Friday, 28 January 2022

Mayfield House

J.W. Oliver homestead, Moffats Road, Bethlehem, Tauranga, c. 1905-1909
The house during Oliver family occupation
Courtesy of Pae Koroki Tauranga Library. Ref. 02-569

Since 1995 Mayfield House has stood in the Tauranga Boys’ College grounds on the corner of Cameron Road and Fifteenth Avenue due to the generosity of Sir Paul Adams. The house, built in 1905 for a farmer J W Oliver on 144 acres adjacent to the main road in Bethlehem is now 115 years old. Gordon Cummings had the first farm of 820 acres that ran from Cambridge Road to the sea and sold it to Oliver’s father who subdivided the land into farms for his sons.

Mayfield homestead, Bethlehem, Tauranga. Front view
The house Hawkridge during Mayfield family occupation
Courtesy of Pae Koroki Tauranga Library. Ref. 03-290

The building was typical of houses of that period in New Zealand with weatherboard cladding and a corrugated iron roof. A gable fronted room on the left and a verandah across the remainder of the building that ended with a side gable. There were three sash windows onto the verandah and a finial on each gable. There were two brick chimneys on the rear pitch of the roof, probably one for a fireplace and the other in the kitchen. JW Oliver farmed a dairy herd and planted an orchard.

"The kauri timber from which the house was constructed was brought from Mercury Bay in the Coromandel down the coast by the scow Pearl and through the harbour to the Wairoa Bridge where it was loaded on to a horse-drawn dray and taken to the site. The price for timber and deliver was between ten and fifteen shillings per one hundred feet.   Puriri blocks were used for the foundations. The iron for the roof and the guttering came from Chappell’s Hardware on the corner of Eighth Avenue and Cameron Road."

Colonel and Mrs. Mayfield and family
Courtesy of Pae Koroki Tauranga Library & The Elms Foundation. Ref. 2008.0455

In 1909 Major Edwin Mayfield bought the property named it Hawkridge and added on a gable fronted extension on the right-hand end of the house. He and his partner Neil Chater bought the original Golden Queen peach cuttings from the Reeve family and set up a canning factory at the orchard.  Unfortunately, by 1926 rot and fire blight brought the orchard to an end and the peaches and pear trees were pulled out. They had been canned under the brand Tauranga Peaches, Hawkridge Orchards.

Hawkridge Orchards label for canned Golden Queen peaches, Bethlehem, c 1920s
Courtesy of Pae Koroki Tauranga Library. Ref. 10-085

By 1966 all of the land except for the house and two and a quarter acres had been sold and it was then  owned by Mr T Gower. Later Sir Paul Adams bought the property and removed the old house in order to make space to build a new home. Today Mayfield House is a sports pavilion overlooking the cricket pitch at Tauranga Boys’ College.

Mayfield House, Tauranga Boys College, Cameron Road, 4 January 2022
Photograph copyright and courtesy of Shirley Arabin

Sources

Mayfield House History in https://www.tbc.school.nz/mayfield-house-history. Accessed 16/12/2021

Traill, Mrs R.G., Memories of Bethlehem, in Journal of the Tauranga Historical Society, No. 49, Dec 1973, p5

Saturday, 22 January 2022

Blog Update

Society bloggers and Brain Watkins House guides, at The Elms, July 2021
Photograph by Brett Payne

In July 2021 the Society celebrated the eighth anniversary of the blog with a get together of contributors, past and present, kindly hosted at The Elms. Between June 2013 and January 2022 we published almost 400 articles, written by 21 contributors and several guest authors. Although some articles have been notices of recent and forthcoming events, most have been the result of the various authors’ original research into the history of Tauranga Moana. We currently have seven regular contributors who each supply an article every two months, published every Friday. It is perhaps worthy of note that four of our founding blog authors are still making regular contributions - after eight years, that is some achievement.

Shirley Arabin - History of Tauranga buildings, Items in the Brain Watkins House Collection
Trevor Bentley - Early Sailing Vessels and visitors to Tauranga
Beth Bowden - A variety of topics relating to early Tauranga
Julie Green – People who Shaped Tauranga
Fiona Kean - Notes of recent events of historical interest
Justine Neal - Tauranga postcards from her personal collection
Brett Payne – A century of Tauranga photographers (1861-1961)

Since April 2021, we have also enjoyed a partnership with Tauranga City Library’s research room, Ngā Wahi Rangahau, whose team post about interesting items in the collection (see Pae Korokī) on the first Tuesday of every month. The staff at Ngā Wahi Rangahau, past and present, deserve additional credit and many thanks for the invaluable research assistance and images provided to authors over the years.

The blog receives between 2000 and 4000 visitors each month. All articles are archived on the web site, and may be accessed using the “Blog Archive” drop-down menu by date (Year and Month), or the “Labels” list, on the right of the main blog page. A list of current and past contributors is also available on the right of the page – click on the name for further information.

Further pages about the Society and Brain Watkins House and are available from the links at the top of this page. PDFs of the Society’s Newsletter can be downloaded by clicking the links in the box at top right.

Considerable time and effort have been put into writing the articles and sourcing images, and both the writers and the Society would welcome your feedback, either through the Comments section at the foot of each blog or via email. It’s always nice to know that your articles are being read and appreciated, so please do leave us a quick note to let us know you’ve dropped by. We’ve introduced a security step in the Commenting procedure in an attempt to alleviate problems with inappropriate spam – it may be a little  tedious to have to go through this step, but please bear with us.

The Society welcomes further contributions to the blog in the form of short articles (roughly 500-1000 words) with appropriate copyright-free images from members and non-members. If you hear of a forthcoming historically related event that you think might interest members, please feel free to let us know and we’ll do our best to find out more and publicize it on the blog. Alternatively, if you’ve been to such a place or event and would like to send us a brief report on it, with at least one photograph, we’d be happy to publish it on your behalf.

Contact Julie Green by email (tauranga.historical@gmail.com) with any such material, or to request a copy of our Blog Article Submission Guidelines.

Brett Payne
Web Editor

Friday, 21 January 2022

Tauranga Photographers: George Alfred Chissell (1866-1892)

Advertisement, The Bay of Plenty Times, 28 Mar 1889

“Mr Chissell” announced his arrival on the Tauranga photographic scene in late March 1889 with some fanfare.[1] Having leased Charles Spencer’s studio for a few weeks, his emphasis was clearly on studio portraiture, with a list of prices for carte de visite, cabinet and boudoir portraits. (Note: the boudoir portrait was a larger mounted format measuring 5¼ x 8½ inches, nothing to do with the modern fad of so-called boudoir photography.) The advert also prominently displayed his late partnership with well known Auckland photographer R.H. Bartlett and, by dint of the latter’s claim to an appointment to the royal family, a coat of arms.[2] 

Carte de visite portrait of unidentified young man
Taken by G.A. Chissell, probably at Tauranga, Mar-Apr-May 1889
Image courtesy of The Elms Foundation Collection, Westlake Album Ref. 2002.0170

For much of the 1880s Charles Spencer had operated a photographic studio behind his chemist’s shop on the Strand, Tauranga, taking portraits, landscapes and capturing a number of local events.[3] Many fine views of the Bay of Plenty during this period carry his imprint, usually blind stamped on the print itself or printed in ink on the card mount.[4] Towards the end of the decade, however, Spencer appears to have either lost interest in the commercial portrait studio, or found it not sufficiently remunerative to warrant much attention. Chissell was the first of a couple of lessees before Spencer left Tauranga for Auckland in August 1890.[5]

Chissell repeated his advert periodically until the end of April, with encouraging reports in the Times:

2 May - Yesterday eight of our staff were photographed by Mr Chissell.

6 May - We have seen a photograph, showing the whole length of the Strand, taken by Mr Chissell. The subject makes a good picture, and will convey to strangers a pleasing idea of our town.

Despite announcing that his departure was imminent – a common trick of the trade – he did seem to be kept fairly busy:

16 May - Mr Chissell, photograper, seems to be doing good business previous to leaving us. On Saturday we noticed him taking (in a photographic sense of course) the premises and staff of Mr Dames, cabinet maker. At a later period he was busily engaged with several members of the Gymnasium Club, who were collectively posed in a pretty but muscle-straining position on the parallel bars. Observing that Mr Chissell seemed to be finished with them almost as soon as they had taken up their respective positions; we found on enquiry, that both groups were taken with the instantaneous shutter — the first negative with an exposure of the 25th part of a second, and the second with the l5th part of a second. "We have since seen the proofs, and they are really capital photographs of such difficult subjects.

A final advertisement indicated confirmed his departure, and notified his customers that all of his negatives had been retained by Charles Spencer, from whom prints could be obtained.[6]

Advertisement, Daily Telegraph (Napier), 4 Dec 1884

But who was Mr Chissell, where had he come from, and where did he go to? It was believed that he was William Chissell, a Napier storekeeper and carpenter who had emigrated from England in 1883.[7] Further evidence shows that the former partner of R.H. Bartlett and lessee of Spencer’s studio was in fact William’s third son George Alfred Chissell, who arrived in Napier in late 1884, more than a year after the other members of his family, and opened a hair-dressing salon.[8] In September 1886 he moved his business to Ruataniwha Road, Waipawa and restyled the premises as a “hairdressing saloon” offering “hairbrushing by machinery” and “tobacco, cigars and fancy goods.”[9]

Waipawa, Albumen print by Burton Brothers studio, c.1880s
Collection of Te Papa Tongarewa, Ref.
O.030758

In February 1888 George added photography to his repertoire, announcing in the Waipawa Mail a partnership with R.H. Bartlett, who had probably taught him the rudiments of the art, and advised him on the import of “all the latest appliances for the successful carrying on of landscape and studio work on the instantaneous principle” from England.[10] Although Bartlett was a well-known Auckland photographer, he was experiencing some financial troubles and in June 1888 would be declared bankrupt so, while his wife fronted the Auckland studio, he appears to have avoided his creditors by practicing in the provinces.[11] George Chissell then sold the hairdressing saloon in Waipawa to his brother Charles Henry in March 1888.[12]

Styled as the photographic studio of Chissell & Bartlett, they offered portraiture, copy work, enlargements, views and residences. The Waipawa Mail mentions in particular a “view of the assembled multitude at the Anglican picnic” in March 1888 and the ceremony marking the opening of the Tamumu bridge in April, but it appears they soon exhausted demand from what was a fairly small community. By May they had moved to new premises in Omahu Road, Hastings,[13] before the perhaps inevitable dissolution of the partnership in July.[14] It is surmised that Bartlett may have removed to Auckland after the conclusion of the bankruptcy proceedings. Chissell then continued on his own, advertising as “G.A. Chissell, late Bartlett & Chissell, Artiste Photographers” until mid-August 1888,[15] after which there are no sightings until his appearance in Tauranga.

After leaving Tauranga, it seems likely that George Chissell returned to Hawke’s Bay. An inventory of his father’s household being sold by auction in 1890 includes a “photographic studio.”[16] In March 1891 George Chissell was back in Napier and had, with his brother Charles, purchased the City Hairdessing Salon, operating as Chissell Brothers.[17] By mid-June, however, they were in financial trouble again and declared bankrupt.[18]

It appears that George Chissell then decided to try his hand across the Tasman, although a notice of several undelivered letters at the GPO in Sydney in January 1891 suggests he was leading a somewhat peripatetic lifestyle.[19] He took photographs of groups of schoolchildren at Port Macquarie on Arbor Day in August 1891,[20] but in January 1892 was drowned while attempting to cross a river at Kendall, New South Wales.[21]

The carte de visite portrait displayed above is one of the few surviving images from George Chissell’s stay in Tauranga. It may be that there are other images in local collections, surviving either as original prints or as copies, which have lost their attribution. The author (Email) would be very interested to hear from anybody who has other information on his time as a photographer, Tauranga or Hawkes Bay, or images taken by him.

References

[1] George Alfred Chissell, “Mr Chissell, Portrait and Landscape Photographer. Advertisment,” The Bay of Plenty Times, March 25, 1889, Vol XVI Issue 2401 edition.

[2] Tony Rackstraw, “Early New Zealand Photographers: Bartlett, Robert Henry,” Early New Zealand Photographers (blog), 2012, https://canterburyphotography.blogspot.com/2012/01/bartlett.html.

[3] Brett Payne, “Charles Spencer (1854-1933) – Part III – Serving the Community,” Tauranga Historical Society (blog), September 13, 2019, http://taurangahistorical.blogspot.com/2019/09/charles-spencer-1854-1933-part-iii.html.

[4] Brett Payne, “Charles Spencer, Photographer – Part II, The Rotorua Connection,” Tauranga Historical Society (blog), July 12, 2019, http://taurangahistorical.blogspot.com/2019/07/charles-spencer-photographer-part-ii.html.

[5] F.E. Stewart, “Photography. F.E. Stewart. Advertisement,” Bay of Plenty Times, August 21, 1890, Vol XVII Issue 2545 edition.

[6] George Alfred Chissell, “Chissell and Spencer. Advertisement,” Bay of Plenty Times, May 16, 1889, Vol XVI Issue 2416 edition.

[7] “Auckland City Library - Photographers Databases,” 2022, http://www.aucklandcity.govt.nz/dbtw-wpd/photographers/basic_search.htm.

[8] George Alfred Chissell, “Hastings Toilet Club. Advertisement,” Daily Telegraph, December 4, 1884, Issue 4172 edition.

[9] George Alfred Chissell, “Hairdressing Saloon. Advertisement,” Waipawa Mail, September 25, 1886, Vol X Issue 988 edition.

[10] George Alfred Chissell and Robert Henry Bartlett, “G.A. Chissell, Photographer, Waipawa. Advertisement,” Waipawa Mail, February 14, 1888, Vol XI Issue 2098 edition.

[11] “Auckland City Library - Photographers Databases.”

[12] Charles Henry Chissell, “Hairdressing & Tobacconist Business. Advertisement,” Waipawa Mail, March 10, 1888, Vol XI Issue 2109 edition.

[13] Robert Henry Bartlett and George Alfred Chissell, “Bartlett & Chissell, Artiste Photographers. Advertisement,” Daily Telegraph, May 17, 1888.

[14] George Alfred Chissell, “Dissolution of Partnership. Advertisement,” Hawke’s Bay Herald, July 10, 1888, Vol XXIII Issue 8101 edition.

[15] George Alfred Chissell, “G.A. Chissell, Late Bartlett & Chissell, Artiste Photographers. Advertisement,” Daily Telegraph, July 10, 1888, Issue 5267 edition.

[16] Anon, “Baker & Tabuteau’s Sales. Land Sale. Advertisement.,” Hawke’s Bay Herald, March 31, 1890, Vol XXV Issue 8634 edition.

[17] Chissell Brothers, “Messrs Chissell Bros. The City Hairdressing Salon. Advertisement,” Daily Telegraph, March 4, 1891, Issue 6089 edition.

[18] Anon, “Meeting of Creditors. Bankrupt Estate of Chissell Bros.,” Hawke’s Bay Herald, June 16, 1891, Vol XXVI Issue 8999 edition.

[19] General Post Office (Sydney), “List of Letters Returned and Unclaimed, GPO Sydney,” Supplement to the New South Wales Government Gazette, January 21, 1891, No 53 edition.

[20] Anon, “Arbor Day.,” Port Macquarie News and Hastings River Advocate, August 29, 1891.

[21] Anon, “A Photographer Drowned,” Australian Star, January 12, 1892.

Friday, 14 January 2022

Te Puna's Lost Watercourse

It’s a large historical claim to make, that something has been quite lost.  And for various reasons, the stream so-described in the title – the Hakao – has never been entirely abandoned by human memory.  Perhaps the better term might be, “ignored” – except that the very-much-altered Hakao has become, of late, a focus of intense interest for two quite different aspects of modern development in Te Puna: the imminent construction of the Takitimu Northern Link road and, across the fan where it used to meet the estuary at the mouth of the Wairoa River, the creation of a zone of land designated in 2005 to be used for industrial purposes.  The image that follows stops short of the inland route of the TNL but shows very clearly the expansive wetland that Theophilus Heal first surveyed in 1867[1].


Well before 2005, the valley of the Hakao had been seriously modified.  The writer remembers the long straight drain running down the centre of flat water meadows from the middle of last century.  The Environment Court’s 2005 decision puts these drainage works at “unspecified dates after the 1940’s”[2] 


Nevertheless, it is possible to surmise that, even in the nineteenth century, the wide expanse of bottom land was easily-cleared, attractive farmland, not far away from the Wairoa Mill, and different in nature from the irregularly rolling neighbouring country, regularly divided by other narrow but consistently running streams draining from the Rangituanehu/Minden Ridge.  Wheat grows well in damp soil.  As does grass, once waning soil fertility drops the grain yield to an uneconomic level.  Another early map[3] is endorsed in copperplate handwriting to show land holdings, from the Hakao mouth to where SH2 crosses it today, in the names of “Thos. Craig, Waihi Hohi, C Potier’s Children and James C Doull”.

These landholdings made up the bulk of J A M Davidson’s property, Rangikura Farm.  The Cyclopaedia of New Zealand[4] is hazy about the date of acquisition, possibly in deference to the sensibilities of John’s Maori wife, Adelaide.  But it tells us that this energetic settler, soon to be County Chairman and the first Chairman of the Tauranga Harbour Board, was born in Jamaica and was using his farm for “fattening store sheep and cattle for the Waihi market”. 

Why Waihi, one wonders?  To me, the answer lies, as it so often does in settler society, in the infrastructure.  No sooner had the twenty-five-year-old Davidson arrived in Te Puna than he was made chairman of the Te Puna Roads Board and no doubt found it easier to contemplate herding his stock overland to a market within reach of the Thames goldfields than negotiating the Wairoa river and the muddy wetland tracks around the Kopererua valley to a much smaller market in Tauranga.

Davidson was well-acquainted with mud.  The entrance to Rangikura was, it appears, adjacent to the point where the Hakao intersected with the main road, termed in the Bay of Plenty Times, “Te Hakau”.  Technically, there was a bridge[5].  Actually, the County Chairman, writing in his capacity as a private citizen, described the area as a “lake.”


The dry bone of SH2 now lies over the well-culverted and contained Hakao watercourse at the very same spot.


But a 180-degree turn offers a very small taste of what the upstream Hakao might have been like – the stream along which, in living memory[6], Maori wāhine from nearby kāinga did their washing and, no doubt, fossicked for koura and freshwater mussels.

“The extensive low lying wetland that extends from the mouth of the Wairoa River, past Pukewhanake to the foot of Rangituanehu, is generally known as Te Hakao.  The name Te Hakao was probably attributed to the whole area from the name for a tributary of a river near its mouth.  Whilst parts of this landscape are tapu, in certain places food and eel fishery which was [sic] in use until at least the 1960’s.  It is not fished these days but is still considered important as a nursery.[7]

Given the ravages that time has wrought on the lower, highly important reaches of the Hakao, it is mildly comforting to read the 2017 account from the New Zealand Transport Agency indicating their opinion that the “potential hydraulic impacts” of the Hakao Stream bridge structure that will carry the traffic hurtling along the Takitimu Northern Link to Tauranga “will be no more than minor[8]”.

Wetlands hold a very mixed place in history.  There is a peculiar irony in the fact that it was pressure from the Port of Tauranga, the eventual descendant of the body first chaired by J A M Davidson, that pushed the District Council into the hard-fought, and still controversial, decision to zone the lower Hakao as suitable for industrial use.  And the big rigs that serve the port with its containers and logs will in due course go over the upper Hakao using a bridge and not a culvert.  Only if some simultaneous catastrophe takes out the two main roads will they make their tenuous way, adjacent to the railway line, past Te Tawa and Pukewhanake.  But of course those carrying stuff destined, not for the port, but for other Environment Court-sanctioned purposes will have to go that way.  And the status of the lower Hakao, seeping still underneath an industrial “park”, seems to justify the word, “lost”.


 
References

[1] I have written about this map before [THS blog, October 2019].

[2]  Thomson v Western Bay of Plenty District Council [2005] NZEnvC 41 3 February 2005 http://www.nzlii.org/cgi-bin/sinodisp/nz/cases/NZEnvC/2005/41.html

[3] SD9760 of 1867

[6] Conversation between the author and Gordon Burr, whose parents farmed along the upper reaches of the Hakao.

[7] Wairoa River Strategy October 2013, p.26. https://www.tauranga.govt.nz/Portals/0/data/council/strategies/files/wairoa_river_valley_strategy.pdf

An excellent topographical map of the area, including the present course of the Hakao, is at p. 4