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First published in 1904, this book is the last of Lady Mary Anne
Barker's memoirs of her life in several of Britain's colonies in
the nineteenth century. Barker (1831 1911) was born in Jamaica and
educated in England and France. In 1865, she moved to New Zealand
with her second husband, Sir Frederick Broome, and spent three
years living on a sheep station. She then lived in South Africa,
Mauritius, Trinidad, and Western Australia following the various
political appointments of her husband. During her travels she began
her successful writing career and published several memoirs and
housekeeping guides. In Colonial Memories, she recounts her life as
a colonial wife, detailing her experiences in far-flung locales.
The book also includes chapters on birds, interviews, General
Charles Gordon (whom she met in Mauritius), and her servants.
Several of the chapters were initially published as articles in
London magazines.
Written by the adventurous and widely travelled Lady Mary Anne
Barker (1831 1911), this 1870 publication records 'the expeditions,
adventures, and emergencies diversifying the daily life of the wife
of a New Zealand sheep farmer'. Born in Jamaica and educated in
England and France, Barker married her second husband in 1865 and
spent the next three years living on his sheep station on the South
Island. This book is based on letters written to Barker's younger
sister, beginning with an account of her two-month voyage to
Melbourne and her onward journey via Nelson and Wellington to
Christchurch. Barker vividly describes her domestic surroundings,
friends, neighbours, servants, her first (and last) experience of
camping, the Canterbury landscape and vegetation, and the 7,000
sheep on the farm. Her enthusiastic personal account of Victorian
colonial expansion captures the 'delight and freedom of an
existence so far from our own highly-wrought civilization'.
First published in 1877, this book is one of several colonial
memoirs by the successful writer and journalist Lady Mary Anne
Barker (1831 1911). Born in Jamaica and educated in England and
France, Lady Barker spent periods living in New Zealand, South
Africa, Mauritius, Trinidad, and Western Australia following the
career and colonial service appointments of her second husband,
Frederick Broome. She arrived in Natal in 1875 and lived there for
three years while Broome was Colonial Secretary. This book,
presented in the form of letters, vividly describes the family's
experiences and domestic life. It begins with Barker's early
impressions of Cape Town and Natal, mentioning particularly the
'forlorn and discouraging' Robben Island. Barker's detailed
observations on African weather and scenery, Zulu customs and
beliefs, and the interactions between indigenous people and the
European colonists are still an invaluable resource for those
interested in nineteenth-century colonial Africa.
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