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Eliza
Hassall 1834 - 1917 missionary
Eliza
Marsden Hassall (1834-1917), superintendent of the Marsden Training
Home, was born at 'Denbigh', Cobbitty, New South Wales, on 2 November
1834, the seventh of eight children of Anne (a daughter of Rev.
Samuel Marsden), and Thomas Hassall, farmer, grazier and clergyman.
She was taught by an 'excellent' governess and her brothers' tutor.
She learnt also the art of needlepoint; a lace collar, a birthday
gift to her mother made by Eliza and her sisters, is held by the
Royal Australian Historical Society.
'Denbigh' had a large resident labour force. Eliza's letters reveal
an intelligent interest in the management of the estate: she wrote
to her brother about sheep and horses, crops, servants' meals and
Aborigines. Her father, 'the galloping parson', bred horses and
there were always sufficient for a picnic party of 20. Eliza shared
the genteel lifestyle of well-established pioneering families. Her
father, a strict Evangelical of the Clapham Sect tradition, was
interested in practical religion rather than theology. He wrote
of her (aged 21): 'Dear Eliza is a great assistance - she takes
up things so earnestly'.
Thomas suffered in the 1840s depression. He was a shareholder in
the Bank of Australia which failed, and he was forced to sell several
properties. Eliza was the only daughter not to marry. After her
father died in 1868 she moved to Parramatta, caring for her mother
until her death in June 1885, and doing parish work at St John's.
It was said of Eliza that it was a 'pleasure to listen to her conversing
on spiritual and intellectual topics'. She founded the first Australian
Scripture Union in 1880, acting as secretary for many years. By
1889 the Union claimed 1200 members.
Responding to an appeal from the Church Missionary Society in 1892,
Eliza offered 'Cluden', at Ashfield (where she was then living),
as a training home for women missionaries. The Marsden Training
Home opened in 1893 and her offer to serve as voluntary superintendent
was accepted. Candidates received lectures from the clergy and under
Eliza's supervision studied the Acts of the Apostles, the Book of
Revelation, other Bible readings and missionary geography. The first
student was her niece, Amy Isabel Oxley, who went to China in 1896
as an accredited missionary and there established a home for blind
boys. In response to demand, Eliza added two rooms to her home,
enabling it to accommodate seven women. As president of the ladies'
committee she organised fundraising activities, and in 1898 larger
premises were leased. A Missionary Loan Exhibition in 1899, was
a conspicuous success. She was awarded the distinction of honorary
life membership of the Church Missionary Society, London.
Advancing age led to her retirement and the closure of Marsden Training
Home in 1903. The Diocesan Deaconess Institute at Newtown took over
the training of women candidates. Eliza died on 26 December 1917.
She was buried in the churchyard at Cobbitty where she had worshipped
and had been encouraged to foster in her own life the inheritance
of practical mission activity.
Winifred Ward
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