Friday 7 September 2018

#52Ancestors, Week 36, Work


I don’t think I have anyone in my tree with an occupation which would be considered out of the ordinary.

Farmers, ag labs, railway employees, tailors, builders, engineers, teachers, nurses, domestics, grooms, coachmen, taxi drivers, truck drivers, mechanics, publicans, gardeners, sailcloth weavers, glovers, fitters, bakers, millers, labourers, clerks, cordial manufacturers and nurserymen can all be found scattered through my tree.

When my Cooper ancestors came to New Zealand in 1841 Samuel the head of the family was a tailor. A trade he had worked at in Montacute, Somerset before emigration. I don’t know where he learnt this trade, perhaps from his father although he died when Samuel was quite young; so maybe not.

Samuel and Elizabeth bought with them seven children. John the eldest was my great great grandfather. He was about twenty when they left England and followed his father and became a tailor. Two other sons began ginger beer and cordial manufacture businesses. Thomas was reputed to be the first to do so in New Zealand. Frederick who was just fourteen months old when they emigrated went on to establish a firm which operated for over 100 years.

F. Cooper Ltd.

It was recognized as a world leader in the production of seed peas for freezing and canning as well as a well established reputation as a producer of other quality seeds.

Fred married Ellen Carpenter in 1863. She was born in Wellington in 1842 shortly after her parents had arrived. Together they set up shop in Manners Street, near Herbert Street. Herbert Street no longer exists, but their shop was on the site, or very close to, where McDonalds now operate on the corner of Manners and Victoria Streets. They sold groceries, fruit and other needs of early settlers as well as seeds and plants from a nursery which Fred had already established between Taranaki and Hooper Streets. In 1866 they placed a half page advertisement in the Wellington Almanac. Their business prospered and four years later in the same publication they advertised that they had been able to erect a large building adjoining the shop where they intended to conduct all of their business.

By 1880, they had outgrown the space between Taranaki and Hopper Streets and extended their interests to Alicetown, south of the present Ewen bridge on the western side of the Hutt Valley. Here they established the Bijou Nurseries. In spite of economic fluctuations they were able to build on their early steady solid growth and in 1890 were obliged to find a larger building. This time on the east of Manners Street near the junction of St Hill St (today this is the laneway running between ASB Bank and Subway on Manners Street through to Bond Street).

Ellen and Fred had a family of eight children. Their two sons and three of their daughters joined the family business. In 1899 their son George aged twenty was sent to England to investigate prospects and returned with a contract to export seeds to the United Kingdom.

Fred died in 1908 but the business continued to grow in the hands of the two sons. In 1909 they erected a five storey building on the corner of Mercer and Willis Street; in 1913 they needed another building, this time in Dixon Street, near Willis Street. They operated from this site until at least the 1960s. The business passed to another Fred Cooper, grandson of the founder in the 1950s.

Coopers were at one time the largest seed house in New Zealand. In 1974 F Cooper Ltd was sold to Arthur Yates & Co Ltd. Yates had begun a similar business in Auckland in 1883, expanding to Australia in 1887. The Yates Seed Division was sold to South Pacific Seeds in 2003. The brand name  for commercial growers was changed to Terranova Seeds. Today Terranova Seeds are still the largest vegetable seed supplier in New Zealand.

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