In one of Dunedin’s most densely populated suburbs, where worker’s cottages sit cheek by jowl and the Hillside Railway Workshops loom large, St Peter’s Church sitting alongside its Vicarage set in green lawns and amid old oaks trees is an oasis that has been the heart of Anglican worship in Caversham since its construction in 1882. St Peter’s was designed in the English Gothic style by prominent Dunedin architect Henry Frederick Hardy. Hardy’s soaring spire and cruciform plan was never completed, but the Church with its battlemented tower recalls the English roots of the Church. The clergy came from England too - Reverend William Ronaldson, the first vicar of St Peter’s was a significant individual in the history of the Church in New Zealand, working in Nelson and the Wairarapa, and with Maori. Clergy brought their English roots and liturgical conflict over ‘Catholic’ practices in the Anglican Church. Reverend Bryan Meyrick King had an important association with that history that is reflected in the continued Anglo-Catholic worship at St Peter’s. St Peter’s has been the centre for both worship and community in South Dunedin, drawing its parishioners from a large area. Long standing members of the congregation recall fondly the role the Church played and its contribution to the spiritual and cultural life of the community. The brick church has cement facings and a slate roof. The porch on the east of the nave has been connected with the hall built in 1986. The vestry is on the east of the nave, with the entrance to the tower vestibule on the west. The chancel is in a small gabled section. There are fixed buttresses running the length of the church and at the corners of the vestry and the tower. Lancet windows run the length of the nave; all have memorial stained glass windows, many designed by Dunedin stained glass artist John Brock. The windows in the chancel and at the end of the nave have stone tracery and clear and coloured quarry panes, the large one above the chancel containing Christian symbols. The interior walls of St Peter’s Church are plastered. The nave is notable for its Kauri ceiling, king posts and beams. The Nave has a Lady Altar at the rear where the stone font sits on raised platform. The main body of the Nave has a central aisle, with timber pews either side. The nave has many memorial plaques to parishioners. The raised pulpit is located on the right hand side of the nave behind the choir. The chancel is up a raised step and has a carved timber altar and altar screen behind. St Peter’s Vicarage, built in 1912 and a small nineteenth century cottage sit in the grounds of the Church. The grounds are notable for the mature trees and garden setting. The vicarage is built of brick and has a tiled roof and timber window joinery. It is built in a restrained Arts and Crafts style, the extended roof lines and multi-paned windows central to the aesthetic of the building. The Vicarage is basically rectangular in plan with a gable roof to the street and a hipped roof to the rear on the smaller gable section at the back of the house. There are two small transecting gables on the south elevation, the line of the gable extending to form the roofed porch of the main entrance. The east elevation has a generous semi-circular recessed porch which provides access to the garden from the sitting room. St Peter’s Anglican Church and Vicarage has historical, architectural, spiritual and aesthetic significance. Its history represents the importance of religion, particularly of the Anglican Church in the South Dunedin community. The history of community support evident in the construction of the first church and the congregation’s fundraising efforts shows the support of the wider community. St Peter’s has stood as the bastion of the Anglican faith in South Dunedin for over 120 years. The Church represents the history of the Church of England community in South Dunedin and their determination to build their own place of worship. Its solidity and picturesque design is also representative of the hopes and dreams of the aspirations of this the Anglican parish in South Dunedin. In 2011 the complex of buildings associated with St Peter’s Church remain the centre for the Anglican community in South Dunedin, Caversham and more widely, and is a landmark in this area of Dunedin.
Location
List Entry Information
Overview
Detailed List Entry
Status
Listed
List Entry Status
Historic Place Category 2
Access
Private/No Public Access
List Number
9545
Date Entered
12th December 2011
Date of Effect
12th December 2011
City/District Council
Dunedin City
Region
Otago Region
Extent of List Entry
Extent includes Lots 36-41 DP 1689, Lot 37 and Pt Lot 38 DP 1111 (RT OT165/121, RT OT265/226, OT165/99), Otago Land District , and the buildings known as St Peter's Anglican Church Complex thereon, and its fittings and fixtures. The registration includes St Peter's Church, Vicarage and Cottage. The registration excludes the modern Parish Centre (Refer to map in Appendix 1 of the registration report for further information).
Legal description
Lots 36-41 DP 1689, Lot 37 and Pt Lot 38 DP 1111 (RT OT165/121, RT OT265/226, OT165/99), Otago Land District
Status
Listed
List Entry Status
Historic Place Category 2
Access
Private/No Public Access
List Number
9545
Date Entered
12th December 2011
Date of Effect
12th December 2011
City/District Council
Dunedin City
Region
Otago Region
Extent of List Entry
Extent includes Lots 36-41 DP 1689, Lot 37 and Pt Lot 38 DP 1111 (RT OT165/121, RT OT265/226, OT165/99), Otago Land District , and the buildings known as St Peter's Anglican Church Complex thereon, and its fittings and fixtures. The registration includes St Peter's Church, Vicarage and Cottage. The registration excludes the modern Parish Centre (Refer to map in Appendix 1 of the registration report for further information).
Legal description
Lots 36-41 DP 1689, Lot 37 and Pt Lot 38 DP 1111 (RT OT165/121, RT OT265/226, OT165/99), Otago Land District
Cultural Significance
Spiritual Significance or Value: St Peter’s Anglican Church has been the place of worship for this congregation since 1882, with the previous Church providing religious services since the early 1860s, a community association of over 150 years.
Historic Significance
Historical Significance or Value St Peter’s Anglican Church and Vicarage has historical significance representing the importance of religion, particularly of the Anglican Church in the South Dunedin community. The history of community support evident in the construction of the first church and the congregation’s fundraising efforts shows the support of the wider community. St Peter’s has stood as the bastion of the Anglican faith in South Dunedin for over 120 years. The Church represents the history of the Church of England community in South Dunedin and their determination to build their own place of worship. Its solidity and picturesque design is also representative of the hopes and dreams of the aspirations of this the Anglican parish in South Dunedin and the confidence they showed in their community and its future prospects.
Physical Significance
Aesthetic Significance or Value: St Peter’s Anglican Church Complex is a pair of brick buildings in a garden setting which make a significant aesthetic contribution to the townscape of South Dunedin’s largely closely built, urban environment. The Church is itself a landmark in South Dunedin. The design of the Church, with its English Gothic style and its many stained glass windows has considerable aesthetic appeal. Architectural Significance or Value: St Peter’s Anglican Church and Vicarage have architectural significance as works combining the architectural talents of Victorian era architect Henry Hardy and Edwardian architects Donald and William Henry Dunning. The design of the Church represents the Victorian philosophies of Church architecture which saw the buildings as expression of Christian spirituality. In addition the coherent design of the complex representing the range of activities including worship, education and social gatherings, makes a significant contribution to the cityscape of South Dunedin.
Detail Of Assessed Criteria
(a) The extent to which the place reflects important or representative aspects of New Zealand history: St Peter’s Anglican Church reflects the importance of established religion in nineteenth century Otago, and the community support for providing a formal place of worship. Its stories exemplify the determination and commitment of the faithful in their efforts to create the physical representation of their religious convictions, an important expression of spirituality in the religious philosophy of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The history of the Church not only illustrates the importance of Christianity, but the development and optimistic expectations of the developing city of Dunedin as it looked into the future. The complex of buildings that grew up around the Church shows the work and social role of the Church to its congregation and community. (b) The association of the place with events, persons, or ideas of importance in New Zealand history: St Peter’s Church and Vicarage are associated with significant individuals. Henry Hardy was a notable Dunedin architect, who designed other important Dunedin buildings. Dunning, who designed the Vicarage was a lesser known but significant early twentieth century Dunedin architect. . Stained glass artist John Brock was known for his ecclesiastical work and St Peter’s has good examples of his designs. Reverend William Ronaldson, the first vicar of ‘new’ St Peter’s was also a significant individual in the history of the Anglican Church in New Zealand, being associated with the church in Nelson and the Wairarapa, and for his mission work with Maori. The Anglo-Catholic history associated with Reverend Bryan Meyrick King, is also an important association that is reflected in the continued Anglo-Catholic practices in the Church today. (e) The community association with, or public esteem for the place: Parishioners recall the significant role of the Church in the lives of the community over a long period which indicate the high esteem in which St Peter’s is held and its continued role as a place of worship and of community for people within South Dunedin and more widely in the community. (h) The symbolic or commemorative value of the place: St Peter’s has commemorative value. All its stained glass windows are memorials to parishioners, including those who fell in the World Wars. There is also a plaque commemorating the fallen, and several other memorial plaques which recall the lives of people associated with St Peter’s Church. (k) The extent to which the place forms part of a wider historical and cultural complex or historical and cultural landscape: South Dunedin is a tightly built urban environment with a mix of houses and industrial complexes such as the Hillside Railway Workshops in the next block down from the Church. Together, St Peter’s Church and Vicarage, in their garden setting are an oasis in the otherwise densely populated townscape and are an important part of that historical landscape. Summary of Significance or Values: This place was assessed against, and found it to qualify under the following criteria: a, b, e, h and k. Conclusion: It is considered that this place qualifies as a Category II historic place.
Construction Details
Description
Original St Peter’s Church erected on site near Caversham gas works (later moved to Mornington)
Start Year
1864
Type
Original Construction
Description
11 February, foundation stone laid. August 1882: consecration ceremony held, church opened 29 September 1882
Start Year
1882
Type
Other
Description
Vicarage built
Start Year
1912
Type
Additional building added to site
Description
Over this period memorial stained glass windows installed that line the nave
Period
1917-1971
Type
Modification
Description
Repairs to the tower
Start Year
1929
Type
Modification
Description
Completion of the sanctuary to Hardy’s plans, renovation of nave
Start Year
1962
Type
Modification
Description
Hall built
Start Year
1986
Type
Additional building added to site
Construction Materials
Brick, slate, stained glass, timber.
The Anglican Church in Otago: In the early 1840s a Maori mission was set up on Ruapuke Island, the earliest known Anglican mission work in Otago and Southland. In 1844 Bishop Selwyn visited whaling stations and Maori communities on the Southern Coast. Selwyn visited Otakou in January 1844 where he baptised children, distributed books and left a Maori who he had baptised at Moeraki to minister to the Anglican Maori at Otakou. An Anglican clergyman Reverend J.A. Fenton arrived at Port Chalmers in January 1852 and held services in the courthouse while a church was built. Fenton was responsible for Otago’s 400 Anglicans. Otago was under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Christchurch until the Diocese of Dunedin was formed in 1868. The building St Peter’s Church represents the period of development in the Anglican Church which saw the consolidation of communities and a steady building programme which saw many new churches constructed in small towns. This is the period described by historian H.T. Purchas as the Macrocarpa period where small church buildings sprung up alongside towns where the church building itself grows dear to its community and the work of established religion, education, fund raising and outreach goes on. This was a period where church building accelerated for the Anglican Church throughout New Zealand, when urban centres grew and small centres consolidated. That the community came together, drawing together to donate the land and organise the building of the church shows the importance of the church as an institution both historically and currently. Caversham: Koterakiatea, the flat area between St Clair and Caversham, was a rich area of swampy land at the base of the hillside Whakaherekau and Ko-raka-a-runga-te-raki, (Lookout Point). It was separated from the head of the harbour by Te Rara, a rib of land running south to north.. Pakeha settled around the foot of the hills, initially farming, with prominent English (and Anglican) settler William Henry Valpy (1793-1852) naming his farms Caversham (after his wife’s birthplace) and Forbury, the names later applying to two of the suburbs that developed in South Dunedin. European settlers were less charitable about the low lying area which Caversham bordered. South Dunedin was, as the University of Otago’s Caversham Project put it, ‘a self-enclosed physical space, bordered by hills and the ocean. The area was mostly boggy and close to sea-level, occupied by a few scattered farms and market gardens, though small settlements sprung up to service the passing gold rush traffic. Cheap land led to the development of housing and industry. Houses ranged from the workers’ cottages on one-sixteenth of an acre sections, to larger more generous dwellings. It was in this context that St Peter’s began in Caversham, an enclave alongside the main road south to the goldfields, by 1905 engulfed as a suburb of the growing city. St Peter’s was the first church to be built in Caversham, reflecting the higher proportion of English immigrants than was generally the case in Dunedin. The history of St Peter’s Anglican Church, Caversham officially begins at 6 pm on 4 January 1864. The Otago Daily Times advertised a ‘Gathering of interested Churchmen in a room of the Edinboro’ Castle Hotel, Caversham under the chairmanship of the Reverend E.G. Edwards, Vicar of St. Paul’s, Dunedin.’ Monetary support and the donation of Clapcott’s acre, situated close by the old Caversham Gasworks and abutting Main South Road ensured that St Peter’s Church was quickly erected. The consecration of the new church is recorded in the Otago Witness. There were difficulties in finding a vicar for the new church but eventually Reverend T.L. Stanley was appointed in 1869. Perhaps it was not much to his liking as he stayed for only one year and a further four year interregnum followed. The laity, it seems, rose to the challenge of such a long interregnum and were thanked by Bishop Nevill for carrying on with the services. Reverend E.J. Penny relieved the ‘drought’, followed by Reverend C.J. Martin and Reverend Wm. Ronaldson. During this period, Caversham experienced a marked growth in population; the number of houses rose from 650 in 1877 to 805 in 1882. Discussions with people in Caversham, Kew, Kensington, St Kilda and South Dunedin identified growing congregation. A larger church was needed. The site of the first St Peter’s made the church difficult to access and Reverend Ronaldson soon suggested relocation along with a new and better building. The results were encouraging, and it was decided to purchase a new site. This, however, was dependent on the sale of the land donated by Henry Clapcott and his agreement to changing his deed of gift. Old St Peter’s was sold for £150 and was removed to Mornington to become St Mary’s Church. On 10 August 1881, St Peter’s Vestry appointed a ‘Committee to Undertake the Building of the New Church’. The site chosen was on land originally granted to John Law Baker. It was purchased from Charlotte Ward Baker of Middlesex, England for the sum of £550. Perhaps there was some doubt as to whether the funds could be raised to build the new church, but an unexpected increase in subscriptions meant that a sum of £400 had collected by August 1881. The Plans and the Architect: Plans for a church to accommodate not less than 300 were commissioned from architect Henry Frederick Hardy, a Dunedin architect who made a prominent contribution to the city’s architecture. For the Anglican Church, theologians of the Victorian period maintained that spirituality was the chief concern of the church and that ‘expression of this spirituality’ was an essential part of the services and of the church buildings. The timber vaulted ceilings, windows, altars and other decorative forms within the church were important expressions of the theology and practice of the time. These elements in St Peter’s, the carved pulpit, altar rails and other religious furniture, are significant manifestations of the spiritual philosophy and practice of the Victorian period. The decoration of the exterior of the Church itself is restrained, with contrasting stone facings and the window details providing the focus. Despite Johns and Evans being the architect’s choice of building firm, Thomas Newton put in the lowest bid (£1,825) and was awarded the tender to build in brick. The tender was for building the nave only, which was to seat about 300 people. The architect’s drawing shows St Peter’s was planned as a Latin Cross, complete with transepts and chancel. An elegant tower with a spire was planned for the front of the church. However, the transepts were never built leaving it more like a two-cell church of the British Norman or Anglo Saxon period. As for the spire, construction problems prevented its erection. Building the Church: Hardy’s specifications for St Peter’s survive. Concrete for the foundations included Knight Bevan’s cement, imported from London firm Knight, Bevan and Sturge. After the concrete came two feet of blue-stone rubble laid in mortar composed of Chain Hills sand and McDonald’s Waihola lime. Fancy bricks were purchased from local brickwork Smith and Fotheringham, although it is not clear if they also supplied the plain bricks. Slates were specified for the roof. Kauri was used extensively in the church and Hardy specifies this timber as bearers for the floor, floor-boards, roof ribs, roof lining, king posts and struts. The foundation stone was laid on 11 February 1882 with the blessing of the Bishop. After the application of the plumb, level and square by members of the Masonic Fraternity, the District Grand Master completed the ceremony by knocking the stone into place. About 600 people witnessed the ceremony. Clearly, the Bishop declared the church was being built principally for those who are called the working classes and he rejoiced that it was so - that it was not intended only for the wealthier class, but for all (a sentiment that has lost none of its power for the congregation over the past 127 years). In October 1881 the Church Building Committee were dissatisfied with progress. On 29 May a resolution is recorded drawing the attention of the architect to ‘the State of the Tower and certain other portions of the Church being evidently in a defective state...’ and ‘That the treasurer be instructed not to pay any more money to the Contractor’. Less than a month later, the inspection committee consulted the architect of St Joseph’s Cathedral, Francis William Petre, about the state of the church, particularly whether the foundations were sufficiently robust to carry the weight of the tower. The inspection committee was vindicated in a long reply from Petre. Apparently the tower had moved six inches from the perpendicular towards the nave, this being due to the nature of the soft soil on which the church was being built. Petre advised against the planned spire, which was never built. Despite the difficulties, the church was completed and Bishop Nevill delivered the opening sermon. On 29 September 1882, Michaelmass, a congregation of 300 assembled. It was raining heavily and it is to be hoped that the leaks in the east window, roof and vestry windows reported earlier been fixed. Bishop Nevill dedicated the church in the name of the Blessed Apostle St Peter. On this rather damp day, began 128 years of prayer, sacraments and praise. The People’s Church: The founders of St Peter’s included some significant individuals. Reverend William Ronaldson, the first vicar of ‘new’ St Peter’s, was born in London in 1823. Fifteen year old Ronaldson joined the ‘Roxburgh Castle’ as seaman. In 1844 he was in New Zealand where he later worked for the Church Missionary Society at Putiki as a catechist schoolmaster. He returned to London and was ordained priest by the Bishop of London (1855). In 1855, Ronaldson was the first clergyman appointed to the Wairarapa district CMS mission at Papawai before moving to Motueka and Picton. He arrived in Otago in 1877. After three years at St John’s Church, Milton, he took up the position at St Peter’s, where he remained until 1890, overseeing the building of the present church. During this time he was Diocesan Secretary on three occasions and Clerical Secretary of the General Synod. In Otago, he was Diocesan Secretary and Bishop Chaplain for the ministry to Maori. As well as being a licensed minister for the Maori and English settlers in the Wairarapa, he was appointed to the Christian Missionary Society Maori College of St. Thomas at Papawai, centre of the Maori Parliament. King and the Anglo-Catholics: The second vicar of the newly built St Peter’s laid the foundations of Anglo-Catholicism, the traditions and theology of which are a feature of St Peter’s in 2011. Reverend Bryan Meyrick King, being the son of Reverend Bryan King who was notorious for his efforts to introduce Anglo-Catholicism into an east end London church, had a close connection to that movement. Many of the practices King’s father had introduced in London are now regarded as normal: lighted candles on a vested altar; a robed choir singing psalms; preaching in a surplice rather than a black gown. Yet in the mid-nineteenth century these were regarded as ‘Ritualism’, smacked of ‘Popery’. After a commercial career King studied theology under his father and then sailed for Western Australia. He was ordained as a priest by the Bishop of Perth in 1879, finally arriving in New Zealand in 1885. His first appointment was as curate at St Martin’s, North-East Valley, Dunedin, before becoming vicar of St Peter’s in 1892. He was appointed Canon in 1897. Canon King continued at St Peter’s until 1911. He died in 1915. Many of the members of the parish were interesting people. In addition to Canon Bryan Meyrick King, Captain John Easther (d.1917) was a sea captain in the Royal Navy and as commander of the paddle-steamer ‘Avon’ during the New Zealand Wars; he narrowly escaped an early death. Easther was a member of the St Peter’s building committee and for 30 years was warden and vestryman.’ Pywell’s parish history describe the very valuable contribution he made at St Peter’s: ‘Again and again he shouldered hard tasks, making representatives or conducting negotiations of one sort or another, and he came out victorious in many a conflict, a credit to the famous services which in his professional capacity he represented.’ Others, like Alfred Luther Beattie (‘Loco Beattie’) show the important links to local industry. Born in Yorkshire, Beattie trained at the railway foundry in Leeds. Following a spell as assistant manager, he must have decided to try his luck in New Zealand. Landing at Port Chalmers on the ‘Helen Denny’ in 1876, Beattie at once joined the Railway Department of Otago, later becoming assistant engineer. It is likely he was recruited for the newly opened Hillside Workshops. After leaving the province, he went on to become Chief Mechanical Engineer of the New Zealand Railway Department and it was during the years 1900-1913 that ‘Loco Beattie’ became famous for his innovative locomotive designs. Around 1912 the parish built a new vicarage for the minister. The architects were Donald and Dunning, who worked out of the Express Buildings in Bond Street. The builder was Thomas Herd. The vicarage was built in Arts and Craft style, in brick to match the adjoining church. William Henry Dunning was a Tasmanian-born architect who worked in South Africa before coming to Dunedin in 1908 to assist with the New Zealand Express Company building, a very large Chicago style reinforced concrete ‘skyscraper’. Dunning designed a number of fine Arts and Crafts houses in Dunedin, as well as Ross Home for the Elderly in North Road. Dunning worked with the young James Fletcher, designing his showcase home in High Street, Dunedin. Dunning’s practice was carried on by his son Cecil on the death of his father in 1933. At the same time they bought a small nineteenth century cottage next to the Church. The gardener lived in this cottage and it has also provided a home for low income parishioners as well as a small income for the parish. By the late 1950s the Parish wished to extend the Church. Having liquidated the old building debt in 1941, attention turned to finishing the Church, extending the existing sanctuary, in brick to match the existing building, and the interior was renovated. The work was completed in May 1962. Memorial Windows: St Peter’s is notable for its memorial stained glass windows. These were made by Dunedin glass artist John Brock, who designed at least thirty-two stained glass windows for many denominations for Canterbury churches at his studio in Dunedin for over fifty years including a number of memorial windows to soldiers who died in the World Wars. Memorials in the church commemorate significant individuals, including Officer W. (Bill) H. Hodgson (DFC), and another his brother Jim Hodgson. Educated in Dunedin, Bill Hodgson was a radio technician before joining the RAF in 1940. After flying training in New Zealand and England he was posted to RAF No 85 squadron at Debden in Essex in May 1940 gaining the nickname ‘Ace Hodgson’ and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, but was killed in a crash at Debden airfield. Bill had flown 150 operational sorties and played a significant role in defending the skies over England in The Battle of Britain, his actions commemorated in a 1986 memorial. Bill’s brother, Jim, second lieutenant in the New Zealand army, was hit and killed by an army truck near Balclutha in 1943. In the memorial windows at St Peter’s, Bill is depicted in his flying officers uniform, kneeling and looking up at Christ, and Jim is portrayed with an angel who is pointing the way to heaven. The Role of St Peter’s: On the 27 August 2008, a group of long-standing parishioners met to share their memories of St Peter’s, their reminiscences showing St Peter’s important role in the community and the long standing relationships and links to the Church. Parishioners like Dawn Bachop (nee Molloy) who moved to Caversham in 1943 with her family, and Jocelyn Malcolmson (nee Lennox) who remembers St Peter’s in the 1930’s, and Lil Bedford, who is 90 years old, and has spent her whole life at St Peter’s, show the ongoing love and commitment to the place. St Peter’s has been, and remains, a social hub for Caversham: ‘Life revolved around the church; choir theatre groups, Sunday School. There were lots of young people’; ‘St Peter’s has always been here. There was a lot going on for families - concerts and musicals’; ‘There was an orchestra and 40 children in the Sunday School’. All commented on the support and lifelong friendships which developed through belonging to the Mothers Union, Young Wives, Ladies Guild and (later) the Association of Anglican Women. The spiritual importance of St Peter’s was also clear - a spiritual home, a place to support people in all the knocks and trials of life. Everyone agreed that St Peter’s has ‘something’. A simple, beautiful building and a prayerful atmosphere contribute to the spirituality of the place. Social Role: St Peter’s and the Caversham Project: In the late nineteenth century, Dunedin’s southern suburbs became ‘the most industrialised and working class urban area of New Zealand’. One hundred years later, the Southern Suburbs became the subject of intense study by the Department of History at the University of Otago - the Caversham Project - which over the last 30 years has built up the largest social historical database in Australasia. Christianity and gender are an integral part of the Caversham Project, which covers the years 1880 to 1940. Despite the province of Otago being founded by the Free Church of Scotland, Anglicans were almost equal in numbers to Presbyterians in the Southern Suburbs according to the census figures of 1891. As part of the Caversham Project, historian Associate Professor John Stenhouse analysed the social make-up of fifteen South Dunedin churches including St Peter’s, Caversham. It is the female attendees, who are the most interesting. In 1893, New Zealand was the first country in the world to give women the right to vote. Whereas the national average for signing the petition was just under 25%, the rate in the Southern Suburbs was an amazing 57% making these women ‘a world-leading, first wave feminist community.’ The reason, says Stenhouse, is linked to class, religion and neighbourhood with religiously-active women from established working class areas such as Caversham spearheading the support for suffrage. Thus, it may be said that the women of St Peter’s and the Protestant churches of the Southern Dunedin Suburbs played a vital role in the early acceptance of voting rights. St Peter’s Church provides a place of Christian worship. It has always been Anglican, but all denominations are welcomed. A bell is rung to signal to the wider community both the start of Sunday worship and the consecration of the bread and wine. Weddings, baptisms and funerals take place on a regular basis. St Peter’s often attracts people from other churches as a wedding venue because of its picturesque qualities, although one could say the sense of it being a holy place is even more compelling. Although the church was built for the people of the Parish of Caversham, the congregation is now drawn from a much bigger area. The main local community outreach is the provision of the Parish Centre, consisting of the church hall and connecting link. These spaces are hired by community groups. Parishioners take an active role in many of these groups, in particular the Stroke Club. There have been other outreaches in the past, in particular teaching of the Christian faith in local schools. The current vicar, Father Carl Somers Edgar, held the posts of Prisoners Chaplain and Police Chaplain until quite recently. There is a history of active involvement with the elderly of the parish and Father Carl is the St. Barnabas Home Chaplain. A special relationship exists between St Peter’s and the Orthodox Church. Under Bishop Nevill, the first Orthodox service in Dunedin was held at St Peter’s and the Church has have provided funding support for the Antiochian Orthodox Church for some years. The parish also supports the Antiochian Orthodox parish family. The Coptic Orthodox Church initially held their services at St Peter’s about 10 years ago and the congregation pray regularly for both churches. In 2011 St Peter’s remains a place of worship and community centre for the Caversham and South Dunedin, and wider afield.
Construction Professionals: Church: Builder: Thomas Newton Architect: Henry Frederick Hardy (1831-1904) Stained glass windows: John Brock: John W. Brock, an Englishmen, was trained under London-based James Powell and Sons. He settled in Dunedin in 1914, where he completed many window designs for churches in Otago and Canterbury. Brock designed at least thirty-two stained glass windows for many denominations for Canterbury churches at his studio in Dunedin for over fifty years. These included windows for the Woodlands Road Methodist Church, the Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Timaru and another at the Chalmers Presbyterian Church. Brock also designed and built the wall above the altar at Otakou Maori Memorial Methodist Church. He designed a number of memorial windows to soldiers who died in the World Wars, including the large Memorial Window in First Church in Invercargill dedicated to the memory of 44 soldiers from First Church who died in World War. Brock was also a muralist and water colourist, painting the ornate scenes in the then Empire Theatre in Dunedin. Vicarage: Builder: Thomas Herd Architects: Donald and Dunning (William Dunning and Donald) Setting: Caversham is one of Dunedin’s oldest suburbs. On the western edge of the city’s central plain, it is situated at the mouth of Caversham Valley, which rises to Lookout Point. The main trunk railway line runs through the suburb and alongside the Southern Motorway. Founded by wealthy pioneer William Henry Valpy, Caversham grew rapidly during the Central Otago gold rush of the 1860s. During the 19th century, the area became heavily industrialized but it is now largely residential with some industrial premises to the east (eg. Hillside Railway Workshops). Notable buildings in the area include Lisburn House and the war memorial at the gate of Caversham School. Hillside Road has a mix of newer and older Victorian buildings, some of which are rather neglected. St Peter’s Church is nicely set within a grassed area with flower borders, shrubs and trees, two trees are listed on the Dunedin City’s District Plan. Further along the road is the famous sports ground known as Carisbrook. Next to St Peter’s Church stands the Vicarage, a two storey building in brick and roughcast with a tiled roof. The vicarage was designed by architect Donald and Dunning and completed in 1912. It is separated from the church by a short pathway. Adjacent to the church is the Parish Centre. A small, nineteenth century wooden cottage with a corrugated iron roof sits to the north of St Peter’s Church. This has recently been refurbished and repainted. The Parish Centre hall was built in 1986, replacing an older building, and is physically joined to the church by a linking corridor installed in 2000. The hall is not included in the registration. St Peter’s Church: Exterior: St Peter’s Church sits parallel to Hillside Road, the nave running east to west as is the traditional orientation, the prominent tower with battlemented parapet a landmark on Hillside Road. Originally designed as a spire, the tower was only completed to the second stage. The church is built of brick with cement facings and a slate roof. The Church is notionally cruciform in plan, though the transepts drawn in Hardy’s original plan were not built. There are two entrance porches at the rear of the nave. The porch on the east of the nave has been connected with the hall built in 1986. The vestry is on the east of the nave, with the entrance to the tower vestibule on the west. The chancel is in a small gabled section. There are fixed buttresses with off-sets, running the length of the church and at the corners of the vestry and the tower. Decorative cement banding follows the line of the Lancet windows. There is decorative brickwork under the eaves. Lancet windows run the length of the nave; all have memorial stained glass windows. The windows in the chancel and at the end of the nave have stone tracery and clear and coloured quarry panes, the large one above the chancel containing Christian symbols. Interior: The interior walls of St Peter’s Church are plastered and painted off-white. The Kauri ceiling, king posts and beams are dark stained. The plaster has recently been renewed. There are new internal doors at the sides and back of the church in keeping with the style of the building. The Nave has a Lady Altar at the rear where the stone font sits on raised platform. The main body of the Nave has a central aisle, with timber pews either side. The nave has many memorial plaques to parishioners. The raised pulpit is located on the right hand side of the nave behind the choir. The chancel is up a raised step and has a carved timber altar and altar screen behind. Memorial stained glass windows installed between 1918 and 1971 line the nave. These are listed in Davies ‘The Church of St Peter in Caversham: 1864-1882-1982’. They include the windows commemorating the Hodgson brothers, as well as others fallen in war, Captain Easther, the organist Bessie Favell and a previous Vicar, Reverend J.L. Mortimer. The windows are in an excellent state of repair and covered with polycarbonate sheets on the outside to prevent damage. St Peter’s Vicarage: St Peter’s Vicarage sits in the grounds of the Church, notable for its mature trees and garden setting. A concrete path leads from the vestry to the vicarage. Exterior: The vicarage is built of brick and has a tiled roof and timber window joinery. It is built in a restrained Arts and Crafts style, the extended roof lines and multi-paned windows central to the aesthetic of the building. The vicarage is basically rectangular in plan with a gable roof to the street and a hipped roof to the rear on the smaller gable section at the back of the house. There are two small transecting gables on the south elevation, the line of the gable extending to form the roofed porch of the main entrance. A large stepped window, matching the line on the internal stairs is a notable feature of the west elevation. The east elevation has a generous semi-circular recessed porch which provides access to the garden from the sitting room. The back door from what was the housekeeper’s room to the recessed porch (and the toilet) has been glassed in. Interior: The main entrance to the vicarage is through an entrance porch on the south east elevation. Entry is into a foyer and open stairwell. There is a small room just inside the front door which was described on the original plan as a ‘waiting room.’ There is a study with fireplace on the north east corner of the house. The study has a faceted bay window with multi-pane fanlights above timber casement windows. Like all the original windows, the window furniture is notable for the latches and casement stays which are curved like a shepherd’s crook. The main living spaces are the sitting and dining room which have folding timber doors to create one large open space if required. The kitchen and dinette (formerly the housekeeper’s room) are located at the rear of the ground floor. The stairs and balustrades are open with a return, leading to the upstairs where there are four bedrooms and two bathrooms. A bedroom, as marked on the original drawings, has been converted to bathrooms for when the building was tenanted. Cottage: This timber framed cottage with a corrugated iron roof sits within the grounds of St Peter’s, on the corner of Hillside Road and Eastbourne Street. It is rectangular in plan. It has timber window joinery and decorative detailing. During building work on the cottage the builder identified the cottage as dating from around the 1880s. It is a small residence typical of a worker’s cottage, a building type common in this area of South Dunedin. The interior was not viewed for this proposal.
Completion Date
9th September 2011
Report Written By
H Brooks, R McComish, with H Bauchop
Information Sources
Ciaran, 1998
Fiona Ciaran, Stained Glass Windows of Canterbury, New Zealand. A Catalogue Raisonne, Dunedin, 1998
Dixon, 1978
Roger Dixon & Stefan Muthesius, 'Victorian Architecture', London, 1978
Evans, 1968
J. Evans 1968 Southern See: The Anglican Diocese of Dunedin New Zealand, J. McIndoe, Dunedin
North Otago Times
North Otago Times
Olssen, 1995
Olssen, Erik, Building the New World: Work, Politics and Society - Caversham 1880s-1920s, Auckland, 1995
Otago Witness
Otago Witness
Phillips, 1983
J Phillips & C Maclean, In Light of the Past, 1983
Journal of Religious History
Journal of Religious History
Davies, 1982
F Jane Davies, The Church of St Peter in Caversham: 1864–1882–1982, Anglican Parish of Caversham, [1982]
Pywell, 1952
A Pywell, The Story of St Peter’s Church: Dunedin : 70th anniversary celebrations, Michaelmastide, 1952, Church Army Press, Auckland, [1952]
Turvey, 1969
Anne Turvey (compiler), The Parish of Caversham Dunedin 1869-1969, St Peter’s, St Peter The Less, St Alban’s, Centennial Celebrations, October, 1969, Parish of Caversham, Dunedin, 1969
Report Written By
A fully referenced Registration Report is available from the Southern Region office of NZHPT. Please note that entry on the New Zealand Heritage List/Rarangi Korero identifies only the heritage values of the property concerned, and should not be construed as advice on the state of the property, or as a comment of its soundness or safety, including in regard to earthquake risk, safety in the event of fire, or insanitary conditions.
Current Usages
Uses: Religion
Specific Usage: Church
Uses: Religion
Specific Usage: Vicarage/Manse/Presbytery/Rectory
Former Usages
General Usage:: Religion
Specific Usage: Church
General Usage:: Religion
Specific Usage: Vicarage/Manse/Presbytery/Rectory