Story and photos by Michele Leggott and Catherine Field-Dodgson The envelope is small, opening on its right side, with an inscription in black ink that reads: ‘Godfrey Briant from Aunt Grace.’ It was rediscovered a few months ago among family files at the home of Goff and Judith Briant in Marton. Hugh Godfrey Briant, known Read More…
Author: Catherine Field-Dodgson
A letter from Emily Harris, 1862
Story by Michele Leggott It is November 2024. Harris descendant Heather Jones hand-delivers Emma Hill’s scrapbook, the real thing, to a kitchen bench in Devonport. The scrapbook and an envelope of family letters and photos has made its way from Judith Briant in Marton to Heather in Clevedon to its latest destination in Auckland. In Read More…
Emma Hill’s scrapbook online
Story and photos by Michele Leggott and Catherine Field-Dodgson We present an addition to our Art and Writing section: This Fair Work: Emma Jane Hill Scrapbook 1826-1880. Browse the introduction below, then visit the feature to view the scrapbook’s contents. Introduction It is a mystery. A hardbound notebook, 204 x 160mm, many of its 160 Read More…
Talking to the archivists
Story and photos Catherine Field-Dodgson and Michele Leggott In October 2024, we travelled to Ōtautahi Christchurch to deliver a keynote presentation for Opening the Archives: access, engagement, innovation. The conference was organised by the Australian Society of Archivists (ASA), Archives & Records Association of NZ Te Huinga Mahara (ARANZ) and the Pacific Regional Branch of Read More…
Here comes 2025
Story and photos Michele Leggott and Catherine Field-Dodgson Welcome to Emily Cumming Harris in New Zealand and Australia. 2025 is a big year for us and for Emily as Te Papa Press publishes our book Groundwork: The Art and Writing of Emily Cumming Harris. Please keep an eye on the blog for updates about publication Read More…
Edwin and Emily Harris at the Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand Annual Conference in Nelson
By Michele Leggott and Catherine Field-Dodgson, with research support from Wayne Orchiston and Ian Cooper First there were Emily’s three small oil paintings of celestial events, each with a connection to Dr Frank Bett, her friend and neighbour in Nile St from around 1910. Bett owned the three paintings and after his death in 1957 Read More…
Emily Harris and the Tākaka Caves
By Jackie Cook So what does Emily Harris have to do with caves? From the 1890s to 1914, something of a vogue arose in Nelson for visiting caves. Four aspects of life in late nineteenth/early twentieth century colonial culture had intersected upon this rather unlikely spot. Taken in sequence, they help explain how an interest Read More…
The oldest document: a court summons 1831 or 1832
By Michele Leggott, with research support from Catherine Field-Dodgson Families keep the strangest things. For years now we have been looking at what we take to be the oldest document in Sarah Harris’s family history, a tattered and yellowing piece of paper pasted into the notebook that is full of intriguing items from the English Read More…
Happy birthday Emily Harris!
By Michele Leggott Thanks to the person who put three framed Emily Harris prints on TradeMe recently, we now have a set of Emily’s beautiful botanical paintings issued by the Turnbull Library in 1968. Our set is 2183 of an edition of 2500. The prints are in good condition and show Emily’s rendition of rangiora Read More…
Tainui trees north of Mokau
By Michele Leggott, with research support from Catherine Field-Dodgson I wasn’t dreaming. There really is a sign on the road north of Mokau and it says ‘Tainui Trees.’ We back up the car and Mark crosses the road where the sign is pointing. There he finds a signboard for Tainui Scenic Reserve, topped by a Read More…