Tuesday, 2 December 2025

Joyce West, Tauranga writer

 From Tauranga City Library’s archives

A monthly blog about interesting items in our collection

In the reference section of Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries, there is a a dedicated collection in honour of esteemed Tauranga writer, Joyce Tarlton West (1908-1985). 

While working full-time as an accountant - writing only at night, over a four-decade career, Joyce West produced a series of detective novels (with Mary Scott), articles and poems for periodicals, and eight children's outdoor adventure books which garnered global popularity. 

Joyce started writing in her teens and had stories published in the New Zealand Herald and the Weekly News. She wrote her first novel, Sheep Kings, while living at the family farm in Oropi, in 1936. Her 1953 novel, Drover's Road, was rejected by 13 publishers before being accepted by  J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd, London.  It would go on to be used in New Zealand schools as an English curriculum literary text.

A black-ink illustration on p. 63 of  'Cape Lost' (1963), one of many that are Joyce West's own work.

Much of the inspiration for Joyce's childrens' stories came from her own childhood. She and her siblings did their secondary schooling by correspondence as her parents were both school teachers, who taught at remote schools in Northland, Taupō and the East Coast.  Her books have countryside settings,  depicting the rural places where she was raised.   Joyce told the Bay of Plenty Times, "I specialise in a type of nostalgia writing... I write childrens' books because I had such a pleasant childhood in an environment so differerent from ours today." (1974, p.9).


Joyce West, with her award-winning book, 'The Sea Islanders', and the contract from Walt Disney Productions, 1974.
Te Ao Marama - Tauranga City Libraries photo gcc-26441

The Sea Islanders, published in 1970, was a particularly successful work. It featured in the BBC series Jackanory,  airing in five parts in September, 1971. Walt Disney Productions bought the rights to the book, though a screen adaption  was never made. 

A copy of 'The Sea Islanders' translated into Danish, in the Joyce West Collection at the library.

Following Joyce's death in 1985, the library sought to recognise her contribution to children’s literature through the establishment of the Joyce West Collection; a reference collection created to preserve and celebrate excellence in New Zealand children’s literature, and provide a resource for those interested in the field of New Zealand children’s writing in years to come. Initially beginning with a copy of each of Joyce's books, the collection grew through the annual addition of award-winning titles donated by the Bay of Plenty Children’s Literature Association (now Bookrapt), an organisation of which Joyce was a foundation member and patron. With help from the Friends of the the Library, the library continues to expand this collection by adding titles that include New Zealand Book Award winners and noteworthy authors from the Bay of Plenty region and beyond.

A signed copy of 'Drover's Road' with a 'Joyce West Memorial Collection' plate in the front of the book.


References

Bay of Plenty Times. (1974, October 26). Author gets TV showing.

Gilderdale, B. (1982). A sea change: 145 years of New Zealand junior fiction. Longman Paul.

Gilderdale, B. (1991). Introducing twenty-one New Zealand children's writers. Hodder & Staunton.


For more information about these and other items in our collection, visit Pae Korokī or email the Heritage & Research Team: research@tauranga.govt.nz


Written by Michelle Bradbury from the Heritage & Research Team, Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries.

Friday, 28 November 2025

Photo News Views Te Puna, 1963-1967

BACK COVER. A quiet corner of Te Puna River.  Just around the point to the left of the picture, the estuary opens out to form a popular anchorage for small boats.
IImage:  Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries, Logan Publishing, Tauranga and Bay of Plenty Photo News Collection Magazine Number 63

For the purposes of this exercise, it turned out to be fortunate that Te Puna is bounded by two rivers.  Seeking to promote the Western Bay of Plenty Community Archives [1], I asked for access to its collection of the Tauranga/Bay of Plenty Photo News, with the thought that browsing through its early issues would be a certain way to discover many images, long left hidden, of life in the 1960’s in the rohe west of the Wairoa bridge.  After all, I reasoned, the magazine’s editor, Tony Ahern, lived in Bethlehem – he was bound to find, and frequently, matters of interest in the next-door neighbourhood, and worthy of a picture or two?

 Tony Ahern 

Image: Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries, Logan Publishing, Tauranga and Bay of Plenty Photo News Collection Magazine Number 61

Not so.  Tony’s was a big beat to cover, extending out beyond the growing town (which became a city in a ceremony recorded in the Photo News of 25 May 1963, Issue 12)  to Opotiki in the east and, occasionally, Katikati and the lower Kaimai to the west and south.  He didn’t look past the riverside very often.  Over the first four years’ worth of issues held in the archive, I found that someone using the search term, <Wairoa> would be much more richly rewarded than if they sought for hits on <Te Puna>.

Tony himself wrote, in the 27 April 1963 issue of Photo News:

“Rivers nearly always make attractive pictures and this scene, where the Wairoa crosses the Waihi highway [i.e., upstream of the road bridge], has frequently been painted by local artists.”

Browsing through the physical copies, as opposed to searching on-line using a specific search term, rewards the researcher with a sense of proportion as well as humility (if that researcher is biassed, as I am).  This is a historiographical exercise – where was the gaze of Tony’s photo-journalism directed?  What served the popular imagination in ensuring the undoubted success and wide appreciation of the Photo News, franchised as it was throughout the North Island? [2]  What – my crucial inquiry – were the things that got Te Puna a feature image or two as the magazine found its way into the households of the Bay of Plenty?

As well as rivers: two things, it turns out.  Cute kids and mushrooms.


Tauranga Photo News #31, 12 December 1964, “Te Puna Convent Day”, p. 49

Image: Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries, Logan Publishing, Tauranga and Bay of Plenty Photo News Collection Magazine Number 31

I encourage readers to explore the online image, digitised on Pae Koroki [3]  - the captions, especially for the driftwood sculpture displayed by Selwyn Bidois, are well worth reading.

Over the first 62 issues of Photo News, this was one of only two features concerning non-riverine Te Puna, as well as one incidental (and interesting) image of a painting, not of river scenery but of workers in the Te Puna Mill, by a local Tauranga artist, Pauline Peacock-Mills. What has happened to this evocative picture? 


 Franklin's Mill, circa 1963, by Pauline Peacock-Mills
Image: Beth Bowden

Photo News spared little to no space to industry in Te Puna, framing it very much as a pastoral enclave with few indications of the corporate, monocultural land uses that were to become such a feature of the area (after the magazine’s demise, it must be said).  One example of innovative and high-tech factory farming, then as now much appreciated by locals, was the Olivers’ mushroom production unit originally sited on Clarke Road [4].


 Oliver family's mushroom farm, Te Puna 1967.  Bay of Plenty Photo News, June 24 1967.  
Image: Beth Bowden

We do know what happened to the Oliver’s mushroom farm.  It moved [5].  For while the geography of Te Puna remains bounded by its two rivers, and its economy is founded on its famously versatile soils, the skills and techniques of land and farm management Tony Ahern recorded in his scant coverage of Te Puna either died in place – as with the mill – or found other ways and means of showing themselves.  The area pictured below, now designated – and used - as an industrial zone in the WBoPDC’s District Plan, no longer merits Tony’s caption of September 1963 [6]  But so things go.

"Down to the Sea.  Wide and free, the beautiful Wairoa River flows beside Te Puna station road through quiet countryside of great charm."  Tauranga Photo News, Issue 16, 14 September 1963 

Image: Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries, Logan Publishing, Tauranga and Bay of Plenty Photo News Collection Magazine Number 16


[1] See its online collections at https://westernbay.recollect.co.nz/
[2] For a step-by-step account of how the Photo News for each particular region was produced, see Bay of Plenty Photo News No. 61, 24 June 1967, “Focus on Photo News”, pp 71-77 Bay of Plenty Photo News No. 61 | Pae Korokī

Author: Beth Bowden


Friday, 21 November 2025

 A to Z of Tauranga Museum - A is for apron

Charlie Haua outside his blacksmith shop in Grey Street. Late 1960s.

Image: Tauranga Museum.

It feels fitting to begin our Tauranga Museum artifact alphabet with a blacksmith apron once worn by Charlie Haua. In 1969, Charlie’s tools and equipment were acquired by the Tauranga Historical Society, forming the foundation of the museum’s collection. Although the Rotorua Museum offered a higher price, Charlie accepted the Society’s offer of £500, as he wanted his blacksmith shop to remain part of our story. “I’ve been at it all my life ... this is a dying trade, and I could not sell out. There is a great deal of old stuff here – material that you would not find in many places.”

Charlie Haua’s apron.

Image: Tauranga Museum

Born in 1903, Charlie came from a well-known and respected Tauranga family. He was the grandson of Anaru Haua (son of Watene and Merepokowai), and the son of James Haua and Mary Hearling. Charlie attended Tauranga District High School until 1919 and was a gifted all-round sportsman. He competed in rowing, rugby, hockey, sailing, athletics, gymnastics, and was a key figure in the local sporting community. He was the first captain of the Cadet Old Boys Rugby Football Club and went on to represent the Bay of Plenty in 1929. Later, he was made a life member of the Tauranga Rugby Association, a reflection of his long-standing contribution to the sport in this region.

Tauranga Football Representatives, 1925. Charlie Haua is pictured at the far right of the front row in this team photograph, taken by local photographer Robert Rendell.

Image: Tauranga Museum

After finishing school, Charlie Haua became the town’s most well-known and longest-serving blacksmith, dedicating an impressive 49 years to the trade. Even in retirement, Charlie and his blacksmith shop remained at the heart of the community, becoming a star attraction at the museum in Durham Street and then at the Historic Village and District Museum, which opened on Seventeenth Avenue in 1975.

Charlie Haua making a horseshoe for the bride and groom. Early 1970s.

Image: Tauranga Museum.

Charlie generously volunteered countless hours, captivating visitors with his skill and bringing the museum to life. His handcrafted miniature horseshoes became popular souvenirs, with thousands sold to help fund the museum’s development. In recognition of his remarkable contribution to the community, Charlie was awarded the British Empire Medal in 1976. 

Nellie Haua (left) and Charlie Haua. The person on the right is currently unidentified.

Image: Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 03-047

Source:

A to Z of Tauranga Museum’ is a regular feature of the Friends of Tauranga Museum newsletter. To subscribe to this free newsletter and join the Friends group, visit:

https://tauranga.syd1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3lapiU8ES1FUlMO

Friday, 14 November 2025

 Jack Costello and the Union Fish and Ice Company, Chapel Street Tauranga

Site for Costello Seafoods Ltd. Sulphur Point, Tauranga c 1968. Jack Costello holds first marker peg, while fisherman Don Shattock drives it in with an axe.
Description and image courtesy of Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 11-152

 In 1930 a retired Union Steamship Company captain, Roslyn King Clark, and his sister set up a fish curing business on the shore of the Waikareao Estuary. The Union Fish and Ice Company made hundred-weight blocks of ice in a concrete tower* and these were let down through a trapdoor to waiting trucks. 

Page 28 of the Bay of Plenty Yearbook 1955, Astra Publicity, courtesy of John Green.

 In 1938 fish retailer W.J. ( Bill ) Costello of Rotorua was the owner of a trawler operating out of Tauranga.  This was a former steam vessel, Marina, converted to a motor vessel three years previously. It was not a success due to high maintenance costs. His next boat, the Katoa, was holed off Town Point at Maketu on VJ Day, 15 August 1945 and was a total loss. 

Aerial view of Chapel St reclamation. The Union Fish and Ice Company is at the top left, its small jetty just visible at the harbour’s edge.
Image from Bay of Plenty Yearbook 1955, Astra Publicity, courtesy of John Green.

 Bill’s son Jack had served his time as a boilermaker in Rotorua but began his fishing career when he and his parents bought the Union Fish and Ice Company and their processing plant on the corner of Marsh and Chapel Streets for £3,500 in 1947. Prior to the 1959 construction of the Chapel Street road bridge, Costello’s trawlers operated from the wharf next to the plant, sailing under the Waikareao rail bridge to access the main harbour and open sea beyond.  

Trawler “Vanguard” discharging catch onto Costello’s Bedford truck at Fisherman’s Wharf, 1950s
Image courtesy of Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 11-164

 Within two years they had expanded their fleet to three    Vanguard, Golden Gate and Sea Ranger. Jack bought his parents out so as to have full control of the operation. The catches brought in on their three vessels had outstripped local demand so he designed and built a blast freezer and sent the frozen fillets to Australia. By 1955 he had amalgamated with fishing giant Sanfords Ltd on reclaimed land in Cross Road, Sulphur Point with the proviso that he manage it for 10 years. In 1967, once his term was over, he negotiated with the Tauranga Harbour Board for a new site. His modern fish processing plant was erected nearby and named Costello’s Seafoods.

 

70-foot purse seiner “Valkyrie”, complete with pipe band on board, at her commissioning ceremony.  Built for Costello’s Union Fish and Ice Company in 1964.
Image courtesy of Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 11-162

By 1971, Sanfords planned to build their own modern plant next door but the depressed fish export market at the time resulted in Costellos’ selling their assets to Sanfords and once again appointing Jack as managing director there until 1975, and then as an advisor for a further three years.

 

Costello’s Seafoods, Sulphur Point 1969.  
Image courtesy of Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 11-157

Following this he moved to Auckland where he set up several more businesses, including two coolstores —  later sold to Sanfords. Jack then moved back to Tauranga and got into property development before leaving for the Gold Coast, Australia in 1981. He passed away over there in 1998, well respected and remembered for his efforts to establish a competitive and successful fishing industry in Tauranga area.

 * The tower was finally removed when the Marsh Street flyover was constructed in 2008

Tuesday, 4 November 2025

A History of the Old Tauranga Post Office

 From Tauranga City Library’s archives

A monthly blog about interesting items in our collection

That old-timey feel the ‘Old Post Office’ carries has a name, Edwardian Baroque, a style designed to declare "empire" with all its permanence. Government Architect John Campbell gave it form in 1905–06 with stone walls and a clock tower meant to outlast us all. By 1987 however, it was empty, nearly felled by that decade’s scythe to all things unprofitable. Yet here it remains, long after many others have gone, a survivor with stories to tell. 

What follows is a brief history of the ‘Old Post Office’ building.

The corner of Willow and Wharf Streets was in the 1830s, part of the Church Missionary Society reserve, where Rev. Alfred Brown established a mission school. During the New Zealand Wars the building was pressed into service as a mission hospital, caring for both Māori and Pākehā. Later it passed into Crown control and became part of Tauranga’s government reserve, already a focus of administration and defence.

In 1874 the Crown erected a vast timber Government Buildings block on the site, an Italianate design by Bennett and Kaye of Auckland that was, at the time, the second-largest wooden building in New Zealand. For nearly 30 years it housed Tauranga’s administration, post and telegraph, and the Resident Magistrate’s Court. Despite its size, maybe because of it, it was not universally admired. Then in November 1902 it was destroyed by fire, along with decades of official records, forcing departments into scattered temporary lodgings.

It was on this layered site that Government Architect John Campbell designed Tauranga’s new Government Buildings in 1904, built over 1905–06. Conceived to house multiple state departments under one roof, the structure placed the Post and Telegraph Department on the ground floor, with the court, Lands and Survey, and other offices upstairs. Its Edwardian Baroque style gave Tauranga a sense of permanence and civic pride, expressed through a prominent clock tower, ornamented façades, and its commanding position overlooking the harbour. Inside, the walls carried the government’s standard scheme: light green upper wall, a darker lower section.

The building was completed in April 1906, with government departments moving in that June. Despite years of public campaigning for such a facility, its opening passed quietly, without ceremony.

Post Office, Tauranga, with staff in front, c. 1906, Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 02-348

In 1907 the town clock was installed after a subscription fund raised by the Bay of Plenty Times, with the mechanism manufactured by Dent & Co. of London. By 1916 the building had already been extended to accommodate Tauranga’s growing administrative needs. Local rimu was used for the interiors, and with the arrival of electricity from the Ōmanawa Falls power scheme in 1915, electric lighting soon replaced the original gas fittings.

For decades the building remained Tauranga’s civic centre, housing postal services, the courts, and a range of government departments.

By the mid-20th century, Tauranga’s growth and rising expectations for modern facilities led departments to move elsewhere. The Post Office relocated to Grey Street in 1938, and a new courthouse opened in 1965. When the last government tenants, the Ministry of Works, vacated in 1987, the Old Post Office stood empty and earthquake-prone. Its future looked bleak. The Tauranga Community Arts Council convened a public meeting that revealed strong community will to save the landmark. A steering committee was formed under chair Grant Aislabie, drawing in architects, engineers, historians, and iwi representatives.

Government Property Services initially set an asking price of $1.2 million, later reduced to $530,000, but insisted on cash purchase. With professional fundraisers warning that public appeals could only follow ownership, the project fell into a catch-22. Structural reports confirmed the risks, but also pointed to possible solutions such as base isolation techniques.

Ideas for new uses reflected both community and tangata whenua aspirations. Proposals included a community resource centre, a bi-cultural gallery for local and touring exhibitions, and space for the Ngāti Ranginui Iwi Authority. Discussions were shaped by the concurrent Ngāi Tamarāwaho claim (WAI 42) over the land, which added weight to the iwi’s call for cultural facilities.

The Historic Places Trust recognised the building’s significance, upgrading its classification from Category C to Category B. Even so, by 1990 the Arts Council concluded that only a community-based solution was realistic, since commercial development was unlikely to succeed. Without the resources to purchase, the campaign faltered. But the effort ensured that the building’s value was now firmly stamped on the public consciousness.

In 1998 Grasshopper Properties acquired the property from Tauranga District Council for $200,000 and undertook a $1.5 million restoration. Historic Places Trust guidelines required the 1905 exterior to be precisely replicated, while the interior was adapted to modern use. New foundations, steel-mesh linings, and a ductile frame system provided earthquake strength, and original features such as the staircase and courtroom fittings were retained.

The restored building reopened in 1999 as modern office space, with Grasshopper Properties among its tenants. A History Room, gardens, and the restored clock reaffirmed its civic role. Mayor Noel Pope praised the project as a “marvellous” legacy for Tauranga.

Opening of the refurbished building 1999, Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 04-670

In 2001 the Smythe Family Trust purchased the building and used it for office space, including leases to iwi organisations. By 2018, new seismic requirements and commercial pressures prompted another transformation. Tauranga City Council approved a $4.9 million conversion into a boutique hotel and restaurant, with careful strengthening and refurbishment. Later that year the building reopened as Clarence Hotel, offering ten suites upstairs and hospitality venues below.

Today the old stone heavyweight that once stamped empire onto this landscape is dwarfed by modern buildings that seem largely agnostic to the history of our city, while down the hill two new structures emerge that, one hopes, will tell a better story.


Sources:

Newspaper Articles in a 1999 Special Edition
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Tricky task, but it was worth it.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Clear guidelines helped restoration project.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “If these walls could speak, they’d say...thank you.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “First Government architect.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Original building much more than a post office.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Proud to be part of a project.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Top example of baroque style.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Marvellous says mayor.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Final postmaster started job in 1942.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Outside looks deceptive.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Last gasp of the Empire.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “A passion for old buildings.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Newspaper fund helped pay for new town clock.”
  • BOP Times. (1999, October 27). “Building extended after just 10 years.”


Other Sources
  • Rorke, J. (1988). Draft and notes to article in the Historical Review – Bay of Plenty Journal of History, 36(2), 104–110.
  • Tauranga Community Arts Council. (1990). Report.

Written by Harley Couper, Heritage Specialist at Te Ao Mārama - Tauranga City Libraries