Jane Barton
Jane Mason "Jeanie" Barton was the wife of Sir Edmund Barton, the 1st Prime Minister of Australia from 1901 to 1903. After her husband's knighthood in 1902 she was known as Lady Barton.
Early life
Barton was born in London, England, one of three children born to Euphemia and David Ross. The family immigrated to Newcastle, [New South Wales], when she was a small child. Her father was Scottish and a trained engineer. After losing money in mining investments, he became the licensee of the Albion Inn, a pub on Hunter Street. He was popular in the community and served as an alderman. His wife died soon after the family arrived in Australia, and the children were largely raised by their aunt Ellen Home, who lived with them.Marriage and children
Jeanie Ross met her future husband Edmund Barton in April 1870, when he visited Newcastle with the Sydney University Cricket Club. They were introduced by his friend Richard Teece. After he returned to Sydney, he sent her a copy of Alfred Tennyson's poem The Princess. She visited him the following month and was introduced to his parents, with an engagement following. However, for primarily financial reasons the couple did not marry for another five years. They eventually wed at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newcastle, on 28 December 1877. She converted from Presbyterianism to Anglicanism for her husband, although she was more religious than him.Once married, the Bartons briefly lived in Stanmore, but after a few months moved to a large house in Redfern so they could be joined by William Barton, Edmund's elderly father. For various reasons, they moved house approximately every two years until 1896 when they rented Miandatta in Carabella Street, North [Sydney, New South Wales|North Sydney]. This would remain their home for twelve years.
Edmund and Jane Barton had six children:
- Edmund Alfred Barton, a New South Wales judge
- Wilfrid Alexander Barton, first Rhodes Scholar for New South Wales
- Jean Alice Barton, married Sir David Maughan in 1909
- Arnold Hubert Barton, married Jane Hungerford in 1909; he migrated to Canada
- Oswald Barton, a medical doctor
- Leila Stephanie Barton, married Robert Christopher Churchill Scot-Skirving in 1915
Public life
During Edmund Barton's term as prime minister, his wife and children continued to live in Sydney. There was no official prime minister's residence in the temporary capital, and "the prime minister's salary of £2,500 was not enough to allow for Jeanie and their younger children to live with him while in Melbourne". She did accompany her husband to the 1902 Colonial Conference in London, and attended the coronation of King Edward VII; she was tasked with presenting Queen Alexandra with a possum-fur carriage rug as a gift of New South Wales. The Bartons took on daily social engagements during their visit, and were well received. According to Geoffrey Bolton, "the daughter of a Newcastle publican and the son of an unsuccessful Sydney stockbroker found themselves moving easily in a closed society intolerant of the parvenu or the ill behaved".