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Jemima
Matcham Jenkins (1786-1842), pastoralist, was born in Belchalwell,
Dorset, the youngest child of Mary (born Matcham) and Robert Pitt.
When Robert died leaving his family impoverished, relatives arranged
their emigration to New South Wales, bearing letters of introduction
from their kinsman Admiral Nelson. With her widowed mother, three
sisters and brother, Jemima Pitt arrived in Sydney on the Canada
in 1801. They were granted land at Richmond. Jemima's sisters and
brother soon married into local families, all of whom were free
settlers.
In April 1810 at Windsor Jemima married Austin Forrest, an employee
of the East India Co., who died on Christmas eve 1811 after being
thrown from his horse. Their only child, a daughter, lived barely
a month. Jemima was married again in March 1813 to Sydney merchant
Robert Jenkins, who also died (in May 1822) following a fall from
his horse. The loss of two husbands in similar circumstances may
explain Jemima's later repeated prosecutions of her coachmen for
careless driving.
Jenkins left Jemima with unrestricted guardianship of their two
sons and control of his mercantile affairs and property. From her
first marriage she owned 'Swilly Farm' at Richmond and from Jenkins,
404 ha at Lake Illawarra, granted in 1817. Jemima expanded from
this base. Between 1822-24 on tickets of occupations she acquired
over 4444 ha at the Illawarra, the Shoalhaven and in the south-western
counties of Argyle and St Vincent to graze cattle, 'the chief support
of her self and family'. As the spread of settlement threatened
to encroach on her runs she protected her stockyards by the purchase
of substantial areas. In the 1828 census she appeared as holding
9075 acres with 2000 cattle and 320 sheep. She employed a nephew,
William Pitt Faithful, as her pastoral superintendent.
She owned property in Sydney, on the Cook's River and at Parramatta,
most of it acquired by Robert Jenkins before his death. From her
home in O'Connell St, she supervised a store in George St selling
wine and glassware, interviewed tenants and conducted her business
correspondence. She sold her George St premises in 1828 for 4000
pounds and leased her O'Connell St house. She moved to 'Eagle Vale',
a 607 ha estate near Campbelltown, which she had recently purchased.
'Eagle Vale' had several advantages: being near the junction of
the roads to the Illawarra and the south-west, it was closer to
her pastoral properties yet accessible to Sydney and it was fine
farming country. Also the local clergyman was Thomas Reddall, a
classical scholar, to whom her sons went to continue an education
commenced at Sydney Grammar School. Lucy Wood, a widowed sister,
lived with her, relieving her of domestic responsibilities.
In the 1830s she had cottages built in Sydney for leasing. When
her sons came of age, Robert Pitt in 1835 and William Warren in
1837, they assumed management of extensive enterprises enriched
by their mother's experience. She died on 22 March 1842 at 'Eagle
Vale'. Though Sarah Mathew, who met her in 1833, called her 'a disagreeable,
vulgar woman', others praised her 'good and useful life', her management
skills, her charity and generosity.
Carol Liston
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