Embezzlement trial, duelling behind story of costume
When researching artefacts in the museum collection, sometimes questions call out to be asked.
Where did they come from? Who owned it and what was their story? What technology was used to make it? What does it tell us of the times that it was in use? What is its connection with Whanganui, to name but a few topics. The January Outfit of the Month on display at the museum is one such object that can tell many stories.
The outfit featured is an elegant, watered silk faille costume, consisting of skirt and jacket, which dates from the mid to late 1860s. The costume follows the stylistic trends of that time, which put an emphasis on the volume of the skirt while rigid corsetry compressed and shaped the bodice.
The time of this outfit was the height of popularity for the caged crinoline. Invented in 1856, a crinoline, or hooped skirt, was an undergarment that eliminated the need for multiple heavy petticoats to achieve a fashionable wide skirt.
Crinoline-enhanced skirts would often measure 3 -4.5m in circumference, allowing the wearer a lot of personal space as they moved around.
However, there was a downside. The English Woman’s Domestic Magazine of 1867 reported that 3000 women were burned to death annually as their wide skirts brushed against fireplaces, and another 20,000 were injured because their crinoline impeded their movement. By the end of the decade, the crinoline had gone out of fashion and the bustle was the new rage.
This outfit was worn by Louisa Maria Ross, who was born in 1844 in Wellington. It is likely to be the outfit she wore when she married Henry Nevison Harrison on January 23, 1867, at Christ Church, Whanganui.
Louisa was the youngest daughter of Hugh Ross and Anna Maria Boteler Wood. Hugh Ross (1797 — 1869) was a solicitor who immigrated from England to Tasmania in December 1822. Ross had a distinguished legal career as Crown Solicitor but was in financial difficulties in 1840. He found it necessary to “borrow” from his employer. Hoping to find more profitable work in Port Phillip, he asked for leave and, when refused, left anyway.
Six days after his departure the extent of his borrowing was realised. Warrants were issued for his arrest. He was eventually found in Western Australia after which he was brought back to Hobart in custody. He was committed for trial on March 8, 1842, charged with embezzlement of £2021 belonging to the Crown. His lawyer shattered the prosecution’s case on
a legal point and won a verdict of not guilty. Ross, then free, sailed with one son for Sydney, then New Zealand, where he quickly set up as a lawyer in Lambton Quay, Wellington. His wife and family followed.
In February 1844, eight days before Louisa was born, Ross got into a quarrel over a court case with fellow lawyer William Brewer. The two men faced off in Sydney St, Thorndon, Wellington. Brewer fired into the air but received Ross’ ball in the groin. He died four days later. Ross again managed to avoid conviction — this time for murder, which was the penalty for duelling in New Zealand.
In the early 1850s, Ross retired from his legal practice and settled at Cokely on the Rangitikei River, where Louisa grew up without her mother, who had died in 1853.
Henry Harrison and Louisa had a farm on Warrengate Rd, Fordell. Henry was a steward for, and in later life patron of, the Wanganui Jockey Club. Together Henry and Louisa had nine children between 1868 and 1884. Louisa Harrison died aged 41 in 1885. In 1957, their daughter Miss Meta Harrison bequeathed this outfit to the Whanganui Regional Museum.
Trish Nugent-Lyne is the collection manager at Whanganui Regional
Museum.