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By Rhonda Bartle
It's as if Rex Brewster needs to balance truth against legend. When you ask about his father, Edgar Roy Brewster, you inadvertently tap into a small seam of pain. Rex is softly spoken and candid, and you quickly come to appreciate his gentle honesty.
It's a way of telling the true story of a man who was not a hero but a real person with real failings. And it doesn't take long to understand the difficulties of living with someone obsessed.

'All his footballer friends called him Chooky Rooster. Most people weren't generally familiar with his nickname; he was too serious a person. He could enjoy a joke but he didn't get into light associations with people because he always tried to expound his theories and ideas and get people to listen. Consequently, they'd avoid the subject or keep away. He had several favourite subjects and just look out if anyone got him started. Bees, hexagonal shapes, aviation…'
Rex and two brothers, Barry and Grant, helped their father build the remarkable hexagonal house called Norian - NO RIght ANgles - which sat for twenty years on a section at Sanders Ave, New Plymouth, and created a good deal of public interest. Made entirely of hexagons and triangles, nothing at all in the house was square. Even the garden was made of hexagonal concrete paving with every second or third one missing and flowers planted in the space.

 |  |  |  | Out of place: The grandfather clock in Norian |  |
In photos, the grandfather clock looks oddly angular against the walls of the honeycomb panelled lounge. That clock now stands in Rex Brewster's house.
Rex says Norian was unique in many ways but a hugely laborious project. 'The hexagons weren't mass produced, they were crafted articles that looked like parquet flooring, all made up of little pieces of wood, all fitted together.'
Though his father once milled his own timber to make beehives, this timber was brought in. 'Some of it was scraps of honeysuckle, rewa-rewa and rimu.'
Other photos show the intricate detail, and how much time must have been consumed in the making of the hexagonal prefab floors, triangulated ceilings and roof. But the house had serious flaws and the roof leaked because, as Rex says, 'How do you put guttering on a dome?' It was something Roy had not worked out. Buckets in the wardrobe collected the rain and Rex's stepmother dodged unsuspecting and wide-eyed visitors to empty them.
Rex thinks it was possibly the combination of an unemotional father and uneducated, highly religious mother that produced a man so full of ideas that he would create his own philosophy on life; a man who came to believe that shapes influenced spiritual well-being and that all unkind thoughts were expressed on the square. A halo, of course, has no angles at all.
Roy Brewster was a driven man, but what drove him is still up for speculation. 'My thoughts in recent years have been trying to understand my father, you know, like many men before me,' Rex says.

He believes a constant need for money drove endless aviation experiments and a life long search for new ideas. 'He was constantly looking. Anyone who came along, he'd press them hard until eventually they would say, 'No thanks.'
Because of his father's fanatical ways, the family suffered through some mighty hard times. Rex was twelve when his mother died in 1941 leaving six young children behind. Two of his brothers were born totally deaf, something his feels his father could never accept. The family was stony broke and World War II made the national situation about as grim as it could be.
Rex believes the stress of living day to day on the edge may have hastened his mother's death. 'You might say she just didn't want to go on living any longer. Things had got very unhappy. Dad had virtually given up any hope of going anywhere with his aviation ideas, he'd been pushing away at them for years and years to the extent when one time he went full time on it for 12 months, building a full sized aeroplane, did nothing else. He ran out of money and he had to go back to work, to start earning again, and just as he made that decision, he got some correspondence from some aviation department and away he went all over again. I'm sure my mother just gave up.'

He thinks, in some ways, his mother was dismantled along with her piano. 'Mum had a piano which she played and it stood in the front hall and he said it had borer, which it did, and he took it to pieces. Then he took it to work and made it into an office desk. I don't think it was calculating, it was just something he did.'
Rex sometimes tagged along to aviation events because he was curious as a boy but on the whole, he got weary of being brow-beaten by his dad. 'If you can imagine, when you have a father who is extremely enthusiastic about something you don't really believe…family quietly skive off and do their own thing, escape.'
His father was a short man but physically very strong and a little frightening, and if you erred, you were beaten. It wasn't an emotional beating, it was measured punishment. 'His father was the same. Cool and consistent, I suppose.'
'I never met anybody who would stand up to him, no matter what size. He wasn't cocky, he was just single minded, and once he got started on something he'd just keep going and people had better look out.'

Rex and Barry Brewster
Edgar Roy Brewster was not a man to let anything go. He had his ideas and felt people should embrace all his theories. But as Rex says, 'The way he talked about his hexagon house and hexagon ideas was just the same as the way he talked about his aeronautical ideas. They were all going to change the world, but none of them did.'

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 |  |  | LIBRARY RESOURCES
Bellini, Bruce & Dobson, Peter, Bell Block, A Local Aviation History (2003), New Plymouth Aero Club, New Plymouth
Blackiston, Howland, Beekeeping for Dummies (2002), Hungry Minds, New York
Incredible Flying Machines (1994), Penguin, Ringwood, Victoria
Melzer, Werner, Beekeeping a Practical Guide for the Novice Beekeeper, (1989), Barrons, New York
Taylor, Kim, Flight (1992), Belitha Press, London
ARTEFACT RESOURCES
Maori bust (ponga) - from Brewster's Punga Works
(A96.980)
Punga vase - from Brewster's Punga Works
(TM.2003.363)
ARCHIVES
A copy of Norian Thoughts written by E R Brewster, outlining his philosophy 'extension of life' by triangulation. Written in poem form, with diagrams. Published by Conical Hill, Stratford. A downloadable PDF version of this is available here:

(ARC 2002-66)
A collection reflecting E Roy Brewster's philosophies on life, the music he composed and the house he built. (ARC 2002-54)
The collection consists of correspondence, research notes, drawings, photographs of his aircraft, hexagonal house and his philosophies. (ARC 2003-3)
A collection of photographs and papers relating to Roy Brewster's beehive house in Sanders Ave, New Plymouth. (ARC 2002-1044)
WEBLINKS
Puke Ariki is not responsible for the content of these external websites.
New Zealand Aircraft Images - a gallery of plane photos
The Kowhai and the Tui - hear an example of the Brewsters' music
Flying Straw - build a flying straw with this project from the Young Engineers' Club
Richard Pearse: First Flyer - The New Zealand Edge profile about New Zealand's pioneer aviator
A Problem with Fleas - article on Flying Fleas was written for Classic Wings Downunder
Taranaki Aviation Transport and Technology Museum - A hexagon shaped table from the Brewster collection
RELATED TARANAKI STORIES
The True Story of a Highwayman
PLACES TO VISIT
Taranaki Aviation Transport and Technology Museum The museum holds several Brewster items including inlaid tables, chairs, house plans, part of the front door and the honeycomb wings from one of Brewster's experimental planes.
Cnr Kent Rd & SH3 (opp. Lake Mangamahoe) New Plymouth
Phone 06 752 2845 Email
Website
ORGANISATIONS
New Plymouth Aero Club Established in 1928, the New Plymouth Aero Club aims to promote aviation while providing a safe and affordable environment for aviation training with modern aircraft and facilities.
Airport Drive, RD3 New Plymouth 06 755 0500
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