Background Tom's father, William Bray, rather than being a captain in the
Royal Navy as is traditionally claimed, in fact, worked as a
cordwainer and
cabinet maker prior to his early death in 1816, aged about 26 years. Tom and Sarah were married at St Mary's parish church,
Portsea, Hampshire, on 22 July 1838, just prior to their embarkation for Australia in the
Prince George, arriving in the colony in December 1838. Sarah's father, William Pink (died 1853), also settled in Adelaide, and was employed as a labourer in the Survey of South Australia. Tom Cox Bray had a boot and shoe factory at 79
Hindley Street, Adelaide from 1840 to 1856, when he and his family returned to England. He had the good fortune to be one of the "Snobs" (i.e. tradesmen) who risked their savings on shares in the
South Australian Mining Association copper mine at Burra, and made handsome profits. The Bray family appears to have moved to the Portsmouth area from the
Isle of Wight, in contradiction to the very garbled accounts of their origins to be found in ''
Burke's Colonial Gentry (1891–1895), volume 2, under "Bray of Adelaide", and in the American Supplement (1939) to Burke's Landed Gentry (1937 edition), and Burke's American Families with British Ancestry'', and found under "Bray" (covering the career and descent of Professor
William Crowell Bray (1879–1946), head of the Chemistry department at the
University of California, Berkeley, who belonged to the Canadian branch of the Bray family which had been established in
Upper Canada in 1839 by
William Bray, J.P., R.N. (1814–1882), a
gunnery officer in the
Royal Navy, and the elder brother of T.C. Bray).
Return to England John Cox Bray's parents, elder brother and sisters returned to England at some point during his early career, due to an improvement in their circumstances said to be the result of Tom Cox Bray's having inherited shipping interests from his paternal grandfather, possibly George Bray (elsewhere called Charles Bray), who had disapproved of his son's marriage to Ann Cox (1789–1840), later Winship, daughter of a farmer from Southsea, Hampshire. Once in England, the family lived in comfort first at
Blackheath in
Kent, and later at
Harrogate, the
Yorkshire spa town in which Mrs Bray died. The elder son,
Thomas William Bray (1840–1887), was sent to
Clare College, Cambridge, and later became an
Anglican clergyman. He was father of
Sir Denys Bray (1875–1951),
K.C.S.I.,
K.C.I.E.,
C.B.E., sometime
Foreign Secretary to the
Government of India, and Indian delegate to the
League of Nations during the
British colonial period. T.C. Bray lived the rest of his life as a gentleman, moving to
Kilmacolm,
Renfrewshire in
Scotland, where he had descendants in the mid-1980s. He died in Scotland and his will was proved in Scotland and South Australia. Descendants include Sir
John Henry Kerr, colonial governor in India,
David Russell, classical guitarist, and
Piers Sellers, astronaut. ==References==