A couple of years ago, I had one of my periodic coups de coeur. I saw the picture of a lovely young lady from Christchurch, NZ, on e-bay and decided to investigate just who she had been. I didn't do too bad a job either. And I went so far as to visit her grave, and then to spend a few week's pension money on having it restored. Well, I told you: coup de coeur. We all do things on the spur of the moment. I, more than most folk! And I rounded off the story with a bloglet ..
https://kurtofgerolstein.blogspot.com/2018/11/a-woman-of-canterbury-end-of-story.html
The end of the story? Not at all. This week I received a wonderful note from a present day member of little Lucy's family! A descendant of one of the nephews and nieces ...
When you do history, it is all too easy to get 'facts' right, but the colour wrong. It is all too easy, also, to make mistakes if you are not very very careful. I try to be punctilious. I try very hard. But ... so, here is my original article (version two) with a few explanations, some colour, and some corrections
SAXTON, Lucy Harriet (b Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire 21 January 1843; d Harewood Road, Papanui, Christchurch 8 October 1926).
Lucy photographed in Matlock circa 1860 |
Lucy, brother George Henry (b Darley 14 Sept 1836; d Karori, Wellington 18 September 1914), and sisters Ann Elizabeth (b Darley 29 December 1837; d 10 April 1869) and Mary (b Darley 19 May 1839; d Matlock 29 July 1876) were the children of the Reverend Solomon Cadman Saxton, formerly curate of Darley north and south, and then perpetual curate of St James’s, Hill, Sutton Coldfield (b Matlock 17 April 1796; d Hill Parsonage 28 August 1859). Yes, a minor provincial clergyman of the type so dear to Mrs Gaskell. Solomon, educated at Cambridge, doesn’t seem to have been of any noteable lineage. His brother, George, was the Matlock pub keeper, his four sisters, three, at least, eternal virgins, lived long lives as ‘fundholders’ until, latterly, obliged to take in the odd paying guest. Solomon, of course, being a clergyman, married (Elizabeth Cardwell) and bred, though rather less exaggeratedly than most Victorian clergymen: just four surviving children, before Elizabeth died (24 December 1874 aged 36), when Lucy was only months old.
And then, in 1859, Solomon died. In 1861, Ann is working as a governess and Mary can be seen with her two younger stepdaughters, living in Leamington Priors. Or rather, not seen: ‘mother absent’ noted the census. Mary did at Long Buckley, Northants in 1882.
Four ‘orphans’. George moved first. From his education at Christ’s Hospital, and whatever he had done since, he emigrated. When? I first see him in Akaroa in 1865. Nearly 30 years of age. And a sheep farmer! Do they teach drenching and dagging at Christ’s Hospital?
Ann moved next. She got married. The gentleman was an Irishman by name Henry Crawford, and of him I know nothing. But the family does "He died in 1883 but Ann did not die until 1917, in Dublin. She had four children, the last born 1880".
So, by the time of the 1871 census, we have just Mary (30) and Lucy (27), helping the elderly aunts with their genteel lodging house in Matlock. But then, all that fell apart. Sister Mary died at 35, auntie Alice had died in 1869, now auntie Mary Ann died at 84, and auntie Harriet in 1877 …
I imagine that, some time around now, as the last Saxton standing in Matlock, Lucy decided to join brother George. As maiden sisters did. I hope, after the parsonage at Hill, she was prepared for Akaroa. ‘Miss Saxton and the Misses Williams have thirty pupils at Robinson’s Bay’ wrote the local paper in 1881 …
In 1911, Lucy is recorded as living at Geraldine ‘Waihi Terrace, spinster’ ("with her nephew George Cadman Saxton"), by 1914 she is back in the city, at 299 Tuam Street, where she stayed for a number of years, seemingly sometime in the company of Miss ?Mary Kiver, who took ‘decorative classes’ for the Horticultural Society … I see the two of them donating regularly a pound or a guinea to various war and patriotic charities (Sailor’s Day, Navy War Fund Appeal, British and Foreign Sailors Society, Soldier’s Christmas Fund, Prisoners of War Appeal, Jubilee Memorial and Queen’s Statue Fund ..). ("she was actually living with the Kiver family - a widowed mother and three daughters")
So, I don’t imagine Lucy was entirely alone. Or was she? George, who died in 1914 (18 September, The Terrace, Karori) had had a number of a not very durable wives ("the first two died of post partum infection"), and a number of children therefrom, but oddly, when she herself died, in 1926, Lucy named as her executor Mr Harry Anderson, engineer, Christchurch agent for the firm of Reid & Gray, of Dunedin, manufacturers of farm implements …
Lucy’s ashes lie in the graveyard of St Paul’s Church, Papanui. In the same road as her last home.
The family has a lovely memento of Lucy ... "My mother has a hip flask that was Lucy's, crystal cut glass with a fitted silver cup and silver stopper. It appears to have been given to Lucy as a 'welcome to NZ gift' potentially by Samuel Farr, a friend of brother George and recognised as an architect in early Christchurch. The cup has her initials LHS on one side and SF on the other. He was married so there is no suggestion there was any romantic attachment, and there is no record of any other suitors either".
So, there we are. Lucy has another dimension. Thank you Rosalyn and Ross for all the red bits of text, I am very glad indeed that I picked on Lucy for my gut-reaction researches, and delighted that my pension was so very well-spent!
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