James Montgomery Hannay was born in Ireland, c 1832.
His parents were James and Mary Hannay.
He married Louise (Lucy) McEwen in either Toronto or New York. Their first daughter, Mary Lilias Louise Hannay, was born in Toronto in 1857, where he worked as a clerk in a newspaper office.
Their second daughter, Ida Stuart Hannay, was born in Cincinnati in 1864, and at about this time James Hannay absconded with his elder daughter and appeared in Takaka, New Zealand.
He stayed 12 years in Takaka where, for a time, he was engaged as the sole teacher at Lower Takaka School.
An extract from "Speaking a Silence" by Christine Hunt, 1981, A.H Reed, Wellington;
The next master at the school was Hannay, he was a Yank, and like the others he lived behind the partition at the end of the school room. But you know what? Hannay nailed his bunk across the end nearest the school and bored a hole through the partition, so he could look into the school. Then about once or twice every three months he'd line the kids up and get them into school, then he'd say to Dad's older brother, "You take th'arithmetic, I've got tickdollaroo* this morning." That's what he'd say. Dad never knew what it meant, whether he had diarrhoea or whether he was tight with whisky or what. But anyway then the kids would be at school, old Hannay would go off into his room and then there'd be a great disturbance with kids throwing things at each other. And you'd see a bloodshot eye, full of whisky, looking through this hole in the partition. He'd be back on the booze out there.
Dad also said old Hannay had his desk in the corner and next to it was a box of sawdust. He was a great chewer of tobacco, old Hannay, and he'd spit out into this box. But he'd miss and hit the wall instead -there'd always be bits of tobacco stuck on the wall.
And he had a whitlow on one finger, it used to go blue. I suppose it was sore, but if he bumped it he'd blame a kid and belt him. It was rough, but that was the schooling in the old days.
Hannay also spent some time as a gold prospector in the Collingwood/Golden Bay area.
In 1875 his daughter, Mary, married Douglas Hastings Macarthur and moved to Feilding, and in 1880 his wife, Lucy, and youngest daughter, Ida, arrived in NZ. Ida lived with the Macarthurs in Feilding until she married Frank Owen in 1883. She died in 1948.
There is a family story that Lucy had a dreadful temper and that she and James Hannay got together again when she visited NZ but parted after only 10 days, Hannay saying that her temper was still foul after 20 years.
The next record found is his death in Palmerston North, NZ, on 25 Jul 1898. He had been in NZ one year and certificate states also known as "Paul Leigh", occupation; engineer.
His wife Louise (Lucy) McEwen was born in Glasgow, Scotland, parents; Alexander McEwen and Janet McLean. She arrived in New York in 1853 with her parents, sister Agnes and brothers William and Benjamin.
After her husband left she styled herself Lucy Stuart, widow, and gives her employment history to the Seattle Post Intelligencer in 1901 as follows;
New Matron for Y.W.C.A.
Mrs Lucy Stuart, who has had thirty years' experience in like work, is chosen.
A life full of varied experiences has been that of Mrs Lucy Stuart, who has come to Seattle to assume the position of matron of the Y.W.C.A. and who is now superintending the fitting up of the association's new headquarters in the Curtiss building on Second avenue, near University street. Mrs Stuart has for more than thirty years been engaged in practical charitable missionary and philanthropic work, and has served as matron of several large charitable institutions in United States and New Zealand, where she spent ten years of her life.
Mrs Stuart was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, but came with her parents to New York when 7 years of age, and was reared and educated in that city. She was married when quite young, and a few years later left a widow. Soon after the death of her husband she entered into active religious and charitable work. Her first experience was in San Francisco, where she was for eight years city missionary with the First Presbyterian church.
In 1874 she resigned that position, and with her little daughter went to Idaho, which was then almost a wilderness, to become matron of the government Indian school at Lapwai, on the Nez Perce reservation. She remained there until 1877, when she, with the other government employees on the reservation, was compelled to flee to civilization to escape massacre at the hands of Chief Joseph and his warriors, who took the war path in that year.
From Idaho she returned to San Francisco and a few months later became matron of the Good Templars' home for orphans at Vallejo, California, remaining with that institution four years. On leaving Vallejo she went to New Zealand to visit a married daughter, and there became matron of the Dunedin Female Refuge, a reformatory institution many of the inmates of which were fallen women of the most hardened type. After five years there she became matron of the Alexandria home, a charitable institution for women at Alexandria (sic), N.Z., and spent five years in that capacity. (This was probably the Alexandra Home in Wellington where a Miss Stewart was the first matron).
Mrs Stuart then returned to California and became a professional nurse. In 1897 she removed to this state, and prior to coming to Seattle was a resident of Everett.
Family group photo taken 1889 by G.W. Shailer*
From left; Mary Lilias Louise Macarthur (nee Hannay)
her eldest daughter Alice Ethel Macarthur,
her mother Lucy Hannay/Stuart,
her second daughter Lily Louise Macarthur,
her sister Ida Stuart Owen (nee Hannay),
Front; her youngest daughter Ida Maud Macarthur
*George Shailer and his wife, Septuagesima, and four daughters were some of the early settlers in Feilding. They arrived an the "Ocean Mail" in 1874. He was a stone mason by trade but after a back injury he started a photography business in Palmerston North. He left a legacy of unique photographs that record early Palmerston North and Feilding from 1882-1894. The Shailer collection is now in the Palmerston North City Library.
Source; Smith V. Saga in Sepia Palmerston North: Dunmore Press, 1979.
Lucy Hannay's death occurred 28 Oct 1911, aged 74 years at the Mental Hospital, Porirua, NZ from "cerebral apoplexy".She had been admitted on 22 August 1910 suffering from senile dementia. She is buried in the Feilding Cemetery.
The Myers Family History -The Hannay Family
Cathy Clarke, Whangarei, New Zealand.
email; mel.clarke@clear.net.nz
Last updated 8 May 2006
