Station Life in New Zealand by Mary Anne Barker (1831 - 1911)

By LibriVox

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Description

Station Life in New Zealand is a collection of cheerful and interesting letters written by Lady Mary Anne Barker (nee Mary Anne Stewart) that is a New Zealand "classic". These letters are described in the Preface as "the exact account of a lady's experience of the brighter and less practical side of colonisation". The letters were written between 1865 and 1868 and cover the time of her travel with her husband (Frederick Broomie) to New Zealand and life on a colonial sheep-station at their homestead "Broomielaw", located in the Province of Canterbury, South Island of New Zealand. Although these letters are written with great humour and fine story telling, her life was marred by tragedy while in Canterbury through the illness and eventual death of her baby son.

The first four ships of settlers that colonised the Canterbury region had only arrived in 1850. Consequently, little was known about, for example, the irregular Canterbury weather patterns that would dominate the lives of Lady Barker and her husband for those three short years. She describes the regular predations of the Canterbury nor'wester (a type of Fohn wind), including its role in completely blowing away her attempts at establishing a croquet lawn, the devastating effects of snow storm that killed over half of their sheep, and of a great flood that not only flooded Christchurch but demolished her poultry and nearly drowned her husband.

Lady Mary Anne Barker was a strong horse woman and very keen for all sorts of "adventures". She describes instigating a bitterly cold late autumn overnight camping trip to the top of their nearest hill, Flagpole, followed the next morning by a serene sunrise over the Canterbury plains. In other letters, she describes her pride and enjoyment at joining and keeping up with nine men, who doubted her abilities, for long hours of walking in untracked, untamed bush with the aim of hunting wild cattle; and her joy at setting ablaze the tussock grasslands on their sheep station in spite of the risk to her eyelashes. As one of the few women in her part of Canterbury at the time, she also helped provide the neighbourhood with books to read, and baptism and schools for children. Lady Mary Anne Barker and her husband returned to England at the end of 1868. (Summary by Gail Timmerman-Vaughan)

Episode Date
Letter XXV: How We lost our horses and had to walk home.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XXIV: My only fall from horseback.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XXIII: Concerning a great flood.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XXII: The exceeding joy of "burning."
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XXI: Wild cattle hunting in the Kowai Bush.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XX: the New Zealand snowstorm of 1867.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XIX: A Christening gathering.--the fate of Dick.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XVIII: A journey "down south."
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XVII: My first and last experience of "camping out."
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XVI: A sailing excursion on Lake Coleridge
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XV: Everyday station life.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XIV: A Christmas picnic, and other doings.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XIII: Bachelor hospitality.--a gale on shore.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XII: My first expedition.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter XI: Housekeeping, and other matters.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter X: Our station home.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter IX: Death in our new home--New Zealand children.
Jan 01, 1970
Letter VIII: Pleasant days at Ilam
Jan 01, 1970
Letter VII: A young colonist.--the town and its neighbourhood
Jan 01, 1970
Letter VI: Society.--houses and servants
Jan 01, 1970
Letter V: A pastoral letter
Jan 01, 1970
Letter IV: First introduction to "Station life"
Jan 01, 1970
Letter III: On to New Zealand
Jan 01, 1970
Letter II: Sight-seeing in Melbourne
Jan 01, 1970
Preface and Letter I: Two months at sea--Melbourne
Jan 01, 1970