here - Golden Bay Museum
Transcription
here - Golden Bay Museum
Golden Bay Museum Te Waka Huia o Mohua Newsletter—May 2015 ~~~~~~~~~~~ Kia ora koutou, Members & Visitors The Museum board and staff hope you’ve enjoyed our wonderful summer. This quieter season is just the time to catch up with what’s going on at our Museum as we head towards the 25th anniversary of first opening the doors in October 1990. More about that next time. NEW EXHIBITION: “Lest we Forget” In New Zealand the centenary of WW1 and in particular the 1915 Gallipoli landing are being marked between 2014 and 2018. Our local exhibition will be on display until at least October this year. It has a thoughtful approach, to the stories of the horses and the mounted riflemen, nurses, domestic life back home, and the personal impact on local families. We are very grateful for items lent, including a 10th Nelson Mounted Rifles uniform from Sir Greg Theatrics of Mapua, and for the striking desert backdrop painted by Philly Hall, who has generously done previous display backdrops. Some oral histories are also part of the exhibition, thanks to work by Robert Jenkin. We invite local families with WW1 memorabilia and stories they are willing to share to contact the museum. There’s a special display case where your family’s items can go on display for a month or so. Visitors find such personal connections of particular interest. Sweetheart brooches Please phone Karen (525-6268) if you would like to offer items for short-term display. Annual General Meeting—Sunday 7 June, 2.30pm Guest Speaker: Gerard Hindmarsh This is YOUR chance to come and ask questions, make suggestions, and find out about our plans. Enjoy Gerard’s talk and then share afternoon tea. Come to the Anglican Church Hall, Commercial Street, behind Epiphany Church (opposite Mariposa) Our 25th Anniversary (October 2015) ... a quick update Alan McLean continues his patient work on the whale skeleton. It’s in a small container at Collingwood Museum Society’s Rockville site. The detailed plans and specifications for the whalery to house it are almost complete, and we will then put them out to tender. At the same time, we’re writing to selected large national businesses and applying for grants to support Alan’s whale work, and to build the whalery. There’s no fairy godmother yet, but we are confident that we’ll be able to raise the funds (about $75,000 all-up) over time. This will continue to be our 25th anniversary project until it’s been completed. (Reminder: We are a registered charity, so donations over $5 are tax-deductible.) Watch out for anniversary events to let you explore and enjoy our amazing Golden Bay/Mohua history. 73 Commercial Street, Takaka, Golden Bay/Mohua, New Zealand T: +64-3-525-6268 // E: [email protected] // www.goldenbaymuseum.org.nz Our Staff (all our staff are part-time, together they are the equivalent of one full-time staff member): Karen Johnson, Collections/Admin Manager Sally Gaffney, Archives Manager Lee Rzoska, Collections Assistant Contact Us: phone: +64-3-525 6268 postal: 73 Commercial Street, Takaka 7110 email: [email protected] www.goldenbaymuseum.org.nz Please note that research enquiries are by appointment only. Happenings: We enjoyed a visit from several members of Motueka and District Historical Association on 28 March, showing them behind the scenes and comparing how we manage our archival collections. The Museum made a submission to Tasman District Council’s Long-Term Plan, seeking some additional funding for staffing. We also sought a district-wide review of heritage services, to make sure that there is a better understanding of what is needed, and how it is carried out and resourced. Sadly the Junction Hotel in Takaka has closed. A special community gathering on 29 March at the hotel paid tribute to the community spirit of Nola & Graham Drummond and their support for many local groups, including the Museum. The volunteer season ended at Easter and we pay tribute to their time generously given over a busy summer season. Thank you—it makes such a difference to visitors to find helpful welcoming locals to greet them. Local History—Did you Know? Ferntown, on the west bank of the Aorere River, was the 1894 birthplace of Jane Crook, daughter of a coalminer. She is better known under her married name of Jean Devanny, author of several novels and a committed socialist and feminist. Her first novel The Butcher Shop was banned for nearly 30 years. Our reference collection includes a copy of her fourth novel Dawn Beloved (1928) which is set in Puponga, where her husband Hal was a miner at the time of WW1. It provides interesting insights into the small rural/ mining communities of western Golden Bay/Mohua. Jean Devanny; ca 1920s. Portrait by S P Andrew Studio (Sir George Grey Collections, Auckland Libraries) Books, Cards & more One way to support the Museum is by purchasing items we have for sale. These include the Museum’s own publications (Strangers in Mohua, several booklets & attractive greeting cards), plus some additional Abel Tasman items and Heritage Golden Bay’s publication The Post Offices of Golden Bay. We also have a selection of recent commercial publications on local history topics, plus some DVDs on historical themes produced by Golden Bay High School. Issues of the Nelson Historical Society Journal are also stocked; these usually have at least one article of Golden Bay interest. Come in and check out what we have in stock! Do you enjoy typing? The original Margaret Wilson Collection has never been digitally catalogued, but we’re starting to make progress on this by typing up the original handwritten and typed lists. Then we’ll be able to search them. If you enjoy typing (and it can be done at home) you could help this project along. Please phone Karen: 525-6268 STOP PRESS! Golden Bay Quilters have decided that our whalery project will be the beneficiary of their 2015 quilt raffle! It’s great news—and we will help sell tickets to ensure a great result. Donations & Membership: We appreciate your support; please remember us when you are considering which community activity to support. We rely on donations for the continued running of the Museum, to top up our grant from Tasman District Council. As a registered charity we issue tax credit receipts for donations over $5. That means you could get back 33% of your donation! Payments can be made online to the Golden Bay Museum Society Inc BNZ bank account: 02-0764-0063386-97 (Please include your name in ‘Reference’ and email your details to: [email protected] so we can send your receipt) OR post with a cheque to: 73 Commercial Street, Takaka 7110 Proudly supported by Tasman District Council We enjoy adding new members to our growing list; please encourage your friends to join us, too. A growing membership list gives our grant applications a stronger case. Membership fees are currently $20 single; $25 joint/family. You receive 10% discount on Museum publications plus other benefits, such as invitations to openings.