Friday, 27 January 2017

Our Western Neighbours

Our suburb of Welbourn stretches south along the eastern side of State Highway 3 from the Boys High School, and includes localities on the western side as well to the site of Highlands Intermediate School.

On the west of the highway for most of its length is the New Plymouth Racecourse and Pukekura Park.

Further west again is the suburb of Brooklands, named after the farm in the area which was owned by the King family in the nineteenth century. The homestead area of the farm is now Brooklands Park. The house was burnt down many years ago and only the chimney survives.

Here is my sketch of the site drawn from a park bench at about the spot where forty years ago Margaret and I were married, on a beautiful May morning. Behind the chimney one could almost see the Brooklands Bowl over the brow of the hill.





Both the King boys grew up in this house. Newton founded the stock and station agency which bore his name, and Truby was the founder of the Plunket Society.

In Coronation Avenue just south of here is this impressively maintained house where one of our friends was brought up.

























One day last week, grandson Spencer asked me to teach him to sketch by drawing the house across the street. Here is the result:




Wednesday, 18 January 2017

Neighbourhood next door

When you move


south along the main highway at the end of our street, you come to a district where the streets are named for historic ships.

The first is Timandra Street, which takes its name from one of the first six ships to bring settlers from Britain in the 1840s. It was on this ship that Margaret's Barriball ancestors came here; her great-great-grandparents arriving 175 years ago next month. We are planning to celebrate this event with other families from the ship, and the Maori hapu who shared their urupa so a newly born infant from the family could be buried when he died suddenly soon after their arrival.

Off Timandra Street is Tokomaru Street, with its satellite Turi Street, both reminiscent of Maori voyaging canoes of the "Great Fleet".

After a shopping block, we come to Oriental Street, named for another early immigrant ship, which is also commemorated in Oriental Bay in Wellington.

Side-streets to Oriental are Tainui, Aotea and Arawa, more of the first group of waka.

This week I stopped in Timandra Street in light rain to sketch a house we have been studying for its new landscaping.



On another day I was driving through Fitzroy near what was in the 1840s the farm of Margaret's Timandra family. At a high vantage point I stopped to catch the view of the Waiwhakaiho River and the three parallel bridges across it.


The clouds were gathering around the mountain and the rain eventually arrived. We will be relieved when Summer really reaches us!


Wednesday, 4 January 2017

More of Rogan Street

Halfway along Rogan Street, at the corner of Ridge Lane, is a massive coral tree. It was planted in the 1870s; during the Taranaki War of the 1860s, this corner was the site of a fort, Fort Cameron, which was one of a line of forts which formed the outer defences of New Plymouth. The next in line to the east was Fort Niger, which is still a reserve up behind our former house in Lemon Street; to the west the line of forts ran to Pukekura Park's highest point, and then to the military HQ on Marsland Hill behind St Mary's Church.

Here is the tree with the houses on each corner next to it:




Next comes a house built on to a stone wall along the street frontage, with windows set into the wall:



You can still see the roof with its two chimneys in this next view, with the next two houses as well:




And finally the last three houses in Rogan Street right opposite the Boys High School.




John Rogan was one of the gang, or crew, of surveyors who assisted Frederic Carrington in laying out the streets and town sections and allocating names in 1841 and 1842 for the infant town of New Plymouth. Others in the crew were Frederic's younger brothers, Wellington and Octavius (cf Octavius Place) and Harcourt Aubrey (Aubrey Street), whose life-story is entwined with that of Margaret's great-great grandmother, Harriet Foreman. One of their descendants until recently lived in the house behind the tree in my first sketch above.
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By way of foretaste of the next sketching blog, here is the first of some views of more houses, this time in Pendarves Street, which runs parallel to Lemon Street one block further away from the CBD. The two-storeyed house on the left is a very early one for this part of town: note the wide weatherboards and the wall without windows.