Smallpox vaccination at the edges of the Empire
24th Jun 2024 - Blog
When you read old books, you often come across things that have a strong connectivity. Often what seems to be
Amidst the European accounts of early New Zealand, a book written by a woman stands out. Not only for its uniqueness, but often for its different point of view. Women like Charlotte Godley had a sharp eye for events, social niceties, people, and the trials of the early settler, particularly for what women had to endure. Maria Thomson (1807-1875) was such a woman, and became another rarity, a successful businesswomen in her own right in early Canterbury. She wrote an account of her travels in New Zealand, misleadingly titled Twelve Years in Canterbury, misleading because she fails to write anything about her twelve years, the book being an account of her travels in New Zealand before sailing back to England. Nevertheless, its a good read, and there is one other thing. She calls herself Mrs C Thomson all through her life, carrying her dead husband’s name, Charles, to her grave, in the Barbadoes Street Cemetery in Christchurch. Here’s a short piece on her and her book.
24th Jun 2024 - Blog
When you read old books, you often come across things that have a strong connectivity. Often what seems to be
24th Aug 2024 - Blog
In the 1790s you could distract yourself from the French Revolution across the Channel, and all its threats, by indulging