Friday, February 13, 2015

Double wedding produces giant family tree



When two couples took part in a combined wedding ceremony nearly 160 years ago, they created an unusual family. In fact the weddings created two families in which many members were related twice over.

The odd circumstances of those Whanganui weddings are related in a soon-to-be-published book, Porters in my Past, by Nelson writer John Ewan, himself one of the many descendants from one of those marriages.

“One of the husbands was David Porter, the grandson of one of England’s most famous chimney sweeps. He married Anna Maria Powell who came from a family littered with minor baronets and professionals of various types,” Ewan says.

“At the same time in the same church, David’s sister Ellen Porter married Thomas Powell, a merchant who happened to be Anna Maria’s father.”

Both marriages stood the test of time and today several hundred people throughout New Zealand can trace their ancestry back to those weddings. The weddings took place 160 years ago this October in Whanganui (16 Oct 1855). 

The Porter and Powell families are now into their fifth and sixth generations. The combined family tree is very convoluted. 

“Most connections between these two families imply two relationships,” Ewan says.  “For example David Porter became both the son-in-law and brother-in-law of Thomas Powell on the same day.”

Joshua and Alfred, two of David Porter’s brothers, also arrived in New Zealand in the 1850’s and stayed in Canterbury.

Joshua was one of Canterbury’s first lawyers and later became an early mayor of Kaiapoi.  His entire family, himself included, was wiped out by tuberculosis.

The third brother, Alfred, established what was to become Castle Hill station.  He too had a sizeable family. He is believed to be the first European to have discovered Porters Pass.

David Porter was an early surveyor in the Whanganui area before moving to Wellington.  In Whanganui he had been a surveyor and had acted as agent for the government on land purchases. In Wellington he became a senior public servant.

David Porter’s grandfather, also named David Porter, started life as a climbing boy for a chimney sweep and went on to become a major property developer in London. Along the way he successfully campaigned to improve the conditions for children employed in the dangerous work of climbing and cleaning chimneys.

It was a second marriage for Thomas Powell.  He had originally settled in India but a few years after arriving there, his wife died.  Instead of returning home, he brought his son and daughter to Whanganui and operated a family-owned wholesale and auctioneering business.

Porters in my Past is not a family history, however, but the stories of three brothers and their sister who made their homes in New Zealand and it relates the challenges they faced.

Published February 2015 by Chateau Publishing Ltd, P O Box 3523, Richmond, Nelson, 7050, with trade distribution by Book Reps.  RRP - $35


Further Information is available from johnfewan@gmail.com.

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