Jane Maria Atkinson

Jane Maria Atkinson (née Richmond, 15 September 1824 – 29 September 1914) was a pioneer, writer, and the first Pakeha woman to climb Mt Taranaki.

Early life

Maria grew up in a Unitarian household. The early death of her father, Christopher Richmond, caused financial strife for the family. At the age of 28, Maria and her family left for New Zealand along with the Hursthouses, Richmonds, and Ronalds. They arrived in Auckland 25 May 1853.[1] They then settled in the early New Plymouth colony. She and Arthur Samuel Atkinson had a shipboard romance and were married 30 December 1854.

New Zealand

Maria initially fulfilled the traditional role of pioneering housewife and mother. When she and Arthur moved to Nelson in 1867 she became active in the community. She promoted women's suffrage, campaigned for a girl's college and ran a debate team.[2] The Atkinsons allowed the newly opened Nelson College for Girls faculty to use their home, Fairfield House.[3]

gollark: Mostly they look like generic metal or plastic cuboids with SATA interfaces on them, or just PCBs with a bunch of flash chips and the M.2 connector, but some insane companies added RGB.
gollark: You should use a solid state SSD disk.
gollark: How does that even happen? These are integers. There shouldn't be floating point weirdness.
gollark: I have some JS which *almost* works, except it's *somehow* off by a few percent and it cuts off the bottom of the text.
gollark: Why is it that CSS makes it really easy to do complex layouts and such but there is literally no simple, working, consistent way - even with JS involved - to make a text area automatically fit its contents?!

References

  1. Porter, Frances. "Atkinson, Jane Maria". Te Ara Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  2. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. "Jane Maria Atkinson". Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  3. Fairfield House. "History". Retrieved 24 April 2011.

Further reading

  • Born to New Zealand: A Biography of Jane Maria Atkinson by Frances Porter (1989, Allen & Unwin/Port Nicholson Press, Wellington) ISBN 978-0-04-614008-3
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.