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Great aunts of the family


Thora Stace

b. 1920, Wellington NZ

m. Laurence Melsop, May 1970

Norman’s older sister, Thora currently lives in New Zealand

 

Aileen Mary Stace

b. 14 Mar 1895 in Manawatu, New Zealand

d. 19 Aug 1977 in Wellington, New Zealand

 

Norman’s aunt Aileen Mary Stace was born on 14 March 1895 at Stoney Creek, Manawatu, to Thomas Walter Stace, a farmer, and his wife, Harriett Matilda Bannister. She was the youngest of eight children. After catching tuberculosis of the spine as an infant, her back became hunched and her legs paralysed, and she received no formal schooling. Clever and artistic, she taught herself a great deal and read widely. She enjoyed the arts, especially ballet.

Aileen’s mother died in 1912, and from 1914 she lived with her father in Wellington until his death in 1921. She then went to live with her sister, Linda Girdlestone, and her husband, Cyril, in Nikau Street, Eastbourne, moving into her own cottage in their garden around 1926. She never married.

She died on 19 August 1977 at Lower Hutt. Afterwards, the Eastbourne Spinners continued to meet, and they gifted examples of her knitting to the Dowse Art Museum. Atalanta went to the Southward Museum Trust.

 


Mabel Jessie Stace

Mabel Jessie Stace (1881-1966) was an aunt of Norman’s. Mabel married Gordon Aitken on 8 August 1910.  Their son, Hollis Stace Aitken (aka G Aitken - perhaps Gordon?) was born on 30 September 1910. [9] 

Two days two days after he married Mabel, Gordon was transferred to Napier[11].

Gordon was killed at Chunuk Bair (Gallipoli) during WWI on 8 August 1915.  

Following Gordon's death, Mabel married Frederick John Sygrove in 1919.  Together, Mabel and Frederick had four sons,  Frederick Sygrove (13 September 1917 - 2002), Scott Stace Sygrove (23 April 1920 - 2008), Peter Stace Sygrove (11 February 1922 - 2002) and Robin Sygrove.  


Aileen Mary Stace

 

Florence Venables Hall (1897 – 1987) was Corinne’s oldest sister, born in England. At the age of 23 she married Robert Grabham in Sydney. They ran a farm in northern New South Wales, but unfortunately the farmhouse burnt down while they were on holidays. She wrote to her parents, who moved out from England with their daughters Jean, May and Corinne. 

By 1932 she was living in Perth, Western Australia, where she made a number of watercolour paintings.  In 1957 she emigrated to New Zealand. 


Perth from South Perth, 1932

 

 

Paintings by Florence include:

Title

Details

Camp Site

Watercolour, signed lower left, 26 x 32 cm

Perth from South Perth 

Watercolour, signed and dated 1932 lower right, 35 x 30 cm

Moored Boats Meelup Bay

Watercolour, signed lower right, 20 x 26.5 cm

Portrait of Flora Bobone

Pencil, signed and dated 1938, lower right, 28 x 23 cm

Old Fremantle Bridge 

Watercolour, signed lower right, 26 x 24 cm

Trilli (Portrait of Flora Bobone)

Pencil, signed and dated '1938' lower right, 36.5 x 28 cm

Landscape

Watercolour, signed and dated '35 lower right, 17 x 22 cm

Boscastle Estuary, Cornwall

Watercolour, signed, 36 x 48 cm

River Fishing c. 1930's

Oil on canvas, unframed, 35 x 25 cm

Paper Barks, Swan River

Watercolour, signed, 26 x 32 cm

Landscape

Watercolour, signed

By the River Applecross Wa 

Watercolour, signed lower left, hand written title, 29.5 x 35.5 cm

Landscape with Gum Tree

Watercolour, signed, 25 x 20 cm

The Edge of the Beach 

Watercolour, signed, 38 x 39 cm

The Maitai Ford

Watercolour, signed, 38 x 28 cm

 

By the River Applecross WA


Old Fremantle Bridge

 
Portrait of Flora Bobone, 1938

 


Annie Hall

Annie Hall (1860 in Sligo, Ireland - 1929 in The Hague, Holland) was Corinne’s eldest aunt. She married a Dutch artist, Jan Theodore Toorup who was half Dutch and half Javanese (Indonesian). 

They had a daughter Annie Caroline Pontifex Toorop (1891-1955), nicknamed Charlie. 

 

 

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Travel

Peru

 

 

In October 2011 our little group: Sonia, Craig, Wendy and Richard visited Peru. We flew into Lima from Rio de Janeiro in Brazil. After a night in Lima we flew to Iquitos.

Read more: Peru

Fiction, Recollections & News

Memory

 

 

 

Our memories are fundamental to who we are. All our knowledge and all our skills and other abilities reside in memory. As a consequence so do all our: beliefs; tastes; loves; hates; hopes; and fears.

Yet our memories are neither permanent nor unchangeable and this has many consequences.  Not the least of these is the bearing memory has on our truthfulness.

According to the Macquarie Dictionary a lie is: "a false statement made with intent to deceive; an intentional untruth; a falsehood - something intended or serving to convey a false impression".  So when we remember something that didn't happen, perhaps from a dream or a suggestion made by someone else, or we forget something that did happen, we are not lying when we falsely assert that it happened or truthfully deny it.

The alarming thing is that this may happen quite frequently without our noticing. Mostly this is trivial but when it contradicts someone else's recollections, in a way that has serious legal or social implications, it can change lives or become front page news.

Read more: Memory

Opinions and Philosophy

Losing my religion

 

 

 

 

In order to be elected every President of the United States must be a Christian.  Yet the present incumbent matches his predecessor in the ambiguities around his faith.  According to The Holloverse, President Trump is reported to have been:  'a Catholic, a member of the Dutch Reformed Church, a Presbyterian and he married his third wife in an Episcopalian church.' 

He is quoted as saying: "I’ve had a good relationship with the church over the years. I think religion is a wonderful thing. I think my religion is a wonderful religion..."

And whatever it is, it's the greatest.

Not like those Muslims: "There‘s a lot of hatred there that’s someplace. Now I don‘t know if that’s from the Koran. I don‘t know if that’s from someplace else but there‘s tremendous hatred out there that I’ve never seen anything like it."

And, as we've been told repeatedly during the recent campaign, both of President Obama's fathers were, at least nominally, Muslim. Is he a real Christian?  He's done a bit of church hopping himself.

In 2009 one time United States President Jimmy Carter went out on a limb in an article titled: 'Losing my religion for equality' explaining why he had severed his ties with the Southern Baptist Convention after six decades, incensed by fundamentalist Christian teaching on the role of women in society

I had not seen this article at the time but it recently reappeared on Facebook and a friend sent me this link: Losing my religion for equality...

Read more: Losing my religion

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