Gypsy Rose Tea Museum owner Deane Hadfield inside the museum in Napier. Photo / NZME
Gypsy Rose Tea Museum owner Deane Hadfield inside the museum in Napier. Photo / NZME
A change is brewing for Napier man Deane Hadfield.
He’s spent the past 15 years collecting and adding items to his quirky museum in Taradale.
But Hadfield has read the tea leaves and decided to close the Gypsy Rose Tea Museum - New Zealand’s only dedicated tea museum - andsell the collection.
Tea lovers will soon be able to pop through the museum and purchase individual items of china, some of them centuries old.
Hadfield’s preference is for a buyer, such as a council, to purchase the collection “in one hit” and ideally open another museum and tearoom.
The collection is more than just cups, saucers and tea leaves, and Hadfield has “come at the subject of tea from every direction you can think of”.
The likes of a teapot used by Queen Elizabeth II during a 1954 visit to New Zealand, a signed picture of Sir Edmund Hillary having a cup of tea on Mount Everest after reaching the summit, and centuries-old china and history are housed in the museum.
The teapot from Queen Elizabeth II's hotel room in Gisborne in 1954.
“I have 1000 stories in here and I know all of them.”
He said, with a smile, that running a museum meant he was not considered “some sort of crack-pot hoarder” as he was able to share the collection with the community, and he had enjoyed hosting countless groups for a visit with a cup of tea and cake.
From about December 1, Hadfield will open the museum most days to the public, for people to visit and buy items from the collection.