Born in Yarwell, Northamptonshire, Daldy sailed to New Zealand with her brother John on the Caduceus, arriving in Auckland on 11 October 1860.[4] In 1865, she married William Henry Smith, a shoemaker, whilst running a 'ladies seminary' on Karangahape Road in Auckland.[4] William Smith died in 1879 at the age of 62, and within a year Amey Daldy married Captain William Crush Daldy in Ōtāhuhu.[4]
After a lengthy career as a suffragist and women's rights activist in New Zealand, Daldy retired from the public eye after suffering from a stroke in 1905.[4] On 17 August 1920, Amey Daldy died, leaving financial legacies in her name to the New Zealand Congregational Ministers' Retiring Fund, the Salvation Army Rescue Fund, the Door of Hope Association, the Auckland YWCA, the NCW, and the WCTU NZ.[4]
Legacy
A public park in Wynyard Quarter, near Auckland's waterfront, has been named Amey Daldy Park. The park is alongside Daldy Street, which was named for her husband William Daldy.
^David Hackett Fischer Fairness and Freedom:A History of Two Open Societies: New Zealand ... – 2012 – Page 243 "Amey Daldy recruited her husband, William Daldy, for the feminist cause. He was a wealthy Auckland businessman who went to ..."
^Margaret Lovell-SmithThe Woman question: writings by the women who won the vote 1992– Page 27 Amey Daldy later resigned as franchise superintendent of the Auckland W.C.T.U., in order to ensure the League would not be associated with the temperance cause (cited in Crimshaw, p.58)."
^ abcdefghNicolls, Roberta (1993). "Daldy, Amey". The Suffragists: Women Who Worked for the Vote. Wellington: Bridget Williams Books. pp. 51–55. ISBN0908912382.
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