Mary Jane
Bennett was not only dedicated to taking care of her husband and seven
children. She was also committed to looking after the well-being of seamen
rounding Pencarrow Head at the entrance to Wellington Harbour. Despite the most
challenging conditions, Mary Jane was the first – and only – woman to become a
lighthouse keeper in New Zealand.
Mary Jane Hebden arrived in New Zealand from England on the ship DUKE
OF ROXBURGH in February 1840, a month after her husband-to-be George
Bennett. They were married in Wellington later that year.
George had a number of different jobs, including running one of the city’s
first pubs, the Durham Arms. But in 1852, he took up the position of the first
Keeper of the Light at Pencarrow Head, at the entrance to Wellington Harbour.
His wife and their five young children joined him there.
There was
no lighthouse – just a beacon in the window of a bleak two-roomed
cottage.
The
smoking oil lamp was all they had to guide ships around the dangerous headland.
It could only be seen from within five nautical miles and several ship’s
captains complained that in poor conditions, the light was barely visible.
Living conditions for the family were appalling too. The tiny cottage was
neither waterproof nor windproof. It shook so severely in gale-force winds, that the
family often abandoned it for shelter in a smaller cabin.
The stove was useless – it took nearly four hours to boil water, which had to
be fetched from 500m away. The cottage was 8km from the nearest road and
much of the path was along a rocky beach.
Imagine how difficult it must have been to cook, wash clothes and raise
children in these conditions? But the Bennetts remained even when their youngest daughter, two-year-old Eliza, died in their first year at Pencarrow Head.
More tragedy struck the family in 1855 when George Bennett drowned. He had
been a passenger in a pilot boat thrown onto rocks at Barrett’s Reef in rough
weather. Mary Jane was pregnant with their seventh child at the time.
Despite
all the sorrow and hardship she endured, Mary Jane stayed on to tend to the
light.
In fact, she did such a good job that when the first Pencarrow Lighthouse was opened in
January 1859, Mary Jane Bennett was appointed the first keeper of a permanent
lighthouse in New Zealand. She would be the only woman ever given this position
at a lighthouse in New Zealand.
Her appointment was confirmed in the New Zealand Gazette at a salary
of £125, plus firewood. A new, more substantial, the house was also built in
a sheltered position below the lighthouse.
Mary Jane lived there for another 10 years before she decided to return to the
United Kingdom with her six children. Mary Jane died in 1884, and some of
her descendants later returned to live in New Zealand.
(FiN)
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