Lawrence, Harriet Eleanor, nee Black

 

Harriet Eleanor Lawrence nee Black
 
 
Harriet Eleanor Black [or Harriet Helena Black], born circa 1848 Uitenhage, Cape of Good Hope, South Africa, the daughter of William Cornwall Black and Frances Elizabeth Grace Carter and granddaughter of Henry Collis Carter, a Doctor of Medicine in Uitenhage, died on 15 April 1898 at the residence of Mrs Manhire, 9 York Street, off Barbadoes Street, Christchurch aged 47 years, reg. 1898/2190, buried 17 April 1898 Sydenham Cemetery, Christchurch, block 23C, plot 46, married 14 March 1863 Port Natal, South Africa, Samuel Charles Louis Lawrence [photographer]born circa 1831-33 Middlesex, London, arrived in New Zealand before April 1866 [when his daughter Fanny Maria Lawrence was born], died 9 September 1891 Ashburton, Canterbury aged 58 years, reg. 1891/4152, buried 11 September 1891, Ashburton Cemetery, area 13, plot 7. 

 
Following the death of her husband, Charles Lawrence in 1891, Harriet Lawrence carried on the business until about 1895.

 
Ashburton Guardian, Volume XIV, Issue 2814, 1 November 1892, Page 3
 
 
A Golden Wedding at Ashburton.— A very pleasant gathering of friends and old settlers took place on Thursday, to honour the occasion of the golden wedding of Mr and Mrs Joseph Hunt, of Seeall Farm, near Ashburton...  About midday the guests began to assemble, and by three o’clock about eighty had arrived from far and near. At four o’clock they were brought into the garden and photographed in front of the house by Mrs Lawrence, of Ashburton...
Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXVIII, Issue 9883, 15 November 1892, Page 4
 
 
 Ashburton Guardian, Volume XV, Issue 3386, 17 September 1894, Page 1
 Mrs Lawrence last advertised in Ashburton on 17 September 1894.
 
 
The pupils of Mrs Bowman Fox commence the first term on Monday next, in the rooms in Saunders' Buildings, same entrance as Mrs Lawrence's photographic studio.
Ashburton Guardian, Volume XV, Issue 3478, 5 January 1895, Page 2
 
 
Photography.
A short time ago Mr F. Cooper, photographer, took over the studio of the late Mrs Lawrence, in Saunders' Buildings, and is now carrying on business there. The people of Ashburton are fortunate in this matter, inasmuch as Mr Cooper is one of the ablest operators in the colony. For years he was the trusted emissary of Messrs Wheeler and Son, a colonial firm with an almost universal reputation. It was from his plates that Wheeler's pictures of New Zealand lake scenery were taken. In 1889 he accompanied Mr G E. Mannering, when that gentleman ascended Mount Cook, and it may he said that the educational value of these Alpine ascents is very greatly enhanced by the story which Mr Cooper's photographs tell. In 1890 Messrs Wheeler and Son sent Mr Cooper to the Sounds on the West Coast, and from that mission he returned with valuable spoils to the number of sixty, depicting Sounds scenery, and the celebrated Sutherland Falls. In November, 1890, in order to illustrate a lecture by Mr Mannering, on "The glaciers of the Tasman valley," Mr Cooper spent a month among the glaciers, reaching as high an altitude as 8000 feet, the Mount Cook range, and personally went through all the risks, dangers, and discomforts of the Alpine climber to secure his slides for Mr Mannering's lantern. In 1891 he was again engaged on similar work, and in 1893 he travelled through the lake district gathering beauties as he went for his firm. It was from his plates that most of the beautiful illustrations were worked that adorn Mr Mannering's book "With axe and rope in the New Zealand Alps," published in London and New York by Longmans, Green, and Co. in 1891, and in the preface to the book the value of Mr Cooper's work is acknowledged. Mr Cooper also holds a testimonial of high value from Mr Malcolm Ross, another celebrated New Zealand climber, but the best testimonial of all are the samples of his Ashburton and Christchurch work, not among dead rocks and sleeping glaciers, however beautiful and grand, but among living people and the lively homes in which they live. These pictures, to be seen m the vestibule of his studio, are well worth a visit.
Ashburton Guardian, Volume XX, Issue 4617, 6 October 1898, Page 3 
 
 

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