs of the Headstones, transcriptions of each Headstone and family notes. This publication is of a very high quality and essential for each and every researcher of family in the Mount York and Hartley Vale areas. This Volume is also no longer in print, all copies sold.
Volume 6 – Wentworth Falls Roman Catholic section is the first updated to include the BMCC’s identifying number to link the cemetery transcripts with the Council records. It has been updated to July 2007. Identifying numbers have been added to all volumes of Springwood & Wentworth Falls, Mt Victoria and Mt Irvine.
All copies of these volumes are no longer available for sale – out of stock.
All Volumes are no longer in stock, also all “Old OPBM” Volumes are also out of print and no further copies are available for purchase.. However, we hold copies of all issues and can photocopy as required. Contact bmfhsweb@gmail.com for any further information. The cost of photocopying is $2.00 per page.
DIGITISING HEADSTONES
Plans were developed during 2005 to digitise the headstones in Blue Mountains Cemeteries. Trials were undertaken to determine the most effective resolution, the best time of day and weather conditions to enable details to be filmed and so on. BMCC has been working on their cemetery maps to make them as correct as possible. As the cemeteries were individually controlled by local committees the details and accuracy varies from place to place and over time. Our thanks to the dedicated Council Staff who are doing an excellent job.
Unfortunately, as the membership of the Blue Mountains Family History Society ages and the ability of members given their ages reduces, it is no longer possible to continue to undertake this task.
If any of these volumes are not available to search in your local family history centre, a BMFHS researcher will undertake a search of these volumes and at a cost of $2 per page will email a digital copy to you.
Copies of some of these volumes may be available from the NSW State Library or National Library.
Please contact: bmfhsweb@gmail.com