Alice Maxwell at “The Old Mission House”. A screen shot from Norman Blackie’s 8mm film Courtesy of The Elms Foundation |
A search of Papers Past reveals that only Alice’s eighty-seventh birthday in 1947 receives any publicity in the Bay of Plenty Times. The article outlines the history of The Elms and Alice’s association with it. While the paper asserted that Miss Maxwell and The Elms ‘are part of Tauranga’s historical tradition’, no birthday party is mentioned.
A commemoration did take place at The Elms in November 1947 in the form of a church service to mark the hundred and eighteenth anniversary of Archdeacon Brown’s arrival at Paihia.
Bay of Plenty Times, 25 November 1947 Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand |
The Old Mission House, Tauranga, a film by Norman Blackie, c.1940
Courtesy of The Elms Foundation Collection: 2009.0126
One last curious aspect of the film are titles that read ‘Miss Maxwell’ and ‘A Head Sea.’ A head sea is a formation of waves running against the course of a ship. The selection of this phrase suggests that Blackie may have viewed Alice as someone whose ‘course’ was running against the direction of time or perhaps he simply saw her as a force of nature?
Keystone Model A-7 16mm camera used by Norman Blackie. Thanks to Hugh Whitehead, who met Blackie in the 1970s, the camera is now part of the Tauranga Heritage Collection. Image: Tauranga Heritage Collection, Ref. 0007/19 |
Margaret McClymont, Norman Blackie’s daughter, has confirmed that the second half of the film was recorded in the later part of the 1940s. Margaret remembers meeting Miss Alice Maxwell at that time and has a vivid memory of the white parasol which features in the film.
Beth Bowden especially enjoyed the dress-ups: two ladies, one young and in white, one senior and in black, Victorian garb, 'paying a call' on Miss Maxwell. That it was the 19-, and not the 1840s is confirmed by the insufficiency of petticoats!
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