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Story: Divorce and separation

Separated family

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Separated family

Mary Isabella Lee is shown with her son John A. Lee and grandson John Rowe. Mary's stormy relationship with her common-law husband Alfred had ended years before. Never formally married, the couple separated, came back together, and then separated permanently. Division of property was not an issue – they had little, and Mary accepted Alfred selling furniture they had received as a 'wedding' present – nor was custody of children. Mary Lee (who continued to use Alfred's surname) struggled to bring up her children on a dressmaker’s income, supplemented by charitable aid.

John A. Lee later wrote (at first anonymously) about his family in Children of the poor. His mother did not agree with his version of her life, insisting on her own respectability in her autobiography The not so poor, published decades after her death. John A. Lee was a notable member of the Labour government elected in 1936, and believed that, like him, several other members of the first Labour government were illegitimate.

Using this item

Auckland Council Libraries − Tāmaki Pātaka Kōrero o Tāmaki Makaurau, Sir George Grey Special Collections

Reference: NZMS828

Permission of Auckland City Libraries Tāmaki Pātaka Kōrero must be obtained before any re-use of this image.

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How to cite this page

Megan Cook, Divorce and separation – Maintenance and the division of property, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/en/photograph/29840/separated-family (accessed 4 June 2026).

Story by Megan Cook, published 21 April 2011.