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Maria
Lord 1780 - 1859 businesswoman
Maria
Lord (1780-1859), convict, was born Maria Risley. She was sentenced
to seven years transportation at the Surrey Assizes on 9 August 1802
and arrived in Sydney in the Experiment in 1804. Details of
her early life are scant. She married Edward Lord, a well-connected
officer of the marines, on 8 October 1808. Whether or not Lord chose
Maria Risley at the Parramatta Female Factory (as in John Pascoe Fawkner's
version), he does appear to have met her in Sydney in 1805 and brought
her and her infant daughter Caroline (known in Hobart as Caroline
Maria Lord) back with him to Hobart. A daughter was born in 1806 who
did not survive but other children followed: Eliza in 1808, John in
1810, Edward Robert in 1812, Corbetta in 1815, William in 1817 and
Emma in 1819. All of the children were educated or spent some time
during childhood in Britain, though Maria never returned to Britain
and never claimed the place in the Lord family in Wales given to her
children.
Lord traded in his wife's name while he was still an officer and built
up extensive land holdings which he stocked with cattle and sheep.
When Lieut-Colonel Collins died in 1810 he took charge of the settlement
and applied unsuccessfully to be appointed Collins's successor. In
1812 while in England he resigned his commission, returning with his
own ship and 30,000 pounds value of goods. During his increasingly
lengthy periods away Maria ran his extensive business ventures and
was his agent. The Hobart store was always referred to as hers, whether
Edward was in town or not. During 1819-23 when he was often away she
extended both his interests and her own, entering into several business
partnerships, including one with her brother to buy merino sheep.
Maria's convict background could not be hidden in Hobart, particularly
as many of her shipboard companions on the Experiment had arrived
there on the Sophia in 1805. Her husband's enemy, the deposed
Governor Bligh, was not alone in referring to her as 'a Convict Woman
of infamous character', but by 1820 Mrs Lord was established in the
colony as the wife of one of its richest men, the hostess at Lord's
country properties and at the substantial house (which still stands)
in Macquarie St, Hobart. A letterbook of this period reveals a woman,
in her own words, 'assiduous in Business', with a keen view of the
shape of the market and the importance of 'turning' money in a colony
where cash was short. Edward appears more impetuous, less organised,
an adventurer whose great success lies in his ability to get land
grants and to raise capital through family connections and brother
officers.
Her control was said to extend over a third of the resources of the
island, and she was alleged to have monopolies in wheat and meat and
a share of the lucrative rum trade. Maria, as much as Edward, deserves
to be remembered as one of 'the wolves' who brought ruin to the small
settlers in the country districts of Van Diemen's Land.
In 1824 Edward Lord successfully charged Charles Rowcroft with 'criminal
conversation' with his wife. Maria lost all right to Lord's property
though he retained the right to hers. She remained active in business,
to 'obtain' as she said in the local press 'a future support for herself
and her Children'. Her ventures were on a smaller scale. She operated
a trading store in Hobart from 1829 and later a store in Bothwell,
where she died in 1859.
Edward never pursued divorce through the British parliament, preferring
to set up a second family in Britain without the benefit of legal
marriage. In 1859, outliving Maria by a few months, he inherited her
Bothwell estate. Maria was not totally banished from colonial society.
She fits neither virtuous nor outcast woman stereotype. Her contribution
to early colonial society was neither simple nor confined to one sphere.
An early entrepreneur, she also helped create forms of social order
and domesticity in the new colony.
Kay Daniels
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