Afbeelding van de auteur.

Lady Barker (1831–1911)

Auteur van Station Life in New Zealand

17+ Werken 158 Leden 3 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Ontwarringsbericht:

(eng) Also used the pen name Lady Broome

Fotografie: Mary Anne Barker and Frederick Broome. Alexander Turnbull Library.

Werken van Lady Barker

Gerelateerde werken

Maiden Voyages: Writings of Women Travelers (1993) — Medewerker — 192 exemplaren
Empire Writing: An Anthology of Colonial Literature 1870-1918 (1998) — Medewerker — 84 exemplaren
New Zealand Short Stories: 1st Series (1953) — Medewerker — 36 exemplaren
The Haunted and the Haunters (1975) — Medewerker — 10 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Barker, Mary Ann, Lady
Broome, Lady
Stewart, Mary Anne
Geboortedatum
1831-01-29
Overlijdensdatum
1911-03-06
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
UK
Geboorteplaats
Spanish Town, Jamaica
Plaats van overlijden
London, England, UK
Woonplaatsen
London, England, UK
Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South Africa
Canterbury, New Zealand
Perth, Western Australia, Australia
India
Mauritius (toon alle 7)
Port of Spain, Trinidad
Beroepen
travel writer
journalist
children's book author
cookery writer
editor
Relaties
Barker, Sir George Robert (1st husband)
Broome, Sir Frederick Napier (2nd husband)
Korte biografie
Lady Barker was born Mary Anne Stewart in Spanish Town, Jamaica, where her father was Island Secretary. She was sent to England for her education. In 1852, she married Captain George Robert Barker of the Royal Artillery, with whom she had two children. A few years later, Barker was knighted for his leadership at the Siege of Lucknow during the Indian Mutiny, making her Lady Barker. In 1865, after Barker's death, she married Frederick Broome, a Canadian-born sportsman and future diplomat 11 years her junior, who was in London on a visit from New Zealand. She departed with him for New Zealand, leaving her children behind in England. The couple lived at Steventon, a sheep station, for three years before selling out and returning to London.
The experience would provide a rich well of material for Lady Barker, and several of the works she produced became classics of New Zealand literature. Poems from New Zealand appeared in 1868, followed by The Stranger from Seriphos (1869). Then she published Station Life in New Zealand (1870), a collection of her letters home. Over the next eight years, she produced 10 more books, including Station Amusements in New Zealand (1873) and First Lessons in the Principles of Cooking (1874). This book led to her being appointed Lady Superintendent of the National Training School of Cooking in South Kensington.
She also was a journalist, writing articles for The Times. In 1875, Broome was appointed Colonial Secretary of Natal in South Africa, and she accompanied him there. His subsequent posts were in Mauritius, Western Australia, Barbados, and Trinidad. Drawing on her travels and experiences in these countries, Lady Barker published A Year's Housekeeping in South Africa (1880) and Letters to Guy (1885). Broome was knighted in 1884, and thereafter she styled herself Lady Broome. She published the last of her 22 books, Colonial Memories, under this name.
Ontwarringsbericht
Also used the pen name Lady Broome

Leden

Besprekingen

This was a good, easy book written in an engaging style. The narrative is composed of letters sent by Lady Barker as she travelled to New Zealand and took up life with her husband on a station in Canterbury. It was nice to get a woman's perspective, as so much of what I read from early settler times in New Zealand comes from men. Lady Barker was of course a little more well off than the average immigrant so her perspective is coloured by that, though this does lead to a comical and endearing scene in which she tries her hand at baking and...it doesn't go so well.

She was also pretty adventurous and like a lot of women writers from past times she emphasises feminine fragility while taking on challenges that many modern-day people, male or female, might hesitate to confront. She bush-bashes, climbs hills, rescues sheep, and participates in burn-offs (the last maybe a little too enthusiastically).
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
weemanda | 2 andere besprekingen | Nov 2, 2023 |
Written in 1870, STATION LIFE IN NEW ZEALAND is a fascinating account of the time Lady Mary Anne Barker lived on a sheep station on the south island of New Zealand. It is just a series of letters that she wrote back to her family in England, starting with her arrival in MelbourneAustralia en route to Christchurch. It gives the reader a real insight into life as a settler in the 1860s, with all its highs and lows.

I gripped my chair in sympathy as she is careened at high speed along the highway by a drunken passenger coach driver. I chuckled at her first attempts at cooking and I cried with her when her naughty dog has to be put down and when she has to help dig dead lambs from a snowdrift after a huge blizzard. Mary Anne writes in a light-hearted style, and she vividly portrayed the lives of genteel sheep farmers (and the not so genteel) the weather and the beautiful scenery and wildlife.

Born in Jamaica, educated in England, her first husband Lord George Robert Barker was knighted for his role at the Siege of Lucknow in India. He died 8 months after receiving his title, however when Mary Anne arrived in New Zealand she was with her second husband, Frederick Broome. For her writing Mary Anne retained her Lady Barker title although later in life her second husband was knighted and she became Lady Broome. During her life Mary Anne lived in England, India, New Zealand, South Africa, Mauritius, Australia and Trinidad. A well travelled lady with some eighteen published works.

STATION LIFE IN NEW ZEALAND is considered the best of the settlers’ tales from the years of colonization of New Zealand, and is a classic of early New Zealand literature.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
sally906 | 2 andere besprekingen | Apr 3, 2013 |
Opening Sentence: “…Now I must give you an account of our voyage: it has been a very quick one for the immense distance traversed, sometimes under canvas, but generally steaming…”

Written in 1870, STATION LIFE IN NEW ZEALAND is a fascinating account of the time Lady Mary Anne Barker lived on a sheep station on the south island of New Zealand. It is just a series of letters that she wrote back to her family in England, starting with her arrival in MelbourneAustralia en route to Christchurch. It gives the reader a real insight into life as a settler in the 1860s, with all its highs and lows.

I gripped my chair in sympathy as she is careened at high speed along the highway by a drunken passenger coach driver. I chuckled at her first attempts at cooking and I cried with her when her naughty dog has to be put down and when she has to help dig dead lambs from a snowdrift after a huge blizzard. Mary Anne writes in a light-hearted style, and she vividly portrayed the lives of genteel sheep farmers (and the not so genteel) the weather and the beautiful scenery and wildlife.

Born in Jamaica, educated in England, her first husband Lord George Robert Barker was knighted for his role at the Siege of Lucknow in India. He died 8 months after receiving his title, however when Mary Anne arrived in New Zealand she was with her second husband, Frederick Broome. For her writing Mary Anne retained her Lady Barker title although later in life her second husband was knighted and she became Lady Broome. During her life Mary Anne lived in England, India, New Zealand, South Africa, Mauritius, Australia and Trinidad. A well travelled lady with some eighteen published works.

STATION LIFE IN NEW ZEALAND is considered the best of the settlers’ tales from the years of colonization of New Zealand, and is a classic of early New Zealand literature.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
sally906 | 2 andere besprekingen | Jun 8, 2011 |

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Statistieken

Werken
17
Ook door
6
Leden
158
Populariteit
#133,026
Waardering
½ 3.6
Besprekingen
3
ISBNs
49
Talen
2

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