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Home / Northern Advocate

Our Treasures: Whangārei Museum photos of 1920s community event a remarkable record

Georgia Kerby
By Georgia Kerby
Northern Advocate columnist·Northern Advocate·
26 Jul, 2021 05:00 PM4 mins to read

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A Hardie Bros. truck (left) pulling a waka near the Harding Army Hall in Walton Street during the 1922 charity parade; Parihaka can be seen in the background. (Whangārei Museum 2020_27_1_7).

A Hardie Bros. truck (left) pulling a waka near the Harding Army Hall in Walton Street during the 1922 charity parade; Parihaka can be seen in the background. (Whangārei Museum 2020_27_1_7).

OUR TREASURES

At Whangārei Museum we never know what the public will bring through the door. Last year we were fortunate to receive a donation from Mr I. Mison of a series of photographs of the town in the early 1920s, likely belonging to a relation, Bessie Shoebridge.

Specifically, the photographs record a 1922 charity parade along tidy clay streets around town central, including Walton and Bank streets.

An advertisement in the Northern Advocate states, "Municipal and Timber Mills Employees have organised this benefit and submit this programme … to provide help to Whangarei's needy".

The day's plan included a procession from the borough yard, Walton St; rugby matches, mayor's welcome and a haka at the Town Hall, tug of war, wood chopping and a social evening.

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The parade itself (pictured) featured a band and vehicles transporting the boy scouts, councillors, Sewer Rats, Bush Rats and Water Rats sports teams, champion woodchoppers, fire brigade, haka team, harbour board members, county council members and local businesses.

Their various floats are dressed up in splendour and are more impressive than what our parades achieve nowadays, covered in palm fronds, flowers, large hand-painted signs, flags and people in costume.

An odd group, the Water Rats (sports team), are dressed up in a cart with King Neptune carrying his trident at the fore, all pulled by a muscular farm horse.

My favourite is a mule-pulled cart topped with a giant three-dimensional teapot advertising Unity Tea.

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What is likely to be the haka group is sitting on a waka several metres long mounted on a cart, the girls wearing headbands and sashes and the boys wearing piupiu. Of course, one of Whangārei's earliest transport companies, Hardie Bros., provided a vehicle to pull this float.

The Unity Tea float (2020_27_1_7).
The Unity Tea float (2020_27_1_7).

One of the best views captured in these photographs is looking north up Walton St with the bare hills of Parihaka in the background. The Hardie Bros. and haka team trail behind an early motor car stuffed full of fauna in front of the Harding Army Hall, which remains there today.

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At this time, Walton St was one of the major streets in town, connecting the railway to ships at the Town Basin.

Mobil advertise their Laurel Kerosene with stacks of crates on a large truck and another American petrol company, Big Tree, has an unmissable sign attached to a truck advertising their "motor spirit" for cars and "kerosene" for domestic lighting.

Their Whangārei depot can be seen in the photograph of Walton St, run by agent Skipper Paterson, who was a friend of the Shoebridge family.

A tiny cottage that belonged to a member of the Shoebridge family stands between their warehouse and the Army Hall.

This series, captured on a personal camera, is a remarkable record of a small-scale local event, showing interesting views of some of Whangārei's main streets in the 1920s.

The parade moving through central Whangārei (2020_27_1_6).
The parade moving through central Whangārei (2020_27_1_6).
What is likely to be the haka group sitting on a waka during the parade (2020_27_1_1).
What is likely to be the haka group sitting on a waka during the parade (2020_27_1_1).

• Georgia Kerby is exhibitions curator, Whangārei Museum at Kiwi North.

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