19 July 2013

Richard Bethell - Ursula's father


I got quite excited the other night, when I was just surfing the web, as they say, and found an Australian publication, "Eyes to the Future," which contains diary entries from William Bethell, Richard's nephew, giving a glimpse into the life of Richard Bethell here in Canterbury until he married Isabel Lillie in 1873.

It's the thrill of the chase, you know!

Upwards and onwards!

03 December 2011

Ursula's parents almost married!

Who would have thought it would take this long to get to the point in the story where Mrs Lillie and children have returned to England following the death of the Rev Dr John Lillie and now Richard Bethell is putting his affairs in order to also return to England, where he and Isabel Lillie were married in 1873?

Yes! I am gradually getting there - and, hopefully, as I become more disciplined in my study habits (one paper per semester by distance through Otago University) perhaps I will also become more disciplined regarding work on this biography!

17 January 2011

Victorian England


Gradually coming to the end of the background information stuff I have, and now looking at the history of Britain and Ireland during the Victorian era. There is also some stuff here about women in Victorian England. Then, when this section is done, I can either put all the background stuff into one chronological sequence or get right into the data I have regarding Ursula Bethell's maternal and paternal ancestors in Christchurch.

So, after all this time, things are finally moving along a bit!

16 July 2010

St Faith's House of Sacred Learning


I have actually worked my way through quite a bit of material since I last made an entry here, and I am now scanning in the material related to the Board of Women's Work of 1929 or so, in the Anglican Diocese of Christchurch, which eventually led to the St Faith's House of Sacred Learning being set up for the training and education of women workers (Deaconesses, Sunday School teachers, and lay workers of various kinds) for the Church of England in the New Zealand Province.

St Faith's finally failed around 1943 or so, but, in the meantime the Church Army had been established soon after the commencement of St Faith's House of Sacred Learning - this may have contributed in part to the failure of the Training College for Women here in Christchurch.

It seems odd, somehow, to be reading, at the same time, books about the lives of young English women from the 1870's up 'til about 1915 or 1917, when women still were not enfranchised, etc., etc. It interests me that the same concerns around social justice at the time have not yet been fully addressed and corrected, which makes me wonder if we may need to start thinking outside the square a bit more vis a vis the very close interconnections between economic wealth and political power!