Community Contributed

Lydia Harris BURR (nee Hoskins)

Kete Horowhenua2020-03-23T16:53:20+00:00
Wife of Amos Burr of Whirokino, Foxton.
Date of birth31/03/1838
Date of death23/08/1930
Mothers nameLydia
Spouses nameAmos Burr
Spouses date of birth06/02/1822
Spouses place of birth17/05/1906
Spouses date of death17/05/1906
Mothers place of deathFoxton
Spouses place of death17/05/1906
Fathers nameJohn Hoskins
Marriage date29/10/1855
Place of marriageFoxton
Fathers place of deathFoxton
Siblings, , , ,
ChildrenJohn Vincent BURR (10/08/1864-21/07/1956), Sidney Paul BURR (28/09/1872-9/07/1949), Esther Maud (Hester) BURR (30/1/1877-27/02/1970), Lydia BURR (15/09/1856-26/06/1930), Amos (Moss) BURR (8/1/1858-12/12/1946), Henry Ernest BURR (29/10/1860-6/11/1936), Edward Albert BURR (2/7/1862-7/11/1938), Alice Julia Ann (Minnie) BURR (14/02/1867-25/06/1964), Arthur Sidney Charles BURR (14/05/1869-4/2/1870), Arthur Charles BURR (29/11/1870-1910), and Clara Grace BURR (7/12/1873-), Leonard Claude BURR (1/1/1876-4/3/1876)
Places of relevance, , , ,
Previous namesLydia Harris Hoskins
Place of birthCheltenham, England.
Place of deathPalmerston North

Arrived in Wellington, New Zealand with her parents on the Poictiers in 1850.

Married, very reluctantly at the age of 17, in 1855 to Amos Burr. At a time when women were scarce, she was highly indignant at her father off-loading her on a disabled man. They had a difficult marriage, both were strong willed but by the time they went their separate ways in the late 1870s they had produced 13 children, 10 of whom survived.

In the mid 1860s, while Lydia remained in Foxton with the family, Amos worked as Overseer of Roads creating the main roads around Palmerston North including the road through the Manawatu Gorge. In the summer of 1865-6 Lydia rode with Lady Fox and the survey party to see the new town deep in the bush. They were the first white women to see it. Amos built the first hotel there in 1867 but Lydia refused to leave the civilisation of Foxton and start again in such primitive conditions so he had to employ a manager. Lack of custom soon saw it close.

Lydia’s life is worthy of the greatest respect also. She often had to provide alone for her family when Amos was away working or seeking work. She had been proprietress of the Adelaide Hotel, Foxton, in the 1860s and had advertised her services in the district as a milliner and dressmaker in 1878. Her children recalled her sewing until 2am to raise money. When she was declared bankrupt in 1880 (when Hon. John Bryce was refusing to pay Amos for services rendered in Taranaki) her youngest child was only 3 years old. She was a survivor however, and when she moved to Palmerston North in 1895, she rose to become head of the Dressmaking Department of Leopold Simmons, then that town’s largest drapery shop.

As Amos grew older he became grumpy and disillusioned. Without Social Security he was still working a flax punt at Moutoa in 1900, aged 78. His hooks had always provided a degree of security during tense moments. Once the Court ordered one of them removed for three months after he “hooked” a heckler at an election meeting. Death finally came in 1906, Lydia travelling down from Palmerston North to his funeral in Wellington. They’d had their differences but she respected him and appreciated his difficult life. Lydia had a stroke in 1910 and she herself was physically disabled for the remaining twenty years of her life. Each spent their latter years with their children passing on valuable information which is now appreciated by later generations throughout the country.

While Amos and Lydia Burr and most of their family were to leave Foxton later in life, descendants regard Foxton as the birthplace of the birthplace of the Burr Family.