History & Haunting of: The Stone Store, Kerikeri , Bay of Islands - TopicsExpress



          

History & Haunting of: The Stone Store, Kerikeri , Bay of Islands , New Zealand’s The Stone Store at Kerikeri is New Zealand’s oldest surviving stone building. Part of the first Church Missionary Society station in New Zealand, the store was designed by John Hobbs to replace an earlier wooden store house. The Stone Store was erected between 1832 and 1836 by mason William Parrott, carpenter Ben Nesbitt and a team of Māori. Construction was of sandstone from Australia, local volcanic rocks and burnt shell mortar. Iron ties and window bars were forged by James Kemp, (though these unfortunately corroded the sandstone). Initially it had a wooden belfry on one side. Spirit spotted in Stone Store window > A new mystery sighting at the Stone Store adds to a number of others reported during the years. From Australia, visitor Sarah Stephens sent the Chronicle a digital photograph taken recently by her husband, showing what they thought could be a ghostly presence standing at the central dormer window. “If you zoom in on the picture and look at the top centre window, below the roof, it looks like the face of an old man... the face is in the lower top half of the window and it looks a little like he’s wearing a white shirt. To me it even looks as though there is a smaller face to the right of him,” she says. In 2005, Historic Places Trust staff were alerted that a woman with grey hair had been seen standing in the central dormer window of the Stone Store at about 10pm. The person who reported the sighting insisted he had seen someone in the store. The figure, he said, had looked straight at him and then moved away. Trust area coordinator Stuart Park said at the time visitors occasionally mentioned that they had seen an old man on the top floor of the store or a woman in a bedroom in Kemp House. Asked to expand on their recent experience Sarah said: “My husband took the photo and hadn’t noticed anyone in the window at the time. I noticed it later when I was going through the photo’s. I had the camera plugged into the TV so was viewing the photos on a large screen. When my husband and I visited Kemp House and the Stone Store the year before we had a bit of a freaky experience in Kemp House but put it down to our imagination. We thought we saw the curtain move in the upstairs bedroom but there was not a breath of wind that day... probably nothing but it did make the face in the window seem even stranger.” So the Chronicle took clairvoyant Judie Roberts to the Stone Store to see what she thought. Judie is a newcomer to Kerikeri and had not been into the Stone Store. Arriving before the 10am opening time, she walked around the outside and into the gardens initially. “There is someone here. I’m not good on names but the name ‘Thomas’ is very strong. The last name could be Wai or Wade but I’m not sure about that. It’s as if he looks after the place. There was a shed behind the Stone Store and he’s glad that it has gone. He came from the United Kingdom and he was strongly connected with the Stone Store. Perhaps he owned it or looked after it. He went up to the church and preached at times and he liked having a few drinks. He was a god-fearing man but he was naughty. He didn’t like getting into small boats. He would rather paint a fence than go out in a dinghy. But he’s upset about a picture in the store. It’s something that he finds offensive. He must have enjoyed the gardens. In those days there were more trees and a veggie garden. He’d like to see more veggies. And if they – the Historic Places Trust – are looking at changing things in the garden, it’d be alright if they asked him first.” Once inside the Stone Store, Judie found a portrait of Queen Elizabeth with moko by contemporary artist Barry Ross Smith. Googling ‘Thomas’ and ‘Stone Store, Kerikeri’, the Chronicle found biographical notes of a Thomas Chapman – 1792 to 1876. Thomas and Anne Champman arrived at Paihia on August 1 1830, on the Active from Sydney, to work for the Church Missionary Society. The Chapmans were lay missionaries and were at Kerikeri from 1831 to 1833. Thomas had charge of the mission store. Thomas is described as “experienced in farming, medicine and seamanship. Literate, liberal, good-humoured and resolute.” But trust property manager Liz Bigwood says she doubts Thomas Chapman would be lingering: “Thomas Chapman had charge of the CMS store from April 1831 until June 1833, when he was replaced by James Shepherd. James Kemp was relieved of his storekeeping duties throughout this period because he was overseeing the construction of the Stone Store, so the store that was looked after by Chapman and then Shepherd is the old wooden one that was located on the land where the Landing restaurant is situated today. This original wooden store was one of the first buildings constructed on the mission station in 1819, and had small apartments above it where the early missionaries lived during the initial establishment of the mission. By the 1830s this wooden store was no longer suitable, deemed insecure and a fire risk. Chapman lived for a time in the Mission House before the Kemp family moved in to it in 1832, hence becoming Kemp House. “When the missionaries first arrived in 1819 the only small boat they had was a punt, which made the long water voyage from Rangihoua to Kerikeri very arduous. There was a lot of toing-and-froing to get stores. In the early 1820s John Butler eventually purchased a whale boat, which made life a lot easier. The missionaries often travelled in waka too, paddled by Maori. The only Thomas that had anything to do with Kerikeri in the early days was Thomas Kendall, confidante of Hongi Hika, but he was based at Rangihoua first and then Matauwhi near Russell. However, he did nearly drown when his small boat capsized in the very early days. He left New Zealand in 1825 and drowned whilst sailing his small boat up the coast to Sydney in 1832. “There were a few serious drinkers among the missionary folk, but none were named Thomas. The original chapel on the hill dates from the 1830s, the St James Church from the 1870s. Liz says Butler established an extensive garden that covered almost the entire area behind the house and including car parks below the church. “He also planted lots of fruit trees – 150 in one day in 1819. Everybody had large vegetable gardens until quite recently. “I really don’t think that the Thomas mentioned is Thomas Chapman, he’s buried near Rotorua and served that area for most of his life in New Zealand.” Later Liz recalled that there was a Maori gardener at the property called Tamihana, which is Maori for Thomas. His last name was Maitarahanga. “According to St James church records he died in 1904, reputed to be 100 years of age according to Kemp family tradition, and is buried up in the St James churchyard in an unmarked grave. He lived in a little cottage behind Kemp House, which can be seen in a few early photos of what was then the Kemp family property. His nickname was ‘Tutu’.” Kemp family tradition has it that Thomas or ‘Tutu’ was taken in by the missionaries as a young boy after he was captured and brought back as a slave to Kerikeri with one of Hongi Hika’s taua – war parties – in the early 1820s, she says. “A picture of him as a very old man is hanging on the first floor of the Stone Store. Rev John Butler records that he took into his household four children in February 1822, from a returning war party – a baby younger then 12 months, a boy of about four years of age, a girl of seven years and a boy of about 12 years. What is known as Kemp House now was designed and built for Rev John Butler, and was completed in 1822. Before moving into the house the Butlers were living in a barn behind it, about where the office-cottage is today. When the Butlers left NZ the children they’d taken into their household remained on the settlement.” Liz says out of some 45,000 visitors to the Stone Store per year, a few do speak about feeling a presence in the store but, more particularly, Kemp House. “The accounts are always very similar, which is interesting. People relate to this site in a myriad of ways, it’s so interesting and has such a dramatic history, it’s good to know that people continue to invest this place with so much meaning.” - The Bay Chronicle stuff.co.nz/auckland/2009 The Stone Store was intended to be the base of the Church Missionary Society’s trading post, selling produce from the farms at Te Waimate mission to ships, and European goods to Māori. Marsden planned to build a flour mill on the adjacent Kerikeri River, but this was eventually built at te Waimate instead. Stone was used to protect wheat from rats, for defence against Māori and to reduce the risk of fire. By the mid-1830s the mission stations could not compete with the private enterprise of other European settlers, either as traders or farmers, and the store was not profitable. The building was converted into the mission library by Bishop Selwyn in the early 1840s. Following the sacking of Kororareka in the Flagstaff War, it was briefly taken over by Governor George Grey for use as a magazine and barracks. After the cessation of hostilities in 1845, the stone store was leased to become the centre of Kauri gum trading operation, and then in 1863 it was used to house a boys school. The building was sold to the Kemp family in 1874, and was used as a general store, although it increasingly became a tourist attraction. The Stone Store was purchased from the Kemps by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust in 1975. Conservation work was done in the 1990s. The store, together with the neighbouring Mission House now form a small museum. en.wikipedia.org Photo 1 by stuff.co.nz/auckland/2009 Face in the window: The photograph taken by visitors from Australia. When it was enlarged they saw something intriguing. Inset: Tamihana Maitarahanga, who looked after the gardens. Photo 2 by by User:Benchillen.wikipedia.org Photo 3 by travelsunravelled- Photo 4 The attic- The Stone Store joetourist.ca/NewZealand/Kerkeri_mission.htm Photo 5 by joetourist.ca/NewZealand/images/2004C0783a.jpg Old-time goods - The Stone Store
Posted on: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 07:45:31 +0000

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