Agnes Busby | |
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Painting of Agnes Busby held by Auckland Museum
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Born |
Agnes Dow 1800 Scotland |
Died | 13 October 1889 Pakaraka, New Zealand |
(aged 88–89)
Nationality | Scottish |
Known for | Contribution to early development of a British community in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand |
Spouse(s) | James Busby (m. 1832; d. 1871) |
Agnes Busby (1800 – 13 October 1889) was an early European settler in Australia and New Zealand married to James Busby, the first British Resident of New Zealand.
Agnes Busby was born to John and Jessie (née Campbell) Dow in Scotland in 1800 and emigrated to the Hunter River area of New South Wales in 1830 with her parents, her brother John, and her sister Susannah. At a party at Potts Point, Sydney, she met James Busby, and in November 1832 they married at Segenhoe in the Hunter Region.
In 1833, James was appointed the British Resident of New Zealand, and he and Busby moved to Waitangi to take up the position. James arrived in May and Busby in July 1833, already some months pregnant. They arrived to a poor situation - the house was "ruinous", there were problems with hiring domestic staff, supplies of household goods were limited and deliveries infrequent, and Waitangi itself was an isolated outpost. In fact, the house was in such a poor state that the Busbys moved out to stay with the missionary Henry Williams for a period of months while workers repaired it, returning in January 1834. In letters to his family at this time, James described his wife's life as "slavish" - "I often think she is a little lonely here, although she never complains".
As the wife of the British Resident, Busby's role was to entertain and provide hospitality for visiting dignitaries, ships officers and local Maori chiefs, and to help James write his despatches to the Colonial Office. The couple were also expected to be the leaders of what colonial society existed in the area at the time (about six families). To provide a level of hospitality befitting the representative of the British government despite the primitive circumstances was a constant challenge requiring much hard work; in a letter to her friend Charlotte Brown at the Tauranga Mission, Busby commented that "our domestic comfort depends so much on our own exertion".
However, reports from contemporaries suggest that she managed well: a letter from Edward Markham, a visitor to Waitangi in 1834, recorded that Busby was "very pleasant" and the stay in her home "a glimpse of Civilisation". Caroline Mair, whose father Gilbert Mair was an early trader and settler in nearby Paihia, described Busby as "a very dignified and rather exclusive little Scotch lady, but kindly withal".