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New Plymouth District Council.

Taranaki Stories 
Business And Industry - The House that Jack Built - how one designer changed the face of Hawera and the dairy industry forever  
The Littlest LibraryThe Architect's DaughterBack to list

By Rhonda Bartle

 

In a tiny library building in the tiny township of Patea, on a handsome brass plate screwed to the wall, a visitor can read these words:

 

PATEA PUBLIC LIBRARY

1930

This building was erected

as a memorial to HUNTER SHAW

late of Whenuakura.  Out of

funds provided by his estate.

 

It fittingly perpetuates his

memory as one who lived an

unassuming honourable life

and bequeathed the whole

of his residuary estate

to charity

 

E F Warren - Executor

Gummer and Ford - Bignell and Son

      Architects - Contractors

      Duffill and Gibson - Supervising Architects

 

And what is so special about this building?  That it exists at all. 

 

An unusual benefactor

When Hunter Shaw arrived in New Zealand he probably had big plans.  As the sixth in a family of ten children, he'd left Ireland at 17, bound for Australia where he expected to make his fortune on the goldfields.  His father, a watchmaker and jeweller, arrived in Wellington in 1858 and set up shop on Lambton Quay. 

 

Hunter didn't make his fortune in gold and followed his father to New Zealand in 1860.

 

A single lifestyle worked well for Patea

In 1873 he moved to Whenuakura, near Patea, where he bought a 500 acre block of land he called 'Crescent Falls.'  Here he lived for the rest of his life, sometimes in total seclusion and sometimes joining the human race at balls, debates and political meetings. He stayed single and spent his daylight hours clearing the land of manuka, fern and flax.  He also owned farmland at Kakaramea and Alton. 

 

Hunter outlived all nine  brothers and sisters. Not one of the Shaw clan married, so when he died in 1928, there was no one to leave property to.  Buried beside a brother at Onehunga, the inscription on his headstone  summed Hunter's life up.  Lived an honourable and simple life and generously bequeathed his wealth to charities.

 

Where his riches went

If Hunter Shaw had had descendents, the littlest library would never have been built. Not one to draw attention to himself in his lifetime, when he died a rich man in 1928, aged 92, he left £8500 (enough at the time to build many houses) to be shared several ways. 

 

Some was for a Children's Ward at the Public Hospital, some for an operating table, some  for a nurses' tennis court and some for a children's playground in the Domain.  What was left was earmarked for a Public Library and Plunket Rooms.

 

Patea library

Patea Library

Image: South Taranaki District Council

 

It was a red letter day for Patea when the Minister of Health and the Mayor of Patea cut the ribbons on the new library, along with those on a new courthouse and a children's dental clinic.  

 

The littlest library is built

The little Library and Plunket Rooms came from a Gummer & Ford plan almost identical to the prize-winning Remuera library designed by the firm two years before.

 

Carefully detailed and made of red brick, it was built in the much admired Georgian Revival style popular of the day.  Inside, it boasted a lending library as well as a newspaper room.



John Duffill

John Duffill

Notable Hawera architect John Alfred Duffill from Duffill & Gibson, was called on to oversee construction.

 

When it was finished, Patea gained a small but noble service centre next to the town's civic block - and a wonderful edifice full of eye-appeal.



 



 




Published 19 February 2005

 

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LIBRARY RESOURCES

Clement, Christine and Johnston, Judith, Women of South Taranaki - Their Stories (1993) Hawera Suffrage Centennial Local History Group, Hawera Star

 

Fryer, Arthur, A Little Bit of History, (1994) The  Post, Hawera

 

Hill, Perry Martin,  New Zealand architecture (1976), School Publications Branch, Dept. of Education, Wellington

 

Historic buildings of New Zealand North Island (1979), Cassell New Zealand,  Auckland

 

Shaw, Peter, A history of New Zealand architecture (1997), Hodder Moa Beckett, Auckland

 

Stacpoole, John, New Zealand Art; architecture 1820-1970 (1972), A. H. & A. W. Reed, Wellington

 

ARTEFACT RESOURCES

Duffill Architectural Plan collection

 

Reminiscences - Compiled by Arthur Fryer from notes taken at an interview on 18th Sept 1998, Miss Mary Duffill reminiscences about her father John Duffill. Mary Duffill talks of her father's architectural career and other interests such as aviation, vehicles, theatre etc.
(ARC 2002-292)

 

WEBLINKS

Puke Ariki is not responsible for the content of these external websites.

 

Eltham Heritage Inventory (PDF) - a comprehensive survey of historic buildings prepared for the South Taranaki District Council

 

Hawera Heritage Inventory (PDF) - a comprehensive survey of historic buildings prepared for the South Taranaki District Council

 

Historic Places Trust - Promoting the identification, protection, preservation and conservation of the historical and cultural heritage of New Zealand.

 

Manaia Heritage Inventory (PDF) - a comprehensive survey of historic buildings prepared for the South Taranaki District Council

 

Patea Heritage Inventory (PDF) - a comprehensive survey of historic buildings prepared for the South Taranaki District Council

 

RELATED TARANAKI STORIES

Eltham Town Hall Has Good Friends

 

EDUCATION

Pathfinders
These are guides to Puke Ariki's resources and provide in-depth information related to a particular topic.


PLACES TO VISIT

Why not vist some of Duffill's creations mentioned in this story.

 



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