Oh, we would like to visit the Chatham Islands one day, and anyone wants to learn the experience of people living there, what life was like in the pre-1860s.
Why would the deaf blogger/researcher want to learn the experience of living there? Mm, the researcher is in the middle of doing researching one particular woman who travelled from Scotland via London and Queensland to Canterbury and Otago before the 1900s. For some, reason, Ms Mitchell chose to travel to the Chatham Islands and got married to a German chap was looking for a bride through newspaper advertising. This woman knows a few people through her brother who was a minister, involved with the church in Queensland, Australia and Charteris Bay, Canterbury.
The researcher was reading one of the diaries, and the diary was fascinated life by a young man – Mr Spencer. He lived in the island for one year because his contract expired and the life was very harsh due to lack of foods, meats and the weather conditions. This Spencer man came from a Spencer family who came out from London, the UK to Christchurch, New Zealand.
How does the connection between Ms Mitchell and the Spencer family back in London, the UK? Ms Mitchell was a servant to the Spencer family according to the census record in 1861 in London, UK. There is also a connection to Scotland and a Mrs E Spencer came from Scotland where Ms D Mitchell came from Scotland.
The Chatham Islands bear rugged landscape, and several small islands are surrounding the main two inlet islands which inhabited.
The Chatham Islands is a 920 sq km, also called Rēkohu (by Moriori) and Wharekauri (by Māori), and Pitt Island is a 7.7 sq km, also called Rangihaute (by Moriori) and Rangiāuria (by Māori).



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