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The Le Roy
Family
This information has been compiled from a multitude of sources
by Margaret Peacocke, a great-great-
grand-daughter of Edward & Annie Paddison.
COPYRIGHT
2007 in its
entirety.
Please make contact if you have information to add or comments
to make.
It is not known why Emilius, the eldest son of the founder of E. Le Roy Ltd
chose farming rather than following his father’s footsteps into the business
world as his two younger brothers Albert and Edward did. Whatever the
reason, he chose to make a life for himself and his family on Great Barrier
Island.
He arrived with his new bride Sarah Jane (nee Cooper) whom he married in
July 1879. Before their house was built, they lived in a nikau whare on
their piece of land in Rarohara Bay, Port FitzRoy to the west of ‘Peach Tree
Creek’. (William Cooper
(Sarah Jane Le Roy’s uncle)
purchased the block of land bordering the Le Roys to the east of Peach Tree
Creek at Rarohara Bay).
When Emilius became Postmaster in 1884, the mail arrived from Auckland by
boat, usually a steamer, which dropped anchor below the house. The mail
would then be transported ashore and carried to the Post Office. A fairly
tall post with an enclosed box at its foot was erected on the top of the
peninsular (between Rarohara and Kaiaraara bays) at a spot called Mill
View’. (Apparently a windmill had been built on this hill prior to the Le
Roys’ arrival and was dismantled in about 1881. I have been unable to
ascertain who built it). Telegrams, or any other important information,
would be put in this box and a signal hoisted on the post – usually a red
bandana. The signal could be seen from many vantage points around FitzRoy.
Once the schoolroom was built on the property, the mail was usually given to
the children to take home.
Emilius held the position of Postmaster for 40 years until 1923 when Joseph
Paddison took over the role. Joe’s property was more convenient once the
wharf was built at Port FitzRoy. Steam ships could easily tie up at the new
wharf (built in 1916 at a cost of £400 some years after residents sent a
petition to Government) and the locals could get to the Post Office adjacent
to ‘Glenfern’ either by horse or boat.
In 1893 Emilius received a grant of £10 “to be paid to Mr Le Roy on
completion of building [schoolroom] to accommodate Mr Warren’s children and
his own”. On its completion, his five school age children were able to, once
again, have the services of a teacher to assist with their education,
although still not on a fulltime basis as the teacher had other families to
educate. The school, attached to the store and Post Office, continued to
operate out of the Le Roys’ schoolroom until 1927 (by this time, all the Le
Roy children had grown up) when a church hall was built next to the Port
FitzRoy wharf. The land was donated by the Warrens (originally William
Cooper’s land) and local people brought materials and built it (at no cost).
It has been described as a nice building but the ceiling was unlined so it
was cold in winter. It doubled as a schoolroom.
In 1941, the last pupil was enrolled at Great Barrier School. In the
school’s register it was number 230, Joseph Paddison Cooper, born 19 August
1935. He was the grandson of Joseph Paddison (enrolled as number 6) and
Samuel Cooper (number 7).The army took over the hall, as its presence on
Great Barrier intensified with fears of a Japanese invasion of Auckland
during WW2. The school never re-opened.
In 1901, tragedy struck the family when their eldest son, Emilius was
drowned (one story suggests that he was wearing new gumboots and wouldn’t
take them off knowing that his father would be cross if he lost them!!) at
the age of 21 after his yacht capsized as he was sailing near Flax Island,
between Rarohara Bay and the “big passage” (Man o War Passage) practically
within sight of his home. His companion swam ashore.
Tragedy struck again in 1902 when their house burned down. However, this
time, tragedy turned into a good news story despite the economic setback,
because everyone got out safely and the pigeon post service was used
immediately after the fire to send an order to Auckland for the necessary
timber and joinery to build a new house. These arrived on the next boat.
Settlers from all over the island came in boats, pitched tents and worked
solidly. They achieved the near impossible - a new single-storied house with
verandahs around two sides was erected in just one week.
A photograph taken prior to the original house being burned down in 1904,
shows a building partly on the beach that was used to store tent poles. At
high tide, they were “loaded onto a large punt to be shipped from the
anchored steamer to Auckland for his father’s tent and cover and coat
shops.” Another small building in the photo is said to be a “drying shed
where oilskin coats were hung to dry after being dressed with a
water-proofing mixture.” (Cyril Moor “Early Settlement of Port FitzRoy, Great
Barrier Island”). So, it would appear that Emilius did have some involvement
in the family business.
Even into the twentieth century, the island was remote. In 1908 when Emilius’
daughter Ada was marrying Joss Moor there was no Minister on the island, so
one had to come by steamer from Auckland. For some reason, he didn’t arrive.
The only person on the island authorised to perform a marriage was the
Postmaster, so Emilius officiated at his daughter’s wedding.
When Emilius died in 1944, his son Selwyn carried on the farm with the
youngest of the eleven children, Girlie until his death in 1962. Girlie
continued to eke out a living by milking a few cows and selling part of her
land. Her death in 1979 completed 100 years of unbroken occupancy by the Le
Roy family on this site.
Many members of the Le Roy, Flinn and Bush pioneer families are buried on
the uninhabited Grave Island in FitzRoy Harbour. This island is marked on
the charts as Coigne or Quoine Island.
Of the Le Roys, the following were buried there;
Emilius George Le Roy
Sarah Jane Le Roy
(Elizabeth) May Waterman (nee Le Roy)
Albert Waterman (May’s husband)
Vera Le Roy
Selwyn Joseph Le Roy
Emilius Le Roy (jnr)
Edward Le Roy also had a relationship with Great Barrier. He spent his
honeymoon (I’m not sure whether this was the honeymoon of his first marriage
in 1896 or his second in 1910) at Great Barrier and obtained 29 acres from
his brother, Emilius. He built a cottage on the land using workers from the
family business when they were not busy. A postcard from 1910 shows it, but
anecdotal evidence indicates that it had not been completed by 1917.
The Great Barrier Island by A. E. Le Roy
Published in the ‘Journal of the Auckland-Waikato’ Issue No. 32 April
1978
Emilius George Le Roy’s Family
Father: Emilius James Le Roy
Born: 1827 in Guernsey
Died: 1905 in Auckland
Buried: Purewa Cemetery, Auckland |
Mother: Catherine (nee Tabel)
Born: 1827 in Guernsey
Died: 1904
Buried: Purewa Cemetery, Auckland |
Emilius George married 1879 to
Sarah Jane (Jenny) Cooper,
Born: 1856 in England,
Died: 1906
Buried: Grave Island, Great Barrier |
| Children: |
|
Emilius Le Roy
Born: 1880
Died: drowned in 1901
Buried: Grave Island, Great Barrier |
(Elizabeth) May Le Roy
Born: 1881,
Died: 1963
Married: Albert Waterman
Buried: Grave Island, Great Barrier |
Daisy Catherine Le Roy
Born: 1883
Died: 1950
Married: Mr Mitchell |
Elsie Annie Le Roy
Born: 1885
Died: 1926
Married: never married |
Vera Tabel Le Roy
Born: 1886
Died: lived only 10 days
Buried: Grave Island, Great Barrier |
Ada Marie Le Roy
Born: 1888,
Died: 1973
Married: Mr Joss Moor
Buried: Le Roy’s Point |
Amy Alice Le Roy
Born: 1889
Died: 1976
Married: Mr Bone |
Selwyn Joseph Le Roy
Born: 1891,
Died: 1962
Married: never married
Buried: at Grave Island |
Olive Winifred Le Roy
Born: 1894
Died: 1963
Married: Mr Wilson |
Dorothy Ruth Le Roy
Born: 1899
Died: 1950
Married: Mr O’Meara |
|
Emilius George married 1911 to |
Elizabeth Craig (died 1916) |
Child:
Agnes (Girlie) Dalziel Le Roy
Born: 1912, Died: 1979, Buried: Le Roy Point
Never Married: |
|
Emilius George married |
L Wilcox (didn’t work out) |
Lands & Surveys record of land
sold to miners 1879 & 1880
| Edward Paddison |
1000 acres |
£400 |
|
| William & Albert Edlington |
600 acres |
£330 |
|
| George Stark |
100 acres |
£40 |
1897 - mention of George Stark owning 200
acres |
| John Moor |
750 acres |
£350 |
|
| William Flinn |
820 acres |
£400 |
|
| Emilius Le Roy |
313 acres |
£125
4/- |
|
1881 Electoral Roll
| Name |
Property |
Occupation |
Electorate |
| Le Roy, Emilius |
Freehold |
Sailmaker |
Parnell |
| Sanderson, Benjamin |
Freehold
Blind Bay, Lot 148 |
Farmer |
Rodney |
| Sanderson, William |
Freehold
Blind Bay, Lot 149 |
Farmer |
Rodney |
| Cooper, William |
Residential
Port FitzRoy |
Settler |
Rodney |
| Cooper, George |
Residential
Port FitzRoy |
Settler |
Rodney |
| Cooper, Samuel |
Residential
Port FitzRoy |
Settler |
Rodney |
| Stark, George |
Freehold
Great Barrier, Lot 123 |
Farmer |
Rodney |
| Paddison, Edward |
No Record |
|
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Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee - 1897
To celebrate this event, school children throughout New Zealand signed a
tribute. From the Great Barrier families of interest, the following
participated;
Le Roy, Ada Marie - Great Barrier School
Le Roy, Amy Alice - Great Barrier School
Le Roy, Elsie Annie - Great Barrier School
Le Roy, Daisy - Parnell, Secondary School
Paddison, Edith Annie - Great Barrier School
Paddison, Frank William - Great Barrier School
Paddison, Harvey Roy - Great Barrier School
Paddison, Herbert Allison - Great Barrier School
Paddison, Ralph Lingard - Great Barrier School
Sanderson, Benjamin - Tryphena School, Great Barrier Island
Sanderson, William - Tryphena School, Great Barrier Island
Benjamin and William Sanderson were probably children of Ben Sanderson,
older brother of William who married Amy Paddison |