Weekend Herald

The butcher, the baker and the homemaker

A new book challenges the idea that a colonial woman’s place was only in the home

- Dionne Christian

Teaching New Zealand history may involve a fresh look at women’s roles in colonial society.

That’s the message from historian Dr Catherine Bishop, whose new book, Women Mean Business, is challengin­g long-held assumption­s that colonial women were wives, mothers or domestic servants whose place was in the home.

Bishop, who was born in Whanganui and studied initially at Victoria University in Wellington, began postgradua­te research in Australia intending to look at women’s domestic lives, but female entreprene­urs and businesswo­men kept popping up.

“There were oodles of them and they were everywhere . . . ”

So she decided to focus instead on the numerous women who ran businesses, shops, hotels and schools and were butchers, bakers, cordial makers, seamstress­es and dressmaker­s, entertaine­rs, teachers, tour guides and publicans able to sort out the drunkest of male patrons.

Bishop first wrote about Sydney’s colonial-era businesswo­men in Minding Her Own Business: Colonial Businesswo­men in Sydney, which won the A$30,000 2016 Ashurst Business Literature Prize, the first book about women to win the prize since it started in 2004. Bishop was also the first historian to win it.

Accepting the award, she said she was pleased because it underscore­d the relevance of history to contempora­ry concerns and the centrality of women in the business world.

With folders full of stories and anecdotes about New Zealand women, Bishop turned her attention to this side of the Tasman and says she was able to do so more easily because of the growing number of resources now online — like Papers Past, which has digitised versions of 19th and 20th century New Zealand newspapers.

She also adopted the “don’t assume it’s a man” mantra when researchin­g and coming across, for example, advertisem­ents for a tinsmith, plumbing and zinc-working business run by A. Spalding (who turned out to be Anna, who took over the business after hus- band Alfred died). It often meant matching up various records to find business-women, something Bishop describes as akin to doing a jigsaw puzzle, but she was able to include 500 in Women Mean Business.

Bishop points out that most of New Zealand’s famed department stores, including Auckland’s Smith & Caughey’s, grew out of female-run businesses such as hat and dressmakin­g.

“And there’s no such thing as a typical businesswo­man — they were middle and working class, young and old, Ma¯ori and Pa¯keha¯; single, married, widowed and sometimes bigamists,” says Bishop.

“There were such good stories and I would often get side-tracked by the stories of some women who had husbands that ran off or who had left a

Women Mean Business: Colonial businesswo­men in New Zealand by Catherine Bishop (Otago University Press, $45) is out now. Catherine Bishop speaks about her book at Highwic House in Newmarket today at 11am.

husband because he was a complete b ***** d — or who collected more than one husband.

“I was also surprised by their mobility and how much some women moved around. I thought that was just the elites or men, but ordinary women moved around a lot. I liked the women who were slightly ‘naughty’ and pushed boundaries.”

She believes businesswo­men were sidelined because, until recently, that is what happened to most women in history, they are harder to find and pin down in written records and that women’s work is often not valued.

Bishop also notes that businesses started and run by men tended to be passed down. It means emphasisin­g the story that the domestic and business spheres were separate and women were in the home as “colonial helpmates” became the accepted narrative.

“But historians are fabulous because we always love to find something new; we’re constantly retelling and going back to our sources or finding new ones and that’s important to make us think again, challenge our assumption­s and add new layers to what we know.

“We were always told a woman’s place has traditiona­lly been in the home but, hell’s bells, it was everywhere else, too.”

 ?? Photo / New Zealand News Limited / Alexander Turnbull Library ?? Makereti Papakura “Guide Maggie” in 1910 in her whare at Whakarewar­ewa.
Photo / New Zealand News Limited / Alexander Turnbull Library Makereti Papakura “Guide Maggie” in 1910 in her whare at Whakarewar­ewa.
 ?? Photos / Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Studio. ?? Nelson butcher Ann Bird ran a business for 40 years and brought up five children alone (left); possibly taken in 1891, the female workforce celebrates the opening of Sophia Anstice’s purpose-built St Alban’s House in Nelson.
Photos / Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Studio. Nelson butcher Ann Bird ran a business for 40 years and brought up five children alone (left); possibly taken in 1891, the female workforce celebrates the opening of Sophia Anstice’s purpose-built St Alban’s House in Nelson.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Catherine Bishop
Catherine Bishop
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand