-
- Researching in the Tipperary area:
- FREWEN, O'KEEFE, HICKEY.
- John O'Keefe & Johanna Hickey were my 3 x great grandparents.
- All the children were baptised in Galbally.
- Their eldest son Patrick O'Keefe married Mary Frewen in the Tipperary Parish.
- They and 3 of Patrick's brothers and his sister Catherine came to Australia in 1856 & 1857.
- Any info on any of these would be appreciated.
- Also researching O'NEILL in Dublin.
- Colleen O'Neill - colmac(at)chariot.net.au
From: "Lyn" <chedoona@tpg.com.au> Subject: O'KEEFE Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2005 16:00:50 +1000
G'day All I am looking for birth and death information on Denis Hickey O'KEEFE [b between 1846-1875] Parents Edmund and Josephine[nee THORN] O'KEEFE. I would appreciate any help cheers Lyn VIC
The Parliament of Tasmania from 1856
Surname: O'KEEFE Given Names: Michael Ignatius Title and Honours: Mr, JP Qualifications: Date and Place of Birth: 28 September 1864 - Westbury, Tasmania ...
www.parliament.tas.gov.au/
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Births in Tasmania
O'KEEFE, Richard, 5 April 1846, Michael O'KEEFE, Johanna HICKEY, Richmond Tasmania. PARKER, Eliza Ruth Mary, 20th December 1895, Thomas PARKER, Eliza HALL ...
www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~austas/birthtas2.htm - 42k -
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O'Keefe, David John (1864 - 1943) Biographical Entry - Australian ...
(A-Z) O'Kane, Thadeus (1820 - 1890) · (A-Z) O'Keefe, John Michael ... Tasmania, son of David John O'Keefe, farmer, and his wife Mary Ann, née McCullagh. ...
www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A110082b.htm - 15k -
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O'Keefe David John (1864 - 1943)
- Birth:
- 21 August 1864, Longford, Tasmania, Australia
- Death:
- 21 July 1943, Brighton, Melbourne, Victoria, Australiaa
- Religious Influence:
- Occupation:
David John O'Keefe (1864 - 1943), by Swiss Studios, 1915, courtesy of National Library of Australia. nla.pic-an23379178. Image Details
On his return O'Keefe engaged in various business pursuits in Zeehan until his election as a Labor senator to the first Commonwealth parliament. In a patchy Federal career he served as senator in 1901-06 and 1910-19 (chairman of committees 1910-14), and later as member for Denison in 1922-25, defeating Laird Smith. Each term ended in defeat.
In January 1926 O'Keefe went to Western Australia, where he managed the Perth branch of the real estate firm of T. M. Burke Pty Ltd. He returned to Tasmania in 1931 to contest unsuccessfully the Senate election, then managed Launceston's Terminus hotel for two years, before securing election to the House of Assembly as member for Wilmot in June 1934. He held the seat until his death, serving as Speaker in 1934-42. He was appointed C.M.G. in 1941.
Apart from his varied employment and parliamentary careers, O'Keefe was active in many other areas: Australian Workers' Union organizer, delegate (seven times) to Labor Party federal conferences, secretary of the Ancient Order of Foresters friendly society and of the Beaconsfield rifle club, and work in amateur theatre. In Zeehan he had been a member of the town board.
Dave O'Keefe married twice. His first wife Sara Frances, née Wilson, whom he married in Melbourne on 17 June 1897, died in 1921, and on 14 October 1924 he married Mrs Agnes Hughes, née Blong, also in Melbourne. He died at Brighton on 21 July 1943, during a trip to Melbourne. His body was returned to Hobart for a state funeral before burial in Cornelian Bay cemetery with Catholic rites. His wife and a son and three daughters of his first marriage survived him. Frank Forde described him as 'a forthright man who had strong convictions but who was tolerant of the views of others'.
Surname: O'KEEFE
Given Names: David John
Title and Honours: Mr, CMG
Qualifications:
Date and Place of Birth: 21 August 1864 - Longford, Tasmania
Date of Death: 21 July 1943 - Melbourne, Victoria
House of Assembly: 9 June 1934
Electorate: Wilmot (Lyons)
Party: ALP
Positions Held: Speaker 18 July 1934 to 9 February 1942
Minister: No
Date of Departure: 21 July 1943
Reason for Departure: Died in office.
Comments:
House of Assembly Long Room Picture: 429
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House of Assembly Long Room Picture Number indicates each Member's position in the photographic record. Source: Parliament of Tasmania Members Biographical Database, Tasmanian Parliamentary Library. Additional Reference Material: A Handbook of Australian Government and Politics, 1890-1964 [by] Colin A. Hughes and B. D. Graham. Canberra, ANU Press, 1968. Biographical Register of the Tasmanian Parliament, 1851-1960 / Scott Bennett and Barbara Bennett. Canberra : ANU, 1980. |
Select Bibliography
Print Publication Details: Scott Bennett, 'O'Keefe, David John (1864 - 1943)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 11, Melbourne University Press, 1988, p. 75.
Another O'Keefe (ff) was Michael (uncle Mick) who used to ride on a gray horse round Beaconsfield area, Tasmania, when my mother Marjorie (nee) O'Keefe was a girl. (She was born Jan 1 1914.) He was her father Dick (Richard) O'Keefe's cousin and he was speaker of the House of Representative s for the state of Tasmania. One or another of these relatives was in the Lyons government (Labour) and died in a crash. He was with Premier Lyons and their car went over a railway crossing and was hit by a train. He died but Premier Lyons survived. I remember that Laurie O'Keef(f)e, great aunt Kate's son stood for parliament for Democratic Labour. I don't know if he was elected. He was about five years older than me and I only met him once when I was 14. He took me into a catholic church and told me I had to sprinkle water on myself and genuflect. He was religious, but not me. My mother, Marjorie Williams stood for parliament (or was it the senate?), but luckily she was not elected.(note by Cedric Williams)
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The Beaconsfield Gold Robbery
Finally, on 8 July 1885 Edmund O'Keefe and John Rice were arrested and charged with having feloniously assaulted and robbed Mr. Cecil Stackhouse of two keys. The trial commenced in Launceston on 27 August with the two prisoners, Barrett and Ward, having been persuaded to give evidence in return for a reduction in the length of their prison sentences. According to them the robbery had been planned with the two Collins, John Ritchie Snr and O'Keefe. They robbed the bank. O'Keefe and Rice had guarded Stackhouse. Collins's part was to get rid of the bank notes through his business. Rice had little to do with the affair. John Ritchie's part had been to let them know which night Stackhouse would be visiting him.
Ward admitted that while he had been dividing and distributing the stolen money he had commenced the action against the bank for malicious prosecution and that he paid his solicitor and the solicitor for some of the others from the proceeds of the robbery. The two men had told police where what was left of the booty was planted. Police recovered £1234 in notes and 15oz of smelted gold in two pieces in a jar buried on the side of Cabbage Tree Hill near a shaft on which Charles Ward had been working and sixty-five £5 notes and about two hundred £1 notes at Delamere about four miles from Beaconsfield.
John Ritchie Snr appeared in court and denied that he was in any way involved. He believed that the claim that he had been involved was part of a conspiracy against him because his son, John, had given evidence against Ward, Barrett and others.
The Beaconsfield Gold Robbery
http://www.elaunceston.com/launcestonhistory/2005/robbery2.htm
Many witnesses were called to support the defence's claim that O'Keefe was at his home most of the evening, leaving the house for very short times only and in bed by about a quarter to eleven. This evidence was crucial in causing doubt about his involvement. His son, who shared a bed with him, stated that his father had been in bed before 11 o'clock, got up after 11 to get something for a man called Richards but had returned to bed shortly afterwards.
In his summing up Mr R B Miller, for the accused, emphasised the unreliable nature of the witnesses, one a thief by his own confession, and the other not only a thief but the basest of perjurers, and the fact that they had been able to plan schemes of vengeance and concoct a story while together in prison. He urged the jury to acquit both men.
*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Tasmania
Facts about Tasmania including cannibalism among convicts.
O'Keefe's Hotel
Ph: (03) 6331 4015; 124 George St, Launceston 7250 www.okeefes.com.auThis is cousin Mike's hotel. He suddenly broke off communication with me, when I mentioned the old family story of the Beaconsfield Gold Robbery. *
From: "Meryl Yost" <meryl@tasfamily.net.au> Subject: Fw: Michael O'KEEFE Date: Fri, 10 Jun 2005 14:18:36 +1000
Forwarded with permission of the sender please reply to Cedric cwok6@vcn.bc.ca not to the poster (Meryl) ----- Original Message ----- From: <cwok6@vcn.bc.ca> To: <austas@tasfamily.net.au> Sent: Thursday, June 09, 2005 6:13 PM Michael O'Keeffe or O'Keefe (the family used both versions) was a convict sent from County Clare maybe about 1830 and was supposed to be a schoolteacher at a church in Hobart, might be St Paul's. I saw his gravestone in the park next to the church when I was about twenty. I am 73 now. There used to be a church graveyard, but the head stones were put around the edges of the park when they made the park. It was somewhere near salamance Place. Anyway Michael got a thousand acres on the Tamar around probably Winkleigh and had an apple and pear orchard. The family spread out especially around Launceston and Beaconsfield and were in the mine etc. His sons were named not in order Octavius, Michael. Cornelius. maybe David. also maybe James. I think his son Michael was my great grandfather and my grandfather was Richard O'Keefe, who died when I was about 25 years old. He was about 68 when he died. Richard married Ida Wootton my grandmother. My mother was Marjorie Veronica and married my father Hector Williams. There was a relative O'Keefe who was a speaker in the Tas. parliament under Lyons and died in a train hitting the car he was in with Premier Lyons. There was another relation O'Keefe who was in the first Australian parliament in Melbourne. My uncle Pat (Francis) O'Keefe lived in Dilston and married Kitty Lyall one son was a footballer, who would be about 68 now. He was my cousin Michael. He had two sisters. I have never heard from any of them for about fifty years. Anyone please email me Cedric Williams-O'Keefe. From Cedric Williams-O'Keefe cwok66@hotmail.com added note by Cedric: If anyone can add to this history or correct it, I would be obliged. Yes I contacted Michael who has a hotel but he clammed up.
O'KEEFE Richard 5 April 1846 Michael O'KEEFE Johanna HICKEY Richmond Tasmania
This thread:
Fw: Michael O'KEEFE by "Meryl Yost" <meryl@tasfamily.net.au>
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