Maker: Bridget Gill

 
 
panel 183

Panel number: 183

Petition Sheet Number: 222

Person honouring: M Hancock

Relationship to makers: None

Mary-Anne (or Mary Ann) Perrett was born in England in May 1855. At eight years old she was orphaned and adopted by her aunt and uncle. By 18 she was a general servant in the household of an innkeeper in Hampshire and a year later she became a dressmaker for Elizabeth Kipling in London. 

Elizabeth’s half-brother, Edward Hancock, was a frequent visitor, and in 1874 Mary Ann became pregnant with his child. They fled to Paris and their daughter was born on Jersey. Eventually the couple married in London in 1876 and they sailed to New Zealand in November of that year. They changed ships in Melbourne and arrived in New Zealand on the Albion in January 1877 and settled in Christchurch. Here they had six further children.

Although successful at first, Edward’s businesses collapsed and in 1884 he was declared bankrupt. He made some money photographing people on the New Brighton pier, and as a floorwalker in a department store, and Mary-Anne contributed to the family’s funds by dressmaking and hand rolling cigarettes for a tobacconist. Mary-Anne died in 1904, aged 49.

Panel materials: Cotton, stitching, paper lace and print.