Auckland’s Water Supply 1859.......
Auckland, in 1859, was the seat and capital of Colonial Government, as well as the main town of the Auckland Province. Here, decisions for settlement, roading, railways and river transport were made by Provincial Council. Completing an unfinished main sewer and upgrading of what was said, an inadequate and polluted water supply were areas of concern for Auckland at this time.
While the responsibility for conducting the civic affairs for the town of Auckland was in theory the Provincial Government’s, little achievement to overcome these two problems happened.
Stewart had not long arrived and settled when Provincial Council advertised, calling for Civil Engineers and others to submit reports to a competition for a Water Supply Scheme for Auckland.
The premium for this competition was £50.
At the 31January, 1860 meeting of Provincial Council, Mr. Williamson reported four reports had been entered – that of Messrs Heaphy, Baber and Edward Oakley, James Stewart and R Wood, with Colonel Mould’s decision favouring Stewart’s Report.
Stewart’s “ scheme was to pump by steam from the Onehunga Springs one million gallons per day by 14 inch rising main to One Tree Hill, and then to gravitate by 12 inch main to the top of Wakefield Street via Newmarket, Khyber Pass and Symonds Street. Estimate £33,381, without reticulation.”
View across to Newmarket, Kyber Pass, Symonds Street Harbour in distance |
Although
Provincial Council had the drawings and cost estimates of the four entrants and
Stewart had a £50 prize for being successful, Auckland did not progress in
spite of a proposal, with any Public Town Water Supply.
Soon after the announcement of the competition results a group of Auckland Residents held a Public Meeting and headed by five prominent citizens of that time (J. Logan Campbell, Theophilus Heale, J.A. Gilfillan, Thomas Russell and Arch. Clark) petitioned Provincial Council. This included a proposal for the establishment of a Public Company to further Stewart’s winning report into a working water supply.
Words, meetings and committees flowed but water did not. The Petition was referred to a Select Committee of the Provincial Council, where the following week a Select Committee was formed. Their brief was to consider the Water Supply propositions of the Petition and report to Provincial Council the following week.
The Water Supply Select Committee reported back their considerations to Provincial Council and after debate the report was adopted with amendments. At a later meeting the Superintendent, Williamson, refused the proposal, reluctant to accept private interests being involved in the provision of a water supply.
Onehunga drew from the water supply source of the Onehunga Springs. Debate on a water supply source for Auckland City continued. It was many years before any building of any substantial water scheme took place to cater for the growing and adequate needs of the city’s residents. Water supply for Auckland was a “hot topic” in the newspapers and the subject of many reports, investigations, opinions and suggestions to the varying municipal governments over the years – Provincial Council, the Town Board, and the Commissioners of the City Board of Works 1862 – 1870, Auckland City Council 1871 – onwards.
The Hunua Ranges, Waikato River and Waitakere were amongst those explored and suggested options as suitable locations to supply that much needed commodity of water.
The Daily Southern Cross in October 1863 reported that the Colonial Secretary in addressing the Provincial Council, discussed the possibility of a water supply from the Nihotipu River, Waitakere District, with a preliminary survey having been made and estimates being prepared.
Pariraha Gorge, Waitakere Ranges - photo JM Stewart 1930's
An adequate water supply for Auckland still did not eventuate. The quest for that elusive water supply continued. An upgrade of the existing Domain Water Supply in 1866 provided only a temporary solution and research shows, not much extra water but for those decision- makers in authority, it was regarded as an economic solution. Although the upgrade did little to quench the water debate, the Domain Springs, nevertheless, provided Auckland with its first piped municipal water supply.
The second change was what
was known as Government’s “Vogel Scheme” wherein driven by Julius Vogel, then
Government Treasurer, a large amount of money borrowed from sources in England,
became available to fund immigration settlement, roads, railways, and municipal
utilities.
The
newly elected City Council gained a series of investigative reports from
various Civil Engineers – William Brogden, of the NZ Government contracted
Railway Construction Company, the Nihotupu Water Catchment in the Waitakeres; C
Napier Bell of Brogden & Sons Company, the Western Springs Water Catchment,
and even E.O. Moriarty, an Australian Civil Engineer who was a Commissioner in
1867, for Sydney’s Water Supply. His report favored Western Springs.
Even the
volcanic cones of Auckland were looked at by as potential supply sources by
those who saw themselves as water experts, who flooded the newspapers with
their proposals, thoughts and ideas.
Fairy Falls Henderson Valley- photo JM Stewart 1930's
A very dry season in 1872 “heated up” the water supply debate further and Council was faced with no longer being able to avoid or side- step the issue, so had to look seriously at somewhere. This they did and Western Springs became for them, the most likely option. The “water experts” continued to flood the newspapers with their theories and ideas which in addition to the volcanic cones even explored the idea of water being piped by bridge across the Waitemata from the Northshore.
“It is true that, in dealing with these lava cones and their so-called mysterious springs, many do not look to local rainfall as the source, but boldly scan some distant lake, and, totally ignoring the laws of gravitation and those regulating the flow of water, as well as the seemingly insuperable difficulty of intervening seas, point to a probable subterranean connection and source of supply.” ( Stewart, 1973)
While Mr.
Goodall’s paper favoured Mount Eden as a probable water supply source, cheaper
to pipe from than the Nihotopu, Western Springs or Onehunga Springs, Stewart’s
paper favoured Western Springs to Mount Eden writing:-
“And the farther inland at which water is sought, the smaller and further apart will be those rivulets, until, on reaching the summit of the watershed at Mount Eden, the minimum will be obtained; and, although at that elevation a basin maybe found containing many million cubic feet of water, it would only be a work of time to exhaust it if the all-important points of rainfall and gathering ground are inadequate to keeping up the supply.” ( Stewart,1873)
“The facts as above stated seem sufficient to warrant the conclusion that all the permeable mass of the volcanic formation in the County of Eden is subject to constant aeration. From a sanitary point of view, the significance of this fact cannot be overrated. It seems to afford a satisfactory reason to account for the continued purity of the western and Onehunga springs, not withstanding the fact that Onehunga has been settled for about sixty-two years, and Mount Eden district for about forty-five years. The population of the volcanic lands of Onehunga, Epsom, Mount Eden, and One Tree Hill at last census was 14970, settled on an area in which there is not a yard of surface stream in the ordinary sense of the term, and up to the present no system of drainage excepting that of natural or artificial drainage- pits.” ( Stewart, 1909)
Stewart concluded in the same paper:-
“ It must not, however, be deduced from this that it would be wise to trust to a continuance of the purity of the springs, without a regular system of drainage, at Onehunga, where a very considerable area of the crust is comparatively shallow, and where an accidental exposure of any of the larger fissures or cavities in the rock might lead to direct and rapid pollution.” ( Stewart, 1909)
Footnote:
However into a new Century, Auckland was moving toward an adequate water supply for that era. At Nihotupu Stream, the first of and temporary wooden dam in the Waitakeres was piped by gravity feed to the Western Springs water works by 1902. More reports, more pipes more dams planned and by 1908 Waitakere water truly flowed to the City of Auckland. Later years saw more water flowing from another dam in the Hunua Ranges where Stewart's grandson was a Ranger at Otau. As to James Stewart MICE. The paper wrote and read to the Auckland Institute as an outcome of his engineering work of drainage of the Epsom depot of the Auckland Electric Tramways was the last. Stewart died in 1914 having just returned from a Wellington meeting of the NZ Institute. His other love of scientific matters as a trustee of this organisation.
The water or lack of it has continued into the new century and now we hear post COVID of new methods to provide water - obtaining it from waste water and salt water - a new era in our NZ history.
Karekare Falls Waitakere - photo JM Stewart 1930's |
Reference Sources:
- Bush, G.W.A. DECENTLY AND IN ORDER, the Centennial History of the Auckland City Council, 1971. Auckland: Collins Bros & Co, 1971
- Furkert, F.W. Early New Zealand Engineers. Wellington: Reed, 1953.
- Lawn, C. A. F. N. Z. I. S. The Pioneer Land Surveyors of New Zealand. Parts I-III. Auckland: N.Z.I.S., 14, October, 1977.
- By JOHN GOODALL, C.E. “ART VI. On the Probability of a Water Supply being obtained for the City of Auckland from Mount Eden.” In Transactions and Proceedings NZ Institute, Volume 6, 1873: also in http://rsnz.natlib.govt.nz/volume/rsnz_06/rsnz_06_00_000550.html.
- By JAMES STEWART, C.E. “ART. VII.—NOTES ON THE PROPOSITION TO SUPPLY AUCKLAND WITH WATER FROM MOUNT EDEN.” In Transactions and Proceedings NZ Institute, from Volume 6. 1873: also in http://rsnz.natlib.govt.nz/volume/rsnz_06/rsnz_06_00_000560.html.
- By James Stewart, M. Inst. C.E. “Art. XXXIV.—On the Aeration of the Auckland Lava-beds .” In Transactions and Proceedings NZ Institute , from Volume 42, 1909: also in http://rsnz.natlib.govt.nz/volume/rsnz_42/rsnz_42_00_003270.html.
- Papers Past NZ National Library
- Daily Southern Cross. “Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Daily Southern Cross, 30 December 1859, Page 4.” Papers Past. (accessed April 14, 2009).
- “Provincial Council. TUESDAY, JANUARY 31,1860. Daily Southern Cross, , 3 February 1860, Page 3.” Papers Past. (accessed April 14, 2009).
- “WATER SUPPLY. Daily Southern Cross, 13 April 1860, Page 3.” Papers Past. National Library of New Zealand (accessed April 14, 2009).
- “Provincial Council. Daily Southern Cross, , 17 April 1860, Page 3.” Papers Past. (accessed April 14, 2009).
- Daily Southern Cross. “Daily Southern Cross, 24 April 1860, Page 4 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1860.” (accessed April 14, 2009).
- Daily Southern Cross. “MONTHLY SUMMARY FOR THE ENGLISH OCTOBER MAIL. GENERAL SUMMARY. Daily Southern Cross, 5 October 1863, Page 3.” Papers Past. (accessed April 20, 2009).
- Auckland Museum. “Auckland War Memorial Museum Education Kit Volcanoes.” Auckland War Memorial Museum. pdf (accessed April 16, 2009).
- Auckland City Council, written by G.W.A. Bush 5.8.98. “History of Auckland City Chapter 2 Building a solid city (1871-1918)The new City Council and Auckland's condition.” Auckland City Council . http://www.aucklandcity.govt.nz/auckland/Introduction/bush/chap2.asp (accessed April 17, 2009).
- “Waitakere Ranges.” Watercare Services Limited. http://www.water.co.nz/watercare/water-supply/waitakeres/waitakeres_home.cfm (accessed April 22, 2009).
- IPENZ. “Western Springs Waterworks – Auckland .” IPENZ Engineering Heritage. (accessed April 17, 2009).
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