James Henry Marriott

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Born1799
London, England
Died25 August 1886 (aged 8687)
Wellington, New Zealand
NationalityNew Zealander
James Henry Marriott
Marriott in Odd Fellows' costume
Marriott in Odd Fellows' costume
Born1799
London, England
Died25 August 1886 (aged 8687)
Wellington, New Zealand
OccupationTheatre manager, playwright, optician etc.
NationalityNew Zealander
ChildrenAlice Marriott

James Henry Marriott (1799 – 25 August 1886) was a New Zealand theatre manager, actor, entertainer, playwright, songwriter, engraver, optician and bookseller. He was born in London, England, and arrived in New Zealand three years after the Wellington area was first settled. In Wellington he was involved with theatrical production at the Ship Hotel, Olympic Theatre, Britannia Saloon and Royal Lyceum. He made himself useful in the early days of the settlement by engraving tombstones, engraving illustrations for newspapers, and grinding lenses for telescopes. He ran a bookshop and sold sheet music, and contributed to the organised social and civic life of Wellington. In New Zealand he was the first regular producer of plays, a playwright (his play Marcilina premiered in 1848), and the first optics professional in that country to make a telescope. He was the father of Alice Marriott and the great-grandfather of Marriott Edgar and Edgar Wallace.

Marriott's parents were Leeds optician William Marriott[1] and Alice McGuinness. His wife was Sarah Bateman (died Wellington, 1885), whom he married on 19 May 1822 in Hackney, London.[2] The second of their three daughters was actress Alice Marriott, born on 17 December 1824 in London, and they had two sons also. He was the great-grandfather of Marriott Edgar and Edgar Wallace.[3][4]

In July 1842, Marriott left his family and sailed through gales and wrecks with a drunken captain on the 497-ton barque Thomas Sparks.[5][6] He disembarked at Port Nicholson, New Zealand, nearly seven months later on 31 January 1843, when Wellington was still a new town of three years.[2] Ten years after that, his wife and two of their children joined him. On 25 August 1886, he died in Wellington after a few days' illness.[2][3]

Career in London

In London, Marriott had "learned from his father the skills of optician and mathematical instrument maker", and possibly also his engraving skills, but initially became a reporter for The Times newspaper. At the same time he was producing Shakespeare plays, and was involved in acting, painting and music.[3]

Career in New Zealand

References

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