Friday 18 February 2022

Planes and Beaches

Boeing floatplane on Tauranga Harbour, 12 March 1920
Image courtesy of Tauranga City Libraries, Pae Korokī, Ref. 99-133

On 12th March 1920 a seaplane crossed the Waikareao Estuary, flew over the Domain and the Military Cemetery to the harbour where the pilot began his descent. He flew in a wide circle towards Whareroa and executed a perfect landing on the water opposite Victoria Wharf then taxied to the beach south of the Town Wharf.

Two hours 14 minutes earlier the seaplane had left Auckland with the pilot Mr. G. B. Bolt and Dr. H. W. Cleary, Catholic Bishop of Auckland aboard. Dr. Cleary was making a pastoral visit to Tauranga, Opotiki and Whakatane. Also on board was the mail to be delivered at various spots along the way.

A large crowd had gathered to witness the plane’s arrival including a group of excited children from the Tauranga District High School who had been given permission to leave their lessons. The mayor Mr. B. Dive and several councillors were present. “Mr Dive said the arrival of the seaplane marked the first air flight to Tauranga but the time was coming when these machines would be as plentiful as cars.” The seaplane left at 11.00am, crossing Hopukiore (Mt. Drury) and heading down the coast to Whakatane and Opotiki. (The Bay of Plenty Times, 12/03/1920)

A beach can be a very handy place to land a small plane as the following photos prove.

Ocean Beach, Mount Maunganui showing aeroplane approaching
Postcard photograph by John Welsh, c. 1922-1924
Image courtesy of Tauranga Heritage Collection, Ref. 0341/10

“Walsh Bros. Aeroplane will be making passenger flights at the Mount from 2 p.m.. tomorrow. Fares as usual. If wind unfavourable for the Mount flights will be made from the Waikareao beach.” (The Bay of Plenty Times, 29 April 1922)
“An aeroplane flew over the town this morning, it approached from the south- west and landed on the Ocean Beach at Mount Maunganui.” (The Bay of Plenty Times, 29 March 1924)

A plane lands on Ocean Beach, c. 1930
Image courtesy of Tauranga City Libraries, Pae Korokī, Ref. 03-043
 
A solo pilot ... Early days of flying Tasman" Ocean Beach, Mount Maunganui, c. 1930
Unmounted Kodak Velox vernacular photographic print (57x81mm)
Image courtesy of Tauranga Heritage Collection, Ref. 0217/08

Seaplane at Waikorire (Pilot Bay), Mount Maunganui, c. 1960s
Postcard by N.S. Seaward’s Studio, Broad Bay, Dunedin (Scenic New Zealand Series).
Image collection of Justine Neal

Friday 11 February 2022

Recollections of Dennis George Marsh - Part 4

Fourth part of a series contributed by guest author Dennis Marsh
(continued from Part 3)

Calf Club Day, Te Puke Primary School, c. October 1961
Image courtesy of Tauranga City Library, Bay of Plenty Times Collection, Pae Korokī Ref. gca-2362

While I was going to primary school in Te Puke, I made friends with David Cannell. David’s father kept pigs. To feed them he used to buy old or unwanted horses, slaughter them and cook the meat up in big drums. It used to stink something awful and, as they lived on the outskirts of the shops, the cooking smell used to waft over the town and many people used to say derogatory things about the Cannell's. One weekend when I was staying with David, his father had been given an old thoroughbred. David’s dad said I should take it home as a horse to ride. I spoke to Dad on the phone and he was adamant that I was not to bring it home, but relented over the weekend and I rode it home on the Sunday afternoon. It was my first long ride on a horse and with no saddle – and by the time I got home I hurt in places no self-respecting person could mention. Dad laughed and called them “half-crowns”. Later Dad used to ride Captain, the name he was given, with Ron Brown when they went to muster the sheep. He was a ‘bugger’ of a horse to ride and the racehorse in him meant he did not like any other horse getting in front of him and he would bite down on the bit so that we had no control over him. Boy could he run !!!!

Dell at First Farm, Te Puke
Photograph collection of Dennis Marsh

We went to school on the bus leaving about 7:30 in the morning and getting home about 4:15. My job was to get dressed as quick as I could and get over to the shed to help Dad. Most of the time when I got there the cows had been milked and I had either to take them to the paddock, wash the shed and the yard or watch the separator to make sure the whey was going into the correct drum and the pig sty. We usually got finished at 5:00 and could then go back to the house and get ready for tea or maybe even do my homework.

My teacher was Jack Gemming. Jack taught us in standard 4 and 5. He then got promoted to secondary school. So when I went to college, I had Jack as my form teacher all through High School. I was part of the first batch of third formers to attend the Te Puke High School, as previously it had been a District High School.

Te Puke School bus, c. 1930s
Image courtesy of Tauranga City Library, Pae Korokī Ref. 07-073

The school bus was owned by the Te Puke Bus Company, Bill and Con Buckley, and most of the time our driver was Naera someone. Norrie Williams was the cream run driver and used to deliver all the stuff Mum ordered from town: groceries, bread, medicines and the stuff Dad ordered form the factory shop. Sometime if I was late to catch the bus, I would have to get a ride to school with Norrie who would drop me off at the factory corner and I walked up the hill to school. Sometimes there would be other kids on the cream truck for the same reason.

“Dennis and George Marsh with 1939 Ford V8 truck at first farm”
Photograph collection of Dennis Marsh

Dad and Mum bought a 1939 Ford V8 small truck- what would be called a ute in today’s language. It had a metal tray on the back and metal sides about 600mm high. Dad made a wooden crate to fit on the back so that he could take animals to the sale yards and back again. Going to “Town” was something special. Mum and Dad in the front and the three kids on the back – under a cow cover if it was raining. The road was only metalled so in the summer we had to contend with the dust and mud in the winter.

Capitol Theatre, Te Puke, c. 1960s
Postcard, Image courtesy of Pae Korokī, Ref. 99-046

Nevertheless, town day was something great. We could meet our friends, especially the girls, and if we had been very good at home, Dad might take us to the picture in the Capitol Theatre – always downstairs as it cost less. I only went upstairs after I started to get pocket money and I could afford to pay the difference myself.

Lolly dispenser, Capitol Theatre, Collection of Te Puke Museum
Photograph by Sandra Haigh, Courtesy of Western Bay Community Archives (Ref)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 New Zealand License

Dennis Marsh, Stewart St, Te Puke, 1961
Photograph collection of Dennis Marsh

Around this time the Post Office put new telephone lines up No. 1 and No. 2 Road. Dad got the job of taking down some of the old poles and wires. He wanted to use the poles for posts and the wire for fencing. I went with him on weekends to help. One Saturday when we were picking up the wire on the back of the truck, Dad said “Hop in and drive to the next heap”. I had driven different makes of tractors but never the truck. But youthful bravado rose to the fore. “OK” I said. Staring the motor and getting the truck moving was OK but then a car came down the road as I was driving to the next heap. What to do ???  PANIC. Dad saw what was happening and called out “Just keep going, You’re OK” and that was my first experience of driving the truck on the road.

(To be continued)

Friday 4 February 2022

Finding new appreciation

Working with the Tauranga Heritage Collection over the years, I’ve come to appreciate, if not love, some surprising objects. Top of my list is our Marshall Steam Traction Engine.  I’ll never forget having the opportunity to drive it - to feel the heat from the firebox and the rumble of the ground beneath the solid rubber tyres. It made a traction engine convert out of me.

Marshall Sons & Co Steam Traction Engine (1904) at the Tauranga A. & P. Show, Tauranga Racecourse, 2009
Tauranga Heritage Collection Ref. 1358/85

Recently I’ve been working with the Tauranga Embroiderers’ Guild to delve into our textile collection in preparation for Stitch-a-Plenty, the Association of New Zealand Embroiderers’ Guild’s National Conference to be held in Tauranga July 2022. It has been a wonderful experience seeing the collection though their eyes. And once again, it has given me new appreciation for objects I’ve not considered before. This time it’s tea cosies.

The Tauranga Heritage Collection has a wonderful variety of tea cosies demonstrating nearly every type of embroidery skill from whitework and cutwork to beading and pulled thread (example). However, my two favourites are a lovely Victorian beaded and Berlin work cosy and a cottage shaped silk thread-embroidered cosy, which likely dates from the 1930s. Both were donated by local families.

Victorian beaded and Berlin work tea cosy. Tauranga Heritage Collection, 2928/84

Cottage shaped silk thread embroidered tea cosy. Tauranga Heritage Collection, 1736/84

It came as surprise to me that the first documented use of a tea cosy in Britain was in 1867. I had imagined it would be much earlier. There is some suggestion that covers to keep tea warm would have been in use when tea was first introduced into England in the late 1600s. It was during the Victorian era that the tea cosy craze took hold and no respectable home or tea party host was without one. Anna Russell, Duchess of Bedford, is credited with popularising afternoon tea and, by association, the cosy. But if you think the cosy has been relegated to the past you might be surprised to know that these days, like many old traditions, it is finding a new audience. Hopefully our small collection can provide tea enthusiasts with some inspiration.

References

Richard Rutt, A history of hand knitting. (London: Batsford. 1987).
https://blog.dominiontea.com/2017/04/29/history-tea-cozy/

Tuesday 1 February 2022

Original pencil sketch by Fred Graham, c 1985

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

Part of our work in the Heritage and Research Team at Tauranga City Libraries involves the discovery and wonder of long forgotten taonga, through our journey to document and make accessible our collections.  One such item we recently unearthed, as part of our digitisation programme, is an original sketch of a carving for Mount Maunganui Borough Council by the world-renowned carver/sculptor, Fred Graham.

Tauranga City Libraries Ams 326

Fred Graham 1928- is an acclaimed contemporary sculptor of Ngāti Korokī Kahukura descent and was born in the South Waikato town of Arapuni. Having trained to be a teacher, throughout the 1950s Graham worked as an arts adviser to Māori primary schools throughout Rotorua and Te Tai Tokerau/Northland and during 1963-1965 he was an art teacher at Tauranga Boys College.  He has many sculptures displayed in prominent public spaces in New Zealand and his work integrates Māori mythology and art practices with Western modernism.

The sketch is dated c. 1985 and resides in the Tauranga City Libraries archives, viewable by request.  The carving, which was originally created for the Mount Maunganui Borough Council, was gifted to Mount Maunganui Library when their Council amalgamated with Tauranga in 1989.  Now hung high above the circulation desk, it is a fitting home for the carving, depicting the Legend of Mauao, in a library which physically sits in its shadow.

Legend of Mauao – Photograph taken by Jody Smart, Tauranga City Libraries

In comparing the original sketch to the mural, we are afforded much more detail about the conceptual planning and information about sketches, materials used and meanings behind the artistic details.  It illuminates the ideas the artist had in mind when he was planning his artwork.

For further insight into the work of Fred Graham, there is an excellent book in Ngā Wahī Rangahau (Tauranga City Libraries) titled:  Fred Graham – Creator of Forms, Te Tohunga Auhaha (2014)  by Maria de Jong, that reveals the stories behind Graham’s life and art.  He says, “I was born in 1928 – 64 years after the Battle of Orakau. At primary and high school the stories and songs were those of Britain and Europe. While I enjoyed this dimension, I am Māori, so my art is all about reminding people that Aotearoa also has poems, stories and waiatas, things which make us different to other Commonwealth communities”.

Tauranga City Library Ngā Wāhi Rangahau Māori – 730.92 DEJO



Sources: 

Auckland Art Gallery Toi O Tamaki (27th January 2022).  Fred Graham.  aucklandartgallery.com. https://www.aucklandartgallery.com/explore-art-and-ideas/artist/2279

Pae Korokī (27th January 2022). Original pencil sketch by Fred Graham for the Mount Maunganui Library mural c. 1985 (Ams 326). https://paekoroki.tauranga.govt.nz/nodes/view/57219

The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi (27th January 2022). Fred. https://www.thearts.co.nz/artists/fred-graham