Isabel Noeline BakerMBE (25 December 1878 – 25 August 1958), known as Noeline Baker, was a New Zealand suffragist, wartime women's labour administrator, gardener, and peace educator.
She returned to New Zealand and built a house at Halfmoon Bay on Stewart Island called Moturau Moana, and used a checklist by botanist Leonard Cockayne to populate it with all the local indigenous plants. Today Moturau Moana is New Zealand's southernmost public garden after she donated it to the government.[1] For her botanical work at Moturau Moana, Baker was awarded the Loder Cup in 1949.[6] Other items of hers are held by Te Papa, the national museum in Wellington.[7]
She edited her father's account of his time in New Zealand[8] and performed music throughout her life.[9][10]
Baker died on 25 August 1958 on Stewart Island.[1]
For her work in England during World War I, she was posthumously inducted into the Hall of Fame of Samuel Marsden Collegiate School in 2015.[11]
References
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