Caring for Trust properties is a labour of love, but it gives
those who do it a very special connection with our heritage and the people who
built it.
Clendon
House: home to a remarkable, little known-couple. Photo:
Lindsay Charman
RAWENE is a tiny settlement
perched on the edge of Hokianga Harbour with a population, last census, of
462, a remote place that is often so quiet that, on a still day, you can hear
a shag dive. And, if youre lucky, the bouncing bedsprings sound of the white
heron, or kotuku.
Lindsay Charman, curator of the towns historic
Clendon House, saw one on his first visit to Rawene, 10 years ago, up in the Norfolk
pines behind the pub. He considered it prophetic. I thought, well, a kotuku!
You dont get a sign like that very often.
Charman has lived
in Rawene ever since, most of that time as the curator of Clendon House. Its
three days a week in summer, and in the winter I starve. Well, theres not
much work around here, but you adjust. Charman is a warm and engaging storyteller,
relating the story of Clendon House or, more precisely, its former residents,
with affection and enthusiasm. He is a poet and published writer; back in 1999
he won the Huia Publishers short story award for a story set in Clendon
House, called Top Hat and Taiaha. A couple of years later, he published
a book of stories under the same name. There are so many interesting elements
of good drama in the story behind this house, he says. Its a
great narrative.
Clendon
curator Lidsay Charman. Photo: courtesy of Lindsay Charman
A brief history: the house was built in the 1860s by Captain James
Reddy Clendon, one of the countrys earliest traders, mainly in kauri.
He regularly sailed his ship from harbour to harbour in the Bay of Islands
and the Hokianga region in search of good wood. The Maori nicknamed him Tuatara,
comparing him to a lizard hunting for food in nooks and crannies. And theres
still a carved post in the meeting house at Motiti representing Tuatara,
says Charman.
Clendon was widely known among Maori, and a key player in
the early part of the 19th century; the first United States Consul to New Zealand,
a member of the first Legislative Council, a witness to the signing of the
Treaty of Waitangi. Yet he is possibly the most underwritten person in New
Zealand history, says Charman.
In 1856, aged 55 and recently widowed,
Clendon married Jane Cochrane. She was 17, going on 18, and the daughter of
an Irishman, Denis Cochrane, and his wife Takotowi. There is plenty of evidence
to suggest that biculturalism was all the rage in 19th-century Hokianga. Or, more
accurately, marrying Maori women was all the rage among Pakeha men in the Hokianga.
In his earlier years, Clendon enjoyed a lucrative career, but had been under financial
stress in the later decades of his life. He had sold his property and house at
Okiato, which became the countrys first Government House, to Governor Hobson
but the Crown ended up paying him a fraction of the agreed price. In the end,
he was paid off with 4000 hectares of land south of Auckland (the area now called
Clendon), which he was eventually obliged to sell for a song.
Charman:
He wrote a letter to his mother in 1848, saying, I can see no other
prospect but to work hard until the end of my days. I cannot say the Government
has done much for me beyond ruining me. This is one of the leading Europeans,
and hes saying hes been done wrong by the Crown! says Charman.
You see, it wasnt just Maori who had issues with the Crown.
And
there were rumours that it was the former US Consul who whispered sometimes
in Hone Hekes ear: If you really want to stir up the British, then
take the British flag. Clendon died in 1872, leaving 34-year-old
Jane with a house, eight children and £5000 ($10,000) debt. This is where
Charman really warms to his theme, detailing with emphatic admiration the story
of a woman who used her intellect, mana, presumably her feminine wiles, and some
shrewd business instincts to keep the creditors at bay. She wheeled and
dealed, says Charman.
Probably robbed Peter to pay Paul is
one way of putting it. Somehow, she kept the house, raised her children
in it, and eventually died in it in 1919. And then her son lived here until
1933, and then her grandson lived there until 1966 and his widow sold the house
to the Historic Places Trust in 1971.
Every curator who has ever
been here has developed an enormous affection for Jane Clendon, saysCharman. I
really enjoy imparting this story of an extremely powerful woman that most
people have never heard of.
You have to pick your market, he
says of the visitors the property attracts. The place is sometimes brimming
with, dare I say it, Aucklanders, and theyre usually in a hurry or waiting
for the ferry, and you have to compress your history lesson. But its
important in the meeting and greeting; youre setting the tone, youre
creating a narrative around the visit, so that when they walk away theyre
not just thinking of the building with a few chairs and plates. Theyre thinking
of the quality of the lives of the people who actually occupied it. And the bicultural
aspect really does surprise people. (It also resonates personally with Charman,
whose father is English and whose mother is of Maori descent.) And whats
it like to have eight kids? Eight kids on your own!
My parting shot to
people is, Next time you think youre having a bad day, think about
what a few of Janes were like.
In the even smaller settlement
of Waimate North, half way between Hokianga and the Bay of Islands, 15 kilometres
from Kaikohe, Rod Burke manages the second-oldest house in New Zealand, Te Waimate
Mission House. When I came here, the previous curator said, Ive
been here for seven years. Five probably would have been enough. Ive
been here for 15 years. Maybe 16. Ive lost count.
Te
Waimate Mission House: our second oldest building. Photo:
Lindsay Charman
Te Waimate Mission House
is a handsome building, furnished with missionary period furniture, set in
pastoral surroundings that were once New Zealands first large Englishstyle
farm, with wheat fields, a water mill and blacksmith shop as well as the chapel,
school rooms, houses and cottages.
What they were trying to do is
look for some inland Maori who hadnt met too many Europeans so they could
put themselves forward as an example that Maori would hopefully follow,
says Burke. Their idea being the Maori were behind in their development
and needed to be brought up to speed, to be like Englishmen. But not just any
old Englishmen. Not those rough old sealers and whalers at Kororareka who werent
the most moral bunch in the world, but low church, evangelical, almost Calvinist
people.
Te
Waimate's Rod Burke. Photo: Lindsay Charman
The first family to occupy the house were the Clarkes. To describe
them as Calvinistic is probably an exaggeration, says Burke, but they were
at that end of the evangelical scale. Missionary zeal isnt so fashionable
these days, and the term missionary is frequently used as a derogatory
adjective meaning paternalistic and didactic. Does Burke actually like the Clarkes?
You
cant help but get fond of people when youve read their personal
diaries and letters, he says. And weve got a couple of Clarkes
letters home to his parents. He didnt seem to be one of those stiff Victorian
fathers. There is an account from one of his daughters, written to her nieces,
and the picture that comes through is that he was quite a kindly father by the
standards of the time.
The Historic Places Trust is not a religious
organisation, but my subjects are religious people, so religion comes into
it, saysBurke. We try and present it in a way that is based on sound
historical study. You just cant talk about it in a way you might talk to,
say, a professor of comparative religion or a historian of the Anglican Church.
Burke
appeals to those who may not be interested in the religious side of the story
by drawing attention to the construction of the building. It is an interesting
piece of architecture. Aesthetically, its a great building; its
all symmetrical, all kauri built on puriri foundations. And its a
classic Georgian building, which is uncommon in New Zealand architecture, which
was mostly neo-gothic.
Burkes CV is a long and varied one.
He did art history at university before studying librarianship at the University College
of London. Hes spent much of his life overseas, and, prior to managing Te
Waimate, was working at the National Library in Wellington. But the librarians
job was becoming increasingly technocratic: I dont think I need to
explain why sitting at a computer eight hours a day is bad for your health.
Now
he lives in relative isolation, on site, where the closest neighbour is half
a kilometre away. Presumably, the money isnt that great so why does he do
it? Ive always had a strong sense of public service, muses Burke.
And Ive been very disappointed over my long years of working life
that public service has been eroded by political leaders while pop stars and football
players have been lauded to the skies. But I always thought it was a privilege
to be able to spend money accountably and do it well. And security may not sound
very interesting, thats one of the satisfactions of the job. Knowing Im
making a difference in keeping New Zealands second-oldest building safe.
To make sure it continues to exist.
Lyttleton's
Timeball Station. Photo: NZHPT
When Jan Titus becamethe property manager of the Timeball Station in
Lyttelton, Christchurch, she told herself shed do it for five years. Part
of me worried that I would get trapped here, she says. But part
of me saw that it was a great challenge. The station was built by the Canterbury
Provincial Council in 1876, a castle-like building that had a tower for the timeball,
and a three-storey building adjacent to it that contained residential rooms, working
rooms, the clock room and the lookout room. It was constructed of scoria, and
there were leaky-building problems from the start; over the years it has been
modified to be more watertight, and extended.
Various people have lived
in the residential part of the building over the decades, including former television
presenter and Mayor of Banks Peninsula, Bob Parker. Titus has a masters
degree in cultural anthropology from the University of California, and has
a particular interest in fundraising, which is where she has invested a lot of
her energies. Shes been there six years now, during which time she has overseen
the restoration of the gardens, of the buildings exterior and of the interior
of the original part of the building. Restoration continues on the buildings 1912
addition.
Weve uncovered the original entrance doorway, which
was partially moved in 1912 to the new front entrance. The remaining handiwork
of Brassington, the stonemason, is now visible and its wonderful. Theres
a lot more remaining than we hoped. Yet there is much more to be done: rebuilding
the stone wall, restoring the kitchen and patio area and, most importantly, developing
innovative visitor resources.
The Timeball Station is one of a handful
surviving around the world, and the only original one left in New Zealand. Once
upon a 19th century, any seaport worth its salt had one. It was the most precise
means of giving a time signal to ships in the harbour so they could check their
chronometers, which they used to establish their longitude and figure out where
they were in the world.
The timeball is made out of a wooden frame and
covered with a thin layer of zinc, measuring one and a half metres in diameter.
A mast is threaded though a hole in its centre. The ships would mark their time
the instant the timeball was dropped from the catch at the top of the mast. The
first one was dropped in December 1876 and the last in December 1934. (By then,
they were replaced by radio signals.)
The dropping of the ball was re-initiated
in the late 1990s. In the early days, local station keepers relied on the Wellington
observatory to provide them with the right time. Nowadays, Titus trusts on an
old transistor radio. We have it tuned to the National Radios news
programme, she says. And on the sixth pip we drop the ball.
Timeball Station's Jan Titus Photo: NZHPT
Visitors to the site have included the great-great-randchildren of
the buildings original stonemason, and the great-grandson of the last station
keeper. Titus says there are many captivating stories to do with the place. Children
are keen anyway, because they want to see the castle. Then you give them
the story about longitude, which has all sorts of great hooks, she says,
admitting that Dava Sobels book Longitude has been extremely useful. Its
got science and technology. Its got piracy. Its got [Commodore] Anson,
who lost half of his crew to scurvy because he couldnt measure his longitude
and couldnt find the land he thought he was heading towards.
Its
not only a legacy of historical navigational tools, but of the role of ports in
Christchurchs economic development, she says. And one of the things
I like about these places is that they are never going to be built again. It costs
too much to build in stone. Or the sites are considered too difficult
this one is on a cliff. In the 1960s, there was talk of this all being bulldozed.
These places deserve to be looked after.
I feel extremely lucky and
privileged to have this job, she says. Its always interesting,
and Ive learnt so much and met so many interesting people both as a host
and through the professional work of restoration and conservation. All these
people who have such good will for this little building.
Places to Visit
Learn
more about the historic sites located in and around
the regions of New Zealand