The historic Wimbledon Tavern has been a part of the tiny community since the 19th century.
The historic Wimbledon Tavern has been a part of the tiny community since the 19th century.
It was the quote that left a tiny community floored and a nation scratching its head.
The owner of Wimbledon’s historic tavern Eric Gathercole has shut his doors on the community, and said this as he turned the lock:
“There is no empathy that exists in the district- all that exists is evil.”
Really? Seriously? Hawke’s Bay Today editor Chris Hyde spoke to people in and around the Tararua village to figure out where that level of animosity came from.
Wimbledon, London, is known as a place of serves and volleys.
The sleepy village of dozens rather than hundreds is a place framed by its winding hill country, sheep paddocks, war memorial, forestry, the Wainui River, and its historic tavern sitting right on Route 52, a road of Kiwi backcountry driving dreams.
When Eric Gathercole moved to the town from Auckland in 2018, he had hopes of reviving the tavern, built in 1896, into a thriving business.
Riddell says Gathercole has now “shot himself in the foot”.
“If you’re in a small community like we are, you need to try not to get offside with anyone, and sometimes that means you shouldn’t say what’s on your mind.
“It sounds clan-ish, but it’s not, it’s just the reality of any small community.”
Eric Gathercole, the owner of the Wimbledon Tavern. Photo / Michaela Gower
Riddell says she felt intimidated at the time by the gang’s presence in the community and offended that Gathercole then “blamed” locals for his decision to invite them by publicly stating that he’d done it because he wasn’t making enough money from them.
However, the friction appears to have ramped up when a group of local families decided to band money together to refurbish and bring back to life the Herbertville Inn.
The inn, which reopened in April, is just 9km or 8 minutes from Wimbledon, and Gathercole is blunt in saying its recent success has ruined him.
Herbertville Inn publican John Sedcole declined to comment for this story, but locals spoken to by Hawke’s Bay Today say it is doing well and is now the place to be on the weekend.
Gathercole can’t quite fathom the decision to restart it. He says it felt like an attempt to “take me out”.
“Why did they need another pub when there are only 70 people out here?” he told Hawke’s Bay Today.
“All I had asked for was a bit of respect, and this is what I got in return.”
Gathercole plans to continue living in the Wimbledon Tavern, a Category 2 historic building.
He says he plans to open it only to large outside groups who give him enough notice that they’re coming — groups like car clubs that often take road trips down Route 52.
Wimbledon's war memorial.
Riddell says it’s a tough time for hospitality everywhere in New Zealand and the Wimbledon Tavern isn’t the only country or city pub feeling it.
Life in Wimbledon and other rural communities has also changed markedly over the years, with fewer people drinking alcohol.
The pub is no longer the community’s focal point, she says.
“We’re a great little community, but I think it’s fair to say the heart of it now is in its schools rather than its pubs.
Like Gathercole, she’s a relatively recent addition, moving from Auckland via Bay of Plenty two and a half years ago, and she’s also started a small business, in her case landscaping.
“I just don’t have that experience at all,” she says of Gathercole’s suggestion the community lacks empathy.
“I have been invited into people’s homes from day one, given eggs and hay and all sorts of other stuff all the time.”
For Tio Lenzen, the community has been everything she expected.
“That was what we were searching for when we moved, the New Zealand we remember 30 years ago, and we’ve got it.”
So, how does this get resolved? A pub effectively locking out the locals leaves the community in an odd situation.