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From Heritage New Zealand, Autumn 2008Mixed-Use Facilityby Rachel MacdonaldAt the end of last year, excavations at Auckland's Carlaw Park turned up a rare link to the North Island's 19th century Chinese immigrant community
Aucklands Carlaw Park, tucked into a gully between the northern slopes of the Domain and the south side of Parnell, has been through many metamorphoses. In the 1840s, it was the site of one of the citys first flour mills, followed by a tannery and then a Chinese market garden. In 1916, the first grandstands and terraces went up as it was turned into rugby league grounds and leased to the Auckland Rugby League Club. And, by 1921, the club had made the park its home; an arrangement that continued until it was retired for use as a university carpark in the 1990s. Then, early in 2007, it seemed there might be a possibility of the stadiums
sporting heritage being resurrected, when it was mooted as a possible
alternative location for then Auckland mayor Dick Hubbards Waterfront
Stadium New Zealand. The concept designs presented to the city council
by lobbyists calling themselves the Domain Stadium Promotion Group were
prepared by the same team that delivered the refurbished Jade Stadium
to Christchurch, and did
That plan failed to fly, however, and today Carlaw Parks Number
Two ground is in the process of being transformed into a sizeable mixed-use
development at the hands of McDougall Reidy & Co. Designed by architects
Warren and Mahoney, and being built by Haydn and Rollett, this will comprise
commercial space, a serviced hotel, residential apartments and hospitality
outlets, all within a quick walk of Parnell and the Domain. The Number
One ground has However, under the Historic Places Act 1993, any location where there is evidence of human occupation before 1900 is defined as an archaeological site. This means it requires an authority from the New Zealand Historic Places Trust before works that will modify, damage or destroy the site can begin. In this case, of particular interest were Carlaw Parks 19th century uses.
So, before the diggers lifted the last of the asphalt last October, time
was allowed to get a team of archaeologists in to investigate what lay
underneath. Led by Dr Hans Bader of Geometria, an to make sure no precious
fragments of the parks rich and varied past were about to be lost. Visiting the site on the day before it closed, I quickly realised that ensuring the remains of one of Aucklands earliest Chinese settlement were retrieved, recorded and interpreted to provide new insights into this part of Aucklands heritage, was a seriously messy job.
Mud-caked archaeologists were bucketing the ground-water out of an old
cesspit (all over Baders car) the pump had found the dirt
too much and given up. In the site tent, trays of dirt-caked artefacts
were painstakingly being cleaned, classified and bagged by other, equally
grimy hands. Despite the mess, though, there was nothing random about this We ranged through the council archives and old maps, and The location and layout of the Low and Motion Flour Mill was
This last find, in particular, strongly reinforced our thinking that the site had high potential for yielding artefacts related to Chinese market garden activities, and could reveal more about Aucklands early commercial industries, as the area was one of Aucklands earliest industrial centres, says Bev Parslow, regional archaeologist for the New Zealand Historic Places Trust. And such a layering of history provided the Geometria team with the challenge
of distinguishing which period of the parks past they were looking
at as they dug. The oldest structure Bader expected to find was the water
race for the flour mill.
However, given the mills short tenure, Bader speculates it cant
have been a particularly successful venture. The same cant be said
of the tannery, if the discovery of a nearly complete hide in one of the
pits, more than 100 years after it was put there, is any indicator. We had a sketch plan of the tannery to go by, but no map, Then, in 1882, ownership of the land passed to Mr Chan, the The finds to date have huge heritage significance, says Parslow,as
they show visible evidence of the settlement and occupation of the Chinese
community in early colonial Auckland. Interestingly, we can also see that
the community was prospering even though Auckland was in the grip
of a major economic depression at the time. In fact, we know Mr Chan later
went on to own six commercial properties on Queen Street, along with three
other market gardens elsewhere in Auckland, and a banana plantation in
Fiji. And the Chinese community has taken enormous interest in the site, as
it gives a voice to a group of people who were almost invisible in Aucklands
early historic records, adds Bader. Bader suspects that when the Chan family took over the land, Around the house site, just beyond the neat little courtyard and The house itself was built on a combination of timber and stone piles,
and underwent several extensions in the course of its life. The chimney
also had to be replaced at some time, with the original fireplace being
laid atop one of the old tanning pits and slowly falling into it over
the years. A number of the significant artefacts unearthed from in and Most of the artefacts came from the site of the old mill, alongside the house, which has been used as kind of a dumping ground, says Bader. Others had just been tossed under the house some behaviours dont really change over time! There were also several 17th century Chinese coins, many-sided and with
a hole in the middle. The most likely explanation for this is that
a member of the family brought it over from China as a keepsake; a memento
of home, says Bader. The open day and a ceremony on the day the dig was closed also offered opportunities for descendents of the Chan family to visit the site. We had one very elderly lady who was fascinated to see where the stream had run, says Bader. She had recollections of her mother telling her, when she was small, how eels could be flipped out of the water by hand, to be cooked for the dinner plate. Such memories, along with the small amount of information that can be
unearthed from the archives, are as essential to the process of archaeology
as the excavation itself. Much of this life of the Chans is to be preserved in a book on Once the new developments are built, were working on having a small space set aside above what was once the millrace, where people can sit and look down on the site, and read about its history from a description board, says Bader. It would be nice to leave both a gesture to, and a memento of, the past here. |
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