Thursday, June 13, 2013

Queen Street in 1935: "a great new world"


I bought this card off Ebay from an American dealer the other day. Finally in my hands, I love it on a lot of different levels. The text on the back is intriguing enough. Fred Blair seems to have known a Mr Crocker of the Florida National Bank in St Petersburg, Florida. He wrote on the back of the card, "No American facilities here as yet -- a great new world with a beautiful semi-tropical climate."


The street scenes on this card would probably give Auckland Transport's boffins a dose of the vapours.


"Travel by Train -- Safety & Comfort."  A neon sign? If so, it must have looked a treat lit up. A reminder of the romantic age of steam.



The tall building, semi-obscured by the photo's dimming, is Milne & Choyce.


Folks can't park like this today without having a hefty panel beating bill ...


Parapets and people. A bloke far below, reading something ...

Friday, June 7, 2013

US military forces in New Zealand 1942-1945



Oriental Bay, Wellington, with American Marines, ca 1942. Reference Number: 1/2-045134-F. Alexander Turnbull Library.

Looking for stuff today, I found a Google Maps entry from nzhistory.net on Map of sites used by US military forces in New Zealand, 1942-45. Worth checking out, and a good overall summary for each site, including military camps, hospitals,commandeered/rented offices, storage areas, receiving and radio transmitting stations, and magazines.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Steam at Oamaru


More images courtesy of Bryan Blanchard from Pleasant Point Railway -- this time taken at Oamaru, during the FRONZ get-together this weekend at Oamaru Steam and Rail Society


From Bryan's email: "B10 built in 1924 at Leeds, that has just been finished restored after a  major over haul - It won the major Locomotive restoration award  - one of the awards presented there, last night."






Saturday, June 1, 2013

Black duck at Rocket Park


Back in March 2009, I blogged about the Oakley Creek waterfall-decorated box at Rocket Park, Mt Albert. Leigh Kennaway spotted and photographed this update (thanks, Leigh): a stenciled back duck added to the image.

Wonder where else the duck will turn up?

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Richardson Road's vanished pukeko


12 February this year, Richardson Road in Owairaka was graced by a pukeko ...



... and now, it's gone (image above by Cathy Casey, with permission. Thanks, Cathy!) The business is moving -- but now Richardson Road is pukeko-less. A pity.

Update, 7 June 2013: The pukeko is heading west, to Colwill School.

Tod's box in Parnell


Earlier this month, a bit of colour was added to the St Stephens/Parnell Road corner beside the cathedral complex. The indefatigable Rendell McIntosh of Parnell Heritage gave me the head's up on its preparation and installation -- and this week I finally had a chance to photograph it.


I have been asked today to give credit for the installation of this mural to the Waitemata Local Board, which I'm very pleased to do, considering how much work that Local Board are putting into the area and especially recognition of the area's heritage.


Amongst the images used are representations of the "Parnell Heritage Rose", and a caricature portrait of Robert Tod who named one subdivision of Section 1, Suburbs of Auckland as "Parnell" when flogging it off to prospective buyers in 1841. The name caught history's fancy, and spread over the next decades to include all the area from Mechanic's Bay to the bounds of Newmarket.




My friend Margaret Edgcumbe has very kindly provided the following info for this blog. (Thank you, Margaret!)


Robert Tod (1798 -1864) was a Scotsman from Glasgow who spent time as a merchant in Egypt and Syria before migrating to the Antipodes in 1837.

In Syria in 1832 he met John Vesey Parnell (1805 -1883), one of the leading members of an independent Protestant mission to Baghdad. It was a brief and mainly commercial acquaintance. Tod, as the local agent for the British and Foreign Bible Society, supplied the mission with translations of the scriptures in the Arabic, Persian and Hebrew languages, but by 1834 they had been forced to admit defeat and leave Persia for India.

In 1841 Tod came up to Auckland from Wellington, and made substantial investments in land. At the first sale of suburban land on 1 September 1841 he bought Allotment 63 of Section 1, Suburbs of Auckland - slightly more than 3 acres - for the sum of £244. 10s. 4d. In the next issue of the New Zealand Herald and Auckland Gazette, 4 September 1841, he advertised that he was putting that same land (above Mechanics Bay, and with matchless views of the harbour and shipping) up for auction. It had been neatly divided into 36 sections and named the “Village of Parnell”.

Other members of the Baghdad mission - Groves, Cronin and Calman - were commemorated in the street names of the “village”, while the Patrick of Patrick Terrace refers to the youngest Tod brother, Robert’s main partner in Syria and Baghdad. Unfortunately, these name choices did not strike any chords with the people of Auckland, and they were soon forgotten and replaced (by Eglon, Fox and Marston Streets, and Augustus Terrace).

But the city fathers did apparently like the name of Parnell, possibly because of its associations with the prestigious Anglo-Irish dynasty, so it was gradually applied to the whole of the area along the Manukau Road towards Newmarket, and then to the Highway Board District in 1863, and to the new Borough in 1877.

Until recently the favourite candidate for the origin of the suburb’s name has been the father of J V Parnell the missionary, the politician Sir Henry Brooke Parnell. Bishop Cowie, for instance, stated categorically that the name had been “given in the early days of the colony, from one of H.M.’s Secretaries of State, afterwards Lord Congleton.” (William Garden Cowie, Our Last Year in New Zealand, 1887.)

As for Tod himself, he was completely forgotten once he returned to South Australia in 1847. Because of the perceived Irish connection many later historians have even referred to him as “the Irishman Richard (sic) Tod.” 



Caricature of Robert Tod, by S Gill 1849, courtesy of the State Library of South Australia.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Auckland Zoo, 1926


This booklet was up for auction recently at TradeMe.  Here are some images from the handbook.




Warning Against Feeding or Teasing of Animals: Visitor are requested to be extremely careful what they give the various animals and birds to eat; tobacco in any form is most harmful; the Polar Bears and other special animals must not be given food of any description. Animals or Birds must not on any account be teased or irritated. Persons found wrongfully feeding or annoying exhibits will be prosecuted; since the opening of the Zoological Park several valuable exhibits have died as the result of harmful feeding by visitors.