Benjamin Corlett

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About Benjamin Corlett

  • Emigration: Sep 8 1850 - Plymouth Sound, England
  • Immigration: Aboard the Sir George Seymour - Dec 17 1850

Benjamin Corlett arrived in Canterbury when he was six, with his parents Stephan (1805-1880), an agricultural labourer, and Jane (44), and his siblings Mary Ann (20), a servant, John (16), an agricultural labourer, William (13), Thomas (10), Eliza(8), and Alfred (2).

On March 24, 1886, Benjamin and brother Alfred married two sisters from Woodend − Benjamin married Laura Ranby and Alfred married Fanny Harpham Ranby. The two brothers took their wives back to Greta Peaks, which was originally part of the Stoneyhurst Station. There they constructed a cob house. Benjamin and Laura had 11 children, with one dying as an infant.

The Corlett brothers fell on hard times in the 1870s and 1880s as the land boom collapsed. In August 1887, the New Zealand Loan and Mercantile Agency Co. was instructed to sell the Greta Peaks property.

Soon after, Thomas, Benjamin and Laura moved to the North Island, where Thomas died in September 1889. Benjamin and his family moved back to Riccarton in 1895 and then returned to the North Island, where he took up farming at Te Mawhai in the Waikato. Benjamin died there on February 9, 1928.

Source: http://www.firstfourships.co.nz/pics/person.php?pos=gs3

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Benjamin Corlett's Timeline

1848
December 25, 1848
Henbury, Cheshire, England, United Kingdom
1881
September 27, 1881
1886
December 5, 1886
Riccarton, New Zealand
1888
September 30, 1888
Inglewood, New Plymouth, Taranaki, New Zealand
1890
1890
1893
August 19, 1893
Opunake, Taranaki, New Zealand
1895
July 8, 1895
Riccarton, Christchurch, Canterbury, New Zealand
1897
March 10, 1897
Riccarton, Christchurch, Canterbury, New Zealand
1900
August 6, 1900
Riccarton, Christchurch, Canterbury, New Zealand