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We can connect 10 things related to 1850, Canterbury Association, and 1800 to the places on this map.
Manuscript

Rose, Conway Lucas, fl 1851-1853 : Letters to his sister Issy about life in the Canterb...

Date: 25 Mar 1852, 20 Oct 1853

By: Rose, Conway Lucas, active 1851-1853

Reference: MS-Papers-3205

Description: Letters to his sister, describing the Canterbury settlement and Christchurch. Letter of 25 Mar 1852 is also signed "and Louie" (ie Louisa Rose). Source of title - Supplied title Relationship complexity - Typescript at MS-1831 Conway Rose was an emigrant who arrived in Canterbury on the "Midlothian", with his wife Louisa George Rose, on 8 Oct 1851, under the auspices of the Canterbury Association. The Roses settled in Christchurch intending to stay in the settlement for ten years but left after only three. His sister "Issy" remained in England. Quantity: 1 folder(s) (16 pages). 0.01 Linear Metres. Physical Description: Holograph Processing information: Formerly Misc MS 654

Other

Selfe, Henry Selfe, 1810-1870 : Correspondence

Date: 1853-1857

By: Selfe, Henry Selfe, 1810-1870

Reference: MSX-8815

Description: Correspondence mainly concerns the Canterbury Association and the settlement of Canterbury Source of title - Transcribed Quantity: 1 volume(s) (27 pages). 0.02 Linear Metres. Physical Description: Typescript (26cm, blue pamphlet case)

Manuscript

Wakefield, Edward Gibbon, 1796-1862 : Letters to R S Rintoul and Miss H Rintoul

Date: [1852-1853]

By: Wakefield, Edward Gibbon, 1796-1862

Reference: MS-2207

Description: Written from Plymouth, then Wellington and Christchurch. Describes the voyage to New Zealand on the Minerva, life and manners in Wellington and Christchurch, the scenery, prospects for the colony, political situation, especially with regard to Sir George Grey and the individual settlements, the concept of colonization; discusses various identities such as Sewell, Bellairs etc. Source of title - Transcribed Quantity: 1 volume(s). 0.02 Linear Metres. Physical Description: Typescript (25cm, various paginations, ¼ dark blue roan)

Map

[Creator unknown] :Plan of Christchurch [ms map]. [185-?]

Date: 1850 - 1860

Reference: MapColl-832.4492bje/[185-?]/Acc.39360

Description: Cadastral plan of Christchurch City, from the government Domain, the river Avon, and including streets bounded by Antigua, St Asaph, Barbadoes and Salisbury streets. Sections are numbered. Cathedral, Cranmer, and Latimer squares are shown, as is the market place, cattle market, abattoir, market garden, and reserves for schools and churches. Some sections are marked with a letter. The reference key shows these as: (H) - allotments held by Mr Hawden by grant from the Canterbury Association; (h) - lots originally granted to Mr Hawden by the Association; (A) - lots held by Mr Aitken; (a) - lots originally granted to Mr Aitken and (A & H) - lots held jointly by Mr Aitken and Mr Hawden. Quantity: 1 map(s) on 8 sheets. Physical Description: Photocopy, scale indeterminable, 38 x 25.5 cm.

Manuscript

Rose, Conway Lucas, fl 1851-1853 : Letters to his sister Issy about life in the Canterb...

Date: 25 Mar 1852, 20 Oct 1853

By: Rose, Conway Lucas, active 1851-1853

Reference: MS-1831

Description: Letters to his sister, describing the Canterbury settlement and Christchurch. Letter of 25 Mar 1852 is also signed "and Louie" (ie Louisa Rose). Source of title - Supplied title Relationship complexity - Original holograph letters at MS-Papers-3205 Conway Rose was an emigrant who arrived in Canterbury on the "Midlothian", with his wife Louisa George Rose, on 8 Oct 1851, under the auspices of the Canterbury Association. The Roses settled in Christchurch intending to stay in the settlement for ten years but left after only three. His sister "Issy" remained in England. Quantity: 1 volume(s) (20 leaves). 0.03 Linear Metres. Physical Description: Typescript (26cm, green cloth)

Other

Wakefield, Edward Gibbon, 1796-1862 : Letters to Lord Lyttelton together with a few oth...

Date: 1850-1854 (1945)

By: Wakefield, Edward Gibbon, 1796-1862

Reference: MS-2206

Description: Mainly concerned with the Canterbury Association and the settlement Variations in title - Spine title: Letters to Lord Lyttelton, 1850-1853 Quantity: 1 volume(s) (92 leaves). 0.01 Linear Metres. Physical Description: Typescript (26cm, maroon linen)

Online Image

Artist unknown :William Deans and his brother squatted at Riccarton in front of the R[i...

Date: 1843 - 1851

By: Cridland, Henry John, 1821-1867; Burnand, William Henry, active 1843-1850s; Turnbull, Alexander Horsburgh, 1868-1918

Reference: A-195-017

Description: A naive watercolour of the Deans brothers' farmhouse and outbuildings, viewed from across the "Avon or Shakspear River", with horses, cows and sheep in the foreground, a log bridge, a man (presumably one of the Deans brothers) with a dog under a tree. The house is red, with a second storey with dormer window, a rain barrel below the downpipe from the roof. The outbuildings to the right of the house appear to be thatched stables, are open at the front and shelter a horse and three carts. Trees are roughly indicated behind the house. On the verso are holograph notes about Banks' Peninsula, copied from Duppa, Daniels [?] and Tyrell and from Captain [William Mein] Smith about Port Cooper (Lyttelton) and its merits for settlement versus those of Akaroa. Dating: William Deans was drowned in 1851, a fact that is not mentioned here, suggesting, along with the general tone of the notes, that this drawing may have been completed before then, although the two-storied building on the site was not completed until 1856. Other material from the same source was produced about 1850 or 1851. William Mein Smith's report was completed about 1843. The page has been removed from a notebook. The author of the notes (and artist) appears to be somebody associated with the Canterbury Association. The first two-storied house at Deans' property was built in 1856, when Jane Deans built a larger house on the site in preparation for the arrival of her brother and his family. The house shown here may be the 1856 north-east section, the earliest part of modern Riccarton House. Other sections were added in 1874 and 1900, resulting in a much larger building. One possible artist is John Henry Cridland, whose other drawings from the same source are quite naive. However another drawing by him of the Deans' property (neg MNZ 1215 1/4 - 'Riccarton, November 1850' - Hocken Library) is very different in style from this one. Identification: The building shown appears to be a roughly-drawn version of the first two-storied house on the site, completed in 1856. Other drawings of the same building appear as Plate 5 and Plate 14 (the latter by Robert Park) in Pioneers on Port Cooper Plains. The Deans family of Riccarton and Homebush by John Deans (Christchurch, 1964). Inscriptions: Recto - top centre - [title in ink as above, with "only 50 Godley" in pencil in another hand]; Recto - centre right - [in river, in pencil]: Avon or Shakspear River.; Verso - [in ink, page covered in text] Quantity: 1 watercolour(s). Physical Description: Ink and watecolour on laid paper 310 x 198 mm Provenance: Originally tipped in to a volume of The New Zealand Journal, ca 1852, from Alexander Horsburgh Turnbull's collection. Prior to acquisition by Alexander Turnbull the volumes had belonged to W H Burnand.

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Online Image

[Fox, William] 1812-1893 :Landing of passengers at Port Lyttleton [Lyttelton] 17 Decemb...

Date: 1850 - 1851

By: Fox, William, 1812-1893; Cridland, Henry John, 1821-1867; Burnand, William Henry, active 1843-1850s

Reference: A-195-015

Description: View of Lyttelton Habour from the Bridle Path, on the hills above the town. The first four ships are in port, with passengers leaving the Cressy via a wharf and walking up into the town. Several large buildings are near the water's edge, including immigration barracks, John Robert Godley's house and the offices of the Lyttelton Times newspaper just below the hill on the left. The Sumner Road is formed. Other small houses and tents are dotted around. Immigrants are carrying baggage and some have wheeled carts. A family is greeting a man building his house in the left foreground and a clothes line is in the right foreground. A building on the far right is marked in pencil "C Store H" [?]. On the verso is a schematic map of the location of Christchurch, showing the River Courtney (Waimakariri), Papanui Bush, the Avon River and Riccarton with William and John Deans' property, notes about land purchases and a list of names of land-owning Canterbury settlers. Possibly Fox's original drawing for the etching entitled "Port Lyttelton. Passengers by the Cressy landing" published in 'Four Illustrative Views of the Canterbury Settlement" in 1851. However the style suggests that it may be a copy of the etching by H. J. Cridland - cf A-195-016, especially the foreshortening of perspective and the manner of drawing people. A watercolour in the Hocken Library by Fox entitled "Port Lyttelton. Immigrants luggage disembarking, Jan 1851" is also similar. Other Titles - Lyttelton Inscriptions: Recto - top centre - [title in ink]; Recto - bottom left - Office of the Lyttleton Times [in pencil]; Verso - [notes and a map in pencil, ink and watercolour] Quantity: 1 drawing(s). Physical Description: Ink on blue laid paper 204 x 322 mm Provenance: Originally tipped in to Alexander Horsburgh Turnbull's bound copy of the New Zealand Journal. Before being acquired by Turnbull, the volumes had belonged to W H Burnand.

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Online Image

Cridland, Henry John, 1821-1867 :Port Lyttleton [Lyttelton], Cavendish Bay Victoria Har...

Date: 1850

By: Cridland, Henry John, 1821-1867; Burnand, William Henry, active 1843-1850s; Turnbull, Alexander Horsburgh, 1868-1918

Reference: A-195-016

Description: View from Governor's Bay looking back towards Lyttelton, with various features marked, including Mount Pleasant, H. M. S. Fly in the harbour, the Custom house, Major Hornby's Hotel [Major Hornbrook's hotel, the Mitre Inn] , the Emigration Barracks, a public cook house, the store and the temporary office of the Union Bank, John Robert Godley's house and garden, the Land Office, the Police Office and the Town Hall, Market Place, Jail and Hospital, the [Canterbury] Association Store House, the Esplanade, settlers' huts, the church, parsonage and school house. Several people including an artist are seated on rocks to the left, by an arched rock. The others are a woman with a baby and another woman with two small children. The reversing of the artist's initials and the naivety of the drawing may indicate that this is a contemporary copy by another hand of the original Cridland sketch located at C-014-002-1. It does, however, have more features indicated in writing than the C-014-002-1 version. Other Titles - Lyttelton. The boat labelled 'FLY' is not an accurate depiction of the HMS Fly. See A-292-070 or C-033-003 for more accurate depictions. September 2022 Inscriptions: Recto - beneath image - title, signature [with initials reversed], date; Recto - top centre - [text describing the scene and its details]; Verso - [map of Christchurch] Quantity: 2 drawing(s). Physical Description: Ink on blue laid paper 196 x 324 mm (irregularly cut) Provenance: Previously tipped into a volume of Alexander Horsburgh Turnbull's copy of The New Zealand Journal housed on the open shelves in the Reference Collection at q328.42 until 1989. The volume had earlier belonged to W H Burnand. Transfers: Compare a very similar view with the same provenance located at C-014-002-1.

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Manuscript

Ward, T G S : Australian and New Zealand letters

Date: 1830-1859

By: Ward, T G S (Captain), active 1967

Reference: Micro-MS-0783

Description: Includes letters 1852-1856 from Fanny and James Edward FitzGerald of Lyttelton and Christchurch to W Vaux of London. Other material of Australian interest. Source of title - Transcribed Captain Ward was a philatelist, specialising in nineteenth century Austrlian and New Zealand covers. Quantity: 1 microfilm reel(s) (ca 168 pages). Physical Description: Positive microfilm Finding Aids: Detailed inventory available.

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