Thursday, February 10, 2011

Three Doug Ford boxes on Rosebank Road


Three more Doug Ford boxes along Rosebank Road today. This one just beyond Victor Street at a pedestrian crossing over Rosebank Road.


Pity about the large branding Auckland Council's contractor slapped over the face.


This one is at the traffic lights at Avondale College's gate further along the road. It's fighting a losing battle with the poster bombers and taggers.






This one is at the corner of Eastdale and Rosebank, Alongsisde the playing fields for Rosebank School.


In the background are the Avondale Road shops.




In this case, the new traffic control contractor branding has been stuck on top of some tagging. An improvement of sorts!

Monday, February 7, 2011

Nobody Here But Us


Coming off a bus from the North Shore at Wellesley Street this afternoon, I find this huge and eye-catching piece of art.


Called "Nobody Here But Us", it's the 1991 work of Richard Deacon, in painted aluminium, commissioned by the ASB Bank Ltd and Fletcher Construction. It sits in the entry to the ASB bank building.


It's weird and big -- but I do like it. Reminds me of tangled movie film.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Labour Party manifesto, October 1938

In 1938, Michael Savage's Labour Government had served one term in power, and wanted to continue their programme of legislation and social change in New Zealand into ensuing terms. In September, they issued their political manifesto, detailing what they'd done so far, and what they still wanted to achieve or maintain.

The other day, someone gave me a torn, slightly foxed copy of the October 1938 "copy to householders, postage paid" version of the manifesto. I was quite taken with its contents, comparing it with today's New Zealand. Of course, with this year an election year for us, it might be interesting comparing how the promises we get today stack up against those of a perhaps simpler time, just as the social welfare system was being constructed, and before the advent of World War II.

Former Lodge Titirangi Hall, Rosebank Road


Today, it is a Korean church. But, up to 2001, it was the base for Lodge Titirangi No. 204, which now meets in Burch Street, Mt Albert.

 1950s. From Avondale-Waterview Historical Society collection.

The former hall for Lodge Titirangi No. 204 at 69 Rosebank Road was once part of a three-quarter acre section purchased in the sale of the Robert Chisholm Estate by a settler in Avondale, John Boyd. He also owned land on Rosebank for a time, up until 1892 (see the story of the Best Varnish Works). He sold the corner site, Great North Road and Rosebank Road, to Avondale baker Thomas Gourlay Grubb and his wife Rebecca in 1894. It's possible Grubb had already set up his business in a wooden store, at the corner with a stable at the rear (the site of today’s hall). The couple sold the property on mortgage to their son-in-law, another baker named Robert Samuel Kirkpatrick, in 1903.

Kirkpatrick didn’t own the property very long. In 1905, he sold it to grain merchants Frederick William and Joseph Robinson Smith. Frederick William Smith appears in the Wises Directory for 1905, having a grain merchants business in Commerce Street in the city. He was to own the entire corner site through to 1909.

In that year, baker Daniel Robertson bought the whole property, and utilised the stables at the Rosebank Road frontage. He in turn sold the property to an agent named Edward Austin Whittaker in 1916. It appears that Whittaker originally came from Hawera, operating an auctioneer’s business there c.1905. In Auckland, he ran a land agency business with his father until at least the mid 1920s.

What ensued then was a tangle of mortgages and sub-mortgages; one of which, a mortgage taken out by Robertson back in 1912, defaulted and led to the sale of the property on 13 May 1919 to the Thode brothers.

On 22 May 1919, the Thodes sold the stables to Charles Theodore Pooley, Henry Potter, William Richard Thom Leighton and Alfred Morgan, the first trustees for “Titirangi Lodge No 204 of Ancient, Free and Accepted Masons of New Zealand”. Why the words “Lodge Titirangi” were transposed is anyone’s guess. Unfortunately, it meant that in common reference around Avondale as I grew up, we would call the building the Titirangi Lodge.

The Lodge itself originated from attempts over the course of eighteen months from 1913 to 1915, according to Lodge historian, Roger Hughes. Joseph Crisp, who lived on Station Road (Blockhouse Bay Road today, between the railway line and Great North Road) worked at gathering enough interest, followed by Walter Francis Brooke-Taylor, a New Lynn resident. He succeeded in gathering in 24 brethren from Avondale and New Lynn, six preliminary meetings held chaired by William Neilson Ingram, with Brooke-Taylor as secretary. In 1915, the petition to the Grand Lodge was signed, with Ingram as Lodge Titirangi No. 204’s first Grand Master.

The Thodes were most likely operating from what became known as “Thodes’ Corner” from c.1916. In February 1918, it must have appeared likely that they’d be in a position to have title at some point. A handwritten promise was made out to the Lodge on 20 February 1918:
“We, the undersigned, agree in the event of our purchasing the block of land on the corner facing Great North Road, and Rosebank Road, Avondale, to sell to Lodge Titirangi, No. 204, for the sum of £375 the built premises now occupied as a stable and the shed occupied by Mr Martin as a coal yard, and including the section on which the above premises stand to the live hedge at the rear.”

So, the Lodge Hall was probably built 1919-1920.

A rare photo of the Lodge from possibly the 1920s, from the Rosebank Road frontage. The brick building hasn't been plastered yet, and the Spanish tiled parapet hasn't been added above the door. The corrugated iron building appears to have been the old horse stable. From Avondale Historical Journal  No. 14, November-December 2003. Photo from Barry Thomas.

The next change to the trustees of the Lodge’s title came in 1941. Now they were: Henry Potter, Charles Pooley, Walter Francis Brooke-Taylor, Robert Ward and Colin Albert Crum. In 1951, Pooley was replaced by John Lupton. The next change was the final one, as the Lodge made plans to sell the hall in 2001: Donald William John Brownlee, John Oldham Currie, Thomas Ure Fraser, Alan Charles Gini, and Mervyn John Nichols.

At some point, the stable to the east of the hall (a coal dealer's business in 1940) was replaced in what appears to be brick, judging by the 1950s image, and was demolished in the latter part of the 20th century. Today the site is part of a carpark. The Spanish tiled portion of the hall looks a bit odd these days now, jutting out on its own.



In 2002. the hall was purchased by the Sung Rak Church Charitable Trust, transformed into the Auckland Sung Rak Church, and all exterior signs of the previous Masonic ownership were erased.






As for the story of the old wooden store at the corner – the Thode brothers leased the store to grocer Edward Civil in 1919, who in turn transferred his lease to Norman McKenzie in 1920 (the store then became known as McKenzies for the first part of the 1920s until the fire in 1925). The Thode brothers meanwhile sold the property to another set of brothers, the Fearons (Charles Edgar and Leonard Roger) back in 1920. When the fire razed the old store, the Fearons built the present day Fearon's Buildings.


St Ninians returns to the community






















On 5 February 2011, the Avondale-Waterview Historical Society held its first meeting for the year at St Ninians. We were the first community group to use the building since it was closed in 2007. Restoration work began in October 2010, and only finished 1 February this year.

The sign (which I suggested) was installed on the fence just this week.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Longwhitekid blog

The Longwhitekid blog belongs to Darian Zam, who commented today at the Fullers Sign and Myers Park posts. There can never, ever be too many Kiwiana/nostalgia blogs, I say. Another one for the blogroll on the side.

Rosebank School turns 50


 Updated: 19 February 2011

On 1 February, Rosebank School in Avondale (there's at least another in New Zealand, at Balclutha) inaugurated a year of celebration for their 50th anniversary. The school opened in  February, 1961, after being in the planning stages since the late 1950s.


I have a bit of a soft spot for Rosebank School, even though I actually attended Avondale Primary -- in part because Rosebank incorporate our district's heritage in their school shield: the rose for Rosebank, but even more cool, the Sandford-Miller bi-plane at the bottom. Recently, a class there went in for one of those Fair Go competitions for schools, and I was invited to sit in a room with the children involved with the project, bombarded with questions about Avondale's past, and what neat places there are to film here for their project. That was one of the most delightful afternoons I've experienced.


To cut the cake, the school had arranged two very special guests: Hone Harawira, MP (who attended Rosebank School when it opened in 1961), and Rosalina Kennach, who had a "first day at school" experience on Tuesday that I would lay odds few children would have this year! The centre of attention, she did remarkably well. Her uncle, Paul Hunter (also chairman of the school's jubilee committee), kept a close watch.





One of the school's murals on the grounds. If you look carefully, just between the two planes and a bit below, you'll see the school included on the Auckland landscape.


The school sits on part of Robert Chisholm's vast 19th century estate on the Rosebank Peninsula. In 1882, a farm of just over 20 acres was purchased by merchants Levi Coupland and George Harper. Two years later, they set up a tenants-in-common arrangement with Charles Henry Emmett and George Pearce Canning Wilkins. Emmett and Wilkins had their own titles for their half-share of the property. In 1889, Isaac and Elizabeth Ann Wymer purchased just over 13 acres of the farm. Some information on the Wymers, luckily enough, can be found here.

"Probably the largest market garden round Auckland is in this district, and Mr Whymer [sic], the owner, on account of his success, has been able to take a trip to the Old Country, where he is now enjoying a well earned rest after his years of toil, and the farming is now carried on by his sons."
Auckland Star, 28 August 1903

In 1904, the Wymers' land was sold to Auckland merchant Ah Chee, and became part of the Ah Chee family's market garden (and rabbit farm) holdings in Avondale. In the 1920s, Ah Chee's sons William and Clement had to let the land go, through the National Bank transferring the mortgage on the property to two firms, Radley and Company, and Turners and Growers Limited. In 1929, under power of sale, these firms transferred the property to the Rosebank Estate Limited. Around 10 acres was purchased by Ernest Ingledew Copsey and Alfred Farmer Copsey, Avondale growers on Rosebank since the late 1890s.

The Copseys' land at this site was taken by the Government for defence purposes in 1944, after initially serving as a market garden conveniently adjacent to the American military hospital constructed close by, the future Avondale College and Intermediate. After the war, the government then set about gazetting areas for housing purposes during the 1950s. One section, to become the school, was gazetted for that purpose in March 1957.

My thanks to Rosebank School for the kind invitation to their cake cutting ceremony. I'll include a link on the blog to the school's website, for those keen to register with the school for the November celebrations, or who have memories of the school to share.