000 03277cam a2200337 i 4500
999 _c45029
_d45029
001 on1176279950
003 OCoLC
005 20200828110713.0
008 160613t20202020nz 00| f eng
020 _a9781927167410
_qpaperback
020 _a1927167418
029 0 _aNLNZL
_b9918973372702836
035 _a(OCoLC)1176279950
040 _aNZ1
_beng
_erda
_cNZ1
_dNZGPL
_dOCLCO
_dOCLCF
042 _anznb
082 0 4 _aNZ823.3
_223
100 _aSingleton, Suzanne,
_d1945-
_eauthor.
_947449
245 1 0 _aMellons Bay /
_cSuzanne Singleton.
260 _aChristchurch, New Zealand :
_bWily Publications,
_c2020
300 _a237 pages ;
_c24 cm
500 _a"a fictionalised history based on real life characters and events"--Page 235.
500 _aNovel.
520 _a"MELLONS BAY is a story of relationships and family. It depicts life in colonial Auckland, change and adaptation in a new land, heartache, hope, love and loss. It is also a fictionalised account of the author's great-great-grandparents.The book traces the story of a 19th century Irish family affected as so many were by famine and poverty. In 1849 Harriet and William Mellon arrived in New Zealand on the Oriental Queen, one of ten ships which brought a detachment of mostly pensioned soldiers, the Royal New Zealand Fencibles, to Auckland. They settled in four villages then lying on the outskirts of the settlement: Howick, Panmure, Onehunga and Otahuhu. The Fencibles constructed houses, roads and bridges and gradually schools, shops and churches. Initially, they were granted an acre of land. After seven years the Mellons purchased a five-acre block of land in a bay near Howick, later called Mellons Bay. Here they built a sod cottage which was still visible in 1977. William Mellon worked as a surveyor for several prominent Auckland companies, while his wife produced homegrown goods for the market.William was born in Dublin in 1807 and as a young man joined the Royal Engineers and worked as a surveyor on the Ordnance Survey of Ireland.Born in Belfast, Harriet (nee Hennessy) married William in 1837 in County Cork. Less is known about her. The family stories claimed that she had red hair, had been 'on the stage' and was 'flighty and frivolous'. The few stories of her were dismissive. She had become the invisible woman who left her husband for another man. As a result of careful research Mellons Bay adds details to her story, giving Harriet strength of character and solidity - a more deserving place in the family history.William prospered in New Zealand. He bought fifty acres on the Mangamangaroa Creek in Pakuranga. He later bought farmland in the Waikato where he lived during the 1870s with his daughter and son-in-law. The farm was bequeathed to his daughter, Mary-Anne on his death in 1880. Mary-Anne and George Floyd had fifteen children. The youngest son was the author's grandfather, born in 1878"--http://www.wily.co.nz.
600 0 _947450
_aMellon, Harriet
_vFiction.
_xFamily
651 0 _94272
_aAuckland (N.Z.)
_vFiction.
655 4 _aNew Zealand fiction
_y21st century.
_5Nz
_918597
655 7 _aHistorical fiction.
_2fast
_943610
655 7 _aHistorical fiction.
_2lcgft
_943610
942 _2ddc
_cFICNZ
948 _hNO HOLDINGS IN NZWMT - 8 OTHER HOLDINGS