A Heritage in Two Threads — their names, their countries, their crossing —
Compiled April 2026 · From parish registers, civil records & passenger lists
Part the First
The Forsyth Line
Of the Border country — Dryfesdale, Lochmaben, Langholm — and the long Scottish chain of Forsyths, Martins, Camerons and Donaldsons that brought our great-great-grandmother into the world in March 1853.
The Forsyth surname is, even by Scottish standards, a name of unusually disputed origin. Black's Surnames of Scotland — the standard reference, in print since 1946 — gives it a "twofold" derivation: either from a now-lost place called Fersith in Midlothian, or from the Old Gaelic personal name Fearsithe, meaning "man of peace." A third tradition, less well evidenced but charmingly told, traces the family to a Norman nobleman de Fronsoc, whose ancestor Forsach was a Norseman granted lands on the Dordogne in Aquitaine.
Whichever theory is true, the surname is first reliably attested in 1296 — when one William de Fersith signed the Ragman Roll at Berwick, submitting in name to Edward I of England — and from that moment the Forsyths are documented continuously across the Scottish record for the next seven hundred years.
Our particular branch of the family belongs not to the famous Forsyths of Nydie in Fife, nor to the Forsyths of Stirling who fought at Bannockburn, but to the quieter Border country of the south-west — a country of low hills, slow rivers, peat-roofed cottages, sheep and cattle, and a long memory of the cross-border raiding of the 16th and 17th centuries. The earliest Forsyth in our direct line is one Joseph Forsyth, born around 1740 in this same Dumfriesshire country, his birthplace not yet pinned down by the parish records.
✦The Forsyth Line — Four Generations✦
From this Joseph the line passes to a younger Joseph Forsyth, born 25 March 1769 in Lochmaben — the same parish in which Robert the Bruce had been born five hundred years earlier. He married a local woman, Margaret Chalmers, born at Dryfesdale in 1781, daughter of William Chalmers and Agnes Caird. The Chalmers were themselves of Borders standing, and Margaret would live until 1847, by which time her son John was a man of thirty-four.
That son — John Forsyth, born 10 September 1813, also at Dryfesdale — is our great-great-great-grandfather. He married Susan Martin, born 22 August 1818 at Langholm in Lockerbie, into a family with a quite different geography behind it. The Martin line traces back through Edinburgh and the Aberdeenshire Highlands; Susan's mother's mother was a Janet Cameron of Langholm, whose own father Peter Cameron came from Alford in Aberdeenshire. Through Janet Cameron, the line reaches further still — back through generations of Camerons, Donaldsons of Dunfermline in Fife, and a recorded ancestor named Robert Donaldson, born about 1630, just as the wars of the Three Kingdoms were beginning.
Deeper Roots · The Martin–Cameron–Donaldson Lines
Eight generations into the Scottish past
Through Susan Martin (Helen's mother), the Forsyth line opens into a much wider Scottish ancestry — Martin of Edinburgh, Cameron of Aberdeenshire and Inverness, Donaldson of Fife, and several other strands. The deepest known ancestor on this side of the tree, Robert Donaldson, was born in Dunfermline around 1630 — eight generations before Helen, when Charles I was on the throne and the wars of the Three Kingdoms were just beginning.
G⁸ · Deepest knownDonaldson
Robert Donaldson
b. c. 1630
Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland
G⁷Donaldson
Issobell Bruce
b. 15 Oct 1648
Kirkcaldy, Fife
G⁷ · HighlandCameron
Ewen Cameron
b. c. 1675 — d. 1715
Aberdeenshire, Scotland
G⁷Munro
Hugh Munro
b. 1680
Inverness-shire, Scotland
G⁷Munro
Margaret Sym
b. Jul 1689
Alves, Moray, Scotland
G⁶Cameron
John Cameron
b. 6 Jun 1703 — d. 1745
Peterhead, Aberdeenshire
G⁶Martin
William Martin
b. 30 Sep 1764 — d. 9 Jan 1836
Edinburgh, Midlothian
G⁵Cameron
Peter Cameron
b. 3 Aug 1760 — d. 21 Mar 1846
Alford, Aberdeenshire
G⁵Martin
Thomas Martin
27 Apr 1793 — 2 Sep 1870
Kirkbean, Kincardineshire
G⁵Cameron
Janet Cameron
7 Jan 1792 — 3 Sep 1872
Langholm, Dumfriesshire
One striking pattern: the Forsyth maternal ancestry is far more Highland than the surname Forsyth itself would suggest. The Cameron, Munro, Sym and Cowie strands all lead back into Aberdeenshire, Inverness-shire and Moray — the Gaelic-speaking, Episcopalian-leaning north-east, very different from the Presbyterian Borders country that Helen herself was born into. The family had quietly migrated south within Scotland for about a century before it ever crossed an ocean.
On the surname
Forsyth /fɔːrˈsaɪθ/ — also Forsythe, Fersith
"Man of peace" — Gaelic Fearsithe · or, alternatively, from a lost Midlothian place-name Fersith.
The surname's first appearance in the Scottish record is William de Fersith, a signatory of the 1296 Ragman Roll. By the 14th century the family is established in Stirling, where Osbert filius Forsyth received a grant from Robert the Bruce after Bannockburn in 1314.
A more romantic tradition derives the name from Forsach, a Norseman who settled in Aquitaine and whose descendants supposedly travelled with Eleanor of Provence to the English court in 1236. The truth is that all three theories — Gaelic, Brittonic-locative, and Norman-Norse — are plausible, and the Borders Forsyths were probably formed from a fusion of several of them.
From Black, Surnames of Scotland (1946), pp. 271–272
Of John and Susan Forsyth's daughters, the one who concerns us most is Ellen Helen Susan Forsyth — born 17 March 1853 at Dryfesdale, baptised in the parish kirk, raised in the Borders countryside, and, at some point in her early or mid-twenties, sufficiently determined or sufficiently desperate to take ship for the Antipodes. The precise vessel and date of her passage are not yet recovered, but by 1880 she was in Sydney.
She had been born during the reign of Victoria, into a Britain still reeling from the Hungry Forties; she would die in another country altogether, on the central coast of New South Wales, in the first weeks of the First World War.
An Interlude · The Furthest Reach
The Longest Path
Of all the lines in Helen Forsyth's ancestry, one runs further into the past than any other — eight generations back, through the Donaldsons of Dunfermline in Fife, to a man born in the second year of King Charles I's personal rule. This is that path.
Generations traced
8back
Earliest birth year
c. 1630
Years spanned
223yrs
Relationship to Helen
6×great-gp.
0self
Origin point — the immigrant
Ellen Helen Susan Forsyth
b. 17 Mar 1853 — d. 5 Sep 1914
Dryfesdale, Dumfriesshire → Gosford, NSW
1853 — Mid-Victorian Britain. The Crimean War is eight months from breaking out. The Australian gold rushes are at their peak. Helen will be the only person in this entire chain to leave Scottish soil.
1mother
Helen's mother
Susan Martin
b. 22 Aug 1818 — d. 19 Aug 1907
Langholm, Lockerbie, Dumfriesshire
1818 — Regency Britain. Mary Shelley publishes Frankenstein. Napoleon has been on St Helena three years. Susan will live almost a full century, dying in 1907 — outlasting her own daughter by seven years.
2g.mother
Helen's grandmother
Janet Cameron
b. 7 Jan 1792 — d. 3 Sep 1872
Langholm, Dumfriesshire
1792 — The early French Revolution. Louis XVI is in his final months on the throne. Robert Burns, in nearby Dumfries, has four years left to live. Janet's father has just brought the family south from Aberdeenshire.
3g-g.mother
Helen's great-grandmother
Jean Donaldson
b. 4 Apr 1763
Langholm, Dumfries-shire
1763 — End of the Seven Years' War. Britain has just won Canada from France. James Watt is sketching out his improved steam engine. The Donaldson surname enters the line here, on Jean's father's side.
42× great
Helen's 2× great-grandfather
Henry Donaldson
b. 19 Jan 1733
Langholm / Dunfermline, Fife
1733 — Hanoverian Britain. George II is on the throne, twelve years before the Jacobite rising of 1745 reaches Edinburgh. The Scottish Enlightenment is just beginning. Henry will likely be alive when the family migrates south to Dumfriesshire.
53× great
Helen's 3× great-grandfather
Alexander Donaldson
b. 14 Dec 1703 — d. before 1799
Dunfermline, Fife
1703 — Scotland's last independent years. The Act of Union with England is four years away. Queen Anne is on the throne. Dunfermline is still living memory of being the burial place of Robert the Bruce.
64× great
Helen's 4× great-grandfather
Henry Donaldson
b. c. 1675
Beath, Dunfermline, Fife
c. 1675 — Restoration Scotland. Charles II has been restored fifteen years. The Killing Time of Covenanter persecution is just beginning in the south-west. The Bass Rock is being used as a prison for Presbyterian dissenters.
75× great
Helen's 5× great-grandfather
Alexander Donaldsone
b. 7 Mar 1655
Beath, Dunfermline, Fife
1655 — The Cromwellian Protectorate. Scotland is under English military occupation. Cromwell has dissolved the Long Parliament two years earlier. Alexander would be five years old at the Restoration of 1660. His name is recorded with the older spelling Donaldsone.
86× great
Deepest documented ancestor
Robert Donaldson
b. c. 1630
Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland
c. 1630 — The reign of Charles I. Robert is born in the second year of the King's eleven-year personal rule, before Parliament was recalled. The Bishops' Wars are nine years away; the English Civil War twelve; Charles I's execution at Whitehall, eighteen years and a few months from Robert's birth. He is the furthest back into Scottish history that Helen's ancestry has, so far, been traced.
Eight generations. Two hundred and twenty-three years. From a man born in the reign of Charles I to a woman who would cross the world on a steamship — and yet the entire chain takes place within a single small region of Scotland: Fife, then Dumfriesshire. Robert Donaldson and Helen Forsyth lived their lives less than fifty miles apart, separated only by time.
Part the Second
The Toepfer Line
Of a small village in central Saxony — Rockendorf in the Saalekreis — and the young Saxon who, before he was twenty-two, had crossed half the world to be married in a colonial city he had never seen.
If the Forsyth line is long and well-attested, the Toepfer line is, by contrast, deep but narrow — a very specific Saxon-German thread, of which the Australian record retains only the bare bones. We know the immigrant ancestor and his parents by name; we do not yet know with confidence the generation behind that, although the surname's distribution in the East German parishes makes the broad outline reasonably clear.
The surname Toepfer — properly written Töpfer, with the umlaut — is a straightforward German occupational name. It comes from Middle High German topf(e), "pot, vessel," with the agent suffix -er: Töpfer, "potter," "maker of earthenware." The name is first attested in the 12th century and was originally found only in the East German dialect zone — Saxony, Thuringia, Brandenburg and Silesia, the great pottery-producing region of medieval central Germany.
Our particular Toepfer line surfaces in Rockendorf, a small village in the Saalekreis — the district of the river Saale — in what is today the German state of Saxony-Anhalt. In the mid-19th century, when our ancestor was born, this region was part of the Kingdom of Prussia, which had absorbed the territories of the smaller Saxon principalities after the Napoleonic settlement of 1815. It was a country of small farming villages and Lutheran parish churches, of cold winters and quietly observant communities.
✦The Toepfer Line — Three Generations✦
What we know with certainty: Friedrich Carl Gottlob Toepfer was born on the third day of December, 1858, in Rockendorf. His parents, recorded in the Australian sources only by name, were Johann Gottlob Toepfer and Johanne Frederik Schimpf Pöpser, the latter born in 1819. The mother's surname Schimpf (or perhaps Pöpser — the Australian transcription is uncertain) is itself German, and the spelling is unusual enough that the Saxon parish records on Archion.de should be able to find her with patience.
Friedrich's three given names are themselves typical of Lutheran Saxon practice: Friedrich, after Frederick the Great, the name of every other Saxon boy of the period; Carl, after Karl Friedrich Schinkel or simply for the sound of the name; and Gottlob, "praise God," the kind of pious Lutheran middle name that Saxon families had been giving their sons for two hundred years. He was, in his name as in his upbringing, deeply ordinary for his time and place.
By the time he reached his early twenties, however, Friedrich had done something that was anything but ordinary. He had taken passage on a ship — almost certainly out of Hamburg or Bremen, which were the great German emigrant ports of the period — and had crossed three oceans to arrive in the British colony of New South Wales. The exact vessel is not yet known. What is known is that on the sixteenth of November, 1880, he stood in a Sydney church, scarcely a month short of his twenty-second birthday, and married a woman five and a half years his senior who had taken her own ship from another country altogether.
On the surname
Toepfer /ˈtœpfɐ/ — properly Töpfer
"Potter, maker of earthenware vessels" — from Middle High German topf(e), "pot."
The surname is first attested in the 12th century in the East German dialect zone, and is found in greatest concentration in Saxony, Thuringia, Brandenburg and Silesia — the historic pottery and ceramics country of central-eastern Germany. The earliest known bearer is one Hugo Topfari, recorded in Erfurt in the 12th century.
Like most occupational surnames, by the 18th century Töpfer had detached completely from the trade — a Töpfer in 1858 was no more likely to be a potter than a Smith was to be a blacksmith. Friedrich himself was no potter; he became a small farmer in coastal New South Wales.
From Hanks, Dictionary of American Family Names (2nd edn, 2022)
An Event
The Crossing
In which two strangers — born nearly two thousand miles apart and never in their lives within five hundred miles of each other — meet in a third country and marry within the year.
A Marriage at Sydney
On the sixteenth of November, eighteen hundred and eighty, in the colony of New South Wales —
The Groom
Friedrich Carl Gottlob Toepfer
Aged 21
of Rockendorf, Saxony-Anhalt
&
The Bride
Ellen Helen Susan Forsyth
Aged 27
of Dryfesdale, Dumfriesshire
16 NOVEMBER 1880
— Sydney, New South Wales —
NSW Pioneer Index · Marriage No. 1318 · 1880 · "Helen Forsyth & Fritz Toepfer"
Consider the unlikelihood. Two people from countries nearly two thousand miles apart — who almost certainly never knew of one another's existence twelve months earlier — were married in a colonial port that itself had been founded only ninety-two years before their wedding day. He, a Lutheran-raised Saxon barely out of his teens; she, a Presbyterian-raised Borders Scotswoman five and a half years his senior. They would not, in any other century or in any other set of historical accidents, have met.
Their first child was born less than a year later. Frederick John Toepfer, named for both his parents in the Anglo-German style, was born at Brown Street, Camperdown — an inner-Sydney suburb that was then on the city's western edge — on 25 October 1881. He died seven months later. The couple bore the loss and continued.
Over the next sixteen years they would have nine more children, four of them in inner Sydney (Camperdown, Newtown), the rest at Hue Hue, near Wyee on the New South Wales central coast, where they had taken up rural land. Nine of the ten survived to adulthood. By the time their last son was born in 1897, Friedrich was thirty-eight years old and Helen was forty-four; they had been married for seventeen years and had become Australians.
They lived together for thirty-three years and then Helen died, on the fifth of September 1914, at Gosford on the central coast — a woman of sixty-one. Friedrich outlived her by fifteen years, finally dying at Hue Hue on the twenty-fifth of July 1929, aged seventy. They are both buried near the rural land they had farmed.
In Their Time
A Century in Outline
Each milestone of the family, set against what was happening elsewhere in the world that year. The two threads run in parallel for fifty years before they converge — and the convergence happens in a year already crowded with other Australian history.
176925 March
Joseph Forsyth born at Lochmaben, Dumfriesshire — the eldest known Forsyth in our direct line.
In the worldJames Watt patents the improved steam engine. Captain Cook, that same year, sails the Endeavour for the Pacific.
181310 September
John Forsyth born at Dryfesdale — the man who would become Helen's father.
In the worldThe Napoleonic Wars are still raging; Wellington has just driven the French out of Spain. Jane Austen publishes Pride and Prejudice in January.
185317 March
Ellen Helen Susan Forsyth born at Dryfesdale, Dumfriesshire.
In the worldThe Crimean War begins eight months later. In Australia, the Victorian gold rush is at its peak; Ballarat is overflowing with diggers.
18583 December
Friedrich Carl Gottlob Toepfer born at Rockendorf, Saalekreis — the only surviving record-name from the Saxon side.
In the worldThe Indian Mutiny has just been suppressed. Charles Darwin is finalising the manuscript of On the Origin of Species, to be published the following year.
188016 November
Friedrich Toepfer ⨯ Helen Forsyth — married at Sydney. He twenty-one, she twenty-seven, both new arrivals in the colony.
In the worldFive days earlier, on 11 November, Ned Kelly is hanged at Old Melbourne Gaol — the colonial Australia they are marrying into is the Australia of the Kelly outbreak. The Sydney Harbour Bridge is fifty-two years from being built.
188125 October
Frederick John Toepfer born at Brown Street, Camperdown — the first child. He will live seven months.
In the worldTsar Alexander II of Russia is assassinated by anarchists in March; the gunfight at the OK Corral takes place in October.
1887
Ellen Toepfer born at Newtown, Sydney — the fourth child of the marriage.
In the worldQueen Victoria's Golden Jubilee. Sherlock Holmes appears for the first time in A Study in Scarlet. The colony of New South Wales is approaching its centenary.
1890
The family moves to Hue Hue, near Wyee on the NSW central coast. Mary Jane Toepfer is the first child born there.
In the worldThe great Maritime Strike paralyses Sydney and Melbourne. Vincent van Gogh dies in July. Federation is still eleven years away.
19145 September
Helen Forsyth dies at Gosford, NSW, aged 61. She had been married for thirty-three years and ten months.
In the worldThe First World War has been under way for five weeks. Australian troops are mustering for what will become the Gallipoli campaign.
192925 July
Friedrich Toepfer dies at Hue Hue, aged 70. He has outlived Helen by fifteen years.
In the worldThree months later, the Wall Street Crash will end the Roaring Twenties and begin the Great Depression. The age the couple were married in is, by then, finally over.
By the Numbers
A Marriage in Figures
Some of the numbers underneath the story — the distances, the durations, the gaps and the spans of two lives that crossed three oceans.
Distance — Dryfesdale to Sydney
17,500km
Helen's crossing — by Suez or the Cape
Distance — Rockendorf to Sydney
16,800km
Friedrich's crossing — most likely from Hamburg
Distance between their birthplaces
1,400km
The gap they bridged — across the North Sea
Helen's age at marriage
27
years & 8 months
Friedrich's age at marriage
21
years & 11 months
Age difference (Helen older)
5y 8m
unusual for the period
Children — born
10
over seventeen years
Children — surviving to adulthood
9
a 90% survival rate, very high for 1880s
Years of marriage
33y 10m
until Helen's death in 1914
Friedrich's widowerhood
14y 10m
at Hue Hue, until 1929
Combined years on Australian soil
≈ 86
Friedrich ~49y, Helen ~37y
Last surviving child died
1977
Mary Jane Toepfer, aged 86
An Atlas
The Two Crossings
A genealogical chart of the two journeys — Old World on the left, New World on the right — with the deep ancestral roots of the Forsyth line on the Scottish side, and the long curving paths of both crossings sweeping toward Sydney.
Forsyth · 17,500 km
Dryfesdale, Scotland
~ TWO LONG CROSSINGS · CIRCA 1879–1880 ~
Toepfer · 16,800 km
Rockendorf, Saxony
— The Old World —
Origins of the Two Lines
Scotland · Saxony
— The New World —
Where They Met & Settled
New South Wales · Australia
Forsyth places
Toepfer places
Sydney & NSW · the meeting
The two maps above show the geographies that produced the family. The Old World map carries seven locations: the two birthplaces of the immigrants themselves (Dryfesdale and Rockendorf), and five locations on the Forsyth side that mark the deeper Scottish migration of the Donaldson, Cameron and Martin lines, who travelled the long axis of Scotland from Aberdeenshire through Fife to Dumfriesshire over the course of about a century before Helen ever left.
The New World map shows where the family went after their marriage in 1880: the inner-Sydney suburbs of Camperdown and Newtown where five of their children were born, and then the central-coast country around Wyee and Gosford where they took up rural land in the 1890s and where they both eventually died.
Each marker carries an annotation; click any of them for the detail. Hold shift while scrolling to zoom; click and drag to pan.
The Issue
Ten Children
From the union of November 1880 came ten children, of whom nine survived to adulthood. Each carried both threads of the inheritance — Saxon and Borders Scottish — and each began a separate Australian line.
Friedrich Toepfer & Helen Forsyth
married Sydney · 16 November 1880
↓
First child
Frederick John Toepfer
25 Oct 1881 — 16 May 1882
Brown Street, Camperdown
Died in infancy. Named for both parents in the Anglo-German manner.
Second child
William Charles Toepfer
8 Mar 1883 — 8 Jul 1971
Camperdown, Sydney
Lived 88 years. Died at Cessnock in the Hunter Valley.
Third child
Maggie Ann Toepfer
1885 — 7 Nov 1956
Newtown, Sydney
Died at Rockdale, NSW.
Fourth child
Ellen Toepfer
c. 1887 — 11 Oct 1974
Newtown, Sydney
Married William Syme McLean of Bathgate, Scotland, in 1916. Lived 87 years.
Fifth child
Mary Jane Toepfer
30 Aug 1890 — 18 Jun 1977
Hue Hue, Wyee
First child born after the move to the country. Lived 86 years.
Sixth child
George Frederick Toepfer
1893 — 4 Dec 1971
NSW
Died at Gosford, where his mother had died fifty-seven years earlier.
Seventh child
James Joseph Toepfer
27 Feb 1895 — 22 Nov 1942
Gosford, NSW
The shortest-lived of the survivors. Died at Sydney Adventist Hospital, Wahroonga.
Eighth child
John Toepfer
1897 — 9 Jun 1963
Gosford, NSW
Died at Wyong, on the central coast where the family had settled.
Ninth child
Frank Toepfer
1897 — 27 Aug 1953
Gosford, NSW
Possibly twin to John, born in the same year.
Nine of the ten children lived into the twentieth century; six lived past 1960; the eldest survivor, Mary Jane, lived to 1977 — the year of Star Wars and the death of Elvis Presley. The marriage of November 1880 was already, by then, a cultural ancestor.
Open Questions
Notes for Further Research
A short list of the things this account does not yet establish — and where, with patience, the records might still be found.
Toepfer · Saxony
Friedrich's parents and grandparents
The Australian record gives us only Johann Gottlob Toepfer and Johanne Frederik Schimpf Pöpser by name, with no birth dates or specific Saxon villages. The Saalekreis parish records, however, are well-preserved and largely Lutheran.
The most productive single source is likely Archion.de — the digitised German Protestant church books — which covers most of Saxony-Anhalt for the 18th and 19th centuries.
Toepfer · Migration
Friedrich's ship and date of arrival
We know he was in Sydney by November 1880 to be married, but no inwards-passenger record has yet been identified. Most German emigrants of the period sailed from Hamburg or Bremen.
The Hamburg passenger lists, indexed by year and surname, are searchable on ancestry.com as the Hamburg Passenger Lists 1850–1934 collection.
Forsyth · Migration
Helen's ship and date of arrival
Helen arrived in NSW some time between her birth in 1853 and her marriage in 1880 — a window of twenty-seven years. Most likely she came as an assisted immigrant in her late teens or early twenties, in the 1870s.
The NSW assisted-immigrant records, indexed by name, are held by State Records NSW. Worth searching records.nsw.gov.au directly.
Forsyth · Older generations
Forsyths before 1740
The current oldest Forsyth in this line is Joseph Forsyth, born about 1740. The Lochmaben and Dryfesdale parish registers begin earlier than that, however, and the Forsyths of southern Dumfriesshire are densely recorded.
The Old Parish Registers (OPR) on ScotlandsPeople.gov.uk are pay-per-view but extraordinarily detailed.
Cameron · Highland Connection
The Camerons of Aberdeenshire
The deepest known Cameron in the line is Ewen Cameron, born about 1675 in Aberdeenshire. This places the family in the Highland-Lowland borderland that produced many of the Jacobite Camerons of the 1715 and 1745 risings — though no direct involvement is documented.
Aberdeen and Inverness episcopal records (less complete than Presbyterian ones) might extend the line another two generations.
All sides · DNA
Y-chromosome and mitochondrial DNA
If a male-line Toepfer descendant takes a Y-DNA test, the haplogroup would tell us about the deep paternal origins of the Saxon line. Similarly, an unbroken female-line descendant of Helen Forsyth could test mitochondrial DNA to trace her direct maternal ancestry — back potentially tens of thousands of years.
The relevant tests are sold by FamilyTreeDNA.com; both Y-67 and mtFull-Sequence cost a few hundred dollars.
Photographs
Surviving images of the couple
By the 1880s, formal portrait photography was widely affordable in colonial Sydney, and most settler families of moderate means owned at least one photographic record. No image of either Friedrich or Helen has yet been located in the family archive — but cousin Australians may have inherited copies.
Worth canvassing other descendant lines (the William Charles Toepfer branch, especially, may have retained materials).
✦ ✦ ✦
For Helen
A coda · on names & what they carry
The given name Helen and the surname Forsyth, carried together, are the most particular naming inheritance possible from this branch of the family. They are the name of the woman from Dryfesdale who, alone of her parents and grandparents and great-grandparents, ever crossed an ocean — the immigrant herself, written forward.
That is not an accidental survival. Names in families travel forward by deliberate choice. The grandparents and great-grandparents who chose, generation after generation, to keep the form Helen in use, and to keep Forsyth attached to it, were doing what families do: marking the ancestor they did not want to lose.
The Saxon thread runs alongside the Borders one. From Friedrich Toepfer comes the German half of the inheritance — a surname meaning simply potter, attached originally to a long-forgotten medieval ancestor in the East German pottery country, and brought across the world by a man born in Rockendorf, a Saxon village small enough to walk end-to-end in twenty minutes.
Together these two threads — the Borders Scottish thread that runs back eight generations to Robert Donaldson of Dunfermline in 1630, and the Saxon thread that ends, for now, at Friedrich's parents in Rockendorf in the 1850s — are the substance of what was begun by the marriage of November 1880. Not a single deep-rooted ancestry, but a paired inheritance from two countries that, in any other century, would have had no reason ever to meet.
Both halves of that inheritance are carried, equally and completely, in the name Helen Forsyth.