UK Outward Passenger Lists
Departed London, November 8 1907 on the S.S. Johannesburg”destination Cape Town, South Africa, Cabin passengers
A. K. [Ada Kate] Slatter, married female, age 29
A. A. [Arthur Alexander] Slatter, officer South African Constabulary, married male age 34
K. M. [Kathleen Marion] Slatter, female, age 2
Lizzie Baxter?, domestic servant, single female
J. L [Joan Lois] Capell, female, age 2
A. A. [Algernon Arthur] Capell, male, age 4
L. E. [Lois Ethel] Capell, married female, age 30
A. E. [Algernon Essex] Capell, soldier, married male age 37
[Note: Arthur Alexander Slatter and Lois Ethel Capell (nee Slatter) were siblings]
UK Outward Passenger Lists
Departed Southampton, Sptember 28, 1910 on the Oruba, destination Grenada, 1st class
Major A. E. Capell, married male
Mrs. A. E. Capell, married female
Miss J. Capell, female child
Master A. Capell, male child
Miss [?] Capell, male infant
Possibly with then Miss P. Penny, maid, single female
Listed as a first class passenger on the Oruba (Royal Mail Steam Packet Company) arrived Southampton July 7, 1913, departed Trinidad,
Algernon Essex Capell, army age 43,
Lois Ethel Capell age 34,
Algernon Capell age 9,
Joan Capell age 7,
Robert Capell age 4.
Permanent address Grenada. They seem to be accompanied by a governess.
Zimbabwean Government Gazette, July 4 1986
Notice to Creditors and Debtors
Estate 640/86,
Joan Lois Evans, died April 28 1986, within 30 days, Harare Board of Executors (Pvt.) Ltd.
Joan Evans - Rhodesian Artist from
http://www.flf-rasa.org/home/wordpress/?p=91“I get an enormous amount of pleasure out of my work, and people seem to like my pictures:’ says the Rhodesian artist, Joan Evans, whose interest in painting “started, I think, when I was about two years old.”
Her talent continued to grow under the guidance of her father, Colonel Capell, a former Commissioner of Police, but as a child, Joan “never went to art school” and then “hadn’t much time for painting” during the first twenty-two years of her married life, which were spent on a farm in Bindura. Later, however, she began working in oils in Salisbury and her first exhiÂbition was opened by the then Sir Godfrey Huggins in the State lottery Hall in 1953. A further exhibition in 1960 established her in the public eye and, since then, “people have got used to my style of painting and they particularly want me to do M’sasas because these are Rhodesian,” while her landscapes have become symbolic too.
for more go to the website above
also
https://www.flf-rasa.org/home/JoanEvans/JoanEvans.htmlher paintings
http://www.flf-rasa.org/home/plogger/?level=album&id=4