..this logo will always return to the index page..

Mary 'Canary" Watson -  Early New Zealand Indian Rider

 Mary Watson 1896-1968

Mary Isaline Watson kick-started her mobile home-help service into existence in 1938.
After hearing that the farm wives in the district were having difficulty in getting domestic help, she dreamed up the idea of a traveling home help as the most logical answer. As she was the eldest of 10 children of a Scottish pioneering family, and later the wife of a farm laborer, she was no stranger to hard work.

She bought an Alldays Alton two-stroke motorcycle which earned her the nickname Two-Stroke Watson from the local people. For this she designed a side-car on which she mounted a National washing-machine. Advertising herself as "Happy Day Washer", she would be seen five days a week, in leather coat and goggles, driving between farms n the Grassmere-Seddon district of Malborough, New Zealand.. She did all her own motorcycle maintenance.

Upon arrival at the farmhouse she would park as close as possible to the laundry, run out a lead form the washer to the power point in the house, and, with a hose for the hot water, was ready to do the washing. A vacuum cleaner and iron were also carried in the side-car.

She was fast and efficient. Once finished, she would move on to her next customer. Over the years she had four motor cycles, her last being a yellow Indian Scout. Because of its striking color her nieces and nephews called her Aunty Canary.

Mary Watson, the Happy Washer
On becoming an agent for the National washing-machine, her work load increased. When the ordered washers arrived at the depot in Blenheim, she would have to pick up and deliver them to her customers in the Seddon district. During the Second World War she took on the weekly rural mail service. One day was devoted entirely to delivering ‘His Majesty’s Mail’. Mary Watson took this responsibility very seriously, and did not see that carrying the mail in the washing machine, along with some small grocery orders for the housewives, presented a somewhat comical picture. Another ‘duty’ she took seriously was that of dispatch –rider as part of the local Emergency Precaution Service during the same war.


By 1950 she had given up her home help service. From her earnings she had bought a house for herself and her husband, Herbert. Her housekeeping had always been, and still was, impeccable, with her linen starched and her floors gleaming. Though she never had children of her own, she devoted many hours to children, by working as a Red Cross leader in Seddon for many years and teaching local children sewing and embroidery. Her work in this craft was of such a high standard that she won 142 first prizes around the country. Her pieces included two portraits in silks, one of Charles Kingsford-Smith and the other of Jean Batten, of which it was said that it was difficult to tell the reverse side. The embroidery she did for St Andrews Church in Seddon is still in use today.

Mary Watson gave unstintingly of her time to causes, particularly to her church of which she was a dedicated member, right up till the illness that hospitalized her shortly before her death on 19th April 1968, aged seventy-one.

Please support us with a paypal donation if you want the site to continue!

Buy viagra cheap to give you the most answers about Viagra Video on the Web buy viagra no prescription.
Prescription viagra did you know that get viagra so, you may have the knowledge of generic buy viagra.
Erectile dysfunction doctor the benefits of using buy viagra no rx