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Kupe and the Boulder Bank

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The distinctive Boulder Bank protecting Nelson Haven, known to Māori as Te Taero o Kereopa or Te Tahuna a Tama-i-ea, was named to commemorate exploits during Kupe's visit to Aotearoa in about 1350.  

Kupe pursued a giant octopus, scourge of Kupe's fishing ground in Hawaiki, across the Pacific to Aotearoa, finally dispatching it at Whekenui Bay, Tory Channel. Before returning home Kupe visited Nuku-waiata  to gather fish, shellfish, and birds for the long journey north. Two of Kupe's men, Pani and Kereopa, who wished to remain with tangata whenua , absconded in canoes after kidnapping Kupe's daughter.

Kupe's pursuitKupe's pursuit of Pani and Kereopa. From Mitchell H & J. Te Tau Ihu o Te waka v.1.(Topo data Eagle Technology & Linz and cartography Moira Jackson Assoc). Permission must be sought for further use of image.)
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The Boulder BankNelson's Boulder Bank. Image courtesy Nelson City Council
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Kupe launched his waka in hot pursuit, dashing through Aumiti and into Tasman Bay.   The fugitives threw Kupe's daughter overboard, forcing him to divert to rescue her, prayed for currents, whirlpools and storms, and created reefs and rocky headlands. Nevertheless, Kupe's Matahourua steadily gained on them until the runaways separated as they coasted towards Whakatu.

Kupe first pursued Kereopa who paddled towards the shore. Kereopa offered karakia, which caused boulders at the foot of Horoirangi1 (Mackay's Bluff) to fall into the sea and create a barrier between his waka and the Matahourua. No matter how hard Kupe's crew paddled, Kereopa's boulder bank grew apace, and they could not outstrip it. Kereopa landed and fled inland.  

Kupe then turned his attention to Pani who had circled back towards Rangitoto. Pani also invoked deities and taniwha to whip up storms and violent currents to impede Kupe, but without success. When Pani's party swung around the northern tip of Rangitoto into the passage between it and Takaporewa their canoe was overwhelmed in rips and all drowned. Kupe witnessed the tragedy and named the passage Nga Tai Whaka Hoki Hoki a Pani, or the wild seas which caused Pani's canoe to overturn,  and now known as Hell's Gate.  

The overturned canoe became a rock formation named Te Waka a Pani; Pani's daughters became an unusual large split rock, Nga Tamahine (the daughters) a Pani, and his slave (mokai) also became a rock known as Te Mokai a Pani.   In a cave nearby, Te Ana a Pani, Kupe trapped Pani's spirit forever; a loud moaning noise can be heard when tides surge into it - Pani's eternal grief over his downfall.

Kereopa escaped. His name is perpetuated in senior lines of Ngati Kuia and other South Island tribes; some southern Maori claim descent from Kereopa through his marriage to a Waitaha woman.2

Many other features of Te Tau Ihu , especially in eastern parts, were named for events during Kupe's visit. Naming or renaming the landscape was a sign of taking possession in Maori tikanga.

In 2013 the Boulder Bank was registered as a historic area by Heritage New Zealand. In 2014 the area was listed as a wahi tapu site by Nelson City Council.

2010

Note on the geological origins of the Boulder Bank

The 13.5km long barrier spit sheltering Nelson Haven is a unique geological feature composed of granodiorite pebbles, cobbles and boulders derived from Mackay Bluff, north of Glenduan. The granodiorite was intruded into the earth's crust 140 to 145 million years ago at the beginning of the Cretaceous period. Subsequent uplift and erosion has exposed the granodiorite, angular pieces of which fall from the bluff where they are transported by coastal longshore currents in a southwesterly direction. Because the granodiorite is very hard, with few planes of weakness, the pieces do not readily disintegrate. Instead, as they abrade against each other they become progressively more rounded and smaller as the distance from Mackay Bluff increases. Movement of material is still continuing, requiring regular dredging of The Cut, an artificial shipping channel into Nelson Haven that opened in 1906. Today, the Boulder Bank is managed as a scenic reserve by Department of Conservation. Land access is gained along Boulderbank Drive, signposted at the northern end of Nelson Haven on State Highway 6 or from Glenduan sited 15km north of Nelson.
Information supplied by Mike Johnston, Nelson geologist, to Janet Bathgate for publication on a Nelson City Council Interpretation Panel


George Batt

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George Batt, Drover and Bullocky, 1854- 1931

George Batt was born in 1854 in the Waimea Plains area near Nelson, the sixth child of John and Ann Batt who had emigrated from Hampshire in 1842.

When he was seven years of age, his father purchased thirty-three acres of land at Wai-iti (about two miles south of Wakefield). It was here that George grew up along with five brothers and five sisters.

George Batt with two dogsGeorge Batt with two dogs
Image supplied by author.
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In 1873, when he was just nineteen, he began his career as a drover and bullocky - a career which would continue until 1926, a period of 53 years. When he finally parked up his bullock wagon beside his whare at Glenhope he was 72. He lived for five more years in retirement.

He must have enjoyed the solitary life. The freedom of the open road and a pioneering desire to explore the Nelson back country would also have motivated him. Photos show him to be slightly built, although apparently tough and wiry enough to survive many years in a job which was physically very demanding.

Geo. Batt's bullock Team, Hardy St. The Nelson Provincial Museum, Copy Collection: C120
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His work, involving long periods on the move away from his base at Glenhope and family at Wai-iti, was not conducive to married life and he remained a bachelor, although his life on the roads brought him at times into contact with many people. He carried both people and goods on his bullock wagon: wool, hops, timber and gelignite for railway construction in the days when even main roads were poorly formed. Ranging over the Nelson back country from the Wairau in the east to Christchurch via Tophouse and to the Buller in the west, he would doss down for the night wherever good tucker for the animals could be found.

George Batt's whareGeorge Batt's whare. Image supplied by Dorothea Hay.
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Before he was twenty, George carried timber from the Hope Junction to Nelson by bullock wagon. On returning from one of these trips he was asked how he had fared and replied quite cheerfully, "Not bad. Only three capsizes." Not many today could cope so calmly with a dislodged load, and a team of bullocks on their own.

Hut CeilingHut Ceiling.Image supplied by author.
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Soon after purchasing a bush farm of about 100 acres at Glenhope in 1883, he built on it a small two-roomed whare (also known by the family as "the Hut"). It still stands today; 127 years later, on rising ground looking north up the Hope Valley. Inside the ceiling is papered in parts with photographs of the Auckland Weekly News and other magazines of the early 1900's. An old camp oven (essential for cooking in such a large open fireplace) is still there.

George knew how to stand up for his rights. The Nelson Evening Mail of 29th April 1890 records the case of Batt vs Brooks (another local bullocky). George brought a claim of £44 16 shillings for work done with his bullocks constructing a bridge at the Hope but for which he had not been fully reimbursed. The resident magistrate eventually found in George's favour.

George's Hut in WinterGeorge's Hut in Winter
Image supplied by Dorothea Hay.
Click image to enlarge

George is now a figure from a bygone era. He represents the type of strong, hardy individual who performed an essential service in the pioneering days of New Zealand's development. Today he rests in the Foxhill cemetery, not far from the grave of his parents.

William Brooks with bullock team in the Motupiko Valley, c. 1890. Tyree Studio. 10x8-0927-G. Permission must be sought from Alexander Turnbull Library for further use of this image. Click image to enlarge

2010

Settlement in Stoke

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Stoke was once a swampy area with numerous small streams. When Maori arrived in this area, it was a wetland with numerous streams draining water from the hills to the sea. Covered with flax and raupo it was a mahinga kai.  It was first known as “Brook Green” but renamed by William Songer, who arrived in Nelson in 1841 as Captain Wakefield’s personal attendant. As  Stoke’s first settler, he named the place in memory of his English birthplace.

Stoke walk map

Stoke walk map. Numbers refer to places mentioned in the article

Settlers cleared flax and raupo and fruit growing became the main occupation of settlers in Stoke by the mid 1890s.

Early settlers

Early families settling in Stoke in 1844 included Marsden (Thomas and James), whose stories are told elsewhere on the Prow, Duffey, Walkinshaw, Hammack and Cresswell, as well as these notable names:

William Songers house Stoke

William Songer's house. Image supplied by Havell Stephen-Smith

William Songer was the first settler. When Captain Wakefield was killed at the Wairau, he was given the land, around the area where Strawbridge Square now lies,  by Reverend C. Torlesse, whose son he mentored in New Zealand, and whose daughter was married to Captain Wakefield. Both the Torlesse family and Songer came from Stoke-by-Nayland in England. The families are also remembered in the names Songer Street and Torlesse Street in Stoke.

William Songer 1882 4

William Songer 1882-4. Image supplied by Havell Stephen-Smith

Songer built a mud cottage here in 1843 and grew wheat, oats, barley, turnips and potatoes and ran cattle and pigs.  He was very community minded, being a member of the Jury, the Education Committee, Agricultural Committee, and was involved with building St Barnabas Church and Stoke School. He was the first superintendant of the local Anglican Sunday school and very involved in a variety of roles at St Barnabas Church. Sadly he had no children, and when his first wife died he married Mrs Mary Hubbard in his 60s, and was 90 when he died in 1904. His neighbours were the Ward brothers and C. Thorpe.

Hugh Martin arrived in 1844 with his wife, six children and livestock including “a first rate entire draught horse and very superior ram”. A livestock breeder, he settled on his 50 acres in Stoke, building ‘The Hayes’ homestead. 1844 - 45 was a time of near starvation for many and Martin was well remembered for his generous help to those who struggled to feed their families.

The settlement develops

The road
Work by the New Zealand Company’s road parties to construct Waimea Road from Nelson to Stoke and beyond began in 1842. Drainage channels, bridges and gravel were all required on the swampy ground. Arthur Wakefield ordered Mr Kenning and his road gang to dig what became known as ‘the company’s ditch’ to control water at Stoke. Unfortunately in heavy rain falls, water roared down this channel creating an ever widening gap. The Stoke Road Board were happy as the torrent brought down huge mounds of good usable gravel, which they seized upon, digging out hundreds of dray loads to take away.This annoyed Mr Thomas Marsden as they encroached on his land, digging right up to his gates.

By the 1850s crossing the ‘ditch’ became dangerous and Stoke residents demanded a bridge. A satisfactory bridge was finally built in 1858. A small piped stream can still be seen by the Fire Station.

Stoke panorama

Main Road Stoke in the 1950's. R. Marshall

Twentieth Century developments
Stoke changed from a sparsely populated area in the 1800s to a popular residential area coping with the post World War II baby boom demand for housing. In the 1950s some early housing developments occurred around Maitland, Arapiki Street and Andrew Street areas. Orchard land was slowly converted into housing. At that time Stoke was part of Waimea County, and provision of amenities such as sewerage was a strong reason to amalgamate with Nelson City in 1958.

In the 1920s Main Road Stoke was a narrow gravel road that had to be graded regularly. Few cars were seen. Horse-drawn vehicles were most common, and one woman regularly tied her horse to the big Macrocarpa in front of St Barnabas church while she went inside for a service.

There was no electricity, water supply or sewerage. Water was precious especially in hot weather. Many families had a 20 foot well and used a windmill to pump this water into a tank. They also collected rain water from the roof. Toilets were outside, with either a long-drop or a bucket, which had to be emptied regularly onto the farm. Stoke did not have a night cart collection. House lighting was by kerosene and gas lamps.

Groceries were delivered by Mr Rodley from Nelson in a horse-drawn vehicle. Mr Gledhill cycled from Nelson to Richmond collecting the orders for groceries. The order for the following week could be given when goods were delivered. Bird and Coleman sent their butcher's van from Richmond, and the bread came from at least three different sources. Milk came from the family cow or could be obtained from a neighbour.

In the 1920s young resident Geoffrey Gates recalls: “The village of Stoke consisted of the Turf Hotel, the Methodist church, the Anglican church and the blacksmith W. B. Heath opposite the Turf, who shod the horses and also had one petrol pump. Robinsons had a grocery store and Vincent Dee had a second small (grocery) store down Songer Street, near the railway station. The Turf burned down in about 1927, leaving only the chimneys, and had to be rebuilt. The Reverend Rogers was the minister of St Barnabas, which at that time was  small church with only a handful of parishioners.”

stoke apple orchard

(Railway Publicity photo.) Apple Orchard at Stoke Valley, Nelson, New Zealand. NZETC

The railway
The railway line section that ran through Stoke from Nelson to Foxhill was constructed in 1873 and opened in January 1876.  The first sod for the railway was turned in Saxton’s paddock for the Nelson-Saxton section of the line. Stoke was an easy distance to the city of Nelson and it appears to have been well used. Stoke residents used the rail service into the city for business, purchase of supplies, and entertainments such as those offered at the Theatre Royal. Rail transported produce to Samuel Kirkpatrick’s successful canning factory established in 1881 in the city, and encouraged growers of fruit and vegetables in the region. College students were regular rail users until the last train ran in 1954. The girls and boys travelled in separate carriages and were allowed to use skipping ropes inside to keep warm!

It was always  intended to join the Stoke line to the main trunk line. Frustrating delays occurred, then competition from road transport led to suspension of rail services. Despite huge public protest the last train ran in 1955 and the line was dismantled.A walk/cycleway now runs along the old railway reserve (6)  encouraging easy self propelled access to and from Stoke.

Buildings

The early gracious residences built in Stoke in the 1800s that have endured and are open to the public include Thomas Marsden’s Isel House (2 and the Park 3) and Broadgreen Historic House (7 and 8 the Rose Garden). The latter was built by merchant businessman Edmund Buxton circa 1855. The early Methodist Church, built by Samuel Ironside, has been removed.

Stoke School
Matthew Campbell, who lived in Stoke, was instrumental in building many schools in the district. The first Stoke School was built in 1845, then moved to land provided by Mr Marsden around 1851. By day the building was used as a school and in the evenings and on Sunday was used for religious services. In 1858 the school moved to its present position, and St Barnabas Church was built in its place. The Nelson Education Act was passed in 1856, and made the Nelson Province the first in New Zealand to have public schools where no fees were charged. A central board was established to run them, and the schools were funded through taxation and public revenue.

Stoke St Barnabas Church

Centenary of St Barnabas Church, Stoke. Nelson Photo News No 40 : March 7, 1964

St Barnabas Church (1) was opened on 22 August 1866 and consecrated in 1870. It was the first stone church built in the Nelson Diocese. The architect was William Beatson, who had taken services as a lay preacher in Stoke since moving there in 1852. A new bell was gifted to the church from Sir Rowley from Stoke-by-Nayland in England, and was inscribed “Come let us go up to the house of the Lord”. The stones came from nearby Marsden Valley stream and the half acre of land was given by Thomas Marsden. It had a new nave added in 1971, which blends well with the original architecture.

The Stoke Library (4) has had many homes, but is now firmly situated in Neale Avenue. Established in c.1858 it first operated out of the primary school. By the 1920s books were held in store cupboards in the Foresters Hall, which was on the present Memorial Hall site, and the service was run by volunteers. Stoke became part of Nelson in 1958 and the Nelson Literary and Scientific Institute, which established the Nelson Library in 1841, took on the operation of Stoke Library from the cloakroom of the Memorial Hall. In 1965, Nelson City Council took over the library system from the Institute, and purchased the former Stoke Methodist church to convert into a pleasant suburban branch. A new library was built in 1992 in Neale Avenue, and further developments are planned in the future.

stoke war memorial1

Stoke Memorial Hall. Nelson City Council

Stoke Memorial Hall (5)
Foresters Hall was a lively spot, with old time dances and weekly ‘sixpenny hop’ dance classes held there. Silent movies were shown with a truck outside to provide the power. Stoke Memorial Hall replaced this hall in 1951. It was built using community volunteer labour as a living memorial to those soldiers who were killed at war, from government subsidies granted in 1945-6 to upgrade  community halls.

The Hall continued to provide a venue for community events for all ages. Baby shows were very popular, with the post war baby boom providing much talent. Regular old time dances were held there, and there was a dancing class every week for boys and girls. Bands also did the rounds of community halls bringing a variety of music each weekend until dance popularity waned by the end of the 1980s.

Otumarama (9) , was the site of Charles John Rayner’s homestead. He built there c.1892 when he retired to Stoke from Temuka. Even though the original house is no longer standing, remnants of his garden are still there. The site is now occupied by a rest home.

Stoke Strawbridge

Mayor Doug Strawbridge (on right) congratulating Mr James Eyles, the first director of the Nelson Provincial Museum to be established at Isel Park, 1964. Nelson Photo News, Issue 63, May 1964, pg. 7. Nelson.

Important names
Stoke Kane

Bill Kane, 1968. Nelson Photo News, Issue 97, November 1968, pg. 5.

Douglas Strawbridge was Mayor of Nelson from 1962 to 1968. A Stoke resident, he worked prior to his appointment as an advocate for Stoke amalgamating with Nelson. Post-war housing developments had sprung up in Stoke to house an increasing population, and improving sewerage and other infrastructure were important reasons for Stoke, part of the Waimea County, to join Nelson in 1958. Strawbridge was educated at Nelson College in 1923 and was a successful building contractor.

William Kane was the headmaster of Nayland College, which was opened in 1966.   William (Bill) Kane was a well-respected leader who chose the school's motto, Loyalty and Honour, both qualities he sought to instil in students. Kane became a Nelson City Councillor in 1968 and served three consecutive terms in office, until 1977. He retired from Nayland College at the end of 1978 and moved with his wife, Florence, to Waikane, where he died in 1995. W. Kane Lane was named after him.

2014

John Ribet of Hope Junction

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John Ribet 1835-1890. From France to Kawatiri : Mine Host of the Hope Junction Hotel

Ribet was born in France in 1835, and baptised into the Roman Catholic Church as Jacques-François. He was a man of many hats and several names – known variously as Jacques, James and John, or officially by his name in English translation – James Francis.

Ribet. Courtesy Hoult familyJohn Ribet. Courtesy of the Hoult Family
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Legend has it that Ribet was originally a crewman who jumped ship on arrival in New Zealand.1 After first settling around Waimea South in the late 1850s, he was lured inland by opportunities to be found in the Upper Buller Valley. The discovery of gold along the Buller River set plans in motion for a settlement to be established on flat land at the confluence of the Buller and Matakitaki Rivers. In 1865 Brunner carried out a survey and sections in this new township and its surrounding farmland went up for sale. Most were sold sight unseen to Nelson speculators, who had no intention of living there, but Ribet ventured into the hinterlands of Fern Flat to see for himself the future site of the town called Hampden, but renamed Murchison in 1882. At the time it was all bush, with just a few miners’ huts scattered about and a boggy pack track the only way in.2

Ribet's companion and business partner, Swiss-born accountant Florian Adank, was after the bright fine stuff and moved on to Lyell, but astute Ribet realised that the real money was to be made in associated services (accommodation, transport, food and drink) rather than digging. He saw Hampden’s potential as a gateway to the Inangahua and Lyell goldfields and, by 1871, was running Ribet’s Upper Buller Accommodation House and Stables on the Four Rivers Plain opposite Doughboy Creek, along with a ferry across the Buller River.3

A social and supply centre for gold-miners working the nearby rivers or passing through to the West Coast, the isolated new settlement had few permanent residents during the 1870s and ‘80s. It took luck as well as hard work and resilience to survive and make a living there. Accidents were common,4 especially drownings, with the nearest doctor a good 97 km away in Westport. With no midwife either, women facing the perils of childbirth braved the trek to Westport or Nelson for their confinements. Early settlers several times saw the results of their labour washed away by the Buller River. During the “great flood of 1878” much of Ribet’s farm was swept away, and very nearly his house and family as well. Of his stock, the bodies of sheep left entangled in treetops were all that remained after the waters subsided.5 He persevered, rebuilt his farm and took an active role in the affairs of the small Murchison community.

Ribet Hope SaddleSummit of the Hope Saddle [Cobb & Co coach]. Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Studio Collection. 182023. “Up one side and down the other the road winds about in a most devious and fantastic manner."
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Although Ribet ‘s main interest lay in breeding sheep, he also grew crops, ran cattle and had a particular passion for horses and horseracing. He was a founding member of the Central Buller Jockey Club, and started an annual Murchison tradition with the Upper Buller Boxing Day Races and Festivities he hosted at his Four Rivers farm.6 He was also a member of both the Inangahua County Council and the Hampden Road Board, and campaigned vigorously for improved access by road and rail from the Buller to Nelson. Getting a road right through from Nelson to the Coast by way of the Hope Saddle and the Buller Valley would prove crucial to the later success of his Hope Junction enterprise. When gold-bearing quartz reefs were discovered on the slopes of Mt Owen in 1882, Ribet finally succumbed to gold-fever and with a couple of fellow speculators put together a syndicate called the Golden Fleece Quartzmining Company, one of many such hopeful consortia. Despite the resources poured in, attempts at extracting gold from the Owen Reefs were mostly abandoned as fruitless by 1890.7

Popular and well-respected, Ribet was fêted by the locals with a lavish and well-lubricated banquet8 when he moved to Kawatiri in April, 1883, after making an exchange with pioneer John Rait: Ribet’s Upper Buller Accommodation House, on the outskirts of Murchison, for Rait’s Accommodation House near the junction of the Hope and Buller Rivers.9 Built close to the road, the twp-storeyed Hope Junction Accommodation House (also known as the Kawatiri Accommodation House) was a snug licenced establishment of 19 rooms, with its own vegetable gardens, orchard, home farm and stables all set on 60 acres of leasehold land. A staging post for Newmans’ coaches and a welcome stopping point for travellers taking the grueling overland journey from Westport to Nelson and back, it flourished with Ribet as its genial host, and soon gained a reputation as the “most comfortable resting place on the route”. Before long it became known simply as “Ribet’s”.10

Kawatiri Accommodation HouseKawatiri Accommodation House. Nelson Provincial Museum, Nelson Historical Society Collection: 326758
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Ribet was quick to see the value in tourism. Annual races held on land next to the Hope Junction Hotel brought in punters from far and wide and, by his own initiative, he put through a bridle track to Lake Rotoroa, providing access for hunting parties and sightseers. A trip taking in Lake Roititi, the Owen and Lake Rotoroa became a fashionable excursion for adventurous tourists from Nelson.

Early in 1886 there was some excitement when Ribet nearly lost the Hope Junction Hotel altogether. There was severe drought and the land was tinder-dry. Fast-moving fire threatened Ribet’s stables and was only turned aside after two days and nights of desperate work. There’s a dramatic story told of how the Newman’s coach was caught by the fire down the road, after a stop at Ribet’s, and had to battle to safety through thick black smoke and flames. It emerged miraculously intact, but with driver, horses and coach all well singed. The state of the sole passenger remains unknown!11

Mary Ribet nee Hoult

Mary Ribet (nee Hoult) 1838-1910. W.E. Brown Collection/Nelson Provincial Museum Collection, ref:14862. Date taken Feb. 1882

In January, 1858, Ribet was granted British citizenship and, on the 31st August the same year he married Mary Ellen Hoult (b. 1838) at St Marys Catholic Church in Nelson. It seems likely that they met while he was working as a sawyer for her father. Mary was from a devoutly Catholic English family, a daughter of Waimea South pioneer Joseph Hoult, who came out from England on the ship Prince of Wales with his family in 1842. He settled at Upper Wakefield , where he built a homestead called “Willowbank” and ran a farm and substantial sawmilling operation on a large block of land in the area now named after him – Hoult Valley.12

Ribet Moonlights HotelMurchison ca. 1880. Nelson Provincial Museum/ Tyree collection. 181965 George Moonlight's Commercial Hotel in the foreground.
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Jacques and Mary farmed around Upper Wakefield and later at Bigg’s Valley, Stanley Brook, until Ribet developed itchy feet.13  They had seven children, with Mary travelling to her brother Edward’s Wai-iti home for the last three births in 1868 , ’71 and ‘73. Two sons were stillborn, and a daughter died in her first year. Of their four living daughters, only one survived her parents. The girls, Adelaide, Rowena, Mary (Polly) and Ellen (Nellie), were educated as boarders at St Marys Catholic School in Nelson and, when at home, helped their mother with the domestic tasks necessary for the smooth running of an accommodation house. In 1884 Rowena married Irish-born Michael Fagan, proprietor of the Owen Junction Hotel, and the couple ran the business together, but in 1888 both died within a few months of each other.  The whole district turned out for Rowena’s burial, but the story of her husband Michael’s funeral is pure frontier tragicomedy - truth stranger than fiction. With ghoulish delight, the Nelson Evening Mail takes up the tale in an article entitled A Remarkable Funeral. The Mr Moonlight called into service was not the famous George, but son John, along with his trusty horse, Rory.

Ribet leased the Hope Junction Accommodation House to local man Robert Win in June, 1888, and moved back to town after being granted a publican’s licence for the Fern Flat Hotel at Murchison. Following Michael Fagan’s sudden death in November that year, Ribet then bought his late son-in-law’s Owen Junction Hotel and may have become overextended. He had hoped to keep his family close, but making a go of it around the Buller in the early days was tough and the attrition rate high, especially after the Long Depression bit home. Both Adelaide’s husband, Henry O’Loughlen (a hotelkeeper), and Polly’s, Alfred Smith (a farmer), went into bankruptcy and moved elsewhere to make a fresh start. The O’Loughlens went to the Wairau, the Smiths to Lyell.

Courtesy Christchurch City Libraries PhotoCD IMG0039Fording a stream on the Buller Gorge Road. Courtesy Christchurch City Libraries PhotoCD IMG0039
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Grief, age and the economic slump were taking their toll. Adelaide died, lost, like her sister Rowena, to consumption. Investment in quartz-mining hadn’t paid off and Ribet appears to have been having financial difficulties. He was also embroiled in a legal suit for arrears in rent against a blacksmith called George Edwards, to whom he had leased the Owen Junction Hotel. In February 1890 he went missing while out walking his dog along the Owen River. The dog returned home; Ribet didn’t. Search parties scoured the area over several days, with no success. Adding to the mystery were reports that a man believed to be Ribet was spotted around the Owen Valley and Owen Saddle acting as if he was “out of his mind” - he wasn’t wearing a coat or hat, but had a bunch of shrub attached to his head and, when he saw the searchers, he ran away and hid. It was eventually concluded that he must have met with a fatal accident while of unsound mind. His body was never found.14

Ribet Percival Fagan

Believed to be Percival Michael Fagan (1885-1910), only child of Michael & Rowena (nee Ribet) Fagan. As a 3-year-old orphan he was sent to live with his father’s family in Baranstown, Co. Wicklow, Ireland, where he died at the age of 25. Tyree Studio Collection/Nelson Provincial Museum Collection, ref: 21217

It was a sad end for this enterprising man, described as “one of the fathers of settlement in the Upper Buller district” and much admired for his energy and bonhomie. Although Ribet was a Frenchman at an outpost of the British Empire, the people of the Buller claimed him as one of their own. By way of greatest possible compliment for the time, one local remarked, “He is as good a specimen of the Britisher as any true bred John Bull”.

The iconic Hope Junction Accommodation House went up for auction in a mortgagee sale at the end of 1890 and was bought by its existing tenant, Robert Win.15 It burnt down in 1894. Ribet was gradually forgotten, becoming no more than a name inscribed on an overgrown cairn erected to the memory of notable Hope settlers. Mary Ribet saw the wedding of her youngest daughter, Nellie, to Adam Mathers at the Lyell home of her sister Polly in 1897,16 and the death of Polly herself, who drowned at the Inangahua Junction in 1908. Mrs Ribet died at the Mathers’ Reefton home in 1910, aged 72.17

The hard road to Hampden: early travel between Nelson and Murchison 

 “In the 1860s, before the Hope Saddle was opened, the diggers trudging from Nelson came up the Wai-iti or Motueka Rivers to Gordon (now Golden) Downs, crossed “Berneygoosal” (Kerrs Hill) to the Motupiko, then tramped up Rainy Creek and over to the Buller River at Station Creek. Then they continued up the Howard, over the Porika Track to Rotoroa, and down the Mangles Creek to Hampden (Murchison).”18

Work on the Hope Saddle started around 1874. The road from Nelson to Westport via the Hope Saddle was not finally completed till 1879 and, even then, did not directly connect with Murchison.

2014

Glenhope Pioneers

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The pioneers of the Hope Valley are commemorated by a memorial at Glenhope.

The small rock cairn was originially erected by the Owen Women’s Institute in 1935, close to Korere on the Nelson-Murchison road. The display plaque states: Pioneers Of Hope Valley;  George Batt, Robert Edgar, Thomas McConochie, George Moonlight, John Rait, John Ribet, Robert Win.

Glenhope Pioneers 8240Glenhope Pioneer Memorial. Image supplied by Ken Wright
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Long neglected and overgrown, the cairn was relocated to Crown land, near the former Glenhope Railway station,  by the Rotary Club of Richmond, a project spearheaded by club member, Bob Dickinson. The successful move took place during May, 2014. Along with the refurbished Glenhope Railway Station, it will become a feature of the Glenhope Historic Reserve, which is due to be formally opened in the summer of 2015, just in time for the cairn's 80th birthday.

The seven European settlers commemorated on the plaque were instrumental  in the valley's pioneering history. Some of their stories are told in full, elsewhere on the Prow:

Others are told here:

Robert Drummond Edgar, 1843-1913
Robert Edgar Snr was born at Maybole, Ayrshire, in Scotland. He gave his occupation as a ploughman when he emigrated to New Zealand with his younger brother, John, leaving from Glasgow on the ship Lady Egidia 12 January, 1862 and arriving at Port Chalmers, Dunedin, 6 May, that year. He moved to Nelson where he married a Spring Grove girl, Priscilla Payton Brewerton (1845-1897) in 1868. Her parents John and Harriet Brewerton had emigrated from England in 1842 on the Phoebe and settled in Waimea South.

Edgar Bros Golden Bay Forge CollingwoodEdgar Bros Golden Bay Forge Collingwood. Tyree Studio Collection. Nelson Provincial Museum
Click image to enlarge

After their wedding the couple went to Motupiko in the Upper Motueka Valley where the first of their eight children was born later in 1868. Around 1878 they shifted to the Hope area. The Edgars ran an accommodation house at Hope, near Cow Creek and, in the 1880s leased Crown land around the Owen Run, which Robert cleared for pasture. During the flurry of quartz-mining around Mt Owen during the 1880s, Robert Edgar also acted as Postmaster between 1887-9 for the Owen Reefs' branch of the Post Office operating at Bulmer Creek.

It seems that his sons (there were seven of them) were a bit of a wild bunch, and in 1891 Robert sued for slander a local man, Joseph Gough, who claimed that Robert Jnr had stolen some oats from the stables of Gough's employer, Mr Hall, a coach proprietor. The case was heard at the District Court in Nelson. The defence called on several well-known local characters, like Robert Win and Tom McConochie, who were clearly of the opinion that the Edgar boys were a bad lot. Frederick and James Edgar must have given up their wicked ways, as they became respectable citizens who established a business as Edgar Bros., Farriers & General Blacksmiths, at Takaka in 1897, which they ran for many years.

John Rait (1839-1887)
Born in Dundee Scotland, John Rait worked as a ship’s carpenter as a youth and, in that capacity, sailed to Auckland, New Zealand in 1867 from Gravesend, England, on the Warwick. During its outward bound voyage he married Mary Oxnam (b.1847), sister of another Murchison pioneer, Cornishman John Oxnam. Mary, with her parents, John and Elizabeth (née Darlington) Oxnam and siblings was making the voyage to New Zealand to join John Jnr, who had come out to New Zealand via Australia in 1861 and was already gold-mining in the Buller area by 1863. John Oxnam Jnr was one of the earliest diggers, and bought land at Fern Flat, on the outskirts of Hampden (Murchison), in 1872. The newly married couple accompanied the Oxnam family to the Buller, where John Rait and his in-laws formed a partnership to run an Accommodation House at the head of Black Valley in the Roundell. This partnership was dissolved in 1869, presumably amicably, leaving Rait in sole charge of the Roundell Accommodation House. In 1872 he purchased a section in Hampden (Murchison) Village, being the first local resident to do so.

326758Kawatiri Accommodation House. Nelson Provincial Museum, Nelson Historical Society Collection: 326758
Click image to enlarge

In 1878 the Rait family, which now comprised four sons and two daughters, was living in a log cabin at  Hope Junction, which they used as an Accommodation House. There was a record flood in that year and a son, Stephen Rait, recalled being carried, as a child, to a place of safety away from the rapidly rising river. Shortly afterwards the Raits set up a new Accommodation House, built for them by Mary Rait’s brother Stephen Oxnam) on a higher site at Kawatiri, a few miles down the Buller from Hope Junction. Stables were added when Newman’s commenced a regular coach service in 1882. Their next move was to Four River Plain in 1883, when they exchanged Accommodation Houses with John Ribet, so that the Rait children could attend the first school at Fern Flat.

In 1884, after the death of George Moonlight, John Rait (with the help of John Ribet) purchased the Commercial Hotel and store from the mortgagees, Messrs Buxton and Co. of Nelson. He also acquired a bush section of some 140 acres. While at the Commercial Hotel between 1884-7, the Raits delivered mail, meat and stores to diggers along the Matakitaki as far as Tom May’s Hotel, and the telephone was first installed at that time. The first Murchison Post Office was therefore at the Commercial Hotel. There was a gold dredge working at Fern Flat and a punt took travellers across Buller River there. While clearing his bush-clad section John Rait was struck by a falling tree and sustained an injury from which he did not recover. He died as a result in 1887, at the age of 47 years. His family removed to Wellington after his death but maintained a strong connection with Murchison, with his sons David, James and Stephen returning there when they became adults.

Thomas McConochie (1842-1914)
Born in Scotland in 1842, Thomas (Tom) McConochie came to New Zealand with his mother in 1860 on the Ravenscraig. He was first engaged in mustering on Marlborough sheep stations and later managed Red Hills Station. During the gold rushes he went into business as a butcher at various places – Lyell, Addison’s Flat and the Wangapeka. In association with Alexander Thomson he operated a farm at Wangapeka. In 1893 he acquired land at Glenhope, where he lived until his death in 1914. Among the many adventurous journeys in his career, one of the most difficult was the droving of several hundred head of cattle to Walker’s Run in the Maruia, travelling along the old Porika Track from the Devil’s Grip to Lake Rotoroa and the Upper Matakitaki River. One son, Newton, took over his Glenhope property, and another, Alex, owned Lake Station.

Robert Win (1852-1927)
The son of one of Nelson’s earliest settlers, Robert Win was born at Ranzau, later renamed Hope, on the Waimea Plain, in 1852. His father, William Win (Wynne), emigrated from Wales on the Thomas Harrison in 1842 to Nelson, New Zealand, where he met and married in 1851 Harriet Humphries, from Nottinghamshire, who came out from England on the Sir Charles Forbes, also in 1842. They had twelve children. As a young man Robert went mustering for John Kerr at Lake Station and took up bush-felling contracts. In 1874 he joined a party sub-contracting on a section of the new road over the Hope Saddle. His particular section was in the Clark Valley.

Summit of Hope SaddleSummit of Hope Saddle. Tyree Studio collection. Nelson Provincial Museum
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In 1883 he purchased a bush section near Glenhope, but sold it to George Batt. In 1888 he leased John Ribet’s Accommodation House at Kawatiri, and bought it in 1890 when it went up for sale.He had married Nelson-born Rose Eliza Elliott in that city in 1881 and they had four children - a daughter, Juaneta, and three sons, Lionel, Ronald and Dudley. When the Hope Junction Accommodation House burned down in 1894, the family moved to the Owen. They had a house at Owen Junction, opposite the Owen Junction Hotel, at that time run by George Edwards and his wife. The Owen Junction Hotel had been originally owned by Michael Fagan, followed by his father-in-law, John Ribet.
The second Owen Junction Post office was established near their home in 1898 (the first one opened in 1890, but was closed in 1896), and the Win family ran it for many years. Robert leased some Crown Land, at the Owen Run, which was cleared chiefly by his son Dudley (1887-1968). He himself was mostly occupied on road work. He also later served from 1911 with the Murchison County Council as a councillor for the Owen Riding and by 1916 had been elected chairman of the Council. Like his coontemporary, John Ribet, Robert Win had a great fondness for horses and horse racing. Robert Win died in 1927, but his wife lived on until 1949. His son Dudley continued to live at the Owen and added greatly to the original holding.

 

2015

 

Murchison

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Emerging from the bush

The discovery of gold and the search for grazing land were the initial driving forces behind the establishment of the township of Hampden, which later became known as Murchison.1 But developing a settlement in wild, inhospitable, isolated country was slow.

foxlakearthur.jpg

Fox, William 1812-1893 :On the grass plain below Lake Arthur. 8th & 9th Feb. 1846. Alexander Turnbull Library, B-113-014 Four men (Fox, Heaphy, Brunner and Kehu) with their packs and a gun by a camp-fire in the foreground.

Māori axes and implements indicate that Māori passed through the area in pre-European times on their way to and from the West Coast and its valuable pounamu. The dense native forest in the Upper Buller provided excellent hunting for birds, but it seems that Māori did not live in the area.2

Located on the Four River Plain at the confluence of the Buller, Matakitaki, Mangles and Matiri Rivers, the heavily wooded flat was first described by Charles Heaphy.  In February 1846, each carrying a 75 lb pack,3 Heaphy, Thomas Brunner, William Fox  and their Māori guide, Kehu (Ngāti Tumatakokiri) set off from Nelson to look for ‘the plain beyond Rotoiti.  Heaphy wrote of their first sighting of the Murchison Valley: “ an expanse of open manuka country, with pine (kahikatea) forests and fern flats on either side of the Buller, several valleys seem to join the main opening a mile or two down the plain.”4

Further surveys were conducted in 1859 by John and James Rochfort, who travelled up the Buller River from Westport in kayaks, reaching four miles above Lyell before their canoes capsized in rapids and they returned by foot to Westport.  Early in 1860, James Mackay and Julius von Haast suffered severe privation when they conducted a survey in the area. Haast named Mount Murchison after noted British geologist, Sir Roderick Murchison.5

Gold in the Mangles

Upper Buller

Upper Buller - Trich Devescovi: near Longford on the Upper Buller Gorge Road (print by courtesy of Cobb Robertston)

The Nelson Examiner reported the discovery of a rich gold field in the Upper Buller region on 23 July 1863. Two days later, the newspaper announced that a party of four men had obtained a pound of gold out of the Mangles River after just a few hours work.  Within a month, 70 men were working on the new gold field.6

The Nelson Provincial Council lost no time in planning for future settlement and chose an area of flat land at the junction of the Buller and Matakitaki Rivers.7  In 1864, the council sent John Barnicoat to have a look. He was impressed with the agricultural potential of the land along some of the Buller’s tributaries, travelling about 25 miles along the Matakitaki River valley. On his travels, Barnicoat noted a number of gold diggers on the Mangles, Matakitaki and Lyell Rivers.8

Mangles

Junction of Mangles and Buller Rivers. Ernest Wilton. Nelson Provincial Museum. 178430

Thomas Brunner was back in 1865. By now, he was the Provincial Council’s chief surveyor and town, suburban and rural sections were offered for sale.  They were mainly taken up as investments, and very few people lived in Hampden for the first ten years.9

George Moonlight, Newman brothers and a name change

In the 1870s, legendary explorer and prospector, George Moonlight must have seen potential in the district and settled at Hampden with his family.  He set up a store and in 1877, bought the Commercial Hotel, which became the social centre for gold diggers, with Moonlight as the unofficial sheriff in the Wild West atmosphere.10

Murchison early commercial hotel

View of several horse-drawn vehicles, including two covered wagons, outside C Downie's Commercial Hotel.; Nelson Provincial Museum.181965

In July 1879, Moonlight and other locals were on the steps of the Commercial Hotel to greet Tom and Harry Newman’s first mail run between Foxhill and Longford.  The Newman brothers drove a horse-drawn coach over the muddy bush track, until they had to give up at Longford.11 Tom was determined to get the mail through so he put the mailbag over his shoulders and walked.  Hampden was renamed Murchison in 1882 when the regular mail service began, to avoid confusion with the Otago township of the same name.12

Born in Hampden in July 1880, lifelong resident, George McNee remembered the town in his childhood: “ ….all around was nature in unspoiled beauty. The axe and the mill had not begun to destroy the bush, there were hundreds of birds and insects to listen to and study.” He noted there were “ two stores, a blacksmith’s shop, a cobblers and three or four private dwellings.”13

Moonlight-and-dog11061-2.jpg

Geo. Moonlight & dog, April 1868. The Nelson Provincial Museum, W E Brown Collection: 11061

In 1882 Moonlight offered a ‘commodious building for a school' and the Nelson Education Board received a request to constitute Hampden as a separate district and build a house for a teacher.14 A teacher was sought for Hampden Aided School (salary £75 /annum with residence) in August 1883.15 The hall at the Commercial Hotel was rented for £4 a year and used until a school room was built in 1895.16

There was more contact with the outside world, when a telephone station was opened in July 1883.17 That year, Boxing Day races drew a crowd, with horses racing in events such as the Buller Plate and the Goldfields Handicap.18

In 1884, a Government Act empowered the Midland company to build a railway line between Canterbury, Nelson and the West Coast. While part of the line was built between Nelson and Kawatiri and Greymouth and Reefton, it never reached Murchison or Canterbury and valuable pastoral land was tied up for nearly 20 years.19

Supply Centre for Miners

Commercial hotel

View of two motor vehicles and a group of men and dogs outside the Commercial Hotel, Murchison. 178053 Nelson Provincial Museum

By the end of the 1880s, Murchison was steadily growing as the supply centre for surrounding gold mining communities.20 When George McNee left school aged 15 (1895) his father set him up in a store up the Matakitaki River. McNee wrote that there were about 100 Chinese miners in the area, who were honest (“I’m sorry I cannot say that of the other residents”) and kept their simple whares spotless. He said he learnt some Cantonese, including counting to 100 in the language, and was invited to their homes for meals.  He sold opium to them, until it became illegal.21

But, access to the small township was still difficult. In May 1900, an article in the Colonist,  headlined "The Central Buller. Much Needed Works", described ‘the necessity’ of constructing a road to Murchison, now a bridge across the Buller River at the Mangles was completed. The article also recommended the construction of roads up the Maruia Valley and from the Matakitaki into the Maruia.22  

Twentieth Century Developments

Between 1900 and the outbreak of World War 1 in 1914, three bridges linking Murchison with the outside world were built, the main highway passed through the town, much farming land was taken up, a butter factory was built and various social and sporting clubs were established.23 In 1904, the Oddfellows first anniversary concert and ball was declared the ‘most successful ever held in Murchison’.24

By 1909, the population of Murchison was 300.25 The first dairy factory was opened in 1909, producing the ‘Airship’ brand of butter, which was transported by wagon to the railhead at Kohatu at night to keep it in good condition. The factory closed in 1973.26

Six Mile hydro scheme. NZGeoview M.Boyce

Six Mile hydro scheme. NZGeoview M.Boyce

Molly Borkin’s family arrived in the Tutaki Valley in 1911. Her Irish father, a school teacher had won land in a farm ballot.  “There were over 20 settlers in the valley and soon it was like one big happy family.  It took four hours to drive from our home (on mud roads by horse and cart) to Murchison initially.  Anyone who happened to be going to town, contacted the neighbours on the way to get various messages for them,” she wrote.27 

Murchison residents were some of the first in the country to enjoy electric heat and light.28 The Six Mile hydro-electric scheme was opened on 25 January 1922. At a cost of £13,000, it had an output of 80 kilowatts and was used by the dairy factory, farmers and households, and provided street lighting in the town.29   

Murchison Earthquake

By 1929, Murchison was on its feet, a supply town for farmers and, as it had been in the days when it was a Māori settlement, a crossroads for travellers.  But on a cold foggy winter morning, at 10.17 am on 17 June, 1929, explosions sounded around the hills, chimneys fell, buildings crumbled and hillsides collapsed.30 The magnitude 7.8 Murchison earthquake was centred in the Lyell Range west of Murchison and was felt from Auckland to Bluff.  You can read more about it here

For more information

With a proud, pioneering history, the very active Murchison District Historical and Museum Society, has collected stories of life in the region for many decades - excerpts from some of these accounts are used in this story. Contact the Society.

There are many books and accounts of Murchison’s early days and the 1929 earthquake, particularly the titles by former teachers in the area: Difficult Country: an informal history of Murchison and Murchison, New Zealand: how a settlement emerges from the bush. For details see further sources.

2017 

Lyell

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The Highs and Lows of Lyell

Graveyards have an international reputation for being 'spooky', but when you are standing in the graveyard of a deceased town, 'spooky' takes on a very different connotation. Lyell attained a population of over two thousand and was the chief producer of gold in the Buller district. It created opportunities for aspiring miners and accommodated to the needs of their families. However, all that can be viewed from this once bustling community are decaying headstones, landslide ridden dray roads and remnants of buildings.

Lyell Cemetery. Jason Blair, 2009.
Click image to enlarge

Julius Von Haast explored the South West area of the Nelson region during the mid 1800's, and in his travels named the "continuous rocky chain ... with magnificent needles and points"1 the Lyell Range. Sir Charles Lyell was a British geologist who was the "father of modern geology'2. Sir Lyell is attributed with the theory behind mountains forming after plate movement over hundreds of years, and scientists, such as Charles Darwin, built much of their work on Lyell's three volumes of 'Principles of Geology'. It is commonly accepted that Sir Lyell did not know of the settlement's existence, nor of its rich surroundings, and although Haast also never visited the town, his admiration for Sir Charles Lyell, and the consequent naming of the area, perfectly highlights the rugged and mountainous environment that contained the town.


Maori prospectors were the first to obtain gold from the Lyell region, and potentially sparked a prosperous gold rush for the area. Native Maori knew of the gold's existence in the Lyell area, but due to their fascination with greenstone, they did not prize it. However, after Eparara, a Maori prospector, and four other miners, discovered a 'dumbbell' shaped nugget weighing 19 ½ ounces, 'up the creek named Lyell, by Haast'3, pakeha began to recognise Lyell as a potential gold mining area. Eparara and his team fossicked for gold in a tunnel through solid rock, one mile upstream from the bridge today. This discovery resulted in the desertion of other gold mines, and the establishment of the town know as Lyell.

As reports of significant gold discoveries in Lyell infiltrated the mining community, miners from all over the world made their way to the isolated settlement. By 1863, 100 miners from other gold fields had set up camp along the creek and benefited greatly from the nuggets found which weighed between 17 and 52 ounces. In one report, five Irishmen claimed to have uncovered 500 ounces (1.4 kilograms4) in five days. Twelve men organised themselves into a 'Vigilance Committee', to regulate the claim sizes and prevent Australian gold miners dispossess Maori prospector's findings; on two occasions they threatened the Australians with lynching. However, they did not need to enforce it on either occasion. As well as Australians, miners came to Lyell from Greece, Italy, Switzerland, England, Scotland, Ireland, India and America. Prosperous mining reports kept international excavators interested in the Lyell area and consequently the population began to rise.

Scene in the vicinity of Lyell Township [1880's] Alexander Turnbull Library.
http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=13838

Click omageto enlarge

Transport to and from Lyell was a treacherous journey as the Buller River was the sole contact with exporters and other settlements. Lyell was described as 'the most inaccessible goldfield in New Zealand'5, with Maori the only canoeists strong enough to paddle against the powerful rapids. William Stuart, one of the first residents of Lyell, depicted his journey up the Buller river in his journal and explains 'canoes are poled and paddled, towed by ropes... then pulled by all hands'6 until they finally reached their destination. Early horse roads were created as well as tracks but they were often rough and unstable for carts, so in 1870 a road was laid down called Cliff Street - which became the main, and only, street of Lyell - and was extended in 1877. Soon after, a road was made along the Buller River, which made travelling to Lyell significantly easier. Consequently, as the transportation system developed, women and families were able to venture into Lyell as they centralised the mining community.

Access to Lyell became somewhat easier for the wives and families of the miners, during the late 1860's and early 1870's and they began to move to Lyell. In the early 1870's, the arrival of women encouraged the miners to move from their tents, lining the creek, into a more civilised home. As the population of the town grew, more shops were quickly erected, as before miners had only come to town at the weekends. Numerous general stores, as well as a butcher, a cordwainer, a news agency and a hotel, lined Cliff Street, behind which were several houses and tents. As more females arrived in Lyell, prospectors from the Lyell Creek moved in to the town, and soon a community was created.

As the town expanded further and became more settled, a newspaper was established in 1880 known as the 'Lyell Argus', only to be changed later to the 'Lyell Times'. The 'Lyell Argus' consisted of four pages, with international, local and mining news as well as advertisements and general notices. Sold every Saturday for sixpence, the equivalent of five cents today, the 'Lyell Argus' held important information for Lyell's residents, from touring circuses to the opening of The National Bank. The establishment of the towns' newspaper allowed the residents of Lyell and other members of the community who lived up the Lyell Creek, to keep informed about the town, country's and world's news.

Buller River Valley with Lyell School House[1878-1994] Alexander Turnbull Library
http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=13859 
Click to enlarge

As children were born in Lyell, or brought there by canoe, the demand for an adequate education rose. The journey down river to Westport was a dangerous and tiresome one, so Lyell residents erected a school to educate their children, in the year of 1874. Photographs show the school was situated on the Nelson side of the town, on a small flat piece of land. The roll rose from 52, when the school opened, to 86, in Lyell's heyday, the period of greatest success. Complications with the hiring of the schools teacher proved a difficulty, and in 1892 the school opened late due to the absence of one. Although problems arose for the Lyell school, its existence ensured the education of the miners families would not be affected by the isolated town.

Lyell citizens were predominantly of the Roman Catholic and Anglican faiths, which both required their own separate churches in which the residents could attend. Erected in 1874, the Saint Matthew's Church of England allowed the Anglican residents of Lyell to continue to exercise their faith. It was a regularly used church which held a donated organ, from Mrs Sadlier, and was the church of A.E Ashton, the only clergyman to live in Lyell. Reverend Father Cummings was the Reverend for the Saint Josephs Church, and travelled from Reefton to Lyell once a month to hold mass. The Saint Josephs Church was built in 1876 due to the large population of Irish and Italian miners who lived at Lyell and wanted to show their faith for the Roman Catholic beliefs. Both Saint Matthews and Saint Josephs Church were an important part of the Lyell community as they both allowed its residents to practice their faith in a dignified and honourable way.

Township of Lyell 1880s. Alexander Turnbull Library. http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=13840
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Health care was poor in Lyell, with scurvy and other diseases common due to the extensive journey from Murchison. Illness often resulted in death as there was no doctor that lived in Lyell, and by the time he arrived up the Buller River, it was too late. However, in January 1886 the Lyell Times published an advertisement for 'George Levien, Surgeon Dentist, Chemist and Druggist... to attend patients at the Commercial Hotel'7. Unfortunately he did not stay long but his visit was greatly appreciated among the Lyell people. After his trip, residents attempted to fundraise for a Lyell hospital, but the amount raised, £109 and nineteen shillings, was not enough to begin this endeavour. Consequently, the townspeople of Lyell did generally not live to the ages of sixty and seventy due to the lack of medical care in the area.

As the town thrived, quartz was mined by companies from the reefs behind Lyell, supplying the many miners with more stable jobs. The quartz had to be bashed by a battery, a piston powered by water which fell on the quartz, to obtain the gold inside - this form of mining was the main income for Lyell during its existence. Machinery was brought from Melbourne via Westport and was then allocated to the various mines in the area. The largest mine in Lyell was called the United Alpine, which opened four miles up the Lyell Creek in 1874. Its establishment brought much success to Lyell with its twenty head battery, which 'crushed fifteen tons of quartz per eight hour shift"8, and also the employment of up to two hundred men at one time. Although the town itself was growing, wealth was brought into the area by the surrounding mines which obtained quartz from the hills behind Lyell.

From 1880 to 1896, Lyell experienced its heyday, where the town reached its pinnacle in terms of success. Lyell had grown at an efficient rate due to the presence of gold quartz in the neighbouring reefs which created a stable and successful atmosphere within the town. Cliff Street was lined with banks, hotels, a post office, courthouse, police station, brewery and newspaper agency, which all of Lyell's residents benefited from greatly. A small farm across the Buller River supplied much of the town with milk and vegetables which were transported across the river in 'a box... that was propelled across the river by pulling on ropes'9. This device enabled the residents to cross the Buller River, although there were often complications resulting in death. During this time, regular contact with neighbouring communities began, with a regular coach travelling from Lyell to Nelson. However, this prosperous period was short lived.

Several large, disastrous fires encouraged Lyell's decline after its successful, gold mining heyday. Water was well supplied in Lyell, with a reservoir on the spur above the town and a water tank above the Post Office Hotel; however there was not enough to extinguish the fire of 1896, so it was left to freely demolish the National Bank, three hotels, several stores as well as residents houses. Although there was no loss of life, some townspeople, such as Mr John Fennell, lost up to £8,000 when six buildings he owned were burnt to the ground. People began to rebuild and six months later Lyell was 'beginning to look like it used to'10.

Cliff Street Lyell, c. 1900/. Alexander Turnbull Library.
http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=13840
Click image to enlarge

However, prospectors and their families began to leave Lyell after the New Alpine Mine closed in 1906. The mine was the largest employer in the area and supplied the miners of Lyell with a regular income. Its failure meant the families in Lyell would no longer have sufficient income or employment, so many residents moved to the West Coast or to other mining towns, such as Wakamarina, to find employment.  The closure of Lyell's biggest Quartz mine led to the desertion of their once thriving town. Another fire in 1926 saw the destruction of the Lyell post office, court house, library and school and this resulted in the further abandonment of Lyell.

On the 17th of June, 1929, the Murchison area was struck by a magnitude 7.8 earthquake, which left Lyell completely cut off from the rest of New Zealand. No buildings in Lyell were severely damaged; however, the roads leading into the town had numerous landslips along them.  The slips isolated Lyell as no one was able to leave or come into Lyell; this resulted in numerous people dying as doctors were not able to get to Lyell in time. The Buller road was closed for 18 months and until it was cleared the townspeople had to walk out to get their supplies. The earthquake encouraged more people to leave Lyell, as it reinforced how isolated they were from the rest of the country.

By 1951 the only remaining building in Lyell was the Post Office Hotel; however it too was destroyed by a fire in 1963. The Post Office Hotel had been built in 1874 by a man called Mangos. It had seen the establishment, heyday and decline of Lyell, and held the majority of Lyell's historic artefacts. Mr Cox, the owner of the hotel, hopelessly watched as his hotel, home and history, was engulfed in a 'mass of flames'11 and burned to the ground in less than half an hour. By 1963, few remnants of Lyell remained after the last Hotel was burned to the ground.

Lyell is now a historical reserve with walking and biking tracks surrounding a grass camping ground. The Department of Conservation and the Department of Lands and Surveys, established Lyell as a historical reserve to remember Lyell's existence. Today, visitors are encouraged to pan for gold, in the ‘gold fossicking reserve' on the Lyell Creek, and are able to camp at the sight of the old town. Historic boards and plaques have been erected by both departments to show visitors what life was like for the residents of Lyell and how much the area has changed. These boards also show the few remaining pieces of evidence of the town.

Dray roads and walking tracks from the camping sight lead to significant areas in the town's history. One such site is the United Alpine mine and Croesus mine, whose battery is still there. Other paths lead to the neighbouring towns of Zalatown and Gibbstown, old building sites, and the tunnel in which gold was first discovered by the Maoris in 1862. Yet the most popular walk is only five minutes from the camping ground and leads to the old cemetery of Lyell. Surrounded by dense bush, this cemetery has a handful of headstones enclosed by iron railings. Although much of Lyell's history and buildings have been destroyed, the cemetery has been preserved in an attempt to remember the lives of those who lived here.

Lyell today is a very different place to what is was 100 years ago. It is hard to imagine, when standing in the historic reserve, that people used to live here, amongst the blackberry and gorse there were houses, shops and hotels. Surrounded by forested hills, it is a beautiful place to be. Yet when you are standing graveyard of an abandoned town, it does seem 'spooky'.

Steph Russell, Nelson College for Girls, 2011

George Fairweather Moonlight 1832-1884

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Good as Gold

Legends clung around George Moonlight, from the provenance of his unusual names- it was rumoured he was born on a fine night (Fairweather), abandoned and found in the moonlight; to his reputation as a self-sufficient explorer and gold prospector of uncanny ability.1 

Geo. Moonlight & dog, April 1868. The Nelson Provincial Museum, W E Brown
Collection: 11061
Click image to enlarge

Born in Scotland into the Moonlight family, he arrived in New Zealand  via the Californian and Australian goldfields in 1860.2.  Moonlight and his cousin Tom headed for the Otago goldfields in 1861 and there was soon news of a rich find near Lake Wakatipu – named  Moonlight Creek in his honour3. Moonlight’s discovery started a gold rush into the area.4 

Moonlight’s hallmark was the repeated rapid discoveries of major gold areas, then leaving them for hundreds of diggers5.His appearance and dress also attracted notice: tall and muscular, he dressed as a Californian gold miner, in a crimson shirt, buckskin breeches and a maroon sash.6

Moonlight's house, Maruia. The Nelson Provincial Museum, Copy
Collection: C1589
Collection: 11061
Click to enlarge

In 1863, while prospecting in the Murchison area, Moonlight found a new route from Nelson to the central Grey area.7  It is said he named the Shenandoah and Rappahannock rivers in the area either from his adventures working on a trading vessel between New York and Mexico, or for a cousin involved in the American Civil War.8  

Moonlight’s most remarkable gold discovery came in April 1865 in the Paparoa Range, near Blackball. “Virgin gold lay round the parent reef with ‘quars’ (quartz) still embedded in its large nuggets.”9  The ravine was named Moonlight Gully (Atarau)10. About eight tons of gold was eventually obtained from the gully by 100 –150 diggers, with the 87½ oz Victoria nugget found in 1917.11  

It was said of Moonlight that his solitary journeys were as much about his desire to pit himself against the elements, as for personal gain.12He  liked to travel alone at night and work his claim on his own. When other prospectors arrived, he would pack up and vanish.13 

Geo. Moonlight's Party. The Nelson Provincial Museum, Print
Collection: 282265
Click image to enlarge

In February 1865,  Moonlight married Elizabeth Gaukrodger.  They built a hotel, store and stables in the Maruia Valley, before moving with their children, Totty and Jack, to Hampden14  where they bought the Commercial Hotel, around which the village of Murchison grew.15 

Between 1866 and 1882, Moonlight carried on a brisk trade as storekeeper and hotelier. He was postmaster, unofficial judge and law enforcement officer, with his methods much like those of an American Wild West sheriff.16 

George & Elizabeth Moonlight Memorial. The Nelson
Provincial Museum, Tyree Studio Collection: 176305
Click image to enlarge

On 13 May, 1882, Moonlight’s beloved wife, Elizabeth, died of typhoid fever.17 With Elizabeth’s steady influence gone, Moonlight was soon in financial trouble.  He was owed large amounts of money by the diggers, but the easy gold finds were a thing of the past and New Zealand was entering the long Depression of the 1880s.18 His creditors did not want to embarrass a respected client, but Moonlight was declared bankrupt in 1883.19 

“No two people of my acquaintance ever worked so hard as Mr and Mrs Moonlight did, day and night. When the crisis came, and he could work no longer, he went through the Bankruptcy Court, and was left almost penniless. However he started working again as bold as ever, but one could see that his failure had made a great impression on him, for in a short time his hair had turned very grey,” wrote ‘A Friend” to the Colonist on 22 September 1884.20 

In 1884 he went prospecting in the Glenhope area with an old friend, Jack Bailie. When he was reported missing, his 18 year old daughter, Totty, rode to Nelson and  back within a day to organise a police search.  Three months later, his body was found in the bush at Cow Gully. He had died of exposure.21 

Judge Broad wrote of him: “George Moonlight was a type of the true miner – hopeful always, fearless, and light-hearted; honest as the day; kind to the weak and suffering; not quick to take offence, but ready to defend himself, if need be, with his strong right arm.”22 

2011


Murchison and the Buller

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Murchison’s story and the Buller River and its tributaries are inextricably entwined.  The mighty Buller begins its 177 km journey to the West Coast from the Nelson Lakes National Park.1  It finds its westerly path near Murchison, which is located on the Four River Plain at the confluence of the Buller, Matakitaki, Mangles and Matiri Rivers.2

Flooding

Buller bridge 1938 Buller Bridge 1938. Photo courtesy Rex Smith.
Click image to enlarge

Many ‘record’ floods have caused loss of life, devastation and disruption in the Murchison District with a major tributary, the Matakitaki River, causing the most flooding problems in recent times.3

The 'normal' flow of the upper Buller River at the Longford data recorder north of Murchison is 56 cumecs.3  By the time the Buller reaches the bottom of the Four Rivers Plain, normal flow is approximately 110 cumecs.3  In October 1998 a flood of 1380 cumecs was recorded at the Longford recorder4 and the upper Buller River reached 6.2 metres, the highest level since recording began in 1964.5

In 1878, the Buller and Matakitaki Rivers both became raging torrents and cut into the land on which Murchison, then known as Hampden was being built.  Several buildings had to be abandoned and local identity and hotelier, George Moonlight decided to rebuild his Commercial Hotel away from the river.6

Lyell was isolated, with roads either side of the gold mining settlement blocked and impassable following a disastrous flood in 1878.  ‘There was no Flour in town, there has been no Beef in the place for a week, and the last Pig was killed after eating the last spud...... are the people to starve through the neglect of the Buller County…?’ 7

Buller bridge 1938 2 with Maurice Smith Max Curtis Ross CurtisBuller Bridge, 1938, with deer hunters Maurice Smith, Max and Ross Curtis. Photo courtesy Rex Smith
Click image to enlarge

Ten years later, in March/April 1888, a succession of floods in the Buller and Inangahua Rivers destroyed the hard work of the settlers with fences and farmland, sheep, apples and crops all swept down the river.8

In 1926 the Buller cut into the Four River Plain: much of the road was taken, as well as pasture and stock. The access road from Longford completely disappeared and new road had to be constructed. 9

Buller near LyellNear Lyell, Buller River. Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Studio Collection: 181955
Click image to enlarge

Drownings

The Buller has claimed many lives. In October 1893, Mrs O’Rorke and Miss McInroe were crossing the Buller when the horse broke loose from the trap.  A bypasser went to their aid and, as they were putting a child into his dray, the buggy turned over and both women were thrown into the current, carried away and drowned. 10

In 1941, a brother and sister, William and Dulcie Borkin were  swimming with a friend in a swimming hole near Murchison when Miss Borkin got into trouble. Her brother went to help  but they both drowned.11  

Gold

The Grey River Argus reported in 1910 that three auriferous (gold bearing) rivers and five auriferous creeks ran into the Buller River within a few miles of Murchison.  The junction of the Matakitiki and Buller Rivers at Murchison had been worked since the 1880s, with payable gold and some rich patches struck.12

George Moonlight was known for making large gold discoveries throughout the South Island and then leaving them for other miners.  He and his wife Elizabeth bought the Commercial Hotel, around which Murchison grew.13

Matakitaki bridgeMatakitaki bridge, damaged by the Murchison earthquake, 1929 Alexander Turnbull Library: 1/1-010104-G.
http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=17501
Click image to enlarge

Māori prospectors were the first to obtain gold from the Lyell region and, by 1863, about 100 miners had set up camp. There was a township with hotels and a National Bank at Lyell until the early 20th Century.14

The earthquake

On 17 June 1929, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake, centred in the Lyell Range west of Murchison, was felt from Auckland to Bluff. 15  A huge slip blocked the Matakitaki River south of Murchison and there was a fear that water might break through the dam flooding Murchison and even Westport.  Most people had left town by the time the water was released naturally. 16   

The swing bridge

Rex Smith of Murchison has lived by the river for 63 of his 83 years and has worked  in construction gangs along the Buller and its tributaries. One of the more memorable projects was the construction of New Zealand’s longest swing bridge.

“There had been an old swing bridge across the river there for a long time which was mainly used by miners, farmers and hunters.  A man had bought the mining rights and wanted access to process the gold.  In 1974 I was involved in building a new swing bridge which was made up of aluminium panels 6ft by 3 ft wide.  It was a challenging project with the river roaring below.  It hadn’t been up long when a big flood ripped out the large panels leaving the abutments and ropes,” he said.  The Buller Swing Bridge was rebuilt immediately and still stands, or swings, today as a tourist attraction  14 kilometres west of Murchison.17

2014

The Murchison Earthquake

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Shaky Ground

For centuries before Europeans arrived, Māori had experienced rū whenua - ‘the shaking of the land'. According to Māori tradition, earthquakes are caused by the god Rūaumoko (or Rūamoko), the son of Ranginui (the Sky) and his wife Papatūānuku (the Earth).

Fissures in the roadFissures in Road at Murchison. Nelson Provincial Museum, F N Jones Collection: 321270
Click image to enlarge

Rangi was separated from Papa, and his tears flooded the land. Their sons resolved to turn their mother downwards, so that she and Rangi should not constantly see one another's sorrow.

When Papatūānuku was turned over, Rūaumoko was still at her breast, and was carried to the world below. To keep him warm, he was given fire-he is the god of earthquakes and volcanoes, and earthquakes are caused by him as he walks about.1

Major 'Quakes

On 16 October 1848 an earthquake with an estimated magnitude of 7.5 shook the region. It was felt throughout the top of the south and caused substantial damage in Wellington.

Morell House Busch FarmMurchison Earthquake 17.6.1929, Busch’s Slip. Nelson Provincial Museum, F N Jones Collection: 309942
Click image to enlarge

The 1848 earthquakes and aftershocks were caused by movement along at least 105 kilometres of a major fault along the Awatere Valley. Nelson's resident magistrate, Major Mathew Richmond, noted in November 1848, that ‘a crack quite straight crossed the country for miles; in some places he had difficulty crossing it with his horse; in one place the crack passed through an old warre [whare] dividing it in two pieces standing four feet apart.2

But worse was to come on 17 June 1929. The magnitude 7.8 Murchison earthquake was centred in the Lyell Range west of Murchison and was felt from Auckland to Bluff.

There was serious damage throughout the Greymouth, Nelson and Westport districts, with Murchison's 300-plus inhabitants experiencing the most cataclysmic havoc and destruction as slips roared down hillsides covering farms, livestock and roads with tons of rocks and clay. Trees snapped like twigs, huge cracks appeared in roads, and telephone and power poles leaned at drunken angles, surrounded by twisted wires.

Seventeen lives were lost in the Nelson/Buller area and hundreds of farm animals died.

Murchison faultEvidence of the seismic power of the earthquake at the end of Johnson Creek Track. Huge layered sedimentary rocks are jumbled about below the cliff face from which they were sheared in 1929. Native forest is regenerating around the massive rocks which have been eroded and weathered. Photo: Wayne Stronach 2014.
Click image to enlarge

In 1979, The Murchison District Museum and Historical Society gathered first hand accounts of the earthquake.3 Bernard Teague, a Methodist home missionary, was pushing his bicycle over the Maruia Saddle when he heard a strange roaring noise and the ground began to shake, trees crashed around him and he had trouble staying on his feet.

When he climbed the terrace above Six Mile Creek, Bernard saw a slip, which covered two farms. "One of them, the home of Sam Busch, being completely covered with tons of great rocks and clay. Mr Busch had been away delivering cream to the factory when the earthquake struck. He saw the slip fall over his home with his wife, son and daughter buried beneath it. He lost everything he had."

Nonie Rodgers saw the top blown off the hill. " It was absolutely horrifying, enormous rocks being hurled into the air, volumes of dust and what looked like a fire behind it all."

She grabbed her baby and crawled to the front door, where she stood up, but was thrown down the steps and surrounded by falling electric wires: "I lay there petrified to see the ground open and close again not far away. I looked up to see the hills rocking like jelly on a plate and to my relief, saw Dr McLean staggering up the road.....he found a piece of wood and lifted the wires up so I could crawl away with Des still clutched in my arms."

Feeding the dogsAfter the Earthquake. Nelson Provincial Museum, F N Jones Collection: 321277
Click image to enlarge

Heavy rain made the conditions even worse with continuing earthquake tremors adding to the confusion and terror. With their houses uninhabitable or completely destroyed, the residents of Murchison camped in tents or took shelter in sheds. After about five days about 280 homeless people were evacuated to Nelson. It was six weeks before many people could return home.

The Murchison Earthquake section of this article was based on an article published in Wild Tomato, June 2008, p 23. The article was written by Joy Stephens for The Nelson Provincial Museum and resources mainly came from the Murchison District Museum and Historical Society collection of memories cited below.

The Nelson Railway…to Nowhere

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Despite more than 80 years of drive and determination on the part of Nelsonians to work towards a railway that would end their isolation from the rest of the South Island, the resulting line was destined to be the railway to nowhere. 

Save our Railway

Nelsonians had dreamed of a railway that would link them to the rest of the South Island from as early as the 1860s.

Permission was finally given in 18711 to start work on a line intended to meet up with the main trunk line. Construction of the first 30.4km stage, from the city to Foxhill, began in 1873 and it opened in 1876.2 The line followed St Vincent Street, rather than the publicly favoured port route. It went over the relatively steep gradient of Bishopdale and through Stoke, Richmond, Brightwater and Wakefield, to Wai-iti, just short of Foxhill.3

Belgrove construction workBelgrove construction work by Midland Railway Company, The Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Studio collection,  179476/3
Click image to enlarge

An economic recession forced the suspension of construction until 1879-1880, when an extension to Belgrove was built.4

Meanwhile, in 1878, work had started on widening Haven Road to accommodate a line from the city to Government Wharf at Port Nelson.5 This followed the route of the closed Dun Mountain railway line and was opened in 1880.6

Work began on the Belgrove to Motupiko (Kohatu) section in 1890. A work camp was established and a 1352m tunnel built through the Spooner Range.7 This section opened in 1897, and in 1901 a start was made on the 16km stretch to Tadmor, via Tapawera. A rail and road bridge across the Motueka River was completed in 1906.8

Frustrations grew over the time taken to build the railway. It had taken 33 years to build just 66km of track.9 The line had been extended from Tadmor, through Kiwi, Tui and Kaka to Glenhope10 by 1912. Construction was again suspended, however, and the outbreak of war in 1914 brought a further halt.11

A 6km extension to Kawatiri began in 1920 and the Pikomanu railway camp was established the following year. A tunnel of 185 m. was cut, two bridges built across the Hope River and the section opened in June 1926.12

Services were reduced in the 1920s, with passenger numbers and freight volumes having decreased due to the rapid development of road freight and passenger transport. The Nelson Progress League was established in 1924 to campaign for the line to be extended to join the main trunk. It launched a pamphlet in 1925 calling on the Government to “Fill the Gap”.13

Between 1924 and 1929 a 6km section was built to Gowan Bridge, but this was only ever used for freight. With the country reeling from the Depression, all work on the railway was suspended from January 1931, terminating the employment of 300 men.14

The gap between the completed section of line and Inangahua Junction, where it could connect with the main trunk line, was less than 70km (42 miles).15

Toi Toi Valley trainToi Toi Valley train, The Nelson Provincial Museum, FN Jones Collection, 26713 
Click image to enlarge

From 1931 the line was under constant threat of closure and people were urged to “use it or lose it”. It was announced in 1952 that the Nelson line would remain open only until major highways were completed. Rail services were suspended in 1954.16

A public meeting resulted in a 12,000-signature petition calling for a change of the decision. The Prime Minister, Sid Holland, issued a challenge to Nelson to save its railway by guaranteeing 25,000 tons of rail freight per year. On June 12, 1954, an excursion took 400 passengers on “the last train to Glenhope”. A few days later the Progress League accepted the Prime Minister’s challenge and the line re-opened. Despite its best efforts, the League fell short of the target and the line was set for closure on September 3, 1955.17

Kiwi Protest 1955,Kiwi Protest 1955, The Nelson Provincial Museum, Geoffrey C Wood Collection, 8830 fr38 
Click image to enlarge

The last timetabled train arrived in Nelson on Friday September 2, 1955 and there was a last-ditch public meeting on the Church Steps.18 Ruth Page called her own women’s protest meeting, on hearing that work would start on pulling up the railway lines at Kiwi on September 20th.19 A group of women held a week-long sit-in on the line at Kiwi, with nine of them being arrested and convicted when they refused to move. It was to no avail, and the railway line, so desperately wanted and so long under construction, was gradually dismantled.20

The dream was over.

2008 

Reservoir Creek Richmond

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A history of early European settlement

The European colonisation of Nelson (including Waimea East) was conceived and planned by the New Zealand Company in London at the beginning of the 1840.’1 A copy of J W Barnicoat’s rough survey plan (Richmond)2 of July 1842 [see image] . Reservoir Creek flows through sections 88, 90, 68, 69 and 79 to the Waimea Estuary. Investigations have failed to determine a name for Reservoir Creek prior to the construction of the now defunct reservoir in the early 1890’s.  A geological survey map dated October 1910 identifies the creek as “Reservoir Gully”.  Interviews with long-term residents, who have historical ties with the creek, would suggest the waterway was known simply as “The Creek”.

reservoir creek Bett2012.4.628

Map of part of the accommodation sections in the settlement of Nelson. [1850?]. Nelson Provincial Museum, Bett Collection: Bett 2012.4.628.

The first historical reference of note along the banks of Reservoir Creek occurs on section 88 that was land originally purchased by a Mr. Tollemache.  In March 1862 a man named Roberts opened the Cambrian Coal Mine.3  The mine itself is located just upstream of present day Marlborough Crescent above the Easby Park car park on the true left of Reservoir Creek.  The coal is in Tertiary (Eocene) coal measures caught up along the Waimea Fault. The coal dips steeply, is crushed and discontinuous and while of high volatile bituminous rank has high sulfur content.4

Roberts relinquished the claim after extracting 100 tons of coal that was used for steam engines and household heating.  In 1872 Mr William Higgs, who now owned the property called Barrington Farm, reopened the mine and sold 30 tons to Symonds Flax Mill and some for use in Snowdens and Gappers traction engines.5  An inspection of the mine in 1873 indicated that the workings were very unstable due to rotting and insufficient timber.  Despite this a man named Weir in 1880 removed another 300 ton of coal.  These workings were below Reservoir Creek level and water inflows soon brought the operation to conclusion.

Almost immediately opposite the Cambrian Coal Mine, on the true right of Reservoir Creek on section 90, is the site of a former rifle range.  Following the Wairau Affray settlers of the District were very uneasy “and held fears especially when the men were absent from home all day”.6  This, in addition to an incident at Happy Valley, Wakapuaka resulted in them volunteering to form armed groups in their respective areas in 1845.

Reservoir Creek Selbourne Homestead

Selbourne Homestead Hill St 1890 [Photo Courtesy of Mr. Yelvin Sutton]

 The rifle range, on George Sutton’s property,7 was probably used by the Richmond Corps prior to 1868.  This range was 500 yards long and volunteers would shoot from the bottom of present day Selbourne Avenue to targets just below” the butts” above Easby Park.8  The targets are today located below Cropp Place, under a residential carport.  Jean Sutton’s book “How Richmond Grew” reports that combined Nelson City Cadets and Richmond Corps held camps on the Sutton’s paddock in August 1875 and Easter 1879. In 1881 many of these participants were the first outside troops to arrive at the North Island uprising at Parihaka. It is not known when activities at the rifle range ceased. The last report was around the turn of the century when the Martini Henry rifles were replaced by Lee-Enfield magazine rifles.

As the Richmond Borough developed there was an increasing demand for water.  This was especially true for the Volunteer Fire Brigade relying solely on wells, ditches and tanks.9  A proposal to construct an earthen dam behind Richmond was rejected in 1880.  However a second plan put to residents in September 1885 at a public meeting was “enthusiastically received”.  A notice was sent to William Higgs (section 88) and John Sutton (section 90) to ask if they had objections to the proposed scheme, as the stream from the gully to be dammed (Reservoir Creek) ran through their properties.10   Pipes and ironwork, clearly visible today, were ordered from Scotland and arrived on the S.S. Glenora, amounting to 120 tons.

Fencing, trenching and construction commenced in 1890.  Olivier Sutton ploughed the pipeline from the Reservoir site to Hill Street with a pair of horses.11  The original dam face was constructed with logs to contain a 12-foot head of water with an estimated storage of 1,200,000 gallons of water.  Later the spillway was raised to 20 feet to enhance water storage.  It appears the new Reservoir was operational in 1893. The Reservoir was a closed area for public access, though a duck shooter drowned at this site near the turn of the century.  By 1970 alternative sources of water supply resulted in the closure of the Reservoir.  At 113 years of age Tasman District Council has concerns about the existing dam structure and related issues for public safety.  Future management options are currently being considered. [The dam was decommissioned by Tasman District Council in 2014].

As previously mentioned three surviving members of Richmond’s original European pioneers took time to answer my numerous questions. This resulted in a snapshot of life along Reservoir Creek in the 1920-40’s.  My only regret is not having the time to report on the many fascinating and colourful stories.  Age and beauty must be considered in the first instance…

The research for this story was originally done for Tasman District Council, October 2006

Early Richmond

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It is thought Māori used the Tasman region as a rich food and flax resource from as early as 1350 AD.1 However, a lack of archaeological evidence suggests there were no Māori settlements in the immediate vicinity of the centre of Richmond itself.2

Queen Street, 1880. Tasman District Archives. Click to enlarge

The European settlement of Richmond began in 1842 when two young New Zealand Company surveyors, John Barnicoat and T.J. Thompson, were contracted to survey 20,000 acres of land at Waimea East.3

Most of Waimea East was bought as large land holdings of 50-100 acres, with the Sutton family owning about one quarter of the total area.4 There were many absentee landowners, which disadvantaged the settlers who had to rent land from them and the sense of indignation continued for many years.5

Star & Garter HotelStar & Garter Hotel  The Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Studio
Collection: 76910
Click image to enlarge

A village soon began to develop. Richmond was named in 18546 by which time there were Methodist, Baptist and Anglican churches, as well as shops and businesses: bakers, butchers, coopers, shoemakers and general storekeepers. During the gold mining boom years, seven pubs in and around Richmond did a roaring trade. They included the White Hart, Plough Inn, Railway Hotel and Star and Garter.7

Education was important to the early settlers. Richmond School opened in 1856 and the Richmond Mechanics Institute, offering a book lending service and lecture evenings, was established in 1865.8

During the 1880s, two enterprises were involved in the extraction of minerals in the vicinity of Richmond. Between 10 and 12 tons of copper were taken from the Champion Copper Mine in 1883. About 500 tons of coal were extracted from a two metre thick seam of coal near Reservoir Creek between 1862 and the 1880s.9

Richmond was proclaimed a Borough in June 1891 and an Appleby farmer, George Talbot was elected the first mayor.10 By 1896, Richmond had a population of 500 people.11

The Nelson Railway ran between Nelson and Wai-iti, via Richmond, between 1876 and 1955.  Richmond students travelled to Nelson College by train until 1952, when buses replaced the train service.12 Waimea College opened in 1957.

A & P Show, RichmondA & P Show, Richmond The Nelson Provincial Museum, F N Jones
Collection: 6x8 37
Click image to enlarge

Richmond's first agricultural show was held at the Richmond Fair Ground on 7 December, 1859. There was a ploughing match and entries of cattle, sheep, pigs, poultry and horses, with produce classes introduced the following year. In 1876, the venue was changed to Mr Cannings' paddock, which became Richmond Park.13 The first A&P (Agricultural and Pastoral Association) show was held at Richmond Park in 1893.14

Electric lighting came to the Borough in 1910 thanks to Robert Ellis, who powered his Brightwater flour mill by turbine during the day. The turbine supplied power for lighting by night.15 Power lines were extended along the main highway to Richmond16 to provide lighting for households and 10 street lights in the town.17

Jubilee at Richmond.Jubilee at Richmond. The Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Studio
Collection: 182035
Click image to enlarge

While the early settlers worked hard, they also enjoyed the ‘genial' climate and ‘arcadian' countryside.18 Fish were plentiful with the channels and holes around Saxton's, Best, Quarantine and Rabbit Islands yielding various kinds of fish: snapper, kahawai, terakihi, gurnard. "It would be a poor day if 12 dozen or more good flounder would not be caught," remembered Roly Papps.19

Sport of various kinds was also important in building the local community. Jubilee Park, located in Gladstone Road,  has been the home of rugby football in the area since the 19th Century. Jubilee Park has hosted a range of other sports codes including croquet, hockey, cricket, tennis and soccer; and regional competitions between local fire brigades.  Being the only public park in the borough for some time, it was also used for non-sporting events, such as Lord Plunket's vice-regal tours. In the early 1940s Lime and oak trees were planted to commemorate the European pioneers of the district. In the late 1940s the Richmond Sports Association was formed to raise funds for and oversee the building and management of a combined sports complex on the grounds.20

The Easter Monday picnic at Rabbit Island was a much anticipated occasion: "That was an event. All the local people would go...It was a great gathering of the community on that day. We used to play games on the beach and have races. Croucher's Bakery used to make hot cross buns for everyone for the occasion," remembered Veda Hammond.21

Richmond History trail (to c. 1900's) Tasman District Libraries. Click image to enlarge

A note on the naming of Richmond

One of the early settlers of the area was George Snow, a tailor. He named the settlement after his English home, Richmond -on-Thames in Surrey. The Star and Garter Hotel, built in 1843, was named after a hotel of the same name in Richmond-on-Thames.22

2011

Waimea Plains

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From Grain and Cows... to Vegetables and Wine

Over the years land use on the Waimea Plains has changed to meet changing markets and lifestyles. In the early days of Pakeha settlement, grains, particularly barley, were grown as cash crops. After harvesting, grains were “stooked” – propped up in sheaves to dry – then made into stacks and later threshed to get the grain. These processes were community affairs, with men, women and children all involved. Barley was transported to Nelson either in a boat or by horse and dray. As numbers of livestock increased, grasses, hay and oats were produced to feed them. Later peas took over from barley as a cash crop.

Threshing at Winns property DovedaleThreshing at Winn’s property in Dovedale, a typical threshing photograph of the early 1900s. Traction engines, as the power source for machinery, were rarely used after the 1930s. Nelson Provincial Museum. Tyree Studio Collections 180685
Click image to enlarge
K Pea Viner Appleby“Pea Shelling Made Easy”. The Pea Viner corner on Cotterell Road was where peas were taken off their vines before being transported to Kirkpatricks cannery in Nelson. NPM BARRY SIMPSON NELSON PHOTO NEWS COLLECTION 302_fr15
Click image to enlarge

Before the establishment of processing factories, most milk was churned into butter. Some of this was sent to the goldfields on the West Coast during the 1870s and ‘80s. However the Wells family of Lower Queen Street produced milk that they sold to homes around Richmond and Nelson. The Waimea Dairy Company was established in Appleby in 1914 (the buildings on the corner of McShanes Road and the coastal highway can still be seen there) for processing of cheese and butter. In 1931 the Company moved to Brightwater. After the Nelson “town milk” factory was set up in the 1940s, town supply dairy farms dominated the plains. Today there are very few dairy farms left on the Plains. Horticulture and vineyards are now the predominant land use.

Pigs were to dairying as poultry was to grains; they could be raised on the lower quality product. After the establishment of the freezing works in the early 20th century, many farms ran sheep as a sideline. Horses were an essential part of all farming operations until the 1940s. The art and science of ploughing was celebrated in “ploughing matches”.  Henry Redwood, “The father of the New Zealand Turf”, established one of the first racing stables in the country on the present coastal highway along with training stables on Rabbit Island. Racehorses became an important part of the local economy and entertainment scene.

Written by Janet Bathgate.

The text from this story came from the Tasman District Council/NZ Cycle Trail Heritage Panel 2012

 

John Wallis Barnicoat 1814-1905

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Surveyor and  Speaker of the Nelson Provincial Council 

Born in Falmouth, Barnicoat was articled as a civil engineer before immigrating to New Zealand as a cabin passenger on the Lord Auckland, which left Gravesend on 25 September 1841.

John Wallis Barnicoat, The Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Collection, 34843 John Wallis Barnicoat, The Nelson Provincial Museum, Tyree Collection, 34843
Click image to enlarge

On 4 October, he described a frightening incident aboard the sailing ship: " In the night a heavy gale carried away the foretop gallant mast and flying jib boom and tore the foretop gallant sail." Then the ship was "....tacking about all day and losing way each tack."
  

Once they got their sea legs, Barnicoat and his fellow cabin passengers ate extremely well: "fresh fish every day...roast goose....giblet pie...apple tarts, plum pudding...and plenty of wine". They were thrilled by the birdlife and whales, and devised many entertainments. 

Barnicoat sketch on Lord AucklandBarnicoat, J. Sketch of Messrs Sclanders, Graham and Fell on Lord Auckland, Nelson Provincial MuseumClick image to enlarge

Barnicoat shared a cabin with Thomas John Thompson  and described its snug ambience on 29 December. "I have mentioned that our cabin is only 7 ½ feet by 6 ½ feet and in this space we have two beds, 7 boxes, 2 carpet bags, 2 hat boxes, several small boxes and parcels, shoes etc etc," 

On Sunday 5 February, the passengers were called on deck as Banks Pensinsula hove into sight. "The whole of us were pretty nearly in raptures with the beautiful valleys which continually presented themselves." 

On Sunday 26 February, Barnicoat sailed into Nelson Harbour. Two days later he noted that a public ‘grog shop' was very popular with drunken sailors. " This evening one of them was purposely annoying one of the natives by bawling in his ear and swearing at him.....The native at last quietly got up and knocked the sailor down then gave him two or three tremendous blows on the head and walked off in their usual dignified manner." 

During 1842 and 1843, Barnicoat and his fellow cabin passenger, Thomas Thompson, took up survey contracts in Waimea East and the Moutere. In April 1843, he reported that their tender for surveying "No 1 district in the Wairoo (sic) was accepted at 10 shillings on the net acreage of the district." 

On March 10, 1843, Te Rauparaha arrived in Nelson. "The old murderer was dressed in a dirty blanket with a large bunch of the down of albatross in either ear....He demands compensation for the occupation of Nelson, not yet considering its purchase complete. He also, it seems, wants payment for Motueka, Moutere, Waimai (sic) and the other districts of Nelson." 

On 28 June, after the Wairau Affray, Barnicoat wrote: " On looking back....however much I may be exasperated against the natives on account of the massacre which occurred after the fight, it is difficult to attach any blame to their proceedings before that occurrence....These natives told us repeatedly of the opposition of the chiefs to the occupation of the Wairoo by whites...." 

Barnicoat was among those accused of cowardice for fleeing from the scene. However he said there were two options: Arthur Wakefield  thought it would be ‘certain death' to run away and Barnicoat and others preferred running away as the safest course of action. "We did not run from the fight, for the fight had already ceased."

On February 1, 1844, Barnicoat noted a more subdued Nelson Anniversary than the previous year when "mirth seemed the order of the day". Two barques were waiting in the harbour to take away 25 families of emigrants. "The anniversary was a great falling off from last year...from a feeling that any rejoicing was untimely so soon after the Wairoo Massacre." 

In 1849, Barnicoat married Rebecca Lee Hodgson and they had seven children. He entered politics when the Provincial Government was established in 1853 and served in the Legislative Council from 1883 to 1902. 

This article is paraphrased from a series of columns written by Joy Stephens and published in the Nelson Mail in 2007.

 


Ship Cove - a haven for Captain Cook

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Captain James Cook spent a total of 328 days exploring the New Zealand coastline during his three voyages. The initial purpose of Cook's voyages was to observe the Transit of Venus in Tahiti and then search for a great southern continent which was believed to exist - Terra Australis. Cook was to return to Ship Cove in Queen Charlotte Sound, on five separate occasions. He spent over 100 days there, as it provided safe anchorage, food and fresh water and timber for repairs to his ship. 1

Captain James CookCaptain James Cook, Alexander Turnbull Library, ref A-217-010. Permission of ATL must be sought for further use of this image
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Cook's First Voyage involved a six month long circumnavigation of Aotearoa/New Zealand. His ship, the Endeavour, sailed into Ship Cove, on 16 January, 1770. He described it as a "very snug cove" and recorded that: "The number of Inhabitants hardly exceeds 3 or 400 people, they leive (sic) dispers'd along the Shores in search of their daly (sic) bread, which is fish and firn (sic) roots for they cultivate no part of the lands".  (Journals of Captain Cook, 6 February, 1770)2

Cook's Second Voyage involved two ships, the Resolution, commanded by Cook, and the Adventure commanded by Lieutenant Tobias Furneaux. They left from Plymouth in England on 13 July 1772 and met at Ship Cove in May 1773, but lost contact with each other after they left Queen Charlotte Sound and later both visited the Marlborough Sounds area separately.3

Cook later learned that ten men from the Adventure had been attacked and killed at Wharehunga Bay, Arapawa Island. While it was expected that Cook would seek revenge for the killings on his return (third) voyage, he did not, and acted with commonsense and restraint.

Attempts were made by the Europeans to introduce various animals. Furneaux liberated a boar, and a sow and a pair of goats were released on Arapawa Island. Rats, chickens and more pigs were also introduced to New Zealand by Cook's ships. Cook put a ewe and a ram ashore at Ship Cove and was disappointed with his failure to introduce sheep: "Last Night the Ewe and Ram I had with so much care and trouble brought to this place, died, we did suppose that they were poisoned by eating of some poisonous plant, thus all my fine hopes of stocking this Country with a breed of Sheep were blasted in a moment." (Journals of Captain Cook, 23 May 1773)4 

The Europeans left potatoes, and turnips as well as other vegetables. They also brought serious diseases to Maori, including tuberculosis, and venereal diseases.

View in Queen Charlott's SoundWebber, John (1751-93). View in Queen Charlotte's Sound. London : Boydell, 1809 (oils from a sketch made on Cook's Third Voyage). Alexander Turnbull Library. B-098-015
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During this Second Voyage, Cook recorded that some Maori families were living near their ships and supplying them with fish. He acknowledged that their fishing methods and expertise were superior to those of his own countrymen. Cook left the Marlborough Sounds on 7 June 1773, but he returned to Ship Cove again in November, leaving on 25th November, to return in October 1774, still on his Second Voyage.5

Cook's Third Voyage commanding the Resolution and accompanied by the Discovery, included a stay at Ship Cove "in our old station" in February 1777 to refresh and refit the ships. Captain Cook was 47 years old and clearly weary with the demanding and dangerous voyages and dealing with the various peoples of the Pacific. He began to behave less tolerantly and on 14th February 1779, over-reacted to a theft in Hawaii, which resulted in a fight in which Cook was killed. 6

During his three voyages to New Zealand, James Cook mapped the outline of the country with considerable accuracy. His observations of Maori culture, and natural history, combined with the observations recorded by his men provide a rich source of information and his comments on the abundance of whales, seals, timber, and flax encouraged British interest.

This story is an edited version of an article written by Steve Austin, Chief Executive of the Marlborough Museum and published in Wild Tomato, 2008, and includes additional material from The Captain Cook Encyclopedia

Nayland College - daring to be different

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Daring to be Different

Stoke’s co-educational Nayland College was established in 1966 in the shadow of the long and highly respected history and traditions of the Nelson’ city’s single sex schools. 

Nayland. 1966 first assembly

Bill Kane addresses pupils on the first day. Courtesy Nayland College.

But Nayland’s founding principal Bill Kane was not one to be daunted by tradition. He was determined Nayland would develop its own way and quickly introduced a number of firsts. There would be no cadets, no houses, no dux, and no prefect system in which prefects administered corporal punishment. Instead there was a school council with members elected by fellow students, and the school’s few rules would be simple but strictly enforced.

NaylandCollege aerial 1967

Aerial of Nayland College 1967 surrounded by orchards and farmland, and with Nelson Airport in the background. Courtesy Nayland College

The most radical and noticeable change was the introduction of mufti for seventh formers (year 13) in 1973. This was part of a strategy to transition students into the workforce by allowing them to wear clothing appropriate in an office or workplace situation. In 1975 mufti was extended to the sixth form and eventually to the fifth form (year 11).

Bill Kane retired in 1978, replaced in succession by Ras Zachariassen (1979-1994), Charles Newton (1995-2009), Rex Smith (2009-2014), and Daniel Wilson (2015-present). Each took responsibility for further developing and redefining unique school values which cemented Nayland’s reputation as a school reflective of its community while still proudly forging its own path. 

Traditional ways of doing things continue to be constantly questioned and fresh, non-traditional approaches designed to meet the changing needs of students.  As part of this process, in 1985, Nayland become the first school in the region to remove corporal punishment.

Nayland. 1989 the Radio Nayland team 1

The 1989 Radio Nayland team. Courtesy Nayland College

Innovative projects, included launching the school’s own community newspaper, Circuit, in 1979 (which went on to become an award winning publication) and the launch in 1984 of 16 years of Radio Nayland.

Nayland. Circuit

Sofie Eich, Rosie Manins and Sven Adam, part of the winning 2003 Circuit team. Nelson Mail

The college’s biennial stage productions became known for their slick production and nurturing of raw student talent, with sell-out seasons of world-renowned shows like Grease, Chess, Cabaret and Little Shop of Horrors, and successes in Stage Challenge, Rock Quest and the Sheilah Winn Shakespeare Festival.

Nayland 2010 production of Chess

The College production of Chess. 2010. Courtesy Nayland College

Early on, Nayland embraced the role of computers and technology in education, becoming a leader in the introduction and use of information technology in schools. There was no better endorsement of the path chosen by Nayland than being named the Goodman Fielder New Zealand Secondary School of the Year in 2002.

Nayland. 2008 NaAGS with Diversity tree

NAGS 2008 with the Diversity tree. courtesy Nayland College

Pride in being different and catering for all students is something Nayland has always encouraged. In 1969 the college provided ‘experience’ classes for students with mental or physical disabilities.  This developed into the Learner Support Centre which, in 2001, was rewarded with national recognition as a best practice model of excellence in special education. In 2002 it became the first South Island school to establish a group for gay students.  The Nayland Alliance of Gays and Straights (NAGS) was one of only five such groups in the country. By the 2010s the scope of NAGS had extended to encompass students who identified not only as lesbian or gay but also bisexual or transgender (LGBT). In 2012, it became the lead provider for the region’s first trades training academy.

Never afraid to make changes that benefit students, school houses, one of the traditions eschewed by foundation principal Bill Kane, were introduced in 2012 to enhance students’ sense of belonging and school unity. But these are houses unlike those in more traditional schools. Named for Southern Sky constellations, representing a motto adopted by the school – reach for the stars, and incorporating another original Nayland feature – the vertical form, the four houses are fronted by giant mascots representing an eagle (Aquila), a dragon (Draco), a horse (Pegasus) and a phoenix (Phoenix).

Nayland Students in uniform

Nayland Junior students in uniform. Courtesy Nayland College

Even Nayland’s announcement in 2015 that year 11 students would return to wearing a uniform from 2017 and year 12 from 2018 reflected the wishes of the wider school community while promising to look very different from traditional school uniforms. 

As Nayland entered its second half century, following its 50th jubilee in 2016, it harked back to its roots and the school crest for the inspiration for a new way forward. As principal Daniel Wilson said, Nayland students aim for Success, taking every Opportunity to reach their goals. They do this through Ako – learning, and Manaaki – Respect, which inspires students to rise to new heights, achieve their dreams, and SOAR. This ideology is represented by a new logo incorporating the symbol of the kuaka (godwit), taken from the school crest.

“Kuaka fly non-stop for 11,500km from New Zealand to Alaska in a matter of days,” Mr Wilson said. “Their resilience, persistence and local connection provide a rich metaphor for the values we aspire to at Nayland College.”

2016

Nelson Golf Club and the links course

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A links course for the top of the South

The Nelson Golf Club (NGC) is one of the finest provincial golf courses in New Zealand. It has been in existence for 116 years and its facilities have been enjoyed by members, and visitors, from all over the world.   Despite the success of its well established parkland layout, the NGC is completing a course redevelopment to revert to a links style course. This has been a controversial conversion and the reasons for undertaking it are discussed below.

First though, what is a ‘links' golf course? Such courses were originally built on waste land which ‘linked' (the origin of the word ‘links') the seaside and the farming areas located a little inland.   Nowadays a links course is one that must meet a range of criteria:

Views towards Kahurangi Ranges before and after tree removal.  Note how course has opened up (lower photo). Images supplied by author
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  • It is built on land immediately adjacent to the sea
  • Its soil is sandy and free draining
  • the natural landscape is retained as far as possible
  • there are few if any trees
  • there are generally a large number of bunkers

NGC's seaside location, sandy soils and undulating layout means that it meets the most important of the above conditions. By developing a links layout NGC will be associating itself with golf courses whose names are revered within the worldwide golfing community. St. Andrews and Carnoustie in Scotland, Pebble Beach in the USA,  the NSW Golf Club, Australia, and Paraparaumu Beach here in New Zealand are all iconic links courses.

NGC's 1997 Centenary Book noted that ‘in the early days of the course, except for two substantial blocks of manuka and some gorse, there were very few if any trees.  The course would more correctly be called a seaside links'. However NGC developed some of the characteristics of a parkland course from the late 1950's, when a number of pines and other species were planted as nursery trees and then allowed to grow to maturity. Trees are a feature of parkland courses, along with manicured fairways, water features and shallow bunkers.  The Augusta course (venue for The Masters Tournament) in Georgia USA is probably the best known example.

So what prompted the NGC to change the course back to its original layout? The presence and condition of the aforementioned trees constituted the primary reason.   They required constant (and expensive) pruning and maintenance to comply with Nelson Airport's height restrictions. They drew off large amounts of water from their surrounds and many were rotten and dangerous. The benefits of removal were confirmed when a number of trees situated on three holes were cut down. The playability of those holes improved greatly as a result. 

Sir Bob Charles, New Zealand's most famous golfer, had also been very critical of the condition of the trees and their detrimental effect on the course.   He encouraged the club to recapture its links heritage.

The Club established a Strategic Planning Sub Committee in late 2007 to address the above issues. They also commissioned course architect Jeff Asche (Perspective Design) to develop a Master Plan for the course.  His design made provision for the removal of most of the old trees. However, an act of God in mid 2008 spurred the removal process.  A storm blew over a number of weaker trees, thus underlining the need to take action.

Work commenced in late 2008.  A five year plan was established covering each of the 18 holes on the course. The most important element involved the removal of the remainder of the trees, except for those of particular merit. The plan also provided for an increase in the number of bunkers, the regrassing of substandard fairways, and mounding to cover old tree stumps. Many teeing grounds were targeted for renovation, and fairways and rough for realignment and redefinition to add interest and challenge.

Nelson Golf Club, championship tee.
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The Head Green keeper was given responsibility for execution of the plan. He and his team faced a number of challenges in bringing it to fruition.  In particular, he was required to keep the course in play while changes were made.  He did so through on-going communication with members and with the assistance of a great team of volunteers.  He also had to quickly get rid of a huge pile of mulch after the trees were cut down.  Burning proved not to be feasible, so at the eleventh hour a large stump grinder was fortuitously located and put to use.  It was a bonus for the club that firewood sales covered the cost of the removal of the trees!  Thousands of pine cones were also collected and sold.  After an intensive five year effort, by the green keeping team, work on the course is now largely complete. 

It is fair to say that member reaction to the changes was mixed.  To be a challenging test a links course must have deep bunkers and long heavy rough. Fairways must be narrow, so that a premium is placed on accurate shot making and good course management. Older members, and those on high handicaps, contend that in this state the course is too difficult and unfair.  Wayward golf shots are harshly punished by loss of balls and deep bunkers are difficult to negotiate. Links courses are exposed to the elements (wind in particular) and such days pose real problems for older golfers. So NGC's green keeper is frequently encouraged to ‘cut back the rough' and ‘fill in the bunkers'. He has to walk a fine line between maintaining a course that attracts and challenges good golfers, yet satisfying the needs of members who are not so favoured.'  

NGC's Vision is for ‘the club to be considered the finest golf course and club in the top half of the South Island,  one of the finest provincial golf clubs and courses and be recognised as a leading example of a links golf course in New Zealand'.  This vision has in a large part been achieved and the course, with its panoramic outlook across Tasman Bay, will undoubtedly attract golfers from far and wide. As a testimony to its status as a course, NGC will be hosting the New Zealand Men's Amateur Championships in April 2014.  Other major events will surely follow.

This article was submitted as part of a Nelson Marlborough Insititute of Technology Creative Writing assignment, 2013

Andy Budd and Kush Coffee

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A Man with a Passion

Andy Budd wears a genuine Panama hat, which he imported from Ecuador, he doesn't believe in substitutes for the real thing. He is a man with passion; you only have to look at the photo of him in a bath full of coffee beans to see that!

Travel and coffee both run rich in the veins of this Nelson coffee roaster. At the age of seven Andy was introduced to this rich smelling brew by his mother; on asking if he could drink coffee, his mother replied yes... but first he had to learn to make it properly for her. We were not talking instant, but real coffee, from beans not granules. From then the passion was kindled with many family trips to Europe during which he drank a lot of good coffee, and his mother dragged him to the top of a lot of cathedral towers! He remembers the climbs with less fondness, but was not discouraged from further adventures.

Andy Budd and his coffee roaster. Image supplied by author
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It was while traveling through Southern Europe with his son in 2003 that Andy made a decision to bring great coffee to New Zealand. His enlightenment came by way of a scowling Italian barista, who slammed and muttered his way to serving Andy the best cup of coffee he had ever tasted. I can do this he thought, I can be a grumpy old man and serve great coffee, and with a lot more finesse. From this flash of inspiration, an empire was created.

Kush's coffee roaster. Image supplied by author
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On return to New Zealand Andy wasted no time in getting his show on the road. He bought the cheapest café in the Nelson region, which he found at Craft Habitat in Richmond; sourced the best quality beans by researching Australia's prizewinning coffees, and Kush was born.

Two years later in 2006, Andy was offered the chance to lease a property in Nelson and Kush moved to the Metropolis. The new premises consisted of a small shop in Bridge Street, Nelson, tiny, but pure Kush. The followers grew and the crowds gathered, it was very rare that you would pass by and not see at least one patron sitting at the outside bar, enjoying his daily fix.

It soon became obvious that Kush had outgrown this tiny property and Andy spent a couple of years looking for more suitable premises. The perfect place presented itself when a café in Church Street closed. Andy moved his huge and beautiful steampunk coffee roaster to the new place, and fitted it out with retro decor and locally handcrafted furniture, old and new. With the palatial new premises everything else grew to fit, the staff, the production and the turnover. A bit of a shock to the system, but then this is all par for the course for a man who drinks six triple shots a day.

In it's latest reincarnation, Kush serves delicious food, including lunches and breakfasts, (Sunday mornings are very popular), a heap more coffee, and has a bar license. Since the move in 2009 Kush has increased turnover six fold.... and is one of the busiest meeting places in town. It is wonderful to call in, knowing you will get a perfectly made dry cappuccino, with real grated chocolate and cinnamon, you can chill out on the squishy lazy sofa's and catch up on your Wild Tomato reading, or grab the latest newspapers. And that cappuccino is perfect indeed.... I am transported to higher places without climbing any cathedral towers, as the rich dark chocolate melts into cinnamon spiced foam, perfected for me by barista Ben.

The coffee comes with personality. The cafe's blackboard. Image supplied by author
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From the beginning Andy has had very high standards for Kush. From the bean to the cup, there are a thousand steps to the perfect brew he tells me. I guess it's a bit like playing a musical instrument really well, being in tune and at one with it. Nelson has a lot of baristas, but not all are equal; can just anyone make good coffee with training? Apparently not;  "It's a hands on process that cannot be automated, it's like you feel the perfect coffee, it is in your blood..."

His staff would agree. Kush baristas achieve and continually surpass Andy's highest standards. He cannot praise his team highly enough.

The coffee. Image supplied by author.
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Andy is a great storyteller and he knows his subject. During recent visits to Kush, I have learned how coffee takes an hour to give you the desired rush, how men and women drink coffee for opposite reasons and what makes ‘Over the Moon', his highest priced blend. We munched freshly roasted beans as Andy demonstrated the difference between a hard, lesser quality bean, and a more delicate example. Andy talked about the importance of growing in the shade and of making sure the coffee is both fairly traded and organic. Coffee is one of the most heavily sprayed crops in the world, and Kush has no desire to poison their coffee loving public. This led to a conversation about how wonderful it would be if Andy could go and source his coffee in person, get to know the farmers, to have happy healthy people producing beautiful Kush coffee beans for the people at the top of New Zealand's South island.

When you buy your coffee from a man who imports his genuine Panama hats from Ecuador, you know you will be getting something good. Why? Because he is a man who cares, cares about quality, cares about traditions, cares about the welfare of workers around the globe. Most of all he cares about bringing us the best coffee experience possible

Andy has to start his day with tea, but he then goes on to drink an average of six triple coffees in a day. Six triple shots is a lot of coffee, so in light of his wonderful brew, I mentioned the quality over quantity argument; "Why not have both" is his answer!

At Kush coffee you can... but maybe six triples is excessive, if you value your sleep.

This article was submitted as part of a Nelson Marlborough Insititute of Technology Creative Writing assignment, 2013

Lyell

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The Highs and Lows of Lyell

Graveyards have an international reputation for being 'spooky', but when you are standing in the graveyard of a deceased town, 'spooky' takes on a very different connotation. Lyell attained a population of over two thousand and was the chief producer of gold in the Buller district. It created opportunities for aspiring miners and accommodated to the needs of their families. However, all that can be viewed from this once bustling community are decaying headstones, landslide ridden dray roads and remnants of buildings.

Lyell Cemetery. Jason Blair, 2009.
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Julius Von Haast explored the South West area of the Nelson region during the mid 1800's, and in his travels named the "continuous rocky chain ... with magnificent needles and points"1 the Lyell Range. Sir Charles Lyell was a British geologist who was the "father of modern geology'2. Sir Lyell is attributed with the theory behind mountains forming after plate movement over hundreds of years, and scientists, such as Charles Darwin, built much of their work on Lyell's three volumes of 'Principles of Geology'. It is commonly accepted that Sir Lyell did not know of the settlement's existence, nor of its rich surroundings, and although Haast also never visited the town, his admiration for Sir Charles Lyell, and the consequent naming of the area, perfectly highlights the rugged and mountainous environment that contained the town.


Maori prospectors were the first to obtain gold from the Lyell region, and potentially sparked a prosperous gold rush for the area. Native Maori knew of the gold's existence in the Lyell area, but due to their fascination with greenstone, they did not prize it. However, after Eparara, a Maori prospector, and four other miners, discovered a 'dumbbell' shaped nugget weighing 19 ½ ounces, 'up the creek named Lyell, by Haast'3, pakeha began to recognise Lyell as a potential gold mining area. Eparara and his team fossicked for gold in a tunnel through solid rock, one mile upstream from the bridge today. This discovery resulted in the desertion of other gold mines, and the establishment of the town know as Lyell.

As reports of significant gold discoveries in Lyell infiltrated the mining community, miners from all over the world made their way to the isolated settlement. By 1863, 100 miners from other gold fields had set up camp along the creek and benefited greatly from the nuggets found which weighed between 17 and 52 ounces. In one report, five Irishmen claimed to have uncovered 500 ounces (1.4 kilograms4) in five days. Twelve men organised themselves into a 'Vigilance Committee', to regulate the claim sizes and prevent Australian gold miners dispossess Maori prospector's findings; on two occasions they threatened the Australians with lynching. However, they did not need to enforce it on either occasion. As well as Australians, miners came to Lyell from Greece, Italy, Switzerland, England, Scotland, Ireland, India and America. Prosperous mining reports kept international excavators interested in the Lyell area and consequently the population began to rise.

Scene in the vicinity of Lyell Township [1880's] Alexander Turnbull Library.
http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=13838

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Transport to and from Lyell was a treacherous journey as the Buller River was the sole contact with exporters and other settlements. Lyell was described as 'the most inaccessible goldfield in New Zealand'5, with Maori the only canoeists strong enough to paddle against the powerful rapids. William Stuart, one of the first residents of Lyell, depicted his journey up the Buller river in his journal and explains 'canoes are poled and paddled, towed by ropes... then pulled by all hands'6 until they finally reached their destination. Early horse roads were created as well as tracks but they were often rough and unstable for carts, so in 1870 a road was laid down called Cliff Street - which became the main, and only, street of Lyell - and was extended in 1877. Soon after, a road was made along the Buller River, which made travelling to Lyell significantly easier. Consequently, as the transportation system developed, women and families were able to venture into Lyell as they centralised the mining community.

Access to Lyell became somewhat easier for the wives and families of the miners, during the late 1860's and early 1870's and they began to move to Lyell. In the early 1870's, the arrival of women encouraged the miners to move from their tents, lining the creek, into a more civilised home. As the population of the town grew, more shops were quickly erected, as before miners had only come to town at the weekends. Numerous general stores, as well as a butcher, a cordwainer, a news agency and a hotel, lined Cliff Street, behind which were several houses and tents. As more females arrived in Lyell, prospectors from the Lyell Creek moved in to the town, and soon a community was created.

As the town expanded further and became more settled, a newspaper was established in 1880 known as the 'Lyell Argus', only to be changed later to the 'Lyell Times'. The 'Lyell Argus' consisted of four pages, with international, local and mining news as well as advertisements and general notices. Sold every Saturday for sixpence, the equivalent of five cents today, the 'Lyell Argus' held important information for Lyell's residents, from touring circuses to the opening of The National Bank. The establishment of the towns' newspaper allowed the residents of Lyell and other members of the community who lived up the Lyell Creek, to keep informed about the town, country's and world's news.

Buller River Valley with Lyell School House[1878-1994] Alexander Turnbull Library
http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=13859 
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As children were born in Lyell, or brought there by canoe, the demand for an adequate education rose. The journey down river to Westport was a dangerous and tiresome one, so Lyell residents erected a school to educate their children, in the year of 1874. Photographs show the school was situated on the Nelson side of the town, on a small flat piece of land. The roll rose from 52, when the school opened, to 86, in Lyell's heyday, the period of greatest success. Complications with the hiring of the schools teacher proved a difficulty, and in 1892 the school opened late due to the absence of one. Although problems arose for the Lyell school, its existence ensured the education of the miners families would not be affected by the isolated town.

Lyell citizens were predominantly of the Roman Catholic and Anglican faiths, which both required their own separate churches in which the residents could attend. Erected in 1874, the Saint Matthew's Church of England allowed the Anglican residents of Lyell to continue to exercise their faith. It was a regularly used church which held a donated organ, from Mrs Sadlier, and was the church of A.E Ashton, the only clergyman to live in Lyell. Reverend Father Cummings was the Reverend for the Saint Josephs Church, and travelled from Reefton to Lyell once a month to hold mass. The Saint Josephs Church was built in 1876 due to the large population of Irish and Italian miners who lived at Lyell and wanted to show their faith for the Roman Catholic beliefs. Both Saint Matthews and Saint Josephs Church were an important part of the Lyell community as they both allowed its residents to practice their faith in a dignified and honourable way.

Township of Lyell 1880s. Alexander Turnbull Library. http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=13840
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Health care was poor in Lyell, with scurvy and other diseases common due to the extensive journey from Murchison. Illness often resulted in death as there was no doctor that lived in Lyell, and by the time he arrived up the Buller River, it was too late. However, in January 1886 the Lyell Times published an advertisement for 'George Levien, Surgeon Dentist, Chemist and Druggist... to attend patients at the Commercial Hotel'7. Unfortunately he did not stay long but his visit was greatly appreciated among the Lyell people. After his trip, residents attempted to fundraise for a Lyell hospital, but the amount raised, £109 and nineteen shillings, was not enough to begin this endeavour. Consequently, the townspeople of Lyell did generally not live to the ages of sixty and seventy due to the lack of medical care in the area.

As the town thrived, quartz was mined by companies from the reefs behind Lyell, supplying the many miners with more stable jobs. The quartz had to be bashed by a battery, a piston powered by water which fell on the quartz, to obtain the gold inside - this form of mining was the main income for Lyell during its existence. Machinery was brought from Melbourne via Westport and was then allocated to the various mines in the area. The largest mine in Lyell was called the United Alpine, which opened four miles up the Lyell Creek in 1874. Its establishment brought much success to Lyell with its twenty head battery, which 'crushed fifteen tons of quartz per eight hour shift"8, and also the employment of up to two hundred men at one time. Although the town itself was growing, wealth was brought into the area by the surrounding mines which obtained quartz from the hills behind Lyell.

From 1880 to 1896, Lyell experienced its heyday, where the town reached its pinnacle in terms of success. Lyell had grown at an efficient rate due to the presence of gold quartz in the neighbouring reefs which created a stable and successful atmosphere within the town. Cliff Street was lined with banks, hotels, a post office, courthouse, police station, brewery and newspaper agency, which all of Lyell's residents benefited from greatly. A small farm across the Buller River supplied much of the town with milk and vegetables which were transported across the river in 'a box... that was propelled across the river by pulling on ropes'9. This device enabled the residents to cross the Buller River, although there were often complications resulting in death. During this time, regular contact with neighbouring communities began, with a regular coach travelling from Lyell to Nelson. However, this prosperous period was short lived.

Several large, disastrous fires encouraged Lyell's decline after its successful, gold mining heyday. Water was well supplied in Lyell, with a reservoir on the spur above the town and a water tank above the Post Office Hotel; however there was not enough to extinguish the fire of 1896, so it was left to freely demolish the National Bank, three hotels, several stores as well as residents houses. Although there was no loss of life, some townspeople, such as Mr John Fennell, lost up to £8,000 when six buildings he owned were burnt to the ground. People began to rebuild and six months later Lyell was 'beginning to look like it used to'10.

Cliff Street Lyell, c. 1900/. Alexander Turnbull Library.
http://mp.natlib.govt.nz/detail/?id=13840
Click image to enlarge

However, prospectors and their families began to leave Lyell after the New Alpine Mine closed in 1906. The mine was the largest employer in the area and supplied the miners of Lyell with a regular income. Its failure meant the families in Lyell would no longer have sufficient income or employment, so many residents moved to the West Coast or to other mining towns, such as Wakamarina, to find employment.  The closure of Lyell's biggest Quartz mine led to the desertion of their once thriving town. Another fire in 1926 saw the destruction of the Lyell post office, court house, library and school and this resulted in the further abandonment of Lyell.

On the 17th of June, 1929, the Murchison area was struck by a magnitude 7.8 earthquake, which left Lyell completely cut off from the rest of New Zealand. No buildings in Lyell were severely damaged; however, the roads leading into the town had numerous landslips along them.  The slips isolated Lyell as no one was able to leave or come into Lyell; this resulted in numerous people dying as doctors were not able to get to Lyell in time. The Buller road was closed for 18 months and until it was cleared the townspeople had to walk out to get their supplies. The earthquake encouraged more people to leave Lyell, as it reinforced how isolated they were from the rest of the country.

By 1951 the only remaining building in Lyell was the Post Office Hotel; however it too was destroyed by a fire in 1963. The Post Office Hotel had been built in 1874 by a man called Mangos. It had seen the establishment, heyday and decline of Lyell, and held the majority of Lyell's historic artefacts. Mr Cox, the owner of the hotel, hopelessly watched as his hotel, home and history, was engulfed in a 'mass of flames'11 and burned to the ground in less than half an hour. By 1963, few remnants of Lyell remained after the last Hotel was burned to the ground.

Lyell is now a historical reserve with walking and biking tracks surrounding a grass camping ground. The Department of Conservation and the Department of Lands and Surveys, established Lyell as a historical reserve to remember Lyell's existence. Today, visitors are encouraged to pan for gold, in the ‘gold fossicking reserve' on the Lyell Creek, and are able to camp at the sight of the old town. Historic boards and plaques have been erected by both departments to show visitors what life was like for the residents of Lyell and how much the area has changed. These boards also show the few remaining pieces of evidence of the town.

Dray roads and walking tracks from the camping sight lead to significant areas in the town's history. One such site is the United Alpine mine and Croesus mine, whose battery is still there. Other paths lead to the neighbouring towns of Zalatown and Gibbstown, old building sites, and the tunnel in which gold was first discovered by the Maoris in 1862. Yet the most popular walk is only five minutes from the camping ground and leads to the old cemetery of Lyell. Surrounded by dense bush, this cemetery has a handful of headstones enclosed by iron railings. Although much of Lyell's history and buildings have been destroyed, the cemetery has been preserved in an attempt to remember the lives of those who lived here.

Lyell today is a very different place to what is was 100 years ago. It is hard to imagine, when standing in the historic reserve, that people used to live here, amongst the blackberry and gorse there were houses, shops and hotels. Surrounded by forested hills, it is a beautiful place to be. Yet when you are standing graveyard of an abandoned town, it does seem 'spooky'.

Steph Russell, Nelson College for Girls, 2011

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