Friday 29 April 2022

Judea Sale Yards, 1950

Guest post by Anne Baker (née Stead)

When I was about 10 years old a Mrs London supplied the refreshments on Sale Days. This was done from a shed by the entrance to Mr Robins’ farm and along his driveway was a row of very tall walnut trees. The water for the tea was boiled on an open fire by the shed doorway and my mother helped with the sandwiches.

When I realised it was a Wednesday and the stock sale was on, I would ‘throw a sickie’ so I could go with her to the sale. The shed had a big drop-down wooden servery facing the stockyards and the teas were served through there to the stock agents, truck drivers and farmers attending the sale. I had to sit under this shelf — out of sight!

Sheep Fair - Judea, Bay of Plenty Times, publ. 24 Jan 1961
Tauranga City Libraries, Gifford-Cross Series, Ref. gca-525

After the sale was over, us kids used to go over to the yards and ride on the sheep — good fun!  — until the truck drivers chased us away. Two truck drivers I remember, Gerald and his son Charlie Bennett, Andersons drivers I think, and stock agents —  Archie Strang and Montgomery (Monty.)

I enjoyed the atmosphere and the sound of the auctioneering sale, especially when a beast escaped. Dogs and men put on ‘quite a circus’ until it was back in the yards.

Annual Heifer Sale, Judea, Bay of Plenty Times, publ. 24 August 1963
Tauranga City Libraries, Gifford-Cross Series, Ref. gca-5381

One day I fell into the sheep dip there, my biggest brother, Ernie, pulled me out. We walked up the road (past Mr Robins’ long boundary hedge that had lovely climbing roses growing through it) to the Judea Store where Mrs Jamieson gave me some of her daughter Peggy’s clothes to wear home. Then I got in BIG TROUBLE.

Mrs Jamieson was Mr London’s sister (he had beehives) and she had a big garden where London Place is now. There was a big fence all round the garden and there lived a big, big tortoise.

Sometimes the stock for the sale was driven down a dirt track from 12th Avenue. Formerly the Kopurerua River ran in a curve alongside the road towards 11th Ave. Later this was filled in by a rubbish dump and the river ran in a straight line to the estuary.

 Editors Note: You may also enjoy Beth Bowden’s previous 2019 post on the Judea Sale Yards

Friday 22 April 2022

HMS Pandora and Captain Byron Drury, November 1852

Early Sailing Vessels and Visitors to Tauranga, Part XX

Built and launched at Woolwich Dockyard on the River Thames in 1833, the 318 ton HMS Pandora was a medium sized naval vessel with a length of 90 feet.  A 3-gun packet brig, it initially served in British waters as a coast guard vessel and naval personnel and freight transport until converted to a survey ship in 1845.

In 1850, the Admiralty dispatched Captain Byron Drury and the Pandora to the South Pacific to complete the marine survey of New Zealand, begun by Captain J. Lort Stokes and HMS Acheron between 1848 and 1851. Noted for their detail and accuracy, British naval charts were the consequence of long, tedious surveys and Drury and HMS Pandora remained in New Zealand waters until June 1856. During 1852 the Pandora surveyed the Bay of Plenty Coast, during which the ship’s boats were used to survey its small harbours and bar-protected rivers. In early November of that year, Drury took HMS Pandora through the Mount Maunganui channel entrance to anchor in Pilot Bay. The vessel remained for 23 days while the hydrographic survey of Tauranga Harbour was completed. 

‘HMS Pandora’ by Thomas Hornbrook, 17 February 1851
Auckland Art Gallery, Toi O Tamaki Collection, Ref. 1916/12

Tauranga’s harbour charts were collated under the direction of one of the Royal Navy’s most experienced and discerning hydrographers. Entering the Royal Naval College in 1828, Byron Drury served on a variety of battle ships and saw action in Brazil and China. During the 1830s, he was involved in surveys as far apart as Northern Brazil’s Para River and South Australia’s Port Essington. In 1841, he received his officer’s commission and for the remainder of that decade, was involved in surveys including China’s Yangtse River and the West Coast of Scotland.

Captain Byron Drury, Photograph by Greetham Brothers, Woolwich, 1861
Auckland War Memorial Museum, Ref. PH-2014-171

In 1856, the reports on the New Zealand surveys conducted by HMS Acheron and HMS Pandora were published in London as The New Zealand Pilot. Drury’s November 1852 Tauranga survey report, was also published in New Zealand newspapers at the time. It included some of the following observations:

“The Bay of Plenty is the long extent of coast comprised between Mercury bay and cape Runaway, near the East cape: a line drawn between these two points measures 120 miles, and the greatest depth of the bay from such a line is about 40 miles. There are a number of islands and detached rocks in this extensive bay; the only anchorage in it of importance, and which offers shelter for any vessel larger than a coaster, is Tauranga harbour.

The difficulty of entering this harbour through the deepest channel, is its somewhat tortuous course, and the liability to eddy winds on rounding Mount Monganui; the channel in one place being only half a cable's length wide; but with those winds which would make the Bay of Plenty a lee shore, Tauranga harbour is the most accessible, and when once inside there is anchorage for a fleet.

The entrance to the harbour lies north and south; the eastern head is the remarkable flat-topped hill Monganui, rising abruptly from the sandy shore to a height of 860 feet: the western entrance is formed by low undulating sand-hills, which extend 13 miles northward to Kati-Kati river; one mile north-westward of Monganui, a spit with 9 feet extends eastward from the western sandy shore for a mile; this spit generally breaks.

The approach to Tauranga harbour is remarkably distinct. Vessels bound to it from the northward should bring the south end of Mayor island to bear north, steering a south course; the high flat-topped hill of Monganui will first appear like an island: on this course, Karewha, a small rugged island, bearing from the entrance of the harbour N.N. W. 1/2 W. 6 miles, will be passed on the outside about 3 miles, in 23 fathoms.

Above Te-Papa there is only a boat channel amid extensive flats, and 3 miles above, it narrows again into a small but deep river, running to the southward, which is navigable for boats for 15 miles, and by it a journey can be accomplished to the Rotorua lakes in less than two days. Te-Papa is the Protestant mission station;  the site is well chosen on elevated ground, on the south side of the harbour, three miles from Monganui; two miles westward of it is Otumoiti village, where there is a Roman Catholic mission establishment. and a very neat church, the interior gorgeously decorated by Native wicker-work. ' Four or five Englishmen reside here, chiefly engaged in building small craft, and I am informed, three Frenchmen live at the mouth of the Wairoa.

The total native population of the Tauranga district is estimated at 1,000, and large tracts of land are under cultivation; fresh water can be obtained just within Stony point in small quantities, and pigs and poultry may be had from the natives at reasonable prices.

During the twenty-three days H.M.S. Pandora was at anchor in Tauranga harbour in the month of November it blew very fresh, and almost continually from the S.W., but such strong winds were considered unusual.

Tides: It is high water at full and change 7h 10m, range of tide 6 feet: the strength of the tides at springs is 3 knots; in the narrow channel at Stony point it may attain 4 knots.

From Tauranga harbour, the coast, which is a uniform sandy beach, runs E. b. S. for 15 miles to Kaituna river. The land between is covered with fern, and low, with the exception of two hill ranges of 600 and 800 feet, which rise one mile inland and extend to the S.W.;--a remarkable flat-topped range of hills about 1,000 feet high rises 10 or 12 miles inland of Tauranga, and extends in a north-westerly direction.

Moititi Island lies 4 1/2 miles off this sandy coast, there are 12 fathoms water midway between it and the shore.”

Published by the British Admiralty in 1857, this hydrographic shows locations including Otumoetai and the Te Papa mission station where Drury and his officers were regularly hosted by Alfred and Charlotte Brown.
Admiralty Chart no 2521, Tauranga Harbour, New Zealand
Archives. Ref. ADOE 16621 MW676 Box 1/3A 2521

At the end of the Pandora’s New Zealand survey in 1856, Byron Drury was thanked and recommended to the British Admiralty by Governor, Sir George Grey. On his departure from Auckland, Drury received a testimonial and a service of silver plate from the Chamber of Commerce and local citizens. The South Auckland settlement of Drury was named after him and on his return to Britain, he became a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, with promotions to rear admiral in 1875 and to vice admiral in 1879.  Tauranga residents commemorated his visit and survey by renaming the hill Hopukiore on Maunganui Spit, Mount Drury.

On her return to Britain, HMS Pandora resumed her original role as coastguard watch vessel around England. Sold by the Admiralty in 1862, her name passed to a succession of larger Royal Navy vessels.

Sources

New Zealand Spectator and Cook’s Strait Guardian, 18 June, 1853: 4.

Morgan, William, The Journal of William Morgan: Pioneer Settler and Maori War Correspondent, Nona Morris (ed.), Auckland City Council, Auckland 1963: 110.

Richards, Captain G.H. and Mr. F.J. Evans, R.N. (comp.), The New Zealand Pilot: From Surveys made in H.M. Ships Acheron and Pandora, Captain J. Lort Stokes and Commander Byron Drury, Potter, J.D. London 1856: 75-79.

Monday 18 April 2022

The Nahlin

 “This is the snap I took of Lady Yule’s yacht the Nahlin”
Snapshot photograph from private collection

On February 2 1932 people who happened to have been in Pilot Bay would probably have hardly believed their eyes as a beautiful steam yacht sailed into Tauranga Harbour. She was met by the Harbourmaster Mr A. Dickson who guided her to her anchorage near the big sand hill south of the Railway Wharf at the Mount. As she drew fifteen feet it was not possible to bring her up to the town.

The yacht was the Nahlin, owned by Lady Yule who was the widow of the late Sir David Yule, a wealthy Calcutta jute merchant. Attended by fifty crew, Lady Yule and her daughter Gladys were the only passengers. Both keen fisherwomen they were visiting New Zealand for our deep sea fishing season.

Lady Yule's yacht, the Nahlin, in Tauranga Harbour, Mauao in the background, 2 Feb 1932
Tauranga City Library Photographic Collection, Ref. 04- 575

At that time the Nahlin, who was first commissioned in 1930, was one of the most luxurious yachts in the world. She weighed 1600 tons, could do 17 and a half knots and was a gleaming picture of white and gold with a buff funnel. Nahlin is a native American word meaning fleet of foot and beneath the bowsprit she had a striking figurehead representing an Indian Chief.

Each deck had luxurious saloons furnished with brocade and tapestry upholstered lounges and the yacht’s interior was panelled in light oak. There was a well stocked library, a fully equipped gym and about a dozen bathrooms, beautiful blooms grew in pots throughout the yacht.

“This is taken on board the Nahlin by Phyl Hartley. Can you pick Mrs Mcmillan, she is the one in black with her hand holding her necklace. It is a marvellous yacht I believe.”
Snapshot photograph from private collection

Lady Yule obviously had a soft spot for birds and other animals as there were dozens of brightly coloured cages hanging round the upper and lower decks containing squawking parrots and chirping canaries. Dogs, cats and monkeys were among the other pets on board. (What would today’s Customs would have made of that?)
 
While the Nahlin was anchored in Tauranga Harbour, Lady Yule and Gladys visited Rotorua, plus Tauranga and the surrounding district. According to the Bay of Plenty Times (4 Feb) “His Worship the Mayor, Mr B.C. Robbins, Mr J.C. Green, Chairman of the Harbour Board, Mr C. Lowe, Harbour Board Secretary and Mr Geo. West visited Lady Yule on the Nahlin and were very hospitably entertained.’’ I wonder if their wives were invited, as no mention is made of them?

Mayor Island (Tuhua), Tauranga. Postcard published by Mirrielees (No. 19)
Collection of Justine Neal

Swordfish at Mayor Island (Tuhua)
Courtesy of Tauranga Heritage Collection, Ref. 019/08

On February 5th the Nahlin sailed to Tuhua/ Mayor Island where the ladies were hoping to test the sword fishing grounds.

White Island (Whakaari) from Wilson Bay, Bay of Plenty, N.Z.
Hand-coloured postcard published by Tasman Photo, c. 1960s
Collection of Justine Neal

Early on the morning of February 6th the yacht left for a day trip to Whakaari (White Island). Mr West sailed with them in order to conduct them on a tour of the island. This marked the end of their short stay in Tauranga and, after  returning to their anchorage that afternoon, the Nahlin set sail for Napier.

Luxury yacht Nahlin purchased by King Carol of Rumania from Lady Yule. The vessel at Whangaroa on its New Zealand cruise, Auckland Weekly News Supplement, 11 Aug 1937
Image courtesy of Auckland Libraries Heritage Images, Ref. AWNS-19370811-56-3

Postscript: I wondered why the name Nahlin sounded familiar then I read this report from the Bay of Plenty Times (19 November 1937.) King Carol of Roumania purchased the yacht from Lady Yule in 1937. The previous year, after being redecorated and refitted the yacht was lent to the Duke of Windsor – then King Edward VIII – for his Mediterranean cruise in August 1936. The paper fails to mention his sailing companion, a certain Wallis Simpson and we all know how that story ended.

For those of you with a soft spot for beautiful boats you might like to know that the Nahlin is still sailing. She has been fully restored and is now owned by Sir James Dyson, whose name also has a familiar ring.

References
TheGuardian.com
Wikipedia
Papers Past, Bay of Plenty Times, 19 November 1937, 4 February 1932, 5 February 1932, 3 February 1932, 13 January 1932

Sunday 10 April 2022

Life on Motuopuhi (Rat Island)

Guest article by Max Avery

Many may have looked with envy on the possibility of a Robinson Crusoe-like existence on a deserted Pacific Ocean island. Closer to home, in the Tauranga Harbour, that lonely life became a reality for William and Ethel O’Halloran when, about 1930, they took up residence on tiny Motuopuhi (Rat) Island, just off the Turret Rd foreshore.

Because of its proximity to the mainland, the island may appear to be readily accessible - and so it is , at low tide. At high tide, however, a channel a little more than two metres deep proves an effective defensive moat for inhabitants, and a barrier to prospective visitors.

Standard 4, Tauranga District High School, 1940
(Noeline O'Halloran, fourth row, second from left)
Image courtesy of Tauranga City Libraries, Pae Korokī, Ref. 02-239

So, what sort of a life did the couple face for the next 30 years, and how did they cope with it? We have, luckily, a manuscript penned by their grand-daughter, Noelene Smillie, and lodged in Tauranga City Archives, She explains that her grandfather, a farmer and racehorse trainer, had suffered severe renal failure and been told that he must take life more quietly and importantly, avoid alcohol at all times. Motuopuhi seemed the perfect prescription. The island was private, without easy access, complete with rudimentary house and was available in return for a nominal rental and caretaking duties - the control of scrub growth, rodents and junior arsonists, and breeding pens of quail and pheasants for the local acclimatisation society.

What Motuopuhi did not have was electricity, telephone communication and a  fresh water supply. The hardy couple made do for 30 years with kerosene lamps, their battery-powered radio gave them a link to the outside world, (visitors had to yell “Coooo-eeee” from Turret Road to attract attention), their manuka-fired Dover stove supplied heat for cooking and hot water, and in times of drought, when their rainwater supply from the roof failed, they tediously transported containers of water from the mainland in a tar-covered craft known as the Black Boat.

Motuopihi (Rat Island), Bay of Plenty Times, 9 June 1961
4x5" cellulose triacetate negative (damaged)
Image courtesy of Tauranga City Libraries, Pae Korokī, Ref. gcb-152

Interestingly while Motuopuhi had no fresh water, Will O’Halloran told his family that he had no doubt that there was a mineral spring below the surface, detected with a home-made triple-pronged divining rod, which granddaughter Noelene also proved. (She later heard a rumour that the Hilton Hotel chain planned a mineral-spa hotel on the island.)

Motuopuhi was indeed lacking in what even then were common amenities, but when it came to living off the land the island was a paradise. Noelene wrote: “A colourful abundance of beautiful flowers and shrubs cradled the silver-grey weather-beaten dwelling. The gardens were bright whatever the season. Lillies, daisies, dozens of dahlia, hollyhocks, delphinium, carnations, love-in-the-mist, thrift, honesty, rose bushes, and spring bulbs. Beyond the flower beds loomed the orchard, a massive plum tree towering over the cottage, a fig tree, peaches, apples, nectarines, citrus fruits, grapes, gooseberries and luscious red wineberries. All of these, and vegetables, did well in the sheltered environment.”

The harbour provided the O’Hallorans with many a meal, Noelene remembered: “Most of the male visitors were drawn by the fishing. A couple of hours netting around the island provided enough flounder to make a large pile on a handy sandbank. They were then gutted and strung into a bundle of flax. Some were to be sold, many to be given away. Other fish too - kahawai, millet, kingfish, even snapper, occasionally a ‘whopper’ like the 18-pounder my teenage brother hooked on a settling. It was not long before Will accepted the efficiency of the outboard motor and got one for himself. This made his whitebait forays much easier. He could go under the Harini Bridge, across the estuary and up the Waimapu River in a quarter of the time. In the season the arrival of the Ford on our front lawn with a kerosene tin full of the minute fish was a common sight.”

Extract from Bay of Plenty Jockey Club programme, 1916
Image courtesy of Tauranga City Libraries, Pae Korokī, Ref. Ams 12/5/5

Her mention of the Ford requires an explanation. Will O’Halloran owned Model T Ford motorcars throughout his life on Motuopuhi Island. He kept them in a garage on Turret Road and used them to get himself and Ethel into Tauranga township after negotiating the channel in the Black Boat. Noelene remembered: “His precious Ford! Will’s pride and joy! His mighty steed that took them both to race meetings at Te Rapa, Paeroa and Rotorua, over the Kaimai and Mamaku Ranges, conquering muddy roads, ice, and sometimes snow with the help of clanking chains. There had been a succession of them, always a Ford. We, my brother and I were not permitted to call our grandfather’s cars Lizzies. His last, and loveliest model was a ’T' which went to a collector across the Tasman in the late fifties.”

Will and Ethel O’Halloran found the quiet life they had been looking for on Motuopuhi, and Will regained his health, exercising his expertise in growing vegetables, pruning fruit trees and fishing, while blackbirds, kingfishers, gulls, shags, pied stilts and even moreporks flew around. He had built a substantial letter-box on Turret Road, and it was from this point that visitors “Cooo-eeed:”, and if they were lucky, were transported across the channel in the Black Boat. However, much as they enjoyed family and friends visiting, it was the quiet life they really relished, and it was a sad day when, due to old age and increasing medical emergencies, a move in the late 1950s to a Tauranga Hospital Board cottage in 15th Avenue near Turret Road was necessary.

Motuopuhi was so near, yet so far, and as Noelene noted: “The noise of the close traffic, door-to-door salespeople, unexpected visitors knocking on the door and using electric appliances was all new, and they found it difficult to settle.”

Caption for Tauranga DHS photo: Back row from left: Neville Gilmore-Rogers; Bob McGilp; Brian Fisk; Cliff Anquetil; Oswald McQuillan; Ivan O'Brien; Robin Green; Dennis McShane; Owen Mackay; Ray Snowden Second row: Pat Lowe; Val White; Brian Hartley; Owen Moxham; Neville Berridge; Brian Wenz lick; Huia Sutherland; Keith Holloway; David Auld; Margaret Webb; Audrey Kerridge Third row: Doreen Pemperton; Marie Pope; Pat Ridder; Shirley Willoughby; Ruth-Alice Gresham; Elva Jarvis; Joan Brewer; Freda Watkins; Margaret Jefferson; June Johnson; Fay Hunter; Ramona Potter Fourth row: Margaret Gaulton; Noelene O'Halloran; Dorothy Snow; Marie Lucas...ski [sic]; Jean Taylor; Diana Jordan; Myra Kivell; Betty Parkinson; Margaret Evans Front row: Joan Clark; Len Thompson; Geoff Woods; Ross Manson; Jim Bongard; Frank Robinson; Balfour Jacobson; Ruth Bryan

Tuesday 5 April 2022

Goddards Centre to He Puna Manawa

From Tauranga City Library’s archives
A monthly blog about interesting items in our collection

This past month at Tauranga Library has been a hive of activity as it was relocated from 91 Willow Street to an interim site at He Puna Manawa (formerly the Goddards Centre), located at 21 Devonport Road. 

He Puna Manawa – Tauranga City Libraries 2022

Since 1930 there has been a library on Willow Street, firstly as a combined facility with the Tauranga Municipal Electricity Department and Council, and then as a purpose-built Council and Library civic centre in 1988.

Tauranga Library from 1930-1988 - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 99-1205

The plan is to continue to house the Tauranga Library and Community Hub at 91 Willow Street, although construction of a new civic precinct is expected to take another 3-4 years.  In the meantime, the former Goddards Centre arcade between Devonport and Grey Streets will be a temporary home. 

So what is the history of this building known as Goddards Centre and why was it given this name?  After a little digging into Pae Korokī, Tauranga library’s online archives, it turns out there are some excellent resources that help tell the story(s).  The arcade is named after Ray Goddard who once owned a book store on the site at 21 Devonport Road.  By all accounts it was an excellent book shop and even had an upstairs gift shop (The Attic) which sold pottery and assorted handicrafts.  The building was demolished to make way for the arcade in 1991  and the new owner kept the name, supposedly to pay tribute to Ray’s time there.    

Ray Goddard and customers at his book shop on Devonport Road, Tauranga 1969
Tauranga City Libraries, Logan Publishing, Tauranga and Bay of Plenty Photo News Collection Photo pn-3381 and Photo pn-3318.

There are also two excellent town maps on Pae Korokī from 1934 by G. Duncan, that provide a snapshot of the trade and industry around Devonport Street at that time.

Tauranga properties in the city centre – sheet 2 - Tauranga City Libraries map 21-002

Cross-checking with other Council maps and directories, this places Ray Goddard’s bookstore on this map where Tauranga Furnishing Company’s show room is, with a gap and then Mann Hardware Ltd.  At this time there was no development on the Grey Street side.  Various sources over the years note Babington’s Furnishings (Tauranga Furnishing Company) and Goddards bookstore as being at the address 21 Devonport Road.  This would equate to the northern side of the current He Puna Manawa, being the main parts of the library. 

Changing face: from upstairs of Babington’s Furnishings – Tauranga City Libraries, Logan Publishing, Tauranga and Bay of Plenty Photo News Collection Photo pn-3147

As the arcade covers 23 Devonport Road as well, it is likely Mann Hardware Ltd used to be where the southern side of He Puna Manawa is, including the Customer Service Centre and Rialto Cinema above.  There is also an excellent oral history recording on Pae Korokī of Dave Cambie, a previous owner of Mann Hardware.  He tells of how he worked his way up from a 15 year-old shop boy to the owner of the store, who then branched out and bought the shops either side of his, encompassing the Tauranga Furnishing Company building and land in between.  

Mann Hardware – Tauranga City Libraries Photo 02-118

A few years after Dave Cambie retired, he sold his properties to a Mr Tom Roper and the businesses were run as Goddard's Bookshop and Mitre 10.  In 1991, Mitre 10 and Goddard’s Bookshop/Babington’s Furnishings were then demolished to make way for Goddards Arcade.

Devonport Road shopfront number about 26 - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 15-254


Sources: 
  • Bellamy, A.C. (1982), Tauranga 1882-1982
  • New Zealand Post Office (Wises) Directory (1961)
  • Pae Korokī (https://paekoroki.tauranga.govt.nz). Logan Publishing Tauranga and Bay of Plenty Photo News Collection. Rodney Giddens Tauranga CBD and Mount Maunganui Collection. Interview with Dave Cambie (1992) Oral History Unit Project - Tauranga District Museum Oral History Unit.
  • Paperspast (https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers) 
  • Mapi - Tauranga City Council
  • All other photographs taken by author.

Friday 1 April 2022

Anne Stenhouse

Many years ago I undertook the somewhat laborious task of going through every council minute book since 1882 noting the names of elected mayors and councillors. [i] In the one-hundred and forty-years since the town’s first election, residents of Tauranga have had the opportunity to fill 764 council positions. [ii] It may come as no surprise to learn that women have held only 48 of those positions - this equates to just 6 percent. Indeed, it took forty-four elections before the first woman sat at the council table.

Mrs Anne T. Stenhouse has the distinction of being the first woman to serve on the Tauranga Borough Council and it is amazing to me that her name is not better known. Born in Invercargill in 1891 to Irish parents, Teresa and John Lopdell, Anne (christened Annie Teresa) went on to become a sole charge teacher in the Otago region until her marriage to James S.J. Stenhouse in 1923. As the wife of a doctor her accepted role was to support her husband’s career and raise their four children. However, Anne’s desire to serve her community is evident as she was elected President of the South Otago Plunket Society and was Commissioner of Girl Guides in that district. [iii]

rrived in Tauranga in 1938. Mrs Stenhouse quickly established herself within several local organisations including the Tauranga branch of the Federation of Women’s Institutes to which she was elected President. [iv] During the Second World War she helped to set up a District Committee of the Women’s War Service Auxiliary and was its first ‘Chairman.’ [v]

Postcard view of the Town Hall, corner of Wharf and Willow Streets, Tauranga. The location of the Tauranga Borough Council Offices. Image courtesy of Tauranga Heritage Collection, 0250/09

In September 1943 her view on the role women could play in politics was expressed at a thanksgiving service celebrating women’s franchise held in the Town Hall [vi]:

“Mrs Stenhouse spoke on “The Future.” This was, she said, to be thought of in relation to the tremendous problems arising in regard to the new world order to be established after the war. Women had to take their share in all this implied and their contribution would have to be a worthy one. A rousing call to face the calls that would be made and an idealistic appeal to all women for the vision necessary in planning for the future of generations unborn.” [vii]

A year later, her election to the Tauranga Borough Council provoked little comment. [viii] At the first council meeting held after the election the Bay of Plenty Times reported that new councillors were welcomed by Mayor Wilkinson and ‘particular reference to Cr. Stenhouse to whom went the honour of being the first woman to have ever sat on council.’ [ix] Anne Stenhouse went on to serve for two terms.


[i] On 15 March 1882 the first Borough Council elections were held in Tauranga. Tauranga City Council holds minute books from 1882 onwards. These are available to the public by contacting the Council.

[ii] This includes additional positions created by resignations and deaths. The number of council positions has also fluctuated over time.

[iii] Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXXVI, Issue 14516, 10 November 1947, Page 3

[iv] Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXVIII, Issue 13021, 27 April 1940, Page 6

[v] Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXIX, Issue 13255, 4 February 1941, Page 1

[vi] On 19 September 1893 the governor, Lord Glasgow, signed a new Electoral Act into law giving New Zealand women the right to vote. In September 1943 celebrations were held around the country to mark the occasion.

[vii] Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXXII, Issue 13264, 30 September 1943, Page 7. It is also important to note that Anne was Vice-President of the Tauranga Branch of the National Party at the time of her election.

[viii] She received 1280 votes making her ‘second on the list of successful candidates’.

[ix] Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXXII, Issue 13474, 10 June 1944, Page 2