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New Plymouth District Council.

Taranaki Stories 
Natural World - Peak pioneer - Jane Maria Atkinson  
Jane Maria Atkinson
Peak pioneer: Jane Maria Atkinson

By Sorrel Hoskin

 

Jane Maria Atkinson was the first recorded European woman to stand on the summit of Mount Taranaki. But Maria (as she preferred to be called) was only there as a result of being taken along as the group cook.


Her husband Arthur Atkinson had asked her to join a family group attempting the summit, Maria would be responsible for cooking an evening meal for the company.


The party included a future prime minister (Sir Harry Atkinson) and a future superintendent of Taranaki (Henry Richmond). Other party members were Edward Patten and boys Charles and Calvert Wilson.


They set out from Hurworth on Carrington Road, where the Richmonds and Atkinsons farmed, late in February 1885.


Although an avid journal keeper Maria wrote only a few notes in her diary about her mountain climb: "the celebrated mountain expedition on which alone my hopes of fame rest!" It seems the climb was easier than writing about the event. "The ascent of Mount Egmont I have attempted to describe, but it is a most difficult subject and if I covered quires of paper I should still fail in giving you a notion of it... on the 7th of March we stood on his snowy head."


The only surviving account of the climb was a reminiscence given years later by Charlie Wilson to the Taranaki Herald. But he mentioned precious little about the only woman on the trip.


 "We started out laden with swags of provisions and rugs along the Paritutu Line for upper Mangorei. From thence we cut a line through dense, untouched and primevil bush, in a direct south east course, for Egmont."


The going was slow, as the group had adopted a system of leaving their swags with Maria at the camp and head off into the bush for the day, with a compass and axes, to cut a track, returning in the early evening to a cooked dinner. Maria had to cook the meals in a camp oven over an open fire, the provisions were added to by the occasional pigeon shot by the men. Dry firewood was collected from the surrounding bush.


"The line cutters, after dining plentifully, if not luxuriously, each picked up his load, and all, including Mrs Atkinson, journeyed on the extremity of the line which had been cut, there camping for the night," recalled Charles.


At this rate the climbers moved at a snails pace - an average of two to three kilometres a day. It took them a week to reach the eastern spur of the Waiongona Gorge, near the present Mountain House, the last camp before the summit attempt.


"We descended in the early morning of the 8th March, 1855, into Waiongona's rocky defile, marching slowly on to the head of the gorge… We proceeded over the flower-sprinkled, mossy slopes of the mountain, past boulders and stony prominences, through feet deep of loose shingly shale, direct for the eastern peak of Egmont, till arriving just below the cindery and scoriac rocks of the summit, which looked as if they could not do otherwise than topple over us."


In Egmont, a story of a mountain,  Arthur Scanlan says Jane Maria was climbing in a pair of hand made canvas dungarees, making her journey a lot easier than if she had to tramp in the woman's attire of a long street dress and corset. If so, then Jane Maria was a pioneer in more ways than one - half a century later women were still criticised for climbing in dresses that had been shortened.


The party climbed to the peak where they wrote their names on a piece of paper and left them in a bottle. "All was still on the summit, except the distant murmur of the surf on the shore, and the fitful sighing of the winds among the mountain's riven peaks."


They wound their way down to the bivouac in the scrub below. "A fine view of smoking Ngaruahoe, together with the snowy heights of Ruapehu, was obtained. A thunder shower was also witnessed, the lightening seen, and the roll of the thunder heard far below us. In the morning following the ascent a number of the company left the wild and silent solitudes of the mountain for the civilised haunts of men once more, everyone at the time convinced that the ascending route we took was the easiest to be found on Egmont, and that it ought to be styled the "ladies' ascent".


Jane Maria Atkinson and her family moved to Wellington, then on to Nelson, where she died aged 90 in 1914.




Published 12 April 2005

 

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LIBRARY RESOURCES

Porter, Frances, Born to New Zealand - a biography of Jane Maria Atkinson (1989), Wellington, Allen and Unwin Port Nicholson Press

 

Scanlan, A.B, Egmont The Story Of A Mountain (1961), Wellington, A.H & A.W Reed

 

The First European Ascent of Mount Egmont by Ernst Dieffenbach and James Heberly December 1839 (1989), Distributed by mountain and tramping clubs of Taranaki

 

Dieffenbach, Ernst, Travels in New Zealand with contributions to the geography, geology, botany and natural history of that country (1843), London, J.Murray Capper Press, reprinted 1975 Christchurch Capper Press

 

ARCHIVES

Edith Halcombe's journal - the papers consist of Edith's account of the ascent of Mt Taranaki with Sir William Fox.

(Ref: 2001 - 181)

 

Richmond Atkinson family letters - the collection is a limited edition publication which includes letters and journals written by James Crowe Richmond and Henry Robert Richmond describing their voyage to Auckland on the Victory Oct 1850 - 1851, and letters written by Jane Maria Richmond on her voyage to Auckland on the Sir Edward Paget 1852 - 1853

(Ref: 2001 - 576)

 

EXHIBITIONS

Mt Taranaki display

Check out the display of all things related to Mount Taranaki - from cake tins through to mountaineering tales and fizzy drink bottles - in the Taranaki Life Gallery, North Wing, Puke Ariki.

 

EDUCATION

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Mount Taranaki Interactive

 

Worksheet

For help with downloading and saving these worksheets, see the Help page.

 

Taranaki Geology (PDF 38kb)

 


PLACES TO VISIT

North Egmont Visitors Centre

Discover Mount Taranaki - the geology, flora and fauna, walking tracks and more. Take a short walk then enjoy a coffee and cake at the Mountain Café then stay the night at the historic Camphouse situated almost 1000 metres up Mt Taranaki at North Egmont is an ideal location for people seeking quiet surroundings and stunning views of the North Taranaki coast and Central North Island. It also offers historic atmosphere and access to the beautiful forests and high altitude scenery of Egmont National Park.  Egmont Road, RD 6, Inglewood, Taranaki Phone: 0800 MT TARANAKI (0800 688 2727)

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