Memories are Made of This: The Agar-Hewawissa-Plunkett-Forbes Lineages of Ceylon

Charles Schokman

This picture brought back memories. I knew Ashton Agar’s Great Grandfather from way back in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). Mr. Plunkett worked at Walker Sons & Co Ltd as a car salesman and resided at Negombo. He had two daughters Sheila and Carmaline. (Bubbles). Sheila was married to Nala Hewawissa and Carmaline to Ron Forbes.

In the 1950’s the Demetagoda Christian Guild Recreation Club as a fund raiser organised its Annual September Dance at the Colombo Town Hall and the main attraction was the selection of the “Queen of the September Dance.” In 1957 the panel of Judges were Dr. P.R. Thiagarajah, Mr & Mrs Rajagopal, Mrs. Sita Parakrama, Mr Livy Wijemanne.

It was a difficult decision to arrive at and finally Mrs. Sheila Hewawissa was adjudged “Queen of the 1957 September Dance”.  The runners-up were Mrs Joan Gilles (nee Craggs) and Miss Carmine Cooke. She received a handsome Silver Cup presented by popular showman Mr. A.R. Adam and a beautiful bouquet of flowers.

The band in attendance was Mario Manricks & His Swingtette. The Compere for the night was Mr. Vernon Corea.

The Hewawissa’s and Forbes’s migrated to Australia. In Melbourne Carmaline and Ron took a keen interest in the Ceylon Welfare Organisation. Sadly, they have all departed, but leave happy and pleasant memories.

 

*********

ALSO NOTE

Chip Le Grand and Pia Akerman: “The serene smiling face of Ashton Agar highlights multi-cultural Australia,”  13 July 2013,   in Thuppahi

* “Lehmann makes an Agar Difference,” 7 July 2013, https://thuppahis.com/2013/07/13/the-serene-smiling-face-of-ashton-agar-highlights-multi-cultural-australia/

Michael Roberts:  “The Agars of De La Salle College hit the Headlines,”  6 March 2020, https://thuppahis.com/2020/03/06/the-agars-of-de-la-salle-college-hit-the-headlines/

Alex Malcolm for ESPNcricinfo,  “Australian Cricket Squads for Sri Lankan Tours: Meditations,” 4 May 2022 https://thuppahis.com/2022/05/04/australian-cricke-squads-for-sri-lankan-tour-meditations/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A PERTINENT APPENDIX from EARLSON FORBES in Sydney, 27 June 2022:

“Extending Charles Schokman’s narrative on Ashton Agar’s ancestry, let me say that …………… As Charles states, Ashton’s Great Grandfather was a ‘Plunkett’.  The Plunketts are of Irish ancestry.  Ashton’s Great Grandmother was a ‘Templer’.  The Templers are also from the UK, but I am unsure from which specific part of the UK.  The Plunketts had 6 children: four girls and two boys.  Sheila was the eldest of the children and she was of striking beauty.  No surprise that she won the ‘Queen of the 1957 September Dance’, as Charles tells us.  Nala and Sheila married and set up their beautiful home in Kirillapone.  The marriage was unusual for the time.  Nala, a Kandyan Sinhalese and staunch Buddhist, married Sheila, a Burgher Catholic.  Keep in mind their marriage occurred in the 1950s in Ceylon, when cultural and religious differences were still taboo in many quarters.   Nala was employed at executive level at the Kolannawa Oil Installations. This resource was operated by the three major Oil Companies until 1964, when the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation took over.

The Plunkett family migrated to Australia in stages.  All but two of Sheila’s siblings settled in Melbourne (two moved to Queensland).   Nala and Sheila stayed on in Ceylon at the family home in Kirillapone.  With the passage of time Nala and Sheila had four children; one of whom is Sonia, the mother of Ashton AgarAt or near Nala’s retirement, the family migrated to Australia joining most of the Plunkett family in Melbourne.  The rest of the Ashton Agar story is well documented and needs no addition.

One last thing; Charles makes mention of one of Sheila’s sisters, Carmaline.  Yes, Carmaline went on to achieve high honour as a social worker and volunteer.  In her spare time, she organised entertainment, dinners and lunches for the less fortunate occupants of Aged Care Homes.  So dedicated was Carmaline in this activity, that the residents as a gesture of gratitude nominated Carmaline for Australia Day Honour Awards.  In recognition of her selfless work, Carmaline was awarded the AO (in the 1990s, in which specific year I cannot recall).

5 Comments

Filed under art & allure bewitching, Australian culture, centre-periphery relations, cricket for amity, cultural transmission, economic processes, education, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, island economy, landscape wondrous, life stories, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

5 responses to “Memories are Made of This: The Agar-Hewawissa-Plunkett-Forbes Lineages of Ceylon

  1. Frederick Kreltszheim

    There were not two but three sisters, all beautiful indeed. The second sister is Lorna, who married my brother Duncan. Lorna now lives in Wangaratta, a town in Victoria.

  2. Earlson Forbes

    In the first paragraph reference is made to FOUR GIRLS AND TWO BOYS
    Yes Sheila had three sisters .Of these two settled in Melbourne and the third moved to Queensland along with one brother. The reference to two siblings is in regard to the move to Queensland and not to family numbers.

  3. Olive Templer Ashton’s grandmother was the daughter of John Robert Templer. His parents were Edmund Templer and Maria de Witt. Maria was herself half Singhalese half Dutch Burgher. They were married in 1870. Edmund worked for the Public Works Department and later the prisons. He left Sri Lanka and went to work in Holland in around 1895 abandoning Maria de Witt. Maria went on to have four further children with Simon Moraes in Sri Lanka.

    Edmunds father Henry Templer cam out to Sri Lanka when he was 16. His fathers cousin worked in the Civil Service and he quickly got a role there. He died at the age of 28. His wife Cornelia Bagenall was half Irish/half Spanish and took her four children to France and then England.

    Henry was originally from Devon. He was the illegitamate child of the very wealthy George Templer by Ann Wreyford (the daughter of a poor farmer). They had five children together. His parents did eventually marry. George has a large home called Stover house and made his money from quarrying granite. His ancestors had been involved in building large projects out of stone including the docks at Portsmouth and some of the large hospitals.

    The former tennis player Annabel Croft is also a descendent of Henry Templer 🙂

Leave a Reply to Frederick KreltszheimCancel reply