Who was “Uncle Albert”?

Who was “Uncle Albert”?

In December 2017 I spotted a request from Sherri Murphy of Shantytown on the popular Facebook group West Coast South Island history. “I’m am after any information on Albert Lawn” Sherri asked “he had a Barbers shop in Reefton then Hokitika. I especially would like to know the name of his Barbers in Hoki.”  Sherri is in the process of re-creating Albert Lawn’s barber shop at Shantytown and the following information we have gathered includes excerpts from To Live a Long and Prosperous Life, West Coast Recollect (sister site to West Coast South Island history), Shantytown and Hokitika Museum  archives and descendants of Albert. Perhaps this post will jog a few more memories and bring more information to light.

Albert Harold Lawn was born on 9 June 1878, probably at Blacks Point. He was the second son of Thomas Henry and Sarah Esther (nee Hart) Lawn. Thomas and Sarah Lawn had married in Greymouth in 1876 and began married life in Blacks Point, a short distance out of Reefton; Sarah’s precious piano made the journey up the Grey river on a boat, then over the Reefton saddle to the Inangahua river, and again by boat to Black’s Point. Thomas and Sarah soon had their first child, Samuel, who was born the following year in January 1877. He was soon followed by Albert born in June 1878, followed by Norman in 1880.

By the end of 1885 the Lawns were all living in Greymouth again: Thomas and Sarah had moved back from Reefton in 1882 in time for the birth of their son Frank on the first of February, Ernest arrived two years later and Victor in 1887.

sons sarah hart and thomas lawn rephotographed
Lawn brothers, Greymouth c1891: Left to Right standing: Albert, Samuel, Norman. Sitting; Victor, Ernest, Frank.  HLR collection

Thomas and Sarah and their family returned to live in Reefton in December 1890. Esther was born in 1895 and Ida was born in 1897. The home of Sarah and Thomas, and their six boys and two girls sat up on the Terrace with a wide verandah at the front. Even though the older boys had left school it seems Sam and Albert both shifted to Reefton as well. Norman was still at school when they came to Reefton, he later attended Nelson College on a scholarship and began work in the Consolidated Goldfields Company, first assisting and then running the assay office. The older boys seemed quite at home in Reefton. . .

. . . In the years to come social and sporting events in the Inangahua Times invariably had at least one Lawn listed as a team member, player or singer contributing. Sarah Lawn continued to fit teaching piano and singing around her growing family, who all learned music as they got older. . .  Thomas and Sarah’s eldest sons Sam and Albert Lawn appeared in concerts, Albert playing the auto-harp and Sam the euphonium.

thumbnail combined lawn, hart hansen families 1897
Albert Lawn, c1897

In June 1898 Sarah’s son Albert went into business on his own account when he took over a tobacco shop and hairdressing business ‘The Leading Hair-dressing Saloon’ on Broadway, Reefton where among other things, he ‘made up ladies own combings’ as well as false moustaches and wigs. His profile and a dashing photograph were published in the Cyclopedia of New Zealand (Nelson Marlborough & Westland Provincial Districts) in 1906 (page 251-252) The entries in these were paid for by the contributors, so could arguably called ‘Vanity’ publications, and not always accurate. Albert’s description of his ‘Toilet Club’ has lead to much mirth in modern audiences, although the term ‘toilet’ at the time meant the same as personal grooming. 

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Albert married Harriet Noble on the 13 November 1901. This event and  the extended family photograph has been covered in an earlier post, see Lawn Cousins. In 1902 Thomas Lawn died. Sarah and Thomas’s sons Albert and Norman Lawn both remained in Reefton when their mother and sisters shifted back to Greymouth.

Another photograph survives from this period probably taken mid- to late-1903. It is a four generation photograph, of Albert with his first-born daughter Dorothy (born in December 1902), his mother Sarah and grandmother, Dinah Hansen.

courtesy I. Messenger
Albert Lawn with his daughter Dorothy, Flanked by his grandmother Dinah Hansen and mother Sarah Lawn courtesy I. Messenger

Albert and Harriet Lawn had their second of two children in 1904; family stories recall young Harold visiting his grandmother Sarah and great-grandmother Dinah in Greymouth and taking afternoon tea. The little boy asked if he could have a piece of cake that was on table, and Dinah told him she would tell him when he could have it. Again the little boy asked, and again came the answer ‘I will tell you when you can have it’. To the mortification of his parents, and the astonishment of all others present, in a fit of great daring Harold suddenly snatched the cake off the plate and threw it at Dinah, hitting her in the eye. His father mildly remarked: ‘he was always a good shot’.

albert lawn cyclopedia of nz
Albert Lawn 1906 Cyclopedia

 LAWN, ALBERT H., Hairdresser  and Tobacconist, Broadway, Reefton.

This business  was established  by Mr. R. J. Simpson and taken  over by the present  proprietor in June, 1898.

The hairdressing saloon is handsomely equipped  with  three  up-to-date chairs, and every  necessary  comfort  has been provided at considerable expense.  Mr. Lawn subscribes to, and places in his saloon, all the West Coast papers and Canterbury  weeklies. The shop is well stocked with the leading  brands  of tobacco, pipes, cigars and cigarettes. The show window  is one of the best in the town, and is at all times tastefully dressed. A feature  of Mr. Lawn’s business is a toilet  Club, with a membership of thirty-five, including some of the principal  residents  of Reefton. There is a complete  tobacco-cutting plant  on the premises.  Mr. Lawn was born and educated in Greymouth. He served  his apprenticeship in Wellington  with  Mr. L. P. Christenson, a well-known hairdresser and tobacconist of that  city.

In 1913, Albert and Harriet moved to Hokitika, where they had a house on the corner of Hampton and Bealey Streets, and Albert opened a shop in Revell Street. One year later was the 1914 outbreak of WWI. Albert was 36 and with two children was graded C in the Reserve Roll. In September 1918 he was reported as seriously ill in the local newspaper and confined to bed for several weeks. His ill health could have passed him as unfit if he was called up, which he was in the ballot drawn in September 1918, published in the newspaper. No official army file exists for Albert, therefore it is likely that he was not actually processed for service.

Grandson Keith Stopforth described what he knew of his grandparents:

In 1913 he moved to Hokitika and opened a barbers shop that he ran with his wife – she sold the tobacco and newspapers at the front of the shop. The shop was always busy with lots of men seated on the long wooden seats down either side of the walls. Some I think were only there to talk. He had 3 or 4 chairs and 2 other barbers helping him.  There was an open fire at the end of the shop where men would pass the time of day while they waited for a haircut, a shave or their whiskers trimmed. My grandmother worked in the front of the shop, tobacco sales and cigarettes kept her busy. . .

 . . . He could play anything to fit the occasion.  He had his own band called the Black Hand Band that comprised of two pianists and eight other musicians. He established the Black Hand Society which was a group of friends that gathered together for social evenings. It was exclusive and the yellow badge  with the black outspread hand was keenly sort after. [an example of the tin badge in Hokitika Museum (“Beware we never fail”) is red and black] 

(Keith Stopforth, 2003 to J. Bradshaw, Shantytown.)

According to Keith, his grandfather had never been taught to play the piano – however this is most likely incorrect, given that his mother Sarah was a music teacher from before her marriage, and almost certainly taught all her children to play along with the many students she tutored throughout her life.

Writing his reminiscences of Hokitika, local man  Henry Pierson recalled that Albert’s shop on Revell Street . . . was next door to an old watchmaker called Clark. . . next to that a small lolly shop occupied by . . . Winnie Westbrook. . . Next to Winnie’s was James King Bookseller and Stationer.  Pierson continues:

“Albert Lawn, the barber and tobacconist next door to Winnies, used to give us short back and sides for threepence.  He was well known for his musical talent and his dance band, the Black Hand, was immensely popular in the 1930s. It gained quite a reputation throughout the West Coast. Because of his great sense of humour, his salon was often the centre of outrageous stories and much hilarity. Some of the town’s local characters came in only to tell a yarn or exchange some tit bit of local scandal to which Albert would respond by adding his own version of the subject.”

(pp 13-15, Pierson, H. (2004) The Crooked Mile: Revell Street as I knew it. Silverfox: Christchurch.)

Great grandson Mike Stopforth adds:  The family lived out the back.  Nana told me once that they weren’t allowed to go out to the front of the shop and they had to come and go the back way.  It was located where the old Supermarket used to be when it was just a four square.

Arguably one of Albert’s ‘proudest’ occasions came in May 1920 with the visit to New Zealand of Edward, Prince of Wales. Arriving on the HMS Renown, in Auckland in late April, he departed Lyttelton, New Zealand at the end of May, enroute for Australia and India.

Preparations for the Prince’s visit to various locations around New Zealand were met with an astonishing frenzy of patriotic excitement, with civic events, triumphal arches (involving large quantities of fern fronds), and hordes of school children and obligatory pretty young ladies positioned to catch the playboy Prince’s eye. Bunting and flags were strung everywhere, children wrote essays and holidays declared. The newly formed RSA were hopeful to have their building officially opened, and returned servicemen were lined up to be presented with medals. In Greymouth, a young man Mr. R. G. Caigou of the Public Works Department spent hours laboriously painted an illuminated address to be presented to HRH by the Mayor on behalf of the citizens (see bottom of this post for an image of the address). This young man became Albert’s brother-in-law when his sister Esther married Russell Caigou in Greymouth, in January 1921.

The visit of the Prince to the Coast was somewhat fleeting: he came by train as far as he could from Nelson, motored to Westport, then back to Reefton in a motorcade of 30 cars that included being ‘filmed for the cinema’ passing through fern arch on the Buller. (The press car ended up upside down in a ditch full of blackberries before it reached Reefton). On the 12 May the Prince went by train from Reefton to Hokitika, where he spent the night and then to Greymouth the next day before heading to Christchurch. Details of events of the tour were reported in newspapers all over New Zealand (and overseas).

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“We Revere You As Our Prince” Welcome to Hokitika – Prince of Wales visit 1920. Contributed to West Coast Recollect by Tom Hartill

In Hokitika on the night of the 12 May a grand ball was held in his honour.  The Black Hand Band played and after the event the members were greeted by the Prince and shook his hand. According to Keith Stopforth the Prince was so intrigued by the name [of the band] that he enrolled as an honorary member of the Black Hand Society.

The following was originally published in the Melbourne Age:

“PROMENADE YOUR PARTNERS”

AND THE PRINCE DOES SO. A HUMOROUS PICTURE A delightfully humorous picture of the ball given at Hokitika in honour of the Prince of Wales was cabled to the Melbourne Age by one of the correspondents with the Royal party. He said: “The ball at Hokitika was an enormous popular success. After a public reception the Prince, attended by his staff, proceeded to the ball, which began at 10 o’clock. Most of the young men attending wore tweed suits. One old gentleman wandered through the happy throng wearing a long overcoat dating back to the period when “Bully” Hayes used to make Hokitika a favourite port of call when returning from his predatory expeditions among the islands. Another elderly dancer appeared in tweed trousers and a Cardigan jacket buttoned tightly around the throat. The ladies devoted more attention to dress than the Hokitika men. Many were accomplished dancers, and the Prince danced vigorously with a succession of Hokitika girls. In the official set, which opened the ball, Mrs R. J. Seddon, widow of the late democratic Imperialist, took part. The Prince danced in the set with Miss Perry, the Mayor’s daughter. A dance or two later the master of ceremonies, taking the middle of the floor, issued in a loud word of command, ‘Promenade your partners for circular waltz.’ The Prince does not care about waltzing as a general rule at balls which he attends, and he frequently exercises the Royal prerogative of cutting waltzes out of the programme, substituting one-steps or fox trots. At Hokitika, however, he promenaded his partner, according to directions, with the rest. Supper was an immense success. Rising early, a cool breeze from the snowclad mountains refreshed overnight revellers. From the hotel windows one could see Mount Cook, covered with snow apparently overlooking Hokitika, but in reality many scores of miles away.

Black Hand Band at practice on the verandah
Black Hand Band at the “Marquis of Lawn Hotel” (Lawn residence) – Collection of Hokitika Museum
albert and harriet
Albert and Harriet Lawn in the 1920s courtesy Kath Stopforth

In later years Albert became a radio announcer and had his own children’s session once a week from Hokitika on Thursday nights. Known as Uncle Albert he was obviously very popular as he had a studio photograph that was given out to his listeners. A copy of this photo, cropped without the inscription is in the HLR collection – it wasn’t until Sherri shared this image that I realised that this was Albert Lawn in later life.

uncle albert
“Uncle Albert” Mike Stopforth

 

“In Weld Street , Hokitika, was the studio . . . “Uncle Albert” was the man children came to love. Uncle Albert was gifted with his hands – not just for his daily job of haircutting, but as a pianist who had learnt to play by ear. One of his proudest occasions would be when the Duke of Windsor [sic] visited Hokitika in the 1920s – Uncle Albert being the official pianist as a member of the Black Hands [sic] Orchestra. 

He was often heard on Mickey Spier’s 3ZR Greymouth radio station conducting sessions with Donald McLeod, a well known identity who possessed a phenomenal memory. Within the space of seconds Donald would answer any questions, including trick ones, relating to events and dates, he was seldom wrong. Also joining “Uncle Albert” as he was known to radio listeners was ‘Aunt Dorothy’ (Jock Robinson) a talented pianist of Hokitika.

Bill Dwan served his apprenticeship with Albert Lawn, until he left to open his own business in Weld Street. Ron Brown, another of Albert’s apprentices, opened his own shop in the Regent Theatre corner shop.

After Lawn’s barber and tobacconist shop had closed down, Don Ramsey conducted a radio and records business in it for some years.”

pg 26 Looking at the West Coast, August 1965

A staunch Labour party supporter, he represented the Blind institute on the West Coast for many years. After suffering from diabetes for some time, Albert lost his left arm to the disease.

albert better
Albert Lawn courtesy Kath Stopforth

Understandably this was devastating for him as it meant he was no-longer able to work or play the piano, although there is one account of him wearing a prosthetic limb so he could play chords on the piano. However, family reported he sunk into a deep depression, from which he never truly recovered.

Albert Harold Lawn died in Hokitika on 22 April 1952, aged 72. Harriet lived until the age of 82, until she died in 1961. They are buried together in Hokitika.

Update September 2020:

A photograph of Russell Caigou’s illuminated address presented to the Prince of Wales. Kindly supplied by P. Caigou

John Webster Lawn

Of the Lawn family who I wrote of in my book and in previous posts, regular followers of this blog may recall that there were two sets of brothers – Cornish cousins, who came to New Zealand: James, John and Henry Lawn (I am a descendant of James) and Thomas and Edmund Lawn. These cousins were ‘double’ cousins – their mothers were sisters and their fathers were brothers.

Thomas and Edmund Lawn were the sons of John Lawn (b 1813) and Ann Webster (b 1815), both from the Gwennap area in Cornwall who married in 1836. Like the rest of the Lawn family, John was a miner, and his sons after him. There were nine children in the family, but not all of them made old bones:

  • Joseph Webster Lawn, b 1837, died in Melbourne, Australia in 1891,
  • John Webster Lawn, b 1837, died in Dalton in Furness, Lancashire in 1906,
  • Thomas Henry Lawn, b 1842, died in Reefton, New Zealand in 1902,
  • Emily Lawn, b 1844, died in Ulverston, Lancashire in 1873,
  • Richard Lawn, b 1847, died in Redruth, Cornwall in 1857,
  • Edmund Henry Lawn, b 1850, died in Reefton, New Zealand in 1894,
  • Samuel Lawn, b 1852, died in Ulverston, Lancashire in 1871,
  • Alfred Lawn, b 1855, died in Ulverston, Lancashire in 1871,
  • Richard Lawn, b 1857, died in Redruth in 1861,

This photograph of Lawn brothers and cousins was probably taken about 1868, and includes three of John Webster’s sons: Edmund, Alfred and Sam. It may have been taken at the time that Henry Lawn was married∗. For a long time this photograph, copies of which are in various descendants families, was labelled as ‘unknown Lawns’, until I found a named copy in Dunedin. Given two of the boys picture died just a few months apart in 1871, was this why the photograph was kept within the family? Where is the original of this photograph?

Unknown Lawn cousins Dalton in Furness from copy - Copy
Back: David Lawn, cousins Edmund, Sam and Alfred Lawn (brothers of Thomas Lawn), Front: Benjamin (later Rev.) Lawn, Tom Cowley (another cousin) Henry Lawn. Edmund also came to New Zealand, while both Sam and Alfred died within months of each other in Dalton in Furness in  1871 aged 18 and 16 years. [Update: taken in Barrow in Furness. An original copy was given to Bob Lawn of Reefton by Florrie Bishop, nee James (1888-1986)]
 

John Webster Lawn

John Webster, the second son of John and Ann, began working life in the copper mines in Lanner just like his father, uncles brothers and cousins, but by the late 1850s he had left the area for the more stable iron mining district of Dalton in Furness, Lancashire. In 1861 census, age 21,  he was recorded as lodging with another Gwennap man; Iron Ore Agent William Job and his wife in St Anne Street, Dalton. A few years later in 1864 he married a local girl, Eleanor Gunson. He soon worked his way up and became mining captain in the Barrow Hematite Steel Company, working in Park mine around 1863, a position he had held for 16 years when he gave lengthy evidence during the inquest of the death of two miners killed in a collapse of ore (see: Ulverston Mirror and Furness Reflector June 21, 1879).

From 1871 John was described in census as Iron Ore Agent, the family living firstly in Ulverston Road, then by 1891 their address was given as Fair View, with John now listed as Assistant Manager at Iron Mine. John contributed to his local community; standing for local board elections, eventually becoming Chairman of Dalton District Council. He was closely involved with the local Methodist church and laid a memorial stone to commemorate the building of the Methodist Sunday school in Dalton.

John Webster and Eleanor Gunson Lawn’s family consisted of seven children, but only two daughters and a son survived childhood.

Mary, b 1866, died in 1879 aged 13. James Gunson Lawn b 1868 was the only child of John Webster and Eleanor Lawn to marry and have children. More about him later. Annie, b 1870, died aged 3 in 1873. Her sisters Ada and Emily were born in 1872 and 1874. Both girls remained single, but like their brother James Gunson, were well-educated at boarding school and became teachers. Emily Lawn was also a researcher in the record office of the British Museum and Somerset House in London. The youngest children of John Webster and Eleanor Lawn were Joseph, born in 1876, died 1877 aged 9 months and Eleanor born 1878, died 1879 aged 3 months.

John Webster Lawn family
John Webster Lawn Family c 1899: Ada and Emily (not sure which is which), James Gunson Lawn with their parents John Webster Lawn and Eleanor née Gunson, James Gunson’s first wife Mary née Searle (far right) and from left their children John Gunson ‘Jack’ Lawn b 1894, Marjorie Lawn b 1893 and Laurence ‘Laurie’ b 1898 [image from HLR]
28th April 1906, Greymouth Evening Star. 

“Death of a Gwennap man in Lancashire. Another of the old familiar faces at Dalton has disappeared.  Among all of the people of the town none was better known none could have been more respected than Mr John Webster Lawn, of Fair View; and it was with regret that the announcement was heard on Friday, that he had passed away at seven o’clock that morning.  He had been in failing health for two or three years, and as a result was compelled to relinquish the important position of mine manager under the Barrow Hematite Steel Company.   Mr Lawn was born in the parish of Gwennap, Cornwall, 66 years ago, and came to the North of England 47 or 48 years ago.  By his diligence and perseverance, he rose from the lowest position in the Park Mines to the highest.   He was appointed mining captain in the days of the mines when they were owned by Messrs Selmeider and Hannay, and he continued his connection when they were taken over by the Barrow Hematite Company.   After the retirement of the late Mr Richard Hosking, the managership of the mines was vested in Mr William Kellett, J. P., of Southport, and Mr Lawn was appointed resident manager.  That position was held up to the time of Mr Kellett’s death, when he was chosen general mine manager.   He held the office to January, 1904, when his health gave way, and he was given six months’ rest.  His health did not improve, however, and he felt compelled to resign the position. 

 As a public man, Mr Lawn’s services were often sought.  He was elected to the Local Board in 1885, and continued to be a member of that body and the Urban Council up to 1904 – a period of nearly 20 years.  He held the post of chairman in 1889 and 1890, and was again elected to that seat in 1893, continuing till 1898.   As chairman of the Urban Council, he sat a magistrate (the first working man J. P.) on the Ulverston Bench for four years.  The flag at the Council offices in Station Road flew at half-mast.  He was also connected with the old Burial Board, and the Gas Committee, and was an overseer.  At public meetings, concerts, and the like, his services were freely and generously given.   In politics he was a Liberal, but took ne active part except on the temperance question, being a strong Abstinence man.   To say that he was respected by his fellow townsmen is to freely express the feelings of those who knew him best.  He adorned every position he occupied, wether in public, social, or religious life, and was a very valuable person.  Mr Lawn was an earnest Wesleyan Methodist, a class leader, and a local preacher for many years.  He spent his leisure in preparation for his pulpit work, and for religious engagements.  His services were much appreciated wherever he went and especially in the Barrow, Ulverston and Millom circuits.  He knew Methodism in these parts from the earliest days, and took an active part in its rise and progress throughout the towns and villages of the district.  Mr Lawn leaves a widow and three children, including Professor James G. Lawn, mining expert, of Johannesburg, South Africa.

Every shade of politics, every shade of religious belief, almost every profession and trade were represented at the funeral at the Dalton cemetery on Sunday afternoon.  An addition to the chief mourners, others present were Mrs Lawn, Miss Ada E. Lawn, Miss Emily Law and Mr David Lawn.  The remains were enclosed in a plain oak coffin bearing a plate with the words “John Webster Lawn, died March 2nd, 1906, aged 66 years”.  Following the hearse and mourning coaches was the horse and trap which Mr Lawn had used for many years in his daily round of the different mining properties worked by the Barrow Hematite Steel Company. 

The above are taken from the “North Western News and Mail,” and were written by a Cambornian  on the staff of the above paper.    Mr John Webster Lawn was the last surviving brother of the late Thomas Lawn, well known in Reefton and Greymouth, and cousin of John Lawn, of Reefton.”

JW Lawn funeral
(followed by a lengthy list of attendees and concludes below:)

last
Excerpts from Soulby’s Ulverston Advertiser and General Intelligencer March 8, 1906

John Webster Lawn and Eleanor Lawn (nee Gunson) grave

 

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Lawn memorial in Dalton Cemetery (see https://furnessstoriesbehindthestones.co.uk/?s=John+Webster+Lawn)

While the Lawn cousins who came to New Zealand eventually settled down and married, two brothers of James and John: George and Henry returned to England to marry.  Henry returned for a couple of years: he married Harriet Richards in Gwennap in 1868, and then went to work in the mines in Dalton in Furness where his first son Charles was born. In May 1870 he left the UK and returned to New Zealand and in 1873 sponsored his wife and baby son as new immigrants. George married Sarah Barnett in Gwennap in 1874 and had several children; he died in 1879 before his youngest was born.

 

 

Lawn Cousins

Lawn Cousins

The families of James Lawn and Thomas Lawn are almost as bewildering as the Hart and Nathan families and their repeated names. James’s father was also named James, as was his father before him making three James Lawn in different generations. Our James was often called ‘Jack’—at least when he was older—perhaps a reference to the moniker ‘Cousin Jack’ as Cornishmen were often called. James, John and Henry Lawn were double cousins to Thomas and Edmund Lawn.

After the adventures on the Otago goldfields and his return to Cornwall, James soon returned to Australia with his brother George and their cousin, Thomas Lawn. Thomas and James were double cousins: their respective fathers James and John Lawn had married sisters Jenifer (Jane) and Ann Webster.

Lawn cousins

The cousins left Liverpool on 2 January 1863, on board the record-breaking iron-hulled ss Great Britain, a great marvel of the age, another of Brunel’s successful designs. They arrived 90 days later in April 1863 in Melbourne, and went to join James’ brother John working in the Copper mines at Moonta, on the Yorke Peninsula in South Australia. Many Cornish miners (including Webster cousins) had congregated there in the three towns of Moonta, Kadina and Wallaroo which gained the epithet of The Copper Triangle or ‘Little Cornwall’. In 1927 the Sun reporter summed up James movements in the following years:

Six months of England were enough for James and he returned to Australia and then came again to New Zealand in 1863. Two years later he went to the West coast, in the Hokitika gold rush, and spent a number of years there, and at Reefton, working in the quartz mines.

Thomas Lawn 1842-1902

Thomas Lawn was born on the 27 March 1842 in Penance , and baptised on the 14 April in Gwennap. He appears on the 1851 census in Penance with his family, including his baby brother Edmund who also eventually to make his home in Blacks Point, New Zealand.Thomas Lawn 1851

Thomas a5

Thomas was taller than his cousin and had light brown curly hair – later it was snowy white. When he came to Australia with his older cousin James they were not to know that eventually they would cross the Tasman and find ‘The best looking girls on the Coast’ in Greymouth: the Hart sisters, and eventually marry them, settle down and raise large families.

Sarah HART and Thomas LAWN improved
Sarah Hart and Thomas Lawn, 1876

Thomas Lawn  Margaret

Lawn family 1901  crop

Thomas Lawn, like his cousin James, became a quartz mine manager in Reefton. Like his wife Sarah Thomas was a singer and often contributed to entertainment in social gatherings. Thomas built the family home on the Terrace in Reefton not long after their marriage. The combined Lawn families were photographed on the verandah in 1901 when Thomas and Sarah’s son Albert was married to Harriet Noble.

Lawn family 1901

13 November 1901, Reefton.

Back L to R standing on verandah: Mr and Mrs Noble, Mary ‘Polly’ Lawn (b 1879 – daughter of Edmund & Sarah), Eva Scoltock, Benjamin Hart, Thomas Lawn, Dinah and Charles Hansen, Jack Noble, Victor Lawn. At Right, in front of Jack and Victor: Norman Lawn, Liz (née Noble) and Bill Patterson and Rev. York.

Front: James and Rachel Lawn, Ida Hart, Emily Lawn (b 1882, Polly’s sister), Sarah Lawn with Ida, Albert and Harriet. In front of Liz and Bill Patterson: Emma Noble, Esther Lawn, Ernest Lawn, Tom and Jack Noble.

Image: HLR NB some of the names on the back of this copy in HLR are incorrectly attributed and have been corrected here.

The house still stands today.

Sarah and Thomas Lawn's house.jpg

A grandchild marries

The extended Hart and Lawn families gathered together in Reefton for an exciting occasion; the first of Dinah’s grandchildren, Albert Lawn, 23, second son of Sarah and Thomas was to marry 23 year old Harriet Noble. The wedding took place in late spring, on 13 November 1901. Harriet had been born in South Canterbury to Joseph and Sarah Noble. The dashingly handsome Albert had become a successful hairdresser and tobacconist in Reefton.

            With everyone dressed in their Sunday best, Thomas and Sarah Lawn’s family, along with James and Rachel Lawn, Dinah and Charles Hansen, Benjamin and Ida Hart, and Harriet’s family assembled on the verandah of Thomas and Sarah’s house on the Terrace, Reefton for a family portrait: the men in suits with flowers at the lapel, the women with hats trimmed with feathers and flowers, some looking like birds about to take flight. The boys wear knickerbockers, Eton suits and sailor hats, the little girls swamped in white pinafores and bonnets. Sarah bends forward to keep her youngest daughter Ida still for the photograph. Everyone else waits patiently, squinting a bit in the sun.

            It was to be the last family group photograph that included Thomas Lawn. Less than a year later he was to die in Reefton on 14 June 1902 aged 60. He and Sarah had been married for 25 years. Thomas had suffered from pulmonary phthisis for three years. Commonly known as miner’s phthisis, this was lungs diseased from years of breathing in quartz dust. Thomas’s life ended with a fatal hemorrhage. Mercifully his death was quick, unlike others who lingered days after the initial sudden loss of blood, but nevertheless traumatic for those close to him who witnessed his final collapse.

            Thomas was buried on 14 June at the Reefton Suburban Cemetery at Burkes Creek on Buller Road. Oddly, his headstone faces away from the central pathway. It consists of a cross and roses, although it lies broken; probably damaged after an earthquake. Thomas had made his will in Greymouth in May 1889, simply leaving everything in his estate to his wife Sarah.

excerpt p 286 To Live a Long & Prosperous Life

ThomasLAWN_Probate_06
Thomas Lawn death certificate filed with probate

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Thomas Lawn and Sarah Hart, James Lawn and Rachel Hart children and their families share a combination of the Lawn and Webster, Hart and Nathan strengths and passions. From the combination of Cornish and Jewish genes come a long line of tenacious and hardworking folk. Extraordinary achievers: miners, internationally renowned geologists, doctors, teachers, singers and musicians, writers and academics, including brain surgeons, reserve bank economists, nuclear physicists, university lecturers – and one or two published authors. Chutzpah and the gift of the gab. What an inheritance.