“Where
there is Trees, there’s Wood”
Brief Notes on early New Zealand Forestry/Sawmilling
Anne Stewart Ball written 2012
Kauri logs at
the Booms Whangaroa From photograph
presented by M. H. Roe, Onehunga Source: Kirk, T. F.L.S. The Forest Flora of New Zealand.
Wellington: Government Printers, 1889. |
These “bush fellers” led a rugged life in areas with little or no roading. The terrain was steep, rugged and swampy in the valleys and where rain could bring swollen streams. Injury in the “bush” of the Coromandel Ranges often necessitated, in some instances, up to 30 miles on horseback or stretcher borne, across rough tracks to Thames or Waihi , where there was a hospital. The “bush”, in parts, could be described as dense and the giant of all trees, sought for lumber and timber – kauri – in instances hundreds of years old.
Kauri Matakohe: Parker, Lamb and Company. Source AJHR 1907 Session I, C-04 facing page 12 courtesy AtoJS online National Library of NZ |
“A giant Kauri falls” Northland .Source NZ Herald 1878 |
Fagan, a “bush” contractor in the vicinity of the Tairua
River, was regarded for many years in the 1800’s, as the largest of these,
employing between 65 and 100. It was also said that William Fagan built the
largest Dam on the Coromandel Pensinsula. This dam on the upper Tairua
River, became known as the Wires Dam because of the telegraph nearby, and used
to float kauri logs down to the sea. Bennett in
“Tairua”, 1986 records a Mary Fagan admitted to
Tairua School in 1898 ( page 207)
View of logs confined by Main Booms, Wharekawa Estuary. Source AJHR 1905 Session I, C-06 facing page 11 courtesy AtoJS online National Library of NZ |
Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Observer, Volume XX, Issue 1108, 24 March 1900, Page 2 .Source: Courtesy Papers Past, National Library NZ |
The “bush” contractors were contracted to sawmills and in
some instances, sub contracted to others to supply logs and timber, both for
export supply overseas and for added value products made in the New Zealand
sawmills. The “bush” contractors also
bid for Public Works Department Contracts for supply of thousands of railway sleepers
and for Councils’ electric tramway Contracts (sleepers and poles.) In the early 1900s the Waihi - Paeroa, Kaihu
Valley and Whangarei Railways along with completion of the Main Trunk Railway
were being undertaken. Electric Tramways were being built at Auckland,
Wellington, Dunedin, Wanganui and Takapuna. A search of newspapers on Papers
Past 1900 – 1910 shows a number of advertisements for sleepers. –
Page 8 Advertisements Column 8 Auckland Star, Volume XXXVI, Issue 120, 31 May 1905, Page 8. Source: Courtesy Papers Past, National Library NZ |
Names prominent amongst “bush” contractors in the 1900s were Darrow, Coombs & Kilgour in the ranges and eastern side of the Coromandel Peninsula – Wharekawa and Tairua, Murray Brothers of the Kaueranga, Gibbons & Harris of and Brown Bros Northland, Saw doctors also were utilised in the “bush” for saw sharpening in this era was pre chainsaw days and the native woods hard on saw blades and axes. Even into the early 1900s there were still pit sawyers because of the remote inaccessible areas in some instances. This despite sawmills having adopted steam machinery to process the wood/ timber. “Bush “fellers (sometimes called wood fellers) moved up down the Province - much the same as done in 2012.
Once felled a number of methods were used to transport the logs. The terrain was steep and tortuous in many parts. Rolling or ‘corduroy” roads were made or in some areas tramways (in some instances, both rails and sleepers were wooden and for the more fortunate, iron rails.) A common method was bullock teams – these seemed to be suited to both the terrain and the heavy load.
Gumdiggers camp, Nihotupu – Unknown photographer. Source: The New Zealand Insurance Company Limited. Bold Century. Auckland: The New Zealand Insurance Company Limited, 1959. |
This writer’s great grandfather’s brother was involved in this Industry in the firm of Stewart & Garlick, merchants, exporters and sharebrokers. This firm was also the negotiating brokers for the Melbourne based Kauri Timber Company established in 1888 and one that was to have a major influence in the timber industry.
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The giant Melbourne- based, New Zealand Kauri Timber Company Ltd, by the turn of the century, was firmly ensconsed. Despite the setback of two embezzlement frauds in 1901, the Company was making good profits and one of the main employers in rural areas of the province. Their head office and mill (formerly the Auckland Timber Company) in Customs / Fanshawe Streets, Auckland - a hub of milling activity for this companys enterprises said to be employing 300 at their Auckland Mill in 1902. Their mills at Kohukohu in the Hokianga, Aratapu and Te Kopuru on the Kaipara Harbour , Mangonui (formerly that of Robert Morrow Houston - another family member related to this writer), Tairua and Mercury Bay on the Coromandel Peninsula and Barrier Island provided employment for those in rural areas.
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Mangonui Harbour and Kauri Timber Company Mill Photo in The Cyclopaedia of New Zealand, Vo l 2, Auckland Province. Christchurch: Cyclopaedia Company Limited, 1902. Couresy N.Z.E.T.C. NZ Electronic Text Centre |
The Kauri Timber Company Catalogue of about 1906 shows the
range and quality of mouldings, furniture, fretwork and items including broom
handles on offer at their head office and sawmills in Auckland. Such would have
required saws and machinery in good sharp working order. A search of Papers
Past shows advertisements during 1900 – 1915 for experienced saw doctors (first
class) and several advertisements offering 10 shillings a day wages.
Pursuant to the Inspection of Machinery Act Amendment 1900, those operating steam machinery were required to hold a Stationary Engine Drivers Certificate. ( this requirement came about originally as an outcome of a fatal boiler accident in the Kuranui Mine, Thames in 1874 and applied to those also working in sawmills.
The Certificates could be gained either by examination or by service and categories First Class and Second Class. A search of the AJHR’s ( Associated Journals House of Representatives) on the AToJs website, show under the Annual Inspection of Machinery Report – a. Accidents and sawmills/ planing mills where injury occurred b. names of those who passed their Stationary Engine Drivers Certificate - First Class, Second Class. It is not known by these lists if an Engineer coming from Canada has sat this certificate. Nor have these lists determined whether the person sitting the certificate, works in a sawmill or a mine. More in depth research, than for this article would be needed.
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Katikati, Waihi and Paeroa Mills employed small numbers of hand compared to others in the Auckland Province. At the beginning of the 1900s timber supply from these three mills were used for building and mining purposes. Waihi at the turn of the century was a fast growing town, with what was to become one of the largest producing goldmines in the Southern Hemisphere. While sawmills were small, “bush” contractors and their gangs ( now in 2012 called crews) were more numerous in numbers.
KAURI RAFTS
BEING TOWED UP THE HARBOUR is a comparatively rare sight in these days. Auckland Star 5 December 1931
p 10 courtesy Papers Past, National Library NZ |
The following is a table showing some of the mills of the Auckland Province in the early 1900s
Some of the Sawmills Auckland Province 1907 ( source
AJHR 1907 Session I, C-04 )
Sawmill |
Location |
Number of Hands |
NZ
Kauri Timber Company Auckland |
Auckland |
300 |
Kohukohu
( KTC) |
Hokianga |
40 |
Aratapu ( KTC) |
Kaipara |
|
Te
Kopuru ( KTC) |
Kaipara |
120 |
Mangonui ( KTC) |
Mangonui |
25 |
Onehunga Sawmills ( KTC) |
Onehunga |
35 |
Mercury
Bay ( KTC) |
Whitianga |
60 |
Tairua ( KTC ) |
Tairua |
60 |
Lane
& Sons Whangaroa |
Totara
North, Whangaroa |
14 |
David
Goldie Timber Merchant |
Auckland |
70 |
Parker,
Lamb & Company |
Auckland |
70 |
Leyland
O’Brien No 1 mill |
Auckland |
54 |
Leyland
O’Brien No 2 mill |
Auckland |
50 |
Waitemata
Sawmill Company |
Auckland |
60
|
Mitchelson
Timber Company Ltd |
Auckland |
|
Maclow
Bros Ltd |
Auckland |
39 |
Bagnall
Bros & Co Box factory |
Auckland |
200 |
Bagnall
Bros & Co Sawmill |
Turua |
70 |
Waimamaku |
Hokianga |
60 |
Whangape
( Mitchelsons ) |
Whangape |
16 |
Kaihu
( Trounsons) |
Kaihu |
20 |
Kaipara
Sawmill |
Dargaville |
48 |
White
Pine Company |
On
the Wairoa |
50 |
Robert
Gibbons |
Kopu
Thames |
25 |
Mountain
Rimu Company |
Mamaku
Rotorua |
65 |
Taupo
Totara Timber Company |
Taupo |
300 |
Puketapu
Timber Company |
West
Taupo |
125 |
Paeroa
Sawmill |
Paeroa |
15 |
Tamaki
Sawmill – B L Knight ( formerly J A Brown) |
Waihi |
4 |
Tamaki
Sawmill – B L Knight |
Katikati |
10 |
The companies and sawmills carried out an extensive export trade, involving large fleets of vessels. Logs once they reached the large rivers or sea were tied together in log rafts as seen above or onto waiting barges, brigantines and for local transport scows. All and certainly the largest ( Kauri Timber Company ) were represented in the markets of Great Britain, Cape Colony, Australia, and the South Sea Islands. Like wise timber from other countries in the early 1900’s found its way to New Zealand – redwood from California and Oregon Pine from Canada. More research is needed immigration of timber workers from Canada to New Zealand.
Thus
finishes, a very brief view of the forest /sawmilling industry in the Auckland
Province of New Zealand, in the early 1900s.
Footnote :
Government:
- New Zealand Statistics Department : The New Zealand Official Year Books 1900 -1915
- National Library of New Zealand : Appendix to Journals House of Representatives ( AJHR’s)
- THE TIMBER INDUSTRY OF NEW ZEALAND (EXTRACTS FROM REPORTS BY COMMISSIONERS OF CROWN LANDS ON, TOGETHER WITH TABLES, VIEWS, AND MAPS 1905 Session I C-06
- DEPARTMENT OF LANDS:THE TIMBER INDUSTRY IN NEW ZEALAND IN 1907. Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1907 Session I, C -4
- -INSPECTION OF MACHINERY: ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DEPARTMENT FOR 1907-8. Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1908 Session I, H-15a - INSPECTION OF MACHINERY: ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DEPARTMENT FOR 1909-10. Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives,1910 Session I, H- 15a
Books:
·
Bennett, Francis. Tairua. Morrinsville: Arrow Press
Ltd, 1986.
·
BIBLIOGRAPHY
\l 5129 Kirk, T. F.L.S. The Forest Flora of New Zealand. Wellington:
Government Printers, 1889.
·
The Cyclopaedia of New Zealand, Vol 2, Auckland
Province. Christchurch: Cyclopaedia
Company Limited, 1902.
·
The New Zealand Insurance Company Limited. Bold Century.
Auckland: The New Zealand Insurance Company Limited, 1959.
· Williamson, Beverley M. Whangamata - 100 Years of Change. Paeroa, New Zealand: Goldfields Print Ltd, 1988.
Newspapers:
- Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland
Star, 14 July 1888, P 3
- THE KAURI TIMBER COMPANY
Auckland Star, 14 July 1888, P 4
- THE KAURI GUM TRADE INTERESTING INFORMATION.
Te Aroha News, 27 February 1889, P 4
- THE CUSTOMS STREET MILLS OF THE KAURI TIMBER COMPANY. Auckland
Star, 1 December 1898, P 23
- The Argus 15 April 1901 P 5 KAURI TIMBER COMPANY,ALLEGED EXTENSIVE FRAUDS.A LOCAL MANAGER ARRESTED
- The Kauri Timber Company Ltd (Auckland Office) :[Catalogue. ca 1906].
- Trainweb : NZ G
- Hall Genealogy Website : Old Occupation Name
·