Ulva Belsham | |
Birth Name: | Ulva Lynn Bradshaw |
Birth Date: | 4 April 1921 |
Birth Place: | The Neck, Stewart Island, New Zealand |
Death Place: | New Zealand |
Resting Place: | Riverton Cemetery |
Known For: | Radio operator for Marine Radio Service |
Ulva Lynn Belsham (née Bradshaw; 4 April 1921 – 18 June 2011) was a telegraphist and volunteer radio operator for the Marine Radio Service in the southern part of the South Island of New Zealand.[1] [2] [3]
Belsham was born at The Neck, Stewart Island, and grew up in Bluff, in the south of New Zealand's South Island, with six siblings. Her parents were Joseph and Louisa (née Joss) Bradshaw. Her great-great-grandparents were Kohi Kohi Paatu of Centre Island and John Howell, an English settler and whaler. William Timaru Joss was her grandfather, a Stewart Island whaler and part of the first confirmed landing party on the continent of Antarctica, aboard the Antarctic in January 1895.[4]
During World War II Belsham worked as a telegraphist at the Royal New Zealand Air Force base at Wigram Aerodrome in Christchurch. In 1946 she moved to Hinetui Point, Colac Bay and became a volunteer operator for the Marine Radio Service. She later moved to Riverton, where she volunteered at the Riverton Museum and worked to record and research Māori history, archives, and whakapapa. One of her projects was to transcribe and publish the birth, deaths and marriages register compiled by Rev. Johan Wohlers of the North German Mission Society at the Ruapuke Island Mission in Foveaux Strait.[5] She returned to live in Bluff and Invercargill in her later years.
In the 1977 Queen's Silver Jubilee and Birthday Honours, Belsham was appointed a Companion of the Queen's Service Order for community service.
Belsham died in 2011. Her personal papers and research notebooks on waiata and vocabulary are held in the Hocken Collections in Dunedin and used for research into Māori language use in the province.[6]
Belsham was married to Gordon Belsham (Tama Hika), who died in 1978.[7]