NameJane Angel STONE
Birthabt May 1825, Portland, Dorset, England
Baptism15 May 1825, Portland, Dorset, England
Deathaft 15 Oct 1856
FatherRobert STONE (~1795-1862)
MotherSarah ANGEL (1798-1874)
Spouses
Birthabt 1820
Marriage23 Dec 1842, St John The Baptist. Fortuneswell Dorset
ChildrenAngelina Sarah (1844-)
 Charlotte Dally (1845-)
 Augustus (1847-)
 Jane Angel (~1850-)
 Charles Goodyear (1853-1855)
 Robert (1856-)
Notes for Augustus (Spouse 1)
See rest of line in Bill Bells STONE tree in Corwall folder on the computer

Augustus Florance junior and wife Elizabeth née Hamilton, about 1875


Augustus junior, a Lyttelton times compositor, was, with his father, involved in a flax-milling concern on Ferry Road. He owned a property on the south side of the lane which led to the doctor’s residence, his tall, two-storey house on Caledonian Road being built close to the fence-line. Deeply interested in natural history, the younger Augustus wrote letters to newspapers and graphically described Canterbury’s insect pests. The currant bush fly he saw as elegant and destructive, its beauty “but the difference between the splendidly coloured wasp and the plain hard-working bee”.
Augustus studied nature from the viewpoint of one who wanted to see improved use of the land. He envisaged belts of pines, blue gums and wattles criss-crossing the bleak Canterbury Plain, reducing the force of the winds and providing nesting places for falcons and owls. These he saw as decimating the “sparrows, larks and other vermin” which were gorging themselves on the produce of the orchard, garden and corn field. Should people wish to grow fruit “fit to grace the best markets of the world”, they should, argued Augustus, plant trees in the most crowded parts of the metropolis; experience proved that pests sought the quiet of the suburbs and bush country rather than “the busy haunts of men”. The compositor lamented how “strong net-weaving spiders”, potential allies in the war on insects, were often carelessly swept to destruction.
Augustus edited a threepenny temperance monthly, the Christian labourer, the contents of which were “in harmony with the teachings of the law of God, science and experience”. In Volume 1, No 1, dated September 1877, the editor defended total abstinence:
“It is from the moderate use of intoxicating liquors that all the drunkenness of the world springs, and, unless we at once arise and close for ever this broad road to hell, our sons and daughters will be had to supply the mad-house and gaol, and to double the number of drunkards who are rushing over the dark precipice of ruin”.
The periodical also featured an article, “Smoking as an accessory to drinking”, wherein social, economic and medical problems - including cancer - were attributed to the inhalation of tobacco smoke. In later issues, Augustus stated that he wanted to “increase the spread of knowledge, the arts of peace and universal Christian brotherhood”.
By 1877 Augustus was a husband and father. On 13 October 1872, at St Luke’s, Christchurch, he had married Elizabeth Hamilton, the mother of a five-year-old ex-nuptial daughter, Ada. The couple’s own brood, Elizabeth, Augustus, Robert and David were born in 1874, 1878, 1881 and 1884 respectively. A nephew, Walter Kerr, thought Elizabeth stern and houseproud. During a bout of fever, in childhood, Augustus had lost his sense of hearing, and, although this meant that communication with his offspring was limited, the youngsters held him in great respect.
Elizabeth’s father, pioneer New Brighton settler David Wilson Hamilton, owned a house, “the Grange”, and was proprietor of a coach service, the precursor of the tramway system, which ran from Sharlands Corner via Stanmore, Shirley and the New Brighton roads to the New Brighton Hotel in Seaview Road where he was “mine host”. Elizabeth Florance inherited 50 acres of low-lying land, some fertile, some less so where Mairehau Road, Frosts Road and Beach Road meet. Perhaps it was this family link with the seaside area which led Augustus to purchase, in 1879, Rural Section 16034 of 20 acres on the north-east corner of the intersection of the Beach Road and Frees Road (the latter to become Racecourse Road and, finally, Bower Avenue). Augustus’ landholding is commemorated in the name Florance Street.
On their property the Florances established a week-end and holiday home; bluegums stood at the gate. There being no road into the area, Augustus walked behind his horse as it trudged through the wastes where Bassett Street is now situated and across the Travis Swamp. On either side of the horse were panniers and in these perched the children. Eventually, the Avon Road Board formed Frees Road as a rough track. After work on Saturday night, Augustus would borrow a horse and dray and bring stores to his holding. To the Florance boys, the holiday home was an idyllic spot. When they wanted to bathe, they stripped naked at the house and clambered through the sand-dunes to the sea a mile off. There the silence was broken “only by the call of the sea-gull and the restless varied music of the surging surf”. When hungry, the children dug for pipis.
Augustus, more conscious of the problems associated with seaside living, saw that the native vegetation did little to hold down the sand-dunes and that, whipped up by “an old-man nor-wester”, these would move inland and spread over more productive land. Believing that every day should be “a Christian Sabbath of good works”, that the desert should “blossom as the rose” and that there should spring forth “two blades of grass... where none grew before”, he inaugurated a programme of sand-dune stabilisation.
After unwisely experimenting with twitch, Augustus obtained lupin seed from Victoria’s government botanist, Baron Ferdinand von Mueller. This he sowed at some distance inland where clumps of stunted shrub afforded shelter. In two years the well-established plants were scattering their seed in all directions and there was a shoreward advance.
Lupins could not be relied upon close to the beach where pools of salt water gathered in winter. However, Augustus learned of the “celebrated English marine grass” or marram grass. With its “thick, strong, creeping, perennial roots, with many tubers the size of a pea”, it could withstand attack from winds and waves, “thus forming a barrier against the encroachment of the ocean”. Baron von Mueller had introduced marram grass to Victoria and successful experiments with the plant were carried out on the shifting sands at Port Fairy. It was from this locality that Augustus obtained the seed that he sowed at New Brighton.
Augustus planted soil-binding species over wide stretches of North New Brighton. His efforts were not always appreciated by the Avon Road Board which demanded that he cut a track to allow neighbours to his north easy access to their land. Augustus remained obstinant, telling the board: “It is easy to drive a horse and cart through a road covered with growing lupins. In fact, it is a pleasure”.
On another occasion, Augustus reminisced about the situation which would once have faced the person walking along the road to the beach on a windy day. That person would have found himself on a “naked waste of... sand” which was “blowing... with the force of a rushing alpine river”. There had now been a “glorious transformation of the scene”, the traveller being able to walk along a well-grassed sheltered road. Only when he reached the beach would he realise that the wind was blowing.
Last Modified 13 May 2006Created 12 Apr 2016 using Reunion for Macintosh