Emma Elizabeth Man was born on 24 November 1829 at 33 Apollo Buildings,
Walworth, Surrey, the
daughter of Harry Stoe and Caroline Louisa (Fowle)
Man. She was baptized on 29 January 1830 at St. Peter's, Walworth
(shown below).
She married Charles Edward
Walch on
27 February 1861 at St. Margaret's, Halstead, Kent.
Emma died (of
Tuberculosis), aged 32,
on 16 November 1863 at Magdalen Road, Hastings, Sussex, and was buried 23 November 1863
at St. Margaret's, Halstead,
Kent.
Charles Edward Walch was born on 8 May 1830 in Cannanore, Kerala, India, the son of James
William Henry and Eliza (Nash) Walch. After the death of his wife he
married Fanny Eugenia Birch at Hobart, Tasmania, Australia and went on to have
ten children. Charles died on 25 March 1915, in Hobart,
Tasmania.
Emma and Charles
belong to Generation Five; their child
belongs to Generation Six
and is:
- CAROLINE ELIZA MARY
[References: Emma's birth and baptism - FHL Film # 0307704; her
marriage - record from a film viewed at Kent RO; her
death -
copy of
her death certificate; her burial - record from a film viewed at the
Kent RO.
Charles' birth - FHL # 1396166; his second
marriage and his death - Tasmania Archival record.]
NOTES:
Hubert Man's notes are as follows: "Emma Elizabeth Man daughter of
Henry Stoe Man born Nov 24th 1829 christened at St. Peter's Walworth,
sponsors Betty Fowle, Emma Man (aunts) & H. S. Man father. She was a very pretty
cheerful girl, a bit of a tomboy, always playing with her brothers. She died at
Hastings suddenly of scarlet fever (?)". In his
autobiography Charles Walch never mentions his marriage to Emma nor their
daughter.

Her sister-in-law,
Henriette (Fowle) Man, the wife of Harry Edward Julius died a day earlier at the
same place.
WALCH, CHARLES EDWARD (1830-1915), bookseller and lay preacher, was born on 8
May 1830 at Cannanore, Kerala, India, son of Major James William Henry Walch,
54th Regiment, and Eliza, née Nash. The family returned from India to England in
1837 but, probably influenced by Henry Hopkins, they migrated to Van Diemen's
Land in 1842 in the Royal Saxon and were granted 300 acres (121 ha) in the
Westbury district. About three years later they moved to Hobart Town, where
Walch's father bought the bookselling business of S. Tegg; with his eldest son
James Henry Brett he traded as J. Walch and Son; another son was G. Walch.
In 1845 Walch was apprenticed for five years to Captain William Crosby in the
barque Jane Francis, trading between Hobart and London. He spent two more years
as an able-seaman and second officer but, soon after his father's death in 1852,
went to the Victorian gold diggings. Unsuccessful, he returned to Tasmania
intending to go back to sea. But J. Walch and Son had prospered and his brother
offered him a partnership and position as buyer in London, where he worked in
1854-58. Growth of business in Tasmania led to his recall, but he returned to
London in 1861 to buy stock and printing machinery and engage tradesmen. Walch's
Literary Intelligencer, first produced in 1859 and edited by him for some fifty
years, and Walch's Tasmanian Almanack became standard references.
In England Walch had joined the Young Men's Christian Association and the King's
Weigh-House Chapel, in Eastcheap, under Rev. Thomas Binney. Back in Tasmania he
took charge of a Sunday school held in the Ragged School building, Collins
Street, Hobart; later he became a regular teacher and was superintendent for
thirty-five years of the Davey Street Congregational Church Sunday School. He
sought new and improved teaching methods on which he gave lectures and published
pamphlets. In 1868 he led 516 teachers and 4618 children in an ode of welcome to
the Duke of Edinburgh. He became a well-known Congregational lay preacher and an
advocate of the principles of competitive business.
In 1874 Walch opposed plans to build showgrounds and buildings on the Queen's
Domain and later became chairman of a committee to advise on its use. He was a
member and sometime chairman of the Central School (Bathurst Street) Board in
Hobart and campaigned successfully for new buildings. In evidence to the 1882
select committee on education he criticized the Board of Education for 'the want
of a head to the department'. He moved resolutions at a Town Hall meeting in
1875 supporting the public works proposals of the Kennerley government, and
again in 1876 protesting against the proposed closure of the Hobart-Launceston
railway line. He was a director of the Commercial Bank and other companies, and
a foundation member of the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
Among Walch's many writings was The Story of the Life of Charles Edward Walch,
with a Selection of his Writings, printed in 1908 for private circulation. He
was married twice; first at Halstead, Kent, England, on 27 February 1861 to Emma
Elizabeth (d.1863), youngest daughter of Henry Stoe Man, R.N.; their daughter
died in 1864; next year he married Fanny Eugenia Clara, daughter of George
Birch; they had four sons and six daughters. He died at his home in Davey
Street, Hobart, on 25 March 1915 survived by his wife and five daughters. His
estate was sworn for probate at £42,855.
Select Bibliography
Cyclopedia of Tasmania, vol 1 (Hob, 1900); P. Bolger, Hobart Town (Canb, 1973);
Votes and Proceedings (House of Assembly, Tasmania), 1882 (106); Mercury
(Hobart), 26 Mar 1915; indexes and correspondence file under C. E. Walch
(Archives Office of Tasmania). More on the resources
Author: Neil Smith
Print Publication Details: Neil Smith, 'Walch, Charles Edward (1830 - 1915)',
Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 6, Melbourne University Press, 1976,
pp 337-338.
February 2003