‘I am sorry it is not more, but it is all I could earn’: Presbyterian Children, Christmas and Charity in Colonial New Zealand, c.1909-1945

Authors

  • Hugh Morrison University of Otago, New Zealand

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2016vol24no2art1105

Keywords:

charity, children's literature, New Zealand, Colonial New Zealand c1909-1945, Presbyterian Children, Christmas

Abstract

In February 1884 the Presbyterian mission ship The Dayspring departed the southern New Zealand city of Dunedin, en route back to the New Hebrides [Vanuatu] via Sydney, after completing a tour of the colony’s main centres. The Otago Daily Times reporter observed that in Dunedin the ship was visited by ‘close on 14,000 persons – children and adults’, with another ‘600 children’ as visitors prior to its departure from nearby Port Chalmers. The children inspected ‘various curios’ in the cabins and at least saw, if not interacted with, five ‘natives’ on board. These four men and one woman, from the New Hebrides, had ‘shown themselves to be possessed of much intelligence and observation’ who, through ‘missionary labour and Christian instruction’, had been ‘transformed from savage cannibals into peaceful, gentle Christians’ (‘The Dayspring’ 1884, p. 2).

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Author Biography

  • Hugh Morrison, University of Otago, New Zealand

    Hugh Morrison is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Otago where he teaches in both initial teacher education and education studies programmes, including a course on children’s and young people’s history. He is also a research associate in History at the University of Waikato, New Zealand. In 2017 he is a Visiting Fellow at Magdalen College, Oxford University affiliated to the Centre for the History of Childhood. His research focuses are New Zealand mission and religious history alongside histories of childhood and religion in the British world. He is the author of Pushing Boundaries: New Zealand Protestants and overseas missions, 1827-1939 (Otago University Press, 2016) and is co-editor with Mary Clare Martin (University of Greenwich, UK) of Creating Religious Childhoods in Anglo-World and British Colonial Contexts, 1800-1950 (Routledge, 2017). He has also recently had published articles/chapters on: children’s missionary literature; children, religion and emotions; and on missions and education.

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Published

2016-07-01

How to Cite

“‘I am sorry it is not more, but it is all I could earn’: Presbyterian Children, Christmas and Charity in Colonial New Zealand, c.1909-1945” (2016) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 24(2), pp. 33–73. doi:10.21153/pecl2016vol24no2art1105.