Showing posts with label Tauranga Furnishing Co.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tauranga Furnishing Co.. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 November 2023

Jones & Company

From Tauranga City Library’s archives

A monthly blog about interesting items in our collection

More often than not at the library, we receive research enquiries that pique our interest and we end up making discoveries and connections within the library that we would not otherwise have known about.  This is exactly what happened in this instance, where a member of the Jones' family sent us an email enquiring about a particular building at 107 Grey Street, Tauranga.  This led to much ‘ferreting about’ in the archives, and hence, an interesting story evolved.

At 143 Thirteenth Avenue, Tauranga is Hillsdene Chapel, a faithful replica of early colonial architecture, housing Jones & Company, funeral directors.  It was named Hillsdene in recognition of the history of the former estate on which it stands.


Jones & Company - Image capture: Feb 2010 Copyright 2023 Google

Hard to believe the business was established back in 1909, although it was not entirely recognisable then as the same business it is today. Somewhere along the way the name of the business changed, as did the owners and even its founding trade as furniture manufacturers.

In 1909 the Jones family set up business on the Strand as “Furniture Makers & Upholsters”.  The business soon moved to premises in Hamilton Street and in 1910 formed the company ‘Tauranga Furnishing and Manufacturing Company’.  A newspaper article in the Bay of Plenty Times states: “Amongst the most attractive premises in town are those occupied by the Tauranga Furnishing and Manufacturing Company in Hamilton Street.”

Advertisement - Bay of Plenty Times 11 October 1911

Mr Hugh L. Jones was the company director in those days and he employed over five staff, as he had expanded his casket making to a funeral business.  The  funeral directors wore top hats and tail coats and the horses that pulled the hearse were hired from a local stable in Spring Street, where the old Post Office building is.

By 1913 the Jones family had moved to a much larger and grander building at 21 Devonport Road, which these days is where the temporary library, He Puna Manawa is located.


21 Devonport Road - Tauranga City Libraries 993.42 SETT (Sladden Collection)

The premises had a large workshop which enabled the Tauranga Furnishing and Manufacturing Company to produce a large range of furniture – as well as wooden caskets.  The furniture making side of the business remained in Devonport Road until 1945 when it was taken over by Babington Bros.


Babington's Furnishings - Photo pn-3149

Mr H. E. (Bill) Jones, Hugh’s son, took over as manager of the funeral side of the business and another son, Frank, entered the business about 1946.  In 1938, Jones and Company, as it was then known, built the distinctive Spanish styled building at 107 Grey Street and the funeral parlour moved there.  It was situated just in front of Charlie Haua’s blacksmith business and there were very few shops surrounding it in those days.

107 Grey Street c. 1950s - Photo 02-156

The Grey Street building, with its attractive facade, became quite a landmark in Tauranga and for many years its location was ideal for the funeral business.  The business remained in the Jones family until March 1980, when it was purchased by brothers, Dave and Jim McMahon, however they retained the Jones and Company name.


Jones & Co. Chapel c. 1940 - Photo 03-354

By 1983 Jones and Company had outgrown the building on Grey Street and they moved to ‘Hillsdene’ in 13th Avenue. The Grey Street building was sold to new owners and it still stands today as an iconic reminder of Tauranga’s past, although it currently has a “For Lease” sign in the window giving it a rather forlorn appearance.  People may recognise it most recently as the Versaille Restaurant, which operated on Grey Street for a number of years.


Versaille Restaurant at 107 Grey Street 2015 - Tauranga City Libraries Photo 15-331

Sources: 

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.