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From Heritage New Zealand, Spring 2008Poles of Prideby Michael HooperFitting tributes to pioneers of the Hokianga at RaweneHokianga Harbour
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Jane
Takotowi Clendon stands, eyes open, ahead of the pou of her husband,
James Reddy Clendon, at the foot of the Clendon House pathway. |
With these, his own poetic words, Lindsay Charman, property supervisor of the New Zealand Historic Places Trusts Clendon House, scooped up the attentive, winterdraped community clustered into the Rawene Community Hall and carried them back in time.
Distanced even today from most of the far norths civilisation,
Rawene is not a place that leaps trippingly off the map, nor indeed from
the paucity of signs beside the ribbon road. It is at the tip of a finger
poking into the Hokianga Harbour, joined by a vein to Highway 12, snaking
off State Highway 1, some 25 kilometres north of Kawakawa. If you miss
the Rawene turnoff, you are soon flicked off the wild west coast and up
into the Waipoua Forest to meet Tane Mahuta on your way south to Dargaville.
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Paerama
Riki Kararoa and Brendon Martin explain markings to Northland MP
John Carter. |
The drive is longer than one imagines, deep drains and large culverts along the route offering a clue to the rainfall reasons behind the blue-green lushness of the undulating forest landscape. The further one ventures, the less grip the sporadic ramshackle houses seem to have on their paint, weathered by winters waterblast and blow-torched by summers near-tropical sun. Just add salt, and you have the surprisingly well-coated community of Rawene, where pride in historic buildings positively shines.
It is Sunday morning and the unexpected sounds of a rock band leak from a church hall into the otherwise quiet and quite colonial Parnell Street.
Kaumatua Horotai Tito launches into his third service of the day
and its only 10am. As they rise, his prayers must navigate the Masonic
symbols in the pressed metal ceilings of the Town Hall, which was relocated
from Onehunga and restored in 1988. Although the 1838 Catholic Church
up
the road represents a denomination that was one of the first to establish
itself in this ferry, freight and fishing town, it is clearly Clendon
House, down on the western pebbles of the
peninsula, that holds the beat of this historic heart of Hokianga.
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Ann
Flood with her grandmother Francis Louisa Flood. |
Earlier, at dawn on this 29th day of June, the tangata whenua of Hokianga
had mingled with locals and visitors at the foot of the Clendon House
pathway for a blessing. It is the feast of Saints Peter and Paul but the
two figures faced by the crowd and blessed by the rising sun are revered
not like Sunday saints, but as kaitiaki. Their poupou are not fully Maori.
The woman is in front, eyes atypically open, even though she has passed
to the next world. This is Jane Takotowi Clendon,
daughter of Dennis Browne Cochrane and Takotowi Te Whata of Mangamuka,
who was connected by whakapapa to some of the most notable whanau in the
Hokianga.
Its low tide on Clendon Esplanade, and her figure looks across
the harbour of Hokianga nui a Kupe, the returning place of Kupe, as she
did from the upstairs windows of
Clendon House when her husbands trading enterprises sailed below.
The second poupou, with a top hat, has of New Zealands earliest
traders and shipowners. He was a witness to New Zealands Declaration
of Independence, the first United States Consul in New Zealand, and a
signatory of the Treaty of Waitangi. He was also chairman of New Zealands
first bank, a member of the first Legislative Council, the countrys
first Police Magistrate, and later Resident Magistrate at Hokianga. Theres
a moko on his arm.
I dont usually put ta moko on tau iwi [immigrants],
says local carver Nopera Pikari, but the moko is to show his status
in this country. From the gleaming jacket, at the rear of the poupou,
hangs not a coattail but a lizards tail. When I was first
commissioned I was asked to carve a tuatara, but it just didnt go
well for me. So, I thought the best way to do it was like a top hat and
tail.
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Carver
Nopera Pikari. |
The carvings, to me, continues Nopera, are dedicated to those two people, but more around her, because she was the kaitiaki of the house. When he died she was left the legacy of looking after this place, with £5000 [$600,000 in todays dollars] of debt. She went to Auckland, leaving behind her eight children, and ultimately cleared the debt over about forty years. Theres a pattern on the carving that represents her eight children and many mokopuna.
Jane Clendons story, with its humanity and heroism, somehow outshines
the stature of her husband, and thats clearly how it has affected
Lindsay Charman, and many others gathered in the Town Hall this day. Charman,
a showman and raconteur, holds his audience with a story many might know,
but few have heard presented with such
flourish. After some 20 minutes of oratory, he brings us back to the present,
and the relevance of the poupou.
Janes legacy is that she is the first generation that we
might refer to as a bicultural New Zealander. She was immensely proud
of her Pakeha husband. Her son grew up to became a Justice of the Peace,
surveyor, carpenter many things
Pakeha. But amongst local Maori he was regarded as rangatira.
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Part
of the "rookery" that served as home for the family for
over five years. |
The mornings speeches have all been in a very Tai Tokerau setting;
the six children on the stage singing waiata for each speaker except
Kelvin Davis, who talks about Treaty
chief Whatoi Pomare, his ancestor four great grandfathers away,
then, with his experience as a college principal, beats the choir to the
cut, launching strongly into his own waiata. Theres a sneeze on
stage during the next waiata that brings on a fit of giggles, and soon
two of the chorus slip away, before being rounded up and restored to the
ranks by whanau.
The back room team have clearly been cutting and cooking for hours, and
the doors are opened to several hundred, revealing a feast for 5000.
Artists and artisans from the Hokianga mingle and munch. The remnants of kai would fill more than a few kete. Jeff, Bruce and David Clendon, and three generations of their family are well represented.
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Three
generations of Clendons and Cochrans gather beneath the pou of their
ancestors. |
Its a very large family, admits David, pointing out some of the whanau and their links. The genealogy is something of a game of snakes and ladders, but the message is strong they still cherish the family home, their turangawaewae, and the occasional working bee puts hands to heart. The Pakeha element has dominated the house for much of its existence, and some in the family are quick to credit Lindsay Charman with addressing this imbalance by actively welcoming tangata whenua; many of the days speeches are fully in te reo Maori. Oscar, the youngest Clendon there, abandons texting to pay attention.
Lindsay met his wife on the back steps of Clendon House, and they married
on the front steps this last Waitangi Day. Today, however, the back steps
are the territory of the Clendons great-grand-daughter Ann Flood.
She grew up in the house and, despite an absence of several years now,
she is at home welcoming visitors who straggle over from the Town Hall.
The sun filters through windows onto washboards and wooden benches while
she tells her own stories, holding a picture of her grandmother, (Frances)
Louisa Clendon, one of the eight children.
I was born up the hill at the hospital, says Ann Flood, and
we left here when I was 18 months old in the middle of the
Depression. There were foreclosures right, left and centre; so it was
back to the big smoke.
She reflects on the changes since her birth here in 1931, and applauds
the work of the NZHPT and the community. The
house looks great it really does. The whole township looks good.
There have been times when its been down-at-heel, and everything
needed painting even the population! And its been wonderful
the way the whole township turned out today.
Nopera Pikari has claimed modestly at the hui, I am not a speaker, because my hands speak for me. But as I head back on the now-more-familiar road to civilisation it is one of his comments that settles in my mind: There are a lot of things that drive us apart but these things bind us together. He is talking about more than Clendon House, he is talking about our living history. Lindsay Charman, for all his colourful storytelling, has also been apposite in his summation: Its a magnificent day, a heart-stirring day.
In the main street, attention turns toward the $16 Sunday lunch in the hotel Sports Bar something else you dont find in the city. The magnificent Hokianga hills and echoes of hills for most of the morning have shrugged off the clawing mists, but in my rear-view mirror the tide has turned. And Rawene is once again blessed with rain.
Michael Hooper is winner of the Cathay Pacific Travel Media Awards Best Magazine Story 2007, 2000.
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