McQueen Family Home Page

Welcome to the home page for the McQueen family of Constantia, South Africa.

We all have a common interest in researching our family history. Most of this website is therefor devoted to McQueen family genealogy dating back to the 1700's, but also includes information on Cape Town, our home, as well as the genealogy of the other roots of our family -  Groenewald, Berwick and Woodford.

About Cape Town
Our Branch of the Family
McQueen Family Genealogy
The Groenewald Family
The Berwick Family
The Woodford Family

Of specific interest to descendants of James McQueen of Girvan (Ayrshire, Scotland):

James McQueen of Girvan
Girvan Parish Records
The Caithness Highlanders
Girvan History

Webmaster contact details                 This web-page requires a minimum of 600 x 800 screen resolution                 Last update: 18 March 2017


Our Family

Early family photo

Harold Oscar McQueen, the eldest of three brothers, emigrated from London to what was then the Cape Colony towards the end of the 19th century, arriving in Cape Town about 1895. He married Julia Fourie and had a number of children, five of whom reached adulthood, married and had families. Four generations later, most of Harold Oscar's surviving descendants are still living in South Africa although many have moved from Cape Town.

Picture - Powderhorn
We have been interested in our family history  since at least the very early 1900s. This was probably sparked by a family heirloom in the form of a powder horn, originally owned by a James McQueen, who served in the British army during the Peninsula wars and who was killed at Waterloo. This powder horn - which was presumably hand made, purely as a decorative item - is now held by the Cape Town branch of the family.

Births, marriages and deaths, from the early 1800s until about 1920, have been recorded in the back of a family bible.

Powderhorn detail


Subsequent research has filled in missing details of past family members, but we have been unable to trace back the line with any certainty beyond the James McQueen of Waterloo. Although military records provide information on his place and date of birth (1773), records for the Scottish village of Girvan show that three children named James McQueen were baptised within a few weeks of one another (all possible related and at least two of them almost certainly cousins). Efforts to identify "our" James by eliminating one or two of the others through tracing their descendants have so far been unsuccessful.


Although we seemed to have reached a dead-end as far as tracing back further, we have managed to "trace forward" from James and find a number of our co-descendants (see our genealogy page).  The first James had two sons (that we know of) who grew up in the Colchester area, with the elder son (Alexander) having a large family of 10 children.  We have been able to make contact with a large group of Alexander's descendants now living in America. 

Our branch of the family are descended from the second son, named James after his father, who moved from Colchester to nearby Manningtree, where he established a saddle and harness business. In 1842 he married May Ann Paskell, who came from nearby Mistley. We still have some of his business cards, dating from this period, plus the engraved copper plate from which they were printed. James and Mary Ann later moved to London, where their children were born. We have been able to trace their McQueen descendants down to the present day and also trace Mary Ann's family, in some instances as far back as the late 1600s

Present Day Family

There have now been five generations of McQueens in South Africa descended from Harold Oscar (plus a number of other unrelated McQueen families), this particular "webmaster" being third generation. Most of my immediate family is still in Cape Town or surrounds, but a number of cousins and their children live in or around Johannesburg and Pretoria.

Top


Cape Town

view Table Mountain
Table Mountain, from across the bay

view Peninsula
Central Cape Town shelters in the bowl of Table Mountain, with it's suburbs spreading around the mountain and down the Cape Peninsula.  The Cape has beautiful beaches and a wealth of spectacular scenery, both around Cape Town and inland. The area is noted for it's fine wines. There are several comprehensive websites for the Western Cape, which include maps, pictures, tourist guides as well as hotel and similar information.


view- UCT



There are a number of excellent schools in and around Cape Town, many of the older ones being boys- or girls-only schools. Three generations of McQueen boys have attended SACS (who have a web-site well worth visiting).  There are several universities in or near Cape Town - the world's first heart-transplant was undertaken in 1967 at the University of Cape Town's medical school, attached to Groote Schuur hospital.

University of Cape Town

Protea


The Cape has a large variety of indigenous flora.  Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens, on the slopes of Table Mountain, is one of the oldest botanical gardens of it's type and exhibits a large variety of Cape vegetation.


Waterhole Picture
 
 

Much further afield, the Transvaal Lowveld offers some excellent game-viewing.  You can get the feel for this at the Africam site (or it's North American mirror), which provides live images from a range of waterhole cameras. It's well worth a visit.

Top


Cape Town Links

SA National Archives
Genealogical Society of South Africa
Online South African telephone directory
e-Family     Genealogical web-site (includes useful links)
Cape Town Tourism site
Maps of Cape Town and vicinity


Contact details

Top