Monday, August 18, 2014

A harbour romance

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What a story lies behind this Register of Marriage from 1860!

William Flower Blatchford arrived in Lyttleton in 1851 and was almost immediately employed by Samuel Manson as schoolteacher for the Manson and Gebbie children at the Head of the Bay. It seems as though the school itself was originally located in the Gebbie homestead of Greensland. Agnes, born in Scotland in 1840, was the oldest Manson child and it's unlikely that she had had any formal schooling until William’s arrival. Nine years later William and Agnes were married in the ‘Schoolhouse’ – which may, by then, have been a separate building on the north side of Gebbie’s Pass Road, opposite the yet-to-be-built St Peter’s.

In April 1861, William wrote of having

a nice little girl just 7 weeks old. She is a fine child and both mother and her are in good health, Thank God for it. She is to be baptised on Sunday next, and her name is to be Lydia Mary… I find that a wife adds to the cares of a man, but I am thankful to say we get on very well together.[1]

(What Agnes thought of married life we don’t know!)

A lovely accordion which belonged to William Flower Blatchford remains in the possession of the family.







[1] Letter from W.F. Blatchford to J.N. Flower, April 10 1861. Collection of Linda McFarlane.

1 comment:

  1. Hi, I'd be interested to know more about the marriage entry above. Was this wedding a Presbyterian one? 1860, so I think it must be, as the first marriage in St Cuthbert's register is in 1865 - the marriage of Agnes' sister, Jeannie Manson.

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