George Kersley Sr. (1817-1906) was a pioneer of Western Australia in the Beverley and Dumbleyung districts.
Kersley was born in Medstead, Hampshire in England on 19 January 1817 and was baptised on 17 February 1817[1] at St Andrew's Church. He was the son of George Kersley of Farringdon and Elizabeth Knight of Headley (daughter of Daniel Knight and Martha Upsdale). His mother Elizabeth Knight (born 1796 Headley) was a relative of the famous novelist Jane Austen whose brother Edward Austen Knight was adopted by the Knight family. Jane Austen would often visit his parents on her walks to Farringdon[2] and Alton. His father George Kersley (born 1790 Farringdon) was the fourth son of John Kersley (b.1755) a gentleman of Farringdon, and Olive Lee Yalden. Kersley (b.1817) grew up at the Kersley Manor House in Farringdon (where his grandparents John (1755-1849) and Olive Kersley (Yalden, 1757-1840) lived) and his father's farm in Medstead.
Kersley was the eldest of nine children.
Kersley arrived with his brother Richard Kersley (b.1820) to the Swan River Colony in Western Australia on the Ganges in 1841. By 1844 he was in partnership with James Bartram. Bartram and Kersley firstly leased Avon Dale from Mr Carey in 1844 (August 15) when Bartram was only 17 and Kersley was 27. One document about the Avon Dale research station states:At this time Kersley was one of the leading settlers of the Beverley (near York) district.
In 1851 he married in Guildford Western Australia at the home of his bride Eliza Whittington (b. 4 July 1833 Upper Swan) the daughter of two of the earliest settlers to the Swan River colony Daniel Whittington and Jane Bishop (who arrived in January 1830 on the Wanstead). In the 1860s and 1870s Kersley and Henry Bartram (b.1849 Beverley), the eldest son of Kersley's partner James Bartram, would shepherd sheep to Lake Dumbleyung. In 1869 his sister Martha Olive Martin (Kersley) and her husband Jesse Martin with their young family came from England and settled in Kelmscott (their homestead was in Kelmscott) and Gosnells (they owned the land in the hills that later became the area of Martin in the city of Gosnells). The Police Gazette of 4 February 1880 tells of the mysterious burning of 70 chains of fencing on the property Nookering owned by Kersley in the Beverley district.[3]
In 1875 Kersley took out the first pastoral leases in the Dumbleyung district. His wife Eliza died at Nookering on 1 March 1881.[4] Kersley built himself a homestead at Nunegin in Dumbleyung and he built another homestead called "Wheatfield" for his daughter Elizabeth and her husband Henry Bartram who had been secretly engaged for 10 years but finally married in 1883.[5] In 1886 Bartram and his family moved to the "Wheatfield" homestead on the edge of Lake Dumbleyung. Kersley and his son George Kersley Jr. were leading graziers or farmers of the Dumbleyung district. Kersley Jr. married Margaret, a daughter of the Catholic Cronin family from "Bunkin". Kersley died in Dumbleyung in 1906.
Kersley had three children with his wife Eliza Whittington.