Friday 21 November 2014

Sepia Saturday 255: Handcrafts

Well I don't know any silhouette artists like the picture for this weeks Sepia Saturday, but my great great grandmother, Mary, was into handcrafts such as embroidery.  So I'm posting a photo of her with some other ladies who also look like they were into embroidery and other crafts.


From left to right:  Jessie Susan Wright nee Harris and two children, unknown girl, Mary Lord nee Meng and likely her daughter Elise May Lord (known as May), unknown child and woman.

This photo was most likely taken in Ohoka, as Jessie and Mary lived in Ohoka at this time (around 1898).  The unknown girl of about age sixteen has a black band around her white sleeve, indicating that a family member has recently died.

The woman on the right who is unnamed, has some close relationship to Mary as she is in a family wedding photo that I own.  I have no idea who she is however!  Very frustrating.

I like the way the photo is set up.  It is casual but has a sheepskin on the ground for the children to sit on and a couple of cushions, also a rug I think, to add a tiny bit of luxury.  Behind are what look like some hollyhocks and climbers going up a fence.  Where the photo was taken exactly, I have no idea, but it was likely in Ohoka in someones back garden.  I like the way the babies in the photo have gone blurry as they wouldn't sit still long enough to capture their wee faces correctly.  So they are still a blur over 100 years later.

The Harris and Meng families must have been very close and were friends their whole lives.  Mary and the Harris girls would have gone to Ohoka School together in the 1870s.  I can imagine them as young Mums getting together to do their craft work and have a cup of tea occasionally!

We still have many pieces of craft work done by Mary.  I'm guessing she probably did the dress on May Lord who is sitting on her lap.

Thursday 13 November 2014

Sepia Saturday 254: Couples on the water

I'm writing again about my grandparents and their adventures on the water. My Pop, Grant, who was known as Jack, owned a boat which he took out fishing etc. My Grandma Doreen was a keen fisherwoman also. The photo from this weeks Sepia Saturday of a couple crossing a river, reminded me of one I have taken on Lake Forsyth on what appears to be a leisure trip in about the 1960s.


The hill behind the clinching couple on the Sepia Saturday website, looks a bit like the hill in the following photo.  But that is where the likeness ends.  Most of us Kiwi women get our feet wet.  Out of necessity and the willingness to get dirty and try anything.  My Grandma obviously had to get out and push the boat as well.  Many hands make light work.  NZ women are not scared of a bit of dirty cold water.  She is in a lovely dress that she would have sewn herself (Grandma was a dressmaker).  And she has a scarf on her head.  It looks fairly windy as her dress is blowing against her legs. 


This lake sits between Birdlings Flat, a stark and wonderful stoney beach with wild waves and extreme weather conditions, and Little River, a very small town which sometimes turns in to a river during flooding events. It is a great wee community and a lot of artists and alternative lifestyle people live there. Lake Forsyth these days is quite full of algal blooms and general disgustingness due to it being often land locked and the effluent from surrounding cow farms flowing into it. Too much nitrogen, perfect for algae to grow! My Grandma said that in the past they used to open up the sea entrance to the lake to let the fresh seawater in, but this is not always done these days. I wasn't sure why, but have just read on wikipedia that these attempts at opening up the lake didn't improve the water quality very much. I went sailing on this lake once and was warned not to fall in as I would end up with some sort of gastro bug or poisoning from algae. Anyway back to the fishing couple. Here is another photo of that day but with more people in the boat and a small boy onshore.


I don't know who the extra people are in the boat and can't really recognise them.  The boy on shore could have been my Uncle Bill, but I can't see enough of him.

I have taken photos of this lake with amazing reflections and have also painted this scene, so know every crack and line well. It is a fascinating, yet very polluted lake.

Saturday 8 November 2014

Dora Agnes Jenkins - a lovely photo

I often mention about my wonderful collection of old photos and how I can't name many of them as no one has written on the backs of them. Well the other day I decided to research one of the few photos that was actually written on. The name on the back said "Dora Agnes Jenkins" aged 4, July/15 1893. This photo was taken in Wellington and is now 121 years old. Amazing when you think about how old it is.


Dora Agnes Jenkins
I had no idea who Dora was so started doing some research. I found that she was born in 1887 to Francis John and Sarah Oram Jenkins. Who they were, I had no idea. I then found out that Dora never married in her lifetime and died in 1963 aged 77. This made me want to find out more about her. She probably had no children and therefore no grandchildren or great grandchildren to remember her when she was gone. And there is probably no one else researching her except me. It is quite sad really.

I tried to find when the family had arrived in NZ and found them on the ship Hereford in 1879 arriving into Canterbury with the following family members listed:

Francis J. Jenkins aged 33 of Middlesex, compositor
Sarah Jenkins aged 28
Frank M. J. aged 7
Melville A. F. aged 4
Beatrice aged 1

They also had more children in New Zealand, Arthur Edwin, 1881, Charles Alexander in 1883, Alfred Oram in 1885 and Thomas William, 1893.

I'm guessing this family got to know my family somehow through being neighbours or going to the same church, so I searched some more.  I couldn't find any obvious links.  I couldn't find the history of the family in Christchurch and I am pretty sure they were not related to my family.  The photo was taken in Wellington, so it is assumed the family lived there, not in Christchurch.

I found out that her father passed away in 1905 of a workplace accident at the Government Printing Office.  Dora's mother Sarah had received some compensation but wanted more.  She would have been struggling to survive.  Sarah remarried in 1909 to Mr. Rees Watkins of Petone. Dora Jenkins wore a pretty dress of white muslin and was one of the bridesmaids. She would have been 22 at the time and probably quite lovely.

Dora though never married and I can't find anything else about her.  Hopefully she had a good life.  She was a dear little girl in the photo!



Monday 3 November 2014

Sepia Saturday 253: Angling and fishermen

My Pop was a keen fisherman.  I'm posting this very special picture of him fishing at the mouth of the Kaiapoi River where it feeds into the Waimakariri River, Canterbury, New Zealand.  His name was Grant but everyone called him Jack instead for some strange reason.  He was a watersider, so took loads off ships.  He did his back in hooking great big loads and carrying them on his poor back.  He was also a Kiwi joker - pranks, nicknames for people and general craziness.





On the day of this photo in 1947, he was trying to catch salmon whilst standing on a Waimak Flattie, a kind of flat boat which was commonly used on this large braided river to get around.  He is using an old fashioned cane fishing rod.  Did he have success that day?  No, not according to my Grandma.

My Grandma was sitting on the bank embroidering.  She was with her parents.  Grant was her boyfriend.  I'm guessing my photographic great grandfather Arthur Cyril Pearce took this photo.  My Grandma carried this photo around with her, showing everyone her new boyfriend.  The photo became creased and worn out.  We found it in one of her old albums and she was surprised to find it.  I had never seen it before and instantly loved it.  I took it home and took out the creases with photoshop. 



As I was doing the repair work on the photo, I noticed how young my Pop was.  He still had the lankiness of youth, but quite muscley arms from all the labouring type work he did.  He also had a baby face.  His tongue is hanging out in concentration as he casts out.

In the distance you can see other boats, other anglers trying their luck in the Waimakariri.  Grant is casting towards Stewart's Gully which is a little bunch of cottages and holiday homes where my Grandma used to go for holidays and where she first met Grant. 


My grandparents fished all their lives, catching many fish and having many adventures and lovely experiences in nature.  My Pop died very young, in his 50s.  I knew him until I was about five years old, so can't remember him very well.  At his funeral everyone laughed when they saw a sticker on the back of his car which read, "Old fishermen don't die, they just smell bad."

Saturday 1 November 2014

Sepia Saturday 252: An Anniversary for the Ohoka School

In 1937 it was the Diamond Jubilee for the Flaxton-Ohoka School.  I don't have any pictures of the event but I do have a menu and schedule of events for the evening. 

The function was held at the Wetheral Grain Store, a building which I'm guessing doesn't exist anymore. I wonder how fancy this place was or whether it was just a big shed? Wetheral is a teeny place between Kaiapoi and Ohoka.  It was held on 20 October 1937 at 6.30pm.  I'm guessing my Great Grandma Dorothy Pearce nee Lord would have attended this since she attended the Ohoka school many years before. 

The menu is interesting.  It was called a "banquet" and consisted of ham, tongue, corned beef, salad and bread.  As well as savouries, cakes, pastry, fruit salad, trifle and cream.  The drinks consisted of tea, coffee and soft drinks.  No booze at this party!

People mentioned in the schedule of events included Rev. H. Cottom who said grace.  M. Holton and Mrs S. L. Orchard who helped to cut the Jubilee Cake.  Toasts were made to Parliament, the education board, ex-pupils, school teachers past and present, the school committee past and present, the ladies and the newpapers.  People involved included Mr. Mayer, Williams, Banks, Spencer, Steele,  Wright, Knight, Newnham, Heald, Martyn, Ivory, Orchard and Mrs Ostler and Miss Parkin.

The brochure was printed by Kaiapoi Record Print and there was a space on the back for autographs but my Great Grandma got none that night and her programme was left blank. 

Does anyone else have old menus in their photo collections?