A WELL-DESERVED REWARD
An exceptional woman received a well-won appointment the other day in New York, when Mrs Annie E. Wilson was made inspectress of the New York Custom House. Born in the Bay of Bengal, and reared on shipboard, she married a Boston captain when’ fourteen years of age. Eor'seven years this child of the ocean continued to sail the seas by her husband’s side without accidentbut in 1872 their vessel was struck by a storm on the banks of Newfoundland. The captain, her husband, had his shoulder-blade broken by the fall of a mast, and the first mate and part of the crew were also disabled. The second mate gave way to panic. No sooner, however, had the captain been carried down, lashed on a door to the cabin, than his wife, then a woman of one-and-twenty, hurried on deck. “Boys,” she said, “,our lives are in danger. Let us stick together, and all of us work with; a will. I will take my husband’s place, and take you to some port. They set to work, cleared off the wreckage, manned the pumps and succeeeded in weathering the gale. After it susbided they rigged up a jury mast, put the ship before the wind, and went to St Thomas, which they reached in twenty-one days. After repairs, the indomitable woman, finding her husband was helpless, navigated the ship to Liverpool, making port without accident in 30 days. Her husband was never able to resume his work, and for seven years she kept him and her child by working as a clerk in a dry goods store. Eight months ago her husband died. This month Secretary Sherman appointed Mrs Wilson; • who is not thirty, to an inspectorship of the New York Custom house. ...
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South Canterbury Times, Issue 2460, 5 February 1881, Page 3
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294A WELL-DESERVED REWARD South Canterbury Times, Issue 2460, 5 February 1881, Page 3
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