sketcher, acquired her middle name by being native born – at the Blaxland family home, Newington, Parramatta, on 22 May 1807, soon after her parents, John and Harriott Blaxland, had arrived in New South Wales. She was the sixth of 11 children. Mrs Blaxland encouraged all six daughters to collect and sketch flowers. Emily Manning recorded one of these sketching excursions taken in the company of Louisa and her sister Jane when she stayed at Newington in 1837. Louisa Blaxland never married. Her role in life was to remain at Newington and look after her parents. In 1863, well after both had died, she made her first visit to Britain, Newington having been sold the previous year by her brother Edward, who had inherited the property when their mother died. Louisa regretted the loss of her family home all her life and in 1880 petitioned the New South Wales government to turn it into a public memorial to her father. Instead, it was later renamed Silverwater and converted into a minimum security prison under the control of the New South Wales Department of Corrective Services.

Louisa Blaxland died at Parramatta on 2 August 1888. Some of her letters and her record of John Blaxland’s dying reminiscences of his early life survive in the Blaxland family papers (ML). No extant drawings have been identified.

Writers:
Staff Writer
Date written:
1992
Last updated:
2011