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New Plymouth District Council.

Taranaki Stories 
Conflict and Protest - The Harriet Incident  
The RelicBack to list
Willie Gibson
Willie Gibson

By Rhonda Bartle

 

Willie Gibson sits in the Daily News cafĂ© at Puke Ariki with a book opened before him.  There's a particular photograph in Don Grady's Guards of the Sea he's interested in - the one snapped on the family farm on Manihi Rd, Rahotu. 

 

Circa 1969, there are four males in the snapshot and the one on the left is Willie, aged 17.  Beside him stands a farm worker, whose name has long since been forgotten.  Next is Willie's brother, Bernard, and on the far right, their father Arthur.  A ship's anchor looms large in the foreground.

 

The anchor in 1969

Found: The Harriet's anchor and (from l to r) Willie Gibson, a farm hand, Bernard and Arthur Gibson in 1969.

 

A symbol of earlier, more dangerous times, it's the anchor from the barque Harriet that ran aground off the Okahu River in 1834.  It was from the Harriet that Betty Guard and her two young children were captured by Maori and held prisoners for six months.

 

Today, four generations of the Gibson family have farmed the Manihi Rd land.  The only way to get to the Okahu stream is through the Gibson farm, and it's a fair walk from the end of the road to the place where the Harriet floundered.

 

When Willie's father arrived from Yorkshire as a boy in 1910, he explored the area well, often roaming the sand dunes where he 'hoped to find things.'  And he did.  Arthur Gibson found the Harriet's anchor twice.

 

'Dad first saw this anchor when he was boy,' says Willie, pointing to the photograph.  'But all efforts to dislodge it with a chain and three stout horses failed.  The river sands kept it hidden for fifty years.  He kept it in mind but it got covered up by sand.  The sand kept shifting. But he noticed it again, years later, and he went and grabbed it.'

 

A tractor pulled the anchor home on a sledge, where a fire was lit beneath it to burn off 135 years of rust.  From there it was trucked to New Plymouth to be sand blasted clean.

 

'It was painted and put on the corner where the old hotel used to be.'

 

And that's where it sits today, next to the Rahotu Tavern, mounted on a concrete block beside Surf Highway 45, and Willie Gibson remembers his father every time he drives by.

 

The Harriet's anchor in Rahotu

Anchored: The Harriet's anchor sits opposite the Rahotu Tavern on SH45.



 



 




Published 7 December 2004

 

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LIBRARY RESOURCES

Cowan, James, The New Zealand wars : a history of the Maori campaigns and the pioneering period, (1955),  Government Press, Wellington

 

Grady, Don, Guards of the Sea, (1978) Whitcoulls, Christchurch

 

Marshall, William Barrett, A personal narrative of two visits to New Zealand, in His Majesty's ship Alligator, A.D. 1834, (1836), J. Nisbet, London

 

McNab, Robert, The Old Whaling Days, (1975), Golden Press, Christchurch

 

Woodhouse, A.E., Tales of Pioneer Women, (1988), Silver Fern, Hamilton

 

ARTEFACT RESOURCES

Bell from Harriet

Bell from the Harriet. On display in the in the Te Takapou Whāriki o Taranaki gallery.

 

Cannon

Cannon from the Harriet. On display in the Te Takapou Whāriki o Taranaki gallery.

 

Anchor

Anchor from the Harriet. On display in the in the Te Takapou Whāriki o Taranaki gallery.

 

ARCHIVES
Essay: Betty Guard; The First White Woman in Taranaki gives an account of the life of Betty Guard.
(Ref: ARC 2002-18)

 

Two manuscripts written by John Stanley Stronge: one is entitled 'The history of Egmont County' and covers the earliest recorded history of the area to date. The other, untitled, describes the history and development of the coastal road of Western Taranaki. Includes information on the wreck of the Harriet.
(Ref: ARC 2001-178)

 



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