[Index]
Mary Jane CAMPBELL (1857 - 1944)
Children Self + Spouses Parents Grandparents Greatgrandparents
Arthur Thomas DEAN (1883 - 1968)
Mary Jane CAMPBELL (1857 - 1944)

+

Thomas Pettit Pettard DEAN (1858 - 1948)
James CAMPBELL (1812 - 1883)











Janet CRAIG (1822 - 1902)












b. 1857 at Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
m. 1881 Thomas Pettit Pettard DEAN (1858 - 1948) at Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
d. 05 Jun 1944 at Tumut, New South Wales, Australia aged 87
Parents:
James CAMPBELL (1812 - 1883)
Janet CRAIG (1822 - 1902)
Siblings (8):
Janet CAMPBELL (1844 - 1876)
James CAMPBELL (1848 - 1878)
Anne CAMPBELL (1852 - 1918)
Robert CAMPBELL (1854 - 1922)
Thomas CAMPBELL (1859 - 1917)
Frederick CAMPBELL (1862 - 1945)
Clarissa Clara CAMPBELL (1865 - 1942)
Emma CAMPBELL (1865 - 1918)
Children (1):
Arthur Thomas DEAN (1883 - 1968)
Grandchildren (6):
Veronica May DEAN, Winifred Eva DEAN, Reginald A DEAN (1911 - ), Leslie Robert DEAN (1914 - 2001), Kenneth J DEAN (1915 - ), Geoffrey H DEAN (1918 - )
Events in Mary Jane CAMPBELL (1857 - 1944)'s life
Date Age Event Place Notes Src
1857 Mary Jane CAMPBELL was born Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
1881 24 Married Thomas Pettit Pettard DEAN (aged 23) Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
1883 26 Birth of son Arthur Thomas DEAN Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
30 Apr 1883 26 Death of father James CAMPBELL (aged 71) Tumut, New South Wales, Australia 73
1902 45 Death of mother Janet CRAIG (aged 80)
05 Jun 1944 87 Mary Jane CAMPBELL died Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
Source References:
73. Type: Book, Abbr: Pioneers of Tumut Valley, Title: Pioneers of the Tumult Valley , The History of Early Settlement, Auth: H.E. Snowden, Publ: Tumut & District Historical Society Incorporated, Date: 2004
- Reference = 77 (Name, Notes)

This public tree has about 60,100 people. Every person in the tree is related by birth or marriage to at least one other person in the tree - no strays. The people in the tree come mainly from four projects.
  1. My family tree. The original project begun about 1998. ID numbers less than about 6,000
  2. Canberra and Queanbeyan Pioneers. The next 30,000 begun about 2004. Sourced almost entirely from HAGSOC's excellent 'Biographical Register of Canberra and Queanbeyan'. The project began when I decided to add siblings, spouses and parents for a relation with an entry in the Register. 12 years work.
  3. Wagga Pioneers. I moved to Wagga and thought I would extend the Queanbeyan project by adding people from Wagga Wagga & District Family History Society's 'Pioneers of Wagga Wagga and District'. About 10,300 people added over about a year.
  4. Tumut Valley Pioneers. During the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020, I decided to extend the above projects by adding pioneers of the Tumut Valley. Initial sources were Snowden's 'Pioneers of the Tumut Valley' and 'Relict of ... Lives of Pioneering Women of Tumut and District'. Excellent references published by Tumut Family History Group. I've also added material from newspapers of the time - especially, death records, obituaries and weddings from 'Tumut and Adelong Times'. This project is in its early stage and might take a few years. I plan to extend to the upper Monaro (Adaminaby, Kiandra, Cooma, Jindabyne).
I upload new information to this website about every 3 months. My motivation for these projects is to provide public information for people seeking to trace ancestors and what became of them. Much of the information I provide can be difficult to find.
If you find errors - anything incorrect (dates, places, wrong parents, wrong children), and you have evidence, I would love to fix them. Or, if you have information that would extend my projects, do not hestiate to contact me on the email link below. I do not publish information on living people - which means I'm not much interested in people born after about 1920, and I usually distrust material from before about 1770 without extremely good sources.
g.bell@bigpond.net.au
When you click the mail address abouve, if it does not open your email app, copy the address on the screen.
Geoff Bell, September 2020