Elizabeth Ann Rabone
was born in Staffordshire, England, on November 26th, 1864.
The third child of Samuel Rabone, a West
Midlands Railway Worker, and Margaret Williams, from Shropshire.
The family emigrated to New Zealand in
July 1872, with the Birmingham Railway Contractor John Brogden & Sons, as
part of a contract with the New Zealand Government for the provision of a
railway network and labour force to construct it.
This tough working
class beginning and emigration to a new colony as a child, set the foundation
for Elizabeth; never likely to rise above her station, but with the fortitude
to keep going even when faced with very difficult odds.
Samuel’s
family settled in Picton, at the top of the South Island, and it was here in
November 1883 that Elizabeth aged 19 married 22-year-old Francis Robert Godfrey
(Frank), youngest son of John Godfrey a local Politician, Publican and General
Merchant, and his wife Hannah Smith.
Elizabeth and Frank had nine children between 1884 and 1898,
two of whom died in infancy.
Elizabeth was settled in Picton,
socially active and engaged with her family and their small community.
Her life inexorably changed in 1902,
when Frank was diagnosed with syphilis and Elizabeth’s Doctor urged she “No
longer co-habit with her husband”. Their
marriage marred by bankruptcy and Frank’s unconscionable behaviour, and with
six children under 16, Elizabeth took her Doctor’s advice.
Although the Women’s Movement had been
instrumental in gaining women the right to vote in 1893, there was little
support available for separated or divorced women raising children alone. Elizabeth was not eligible for any financial
assistance from the Government; pensions for widows did not begin until 1911
and low-income families only began to receive Government financial support in
1926. Those unable to support themselves prior to
this relied on family support or charities.
Elizabeth never settled in one place for long after 1902, her limited
choices dictated by her tenuous financial position.
Elizabeth
took the three youngest children and moved to Wellington shortly after the
separation, and over the next several years applied twice to the Magistrate’s
Court for financial support from Frank. His failure to comply with court orders resulted
in a prison sentence in late 1902. Perhaps as a compromise Frank took custody of
the three children in Wellington for twelve months, and Elizabeth returned to
Picton.
In 1905
with her children back in her custody, no maintenance from Frank, and unable to
provide for them, Elizabeth made the heartbreaking decision to relinquish her 5
and 6-year-old sons to a Church Funded Orphanage in Brightwater, 80 miles from
Picton, leaving her with just three children under 16 to support.
By 1911 her eldest children, most still
teenagers, had established themselves on the West Coast in the mining region
around Greymouth, at the foot of the Southern Alps, and Elizabeth joined them
there with the youngest retrieved from the Orphanage and approaching the end of
their compulsory schooling.
While
on the West Coast, Elizabeth successfully pursued a divorce from Frank, citing
poverty as the reason she had delayed taking this action for nine years. The divorce was granted on the grounds of
Frank’s drunkenness, his abuse of, and violence towards Elizabeth, and his infidelity.
Divorce requirements were changed by the
Divorce Act of 1898, making them the same for both men and women, though fault still
needed to be proven, and often sordid details of the guilty party’s actions were
published in the newspaper. Thankfully Elizabeth’s divorce details were
not published and she escaped the embarrassment of public disapproval.
|
Elizabeth Ann Godfrey nee Rabone |
In late
1912 Elizabeth and the two youngest boys moved 640 miles north to Mercer to
join her 17-year-old daughter Madge, who was recently married. Mercer
was a bustling hub of railway activity beside the Waikato River, on the main
trunk line between Auckland and Hamilton. Here for several years Elizabeth used the
surname Young, and although family stories hint at a relationship with a man of
this name, nothing is now known which confirms this.
New
Zealand entered WWI in 1914 and those of her sons old enough enlisted, and
joined the war effort in Europe, Walter in 1914, Sam and Frank in 1916.
Walter and Sam returned to New Zealand
at the end of the war, however Lance Corporal Frank Godfrey of the NZ Machine
Gun Battalion fell at the Second Battle of Cambrai, in Northern France on 8th
October 1918 aged 21. This was a painful year for Elizabeth as her
youngest child Rabone, died six weeks after his brother, during the 1918 Post
War Influenza Pandemic which swept the country. The loss of two sons so close to each other
had a profound effect on Elizabeth, and she continued to remember them with
lines of poetry published in Newspaper ‘In Memoriam’ notices 20 years after
their deaths.
Elizabeth lived the
balance of her life close to, and often with her adult children who were
scattered throughout the country. In 1923, she was with her daughter Olive for
the birth of a grandson in the King Country. She spent the years of WWII in Otaki and
Upper Hutt, near Madge and Walter’s families, and visited Sam who had remained
on the West Coast.
Despite maintaining close relationships
with her adult children, some of her grandchildren recalled Elizabeth with less
than fondness. Her granddaughter
Frankie, remembered her as “a mean woman, who would cut boiled sweets in half”. This frugal action perhaps indicative of the
years of poverty Elizabeth had endured.
|
Elizabeth Ann Godfrey nee Rabone with Grandchildren in Mangaotaki 1929 |
Despite
their efforts to locate him, the family lost touch with their Father in the
late 1920’s, his daughter in law recalled in 1982 “The rumour was he may have
gone back to the goldmines in or out of Picton and met with an accident”. Frank had remained in the North Island and died
in a ‘Home for Old Men’ in 1931, of cerebral haemorrhage and syphilis; by this
time Elizabeth had been calling herself a ‘Widow’ for more than a decade.
Elizabeth
never remarried and succumbed to old age at 85, she died in the home of her
daughter Phyllis, on January 12th, 1950, and was buried in the
Pukekohe Public Cemetery.
Elizabeth
was a stoic and tenacious woman who chose the precarious life of single
motherhood over an unworkable marriage, in a time with few social systems to
support her. With limited finances, she
used her greatest skill, a determined focus on family and creating the tight
bonds which held them together through poverty, separation, bereavement and two
World Wars. Her legacy; kind honourable
sons, and strong resolute daughters.
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