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BISHOPS PUSHED A HAND-CART

ROMANCE OF EARLY CANTERBURY When Bishop Harper (the first Bsihop of Christchurch), and Mrs Harper and ten of their fifteen children landed at Lyttelton in December, 1856, they were met by Bishop Selwyn, who escorted them to Christchurch. Mrs Harpev and the youngest girl rode together on a horse, and the others walked oven the hill to Heathcote Valley, whern

vehicles awaited them. Bishop Harper, Bishop Selwyn, and others pushed and pulled a hand-cart on which bedding and other articles were stacked. Thn walking girls carried bundles contain* ing bonnets and finery which they werd to wear next day. The first home for the Harpers was a small cottage in Cambridge Terrace, by the Avon River, This incident (published in “New Zealand Centennial News”) is recorded in a book, “My Early Days,” written by the late Mrs C. G. Tripp, of Orari Gorge, Canterbury (a daughter of Bishop Harper). “Our house was very small, and when visitors came to see my father some of us had to go to the hospitable neighbours to make room.” wrote Mrs Tripp. Three of us slept in an attic bedroom which we reached by a stepladder. On beams over the beds our saddles hung, and on top of them our ball-dresses, pinned up in sheets. “Mary (a sister) had become engaged some months before me. which gave time to send to England for her things, but my trousseau was a very simple affair; my father, going to Wellington about that time, bought me three dresses —a white muslin with pink sprays on it, a black and white striped thin silk with blue silk flounces, and a brown barege, unmade. A riding habit was made in Christchurch, and 1 had one pair of boots and one pair of shoes. Everything else I made myself —rather different to the trousseau of a girl of the present day—and I know I had to buy boots a few months after my marriage, the rough country walking soon wearing out anything but the strongest.

“Our wedding-day was the 23rd September, 1858. My wedding-gown of white silk and the bridesmaids’ white tarleton and little straw bonnets trimmed with ribbon were all bought at Miss Skillikorn’s general stores, also the wedding-ring. Though my future husband had a large property, ready money was not plentiful, and he had always said he had to borrow £8 for wedding-expenses, and I only had 8s of my own. “I had to come down the step-ladder from our bedroom backwards in my wedding finery, and Mary’s room downstairs was so small that she stood on her bed to be dressed. We walked to St. Michael’s, and both couples returned from church together in a new omnibus, the only other vehicle being a hansom cab without wheels, so not much use. Old Mrs Westenra made us pretty little bouquets, of white primroses, these and a bunch of gorse being the only flowers to be had.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM19390415.2.6.6

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXII, 15 April 1939, Page 2

Word Count
492

BISHOPS PUSHED A HAND-CART Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXII, 15 April 1939, Page 2

BISHOPS PUSHED A HAND-CART Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXII, 15 April 1939, Page 2