I’ve
searched and searched and racked my brain (and the brain of others) in my
endeavour to find a subject for this topic. In 2018 I hinted at some women in
my tree and the tough decisions some had made in their lives, some who overcame
difficult situations and others who stood up to be counted for something they
believed in.
So
this time had to be different. I looked for people with the Strong surname –
none. I’m pretty sure there are no women weightlifters or circus people hiding on
a yet unexplored branch of the tree either.
So, what
makes you strong ?
One
person’s strength is not the same as another – even if the two are as close as
sisters. Is the sister who bid farewell to all that was familiar to her and
followed her husband to the other side of the world to make a new life with
better opportunities for her children stronger than her sister who stayed and
lived in the same village as generations had before her ?
Everybody’s
journey is unique and the events we experience shape us; the way we respond to
them defines us.
Caroline
Ann Cooper is someone in my family who I think was a pretty strong woman. She
strikes me as a resilient, strong woman to have carried on despite the adversities
she faced.
Things
started out great, she was born in Wellington, New Zealand on 23 January 1861,
the 6th child for John Cooper a tailor and his wife Mary Ann. By the
time her younger sister Emma was born 20 months later, her family had left
Wellington and relocated to Kekerengu, north of Kaikoura on the east coast of
South Island where her grandmother and several of her mother’s brothers and
sisters had also moved. A few short years later when she was about 10, the
family had moved south into the township of Kaikoura where the youngest three
of her siblings were born.
When
she was about fifteen her mother left, taking the three youngest children with
her to Australia. By that time two of her sisters had married and started their
own families so I imagine it would have been expected that Caroline would assume
some of the responsibilities, along with her eldest sister, of caring for the
younger children and their father. In September 1879 her eldest sister Charlotte
died aged 28.
Tom Cooke
and his cousin William emigrated in the mid 1870’s first to the West Coast before
settling in Kaikoura. They were both in the building trade. My great
grandfather is said to have been apprenticed to him. William was a painter and
ironmonger, operating a hardware store and offering employing to locals. He also
left a legacy to the youth of Kaikoura – but that might be another story.
In
April 1881 Caroline and Tom were married. Their first child and only son
Thomas, arrived three months later. Three daughters followed, the youngest in
1887.
Something
went awry though; in 1891 Tom appears on the UK census…and he is on every
subsequent UK census until his death in 1926. Caroline remained in Kaikoura and
raised her children, I guess with some support from her family, perhaps also
from Tom’s cousin William.
In
1902 her son Thomas married in Wellington where it is thought he had been
living and working for some time, then her eldest daughter married in Waiau in
1904. In 1905 her middle daughter, Flora, died aged 20. In about 1912 ahead of the
outbreak of World War 1 Thomas left Wellington, taking his family to Melbourne
Australia where he continued to work as a builder later enlisting with the
Australian Imperial Forces.
He
did not return, dying at Pozieres in July 1916 and posthumously being awarded
the Victoria Cross. A memorial brass tablet commemorating his heroism was
unveiled at Kaikoura School, a gold necklet with an engraved Maltese Cross was
presented to Caroline and a war memorial was erected to remember him and the
other Kaikoura boys.
In
April 1918 Caroline’s youngest daughter, Ethel, died after an operation at
Christchurch Hospital. In November of the same year her eldest daughter, Catherine,
was a victim of the “Spanish Flu” leaving seven children aged
between 5 and 14 years.
A
small notice appeared in the Marlborough Express, 3 December 1918
The death occurred at Waiau on
Nov. 25th of Mrs Catherine Oldman, wife of Mr C.A Oldman, at the age of 35. The
deceased was the only surviving member of Mrs C Cooke's family (Kaikoura) who
has lost her three other children, including Private Thomas Cooke, who won the
Victoria Cross whilst doing his duty to the Empire.
Caroline’s
cottage on Brighton Street, Kaikoura was one of three which burnt down in the
early hours of 27 June 1935. All her furniture except a piano was saved, the
other two cottage occupants weren’t so lucky. Her home was rebuilt and is
described in her estate sale as being 5 years old, a three roomed cottage with
a bathroom, sunporch and detached washhouse.
After
her death on 11 January 1941 just a few days short of her 80th
birthday, Caroline was buried in the Kaikoura Cemetery and her home, furniture
and belongings were auctioned as part of estate.
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