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Wellington Harbour Board

Wellington Harbour Board was the body which formerly managed the shipping and commercial affairs of the port of Wellington in New Zealand. It was constituted in 1880 and was disestablished in 1989.

Wellington Harbour Board
Coat of arms of the Wellington Harbour Board
AbbreviationWHB
SuccessorCentrePort Wellington
Formation1 January 1880; 144 years ago (1880-01-01)
Dissolved1 November 1989; 34 years ago (1989-11-01)
PurposePort operator
HeadquartersWellington, New Zealand

During its 110-year tenure the Harbour Board reclaimed land around Wellington Harbour, and built and maintained facilities including quays, wharves, goods sheds, a marina, and a floating dock for ship repairs. The Board managed goods and passengers passing through the port from domestic and international locations and was responsible for the safe movement of vessels within the harbour.

Background edit

Wellington city was settled by British colonists in 1840 and quickly became an important port and business centre. Small private wharves built in the 1840s became inadequate as trade grew and visiting ships became larger. From 1856 the Chamber of Commerce began agitating for a large publicly-owned wharf. Wellington Provincial Council gave permission, and Queens Wharf was built in 1862. It was managed by a Wharf Committee of the Provincial Council.[1]: 11  In 1870, Wellington City Corporation (now Wellington City Council) came into being and in 1871 the Provincial Council sold its interest in Queens Wharf to the City Council, along with the bond store at the wharf and some newly-reclaimed land.[2]: 45, 64  The City Council leased wharf operations to a private company until 1876, when it took over direct responsibility for the wharf.

Continuing expansion of the city and shipping trade led the Chamber of Commerce to push for a separate entity to manage the business of the port. The government passed the Harbours Act in November 1878 to regulate management of harbours around New Zealand, and this led to the establishment of Wellington Harbour Board under the Wellington Harbour Board Act 1879.The act came into effect on 1 January 1880, and the board held its first meeting in February 1880. The Board was an autonomous authority, with responsibility for planning and constructing harbour facilities, regulating the use of wharves, determining port charges and controlling navigation within the harbour limits.[3][4]: 3 

Establishment edit

The Harbour Board initially consisted of 10 members: three appointed by the Government, the mayor, one person elected by the Chamber of Commerce, two members elected by Wellington ratepayers, one representing shipping interests, one elected by Hutt County Council, and one to represent the Wairarapa County Councils.[1]: 11  The members of the first Harbour Board were William Hort Levin, Edward Pearce and William Robert Williams (government appointees);[5] William Hutchison (Mayor of Wellington), Joseph Edward Nathan (representing the Chamber of Commerce), William Valentine Jackson and Paul Coffey (elected by ratepayers), Henry Rose (of the New Zealand Shipping Company, representing shipping interests), Stephen Lancaster (representing Hutt County Council), and Frederick Augustus Krull (a Wellington businessman representing Wairarapa).[6][7]

Wellington Harbour board was unique amongst New Zealand harbour boards because as well as control and regulation of the port, supplying water to ships, and providing cool storage, it acted as wharfinger, responsible for taking goods from ships and delivering them to other ships or to destinations in the city. This was said to be cheaper and more efficient than having other businesses do the work, and gave the harbour board strong authority.[8]

Although the Harbour Board was set up with powers to manage shipping, wharf charges and trade in the harbour, it initially had no assets. The board was entitled to take a loan from central government.[9] In October 1881 the Harbour Board paid the City Council £64000 for Queens Wharf and the bond store, and the wharf became its centre of operations.[2]: 65 [10] Harbour Board employees in October 1881 consisted of the harbourmaster, outward pilot, four boatmen, pilot, coxswain, and two signalmen.[10] The board members did not receive a salary.[9]

Another deep-water wharf was completed in April 1880: Railway Wharf had been built by the government on newly reclaimed land near Wellington Railway Station. Three railway tracks were laid down on the wharf so that goods could be transported directly from the railway station. The wharf was angled on a north-north-west /south-south-east axis, the same as Queens Wharf, because at the time it was important to moor vessels "fore-and-aft" to Wellington's prevailing winds.[11] Following passage of the Wellington Harbour Board and Corporation Land Act in September 1880, control of Railway Wharf was transferred to the Harbour Board.[12][13]

Facilities edit

Wharves edit

More wharves were built around the inner harbour. The first wharf built by the Harbour Board was Wool Wharf (now Waterloo Quay Wharf), completed in 1883 to handle the wool trade. This was followed by Ferry Wharf (1897), Glasgow Wharf (1901), Taranaki Street Wharf (1906), Kings Wharf (1909), Clyde Quay Wharf (1910), Tug Wharf (1914) and Pipitea Wharf (1923). In addition to the big wharves built in the inner harbour for movement of goods and passengers, the Harbour Board oversaw construction of suburban wharves in the eastern bays from Petone around to Eastbourne as well as at Evans Bay and Seatoun and Karaka Bay at the harbour entrance.

 
Head Office and Bond Store on Queens Wharf.

Head Office and Bond Store edit

With the business of the port expanding, the Harbour Board commissioned a new administration building and bond store to replace earlier wooden buildings. The building was built on Jervois Quay at the entrance to Queens Wharf, and was completed in 1892. As of 2023 it houses the Museum of Wellington. The Harbour Board's board room is still on site and open to the public.

Wharf Office Building edit

In 1896 the Wharf Office Building was built opposite the Head Office and Bond Store at the entrance to Queens Wharf. Art Nouveau gates made of iron were installed in 1899 between these two buildings at the wharf entrance.[14] As of 2023 the Wharf Office Building houses apartments and the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts.

 
The former wharf offices seen from Post Office Square.

Evans Bay Patent Slip edit

A patent slip for hauling up ships for repair was built at Evans Bay in 1873. It was operated by the Wellington Patent Slip Company and didn't come under Wellington Harbour Board control until 1908. The Patent Slip Company, which was 90% owned by the Union Steam Ship Company from 1908, continued to operate the slip (and a second slip built in 1922) under lease from the Harbour Board until 1969, when the Harbour Board took over direct management of both slips. The first slip was taken out of commission and the second one was upgraded. It closed in 1980. One of the triggers of the 1913 Great Strike was a demand by Wellington shipwrights that they be paid travelling time when they had to go to Evans Bay to work at the patent slip.[15]

Clyde Quay boat harbour edit

In 1898 local yachtsmen complained that reclamation at Te Aro and other work around Railway Wharf was displacing moorings for small boats. The Harbour Board suggested that yachts could be moored at Evans Bay but the yachting community objected, saying it was too far away and isolated, boats would be vandalised, and the winds there were not ideal.[16] in 1900 the Harbour Board approved construction of a boat harbour and baths at Clyde Quay.[17] Old structures on the beach were removed, Clyde Quay and Oriental Terrace (now Oriental Parade) were widened and a sea wall built, and public salt water baths and a boat harbour for pleasure craft were created.[17] Some land was reclaimed so that the board could build a row of 24 reinforced concrete boatsheds in two sections, with stairs leading down from the footpath.[18] The boatsheds were designed with their roofs below the height of the sea wall so that views of the harbour would not be obstructed. The boatsheds were completed in 1907 and, along with another group of sheds built in 1922, are still in use.[19][20][21]

Dredges, tugs and launches edit

 
The dredge Whakarire in the harbour, 1904. Queens Wharf is to the left.

In 1882 the board bought a Priestman dredge so that it could remove silt and increase the depth of some berths.[22] In 1902, that dredge was replaced with a new steam dredge. The dredge, named Whakarire ('to deepen water'), was built by Lobnitz and Co. in Renfrew, Scotland and sailed to New Zealand via the Suez Canal and Torres Strait.[23][24] Whakarire was sold to Napier Harbour Board in 1934 and replaced by Kerimoana ('to dig the sea') in 1938.[25][26] Kerimoana was scrapped in 1981.[27]

Various privately-owned vessels acted as tugs and pilots on the harbour during the 19th and 20th centuries. For example, Wellington Harbour Ferries operated a tug called Duco between 1892 and 1909, and the Union Steam Ship Company bought a tug named Natone in 1904.[28] In 1900 Wellington Harbour Board bought a launch it named Uta, to use as a pilot boat.[29][30] Uta served the Harbour Board until 1950,[31] and was replaced by Tiakina in 1953.[32]

In 1925 Wellington Harbour Board acquired a purpose-built deep water salvage tug, which it named Toia ('to pull'), on loan from the British Admiralty. The Board also commissioned construction of a floating crane, HIkitia ('to lift') and a new harbourmaster's launch, Arahina ('to lead').[33][34] In 1949 Toia was returned to the New Zealand Navy, to be based at Devonport Naval Base and not replaced because the Union Steam Ship Company had two tugs for use in Wellington harbour.[35] Arahina rescued many people from the passenger ferry Wahine when it ran aground at the entrance to Wellington Harbour in 1968.[36] Arahina was sold in 1990,[37] but as of 2023 was still afloat and moored at Queens Wharf.[36]

 
Kupe, Ngahue and Toia. 2007

The Harbour Board bought another pilot launch, the Tiakina, in 1953.[32] Tiakina arrived in Wellington in 1954 and was in service until 1992.[38] As of 2023 it is used as a private charter boat in Dunedin.[39]

When the Wahine ran aground in 1968, killing 51 people, the Union Steam Ship Company's tug Tapuhi was not strong enough to assist the ship.[40][41] Responding to the disaster, the Harbour Board bought new, bigger tugs: Kupe, which went into service in 1971,[42] Toia (1972) and Ngahue (1977).[43] The Harbour Board's successor, CentrePort, sold Kupe in 2009,[42] and Toia and Ngahue in 2014.[43]

Hikitia floating crane edit

The Harbour Board bought Hikitia, a self-propelled floating steam crane, in 1925. Hikitia was constructed in Scotland and sailed to Wellington under its own power.[44] As of 2023 it is still in working order and thought to be the only working steam crane of its kind in the world.

Progress edit

 
An animation showing the phases of reclamation by year in Wellington Harbour.

Reclamation edit

Although the Harbour Board controlled the wharves, Wellington City Council retained control of the Te Aro seabed and foreshore. From 1884 to 1889 the Council conducted a programme of reclamation which brought it into conflict with the Harbour Board.[2]: 66  Further reclamation would continue throughout the life of the board. Major reclamation at Thorndon was proposed in 1916 but work did not begin until 1923.[45][46][47]

1930: New Zealand's main port edit

In 1930, Wellington was the main trans-shipping port in New Zealand, with over 3000 trading vessels visiting in the previous year.[8] The port handled 62% of New Zealand's hemp exports, 50% of cheese exports and 28% of the country's wool exports. Other products exported from Wellington included butter, frozen meat and apples – in total, an average of 26% of New Zealand's exports.[8]

By this time there were 14 members on the board, and almost 400 permanent staff. In addition, the board employed an average of around 350 casual wharf labourers each day.[8] Harbour Board facilities included 10 inner-harbour wharves, oil wharves at Evans Bay and Point Howard, suburban wharves, Clyde Quay marina for pleasure craft, 35 goods stores along the wharves and waterfront, a variety of cranes including its large new floating crane Hikitia, weighbridges, a repair shop, and a tug.[8] A floating dock was being built, and reclamation of land at Thorndon was continuing.

1940–1960s edit

The Harbour Board continued to upgrade and expand its wharves and facilities. A new breastwork and reclamation in Thorndon begun in the 1920s was completed in late 1939.[48][49]

During World War 2, Wellington was an important port for troop movements. United States authorities were given sole use of the newly developed Aotea Quay.[50]: 69  In October 1943, the 2nd Division of the United States Marine Corps embarked at Aotea Quay on their way to the Battle of Tarawa.[50]: 72  The marina and boatsheds at Clyde Quay were also made available to the United States as a base for repairs and maintenance of their small craft and landing barges.[50]: 69  Almost 72% of 120000 troops in the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force embarked from Wellington.[50]: 65 

In 1946 Wellington was still New Zealand's busiest trans-shipping port, with 70% of New Zealand's tonnage moving through the port. By weight, Wellington accounted for 43% of New Zealand's cheese exports, 24% of frozen meat, 19% of wool bales and 14% of butter exports.[50]: 23 

In February 1951, major industrial action now known as the Waterfront Dispute took place. Waterfront workers around New Zealand refused to work overtime on the wharves, demanding more pay, better working conditions and a repeal of restrictions enforced by the Government during World War 2.[51] Shipping companies refused to employ workers unless they agreed to work overtime. Workers were then locked out of the wharves, which at that time were fenced and able to have access restricted. On 15 February 1951 there were 21 foreign ships berthed in Wellington and a queue of freighters waiting to berth,[52] and by the end of March, 38 ships were in the harbour waiting to discharge 70,000 tons of cargo.[53] As Harbour Board employees refused to work, the government called in hundreds of army and navy servicemen to unload ships.[54] At the end of March, Harbour Board employees voted to return to work,[55] but other workers on the wharves remained on strike. The dispute lasted 151 days and led to changes in the unionisation and employment conditions of waterfront workers.

Between 1950 and 1960 the board built bulk-handling facilities for coal and wheat at Aotea Quay and began development for a roll on/roll off road and rail ferry at Interisland Wharf. The ferry Aramoana came into service in 1962. Development of Wellington Airport, which opened in 1959, required land, foreshore and harbour areas controlled by the Harbour Board, so in an arrangement with the Government the board ceded these areas to the airport development and received land near the Hutt River estuary in exchange.[56]: 66  The board reclaimed 47.5 acres (19.2 ha) of land near its Point Howard oil wharf for leasing to oil companies.[56]: 52 

By 1960 there were 15 men on the board, representing Manawatu, Wairarapa, Upper Hutt/Lower Hutt/Petone, Hutt County/Eastbourne/Tawa, and Wellington city.[56] The board had 739 permanent staff in four departments: the Traffic Department received and delivered cargo; the Harbour Department controlled the movement of ships in the harbour, mooring and pilotage; the Engineers Department handled repairs to facilities and planned new works; and the Accounts Department handled financial matters and statistics. The board also employed almost 500 casual workers on the wharves. During 1959, there were 2579 shipping arrivals in Wellington from New Zealand and foreign ports. The port handled 68% of New Zealand's trans-shipment tonnage. Primary produce made up much of the goods exported: 30% of New Zealand's cheese exports by weight and 16% of its frozen meat exports left from Wellington. Other commodities exported included wool, hides and skins and apples. Imports coming through Wellington included cars, tractors, iron and steel, cotton and synthetic piece goods, petrol and tobacco.[56]: 82 

Container handling capability edit

 
The container terminal, seen from Whairepo Lagoon.

In 1969, the Government approved a recommendation from the New Zealand Ports Authority for the installation of a container crane at the ports of Auckland and Wellington.[57][58] Construction of the Wellington container handling terminal was underway by 1971, including a 49 ha (120 acres) reclamation at the end of Aotea and Fryatt Quays. Two new tugs, Kupe and Toia, were purchased to handle the larger ships expected, and a 40 tonne container crane was ordered.[59] Erection of the container crane began in early 1971.[60] The first container ship arrived in Wellington in June 1971, but was unloaded with conventional cranes, because an industrial agreement with unions had not yet been reached for the operation of the container crane.[61] A second container crane was ordered for the port and delivered in 1975,[62] but an industrial dispute with the boilermakers union caused delay to the construction.[63]

A separate industrial dispute involving demarcation issues caused a 3 year delay to the commissioning of a crane intended to load containers onto railway wagons at the port. The crane was finally put into service in August 1975.[64]

In November 1976, funding was approved for a third container crane at the port.[65] Industrial disputes involving the Wellington boilermakers and the Federation of Labour caused a delay of almost 12 months in the construction and commissioning of the crane.[66][67] The delays to the construction of the container crane, along with more protracted delays to the construction of the steel structure of the BNZ building in Willis Street, led building developers to change designs and move away from the use of steel as a main structural element in building construction.[68]

In the 1979 financial year, the Harbour Board reported 85,257 container movements.[69]

Organisational change edit

 
Rail yards and sports stadium on reclaimed land at Thorndon.

With the shift of port facilities to the Thorndon container terminal, other parts of the waterfront could be redeveloped. In 1986 the Lambton Harbour Group – a collection of architects, urban designers and town planners – was formed to develop concept plans for 22 hectares of the waterfront between Wellington Railway Station / Waterloo Quay and the Overseas Passenger Terminal (formerly Clyde Quay Wharf).[70][71] Lambton Harbour Group was later renamed Lambton Harbour Management. About 80% of the area was owned by the Harbour Board. The Board and Wellington City Council would together choose which concept they preferred for the area.[71] Wellington Harbour Board, Wellington City Council and the Wellington Civic Trust jointly won an award from the New Zealand Planning Institute for the Lambton Harbour Development Project in April 1988. The president of the Institute said that the Lambton Harbour project was "a good example of the enterprise planning which can be promoted to local authorities in New Zealand to ensure more efficient use and enjoyment of public resources by the people of New Zealand”.[72] One of the first projects proposed by the Lambton Harbour Development Project was the Queens Wharf Retail Centre, initially described as a 'Festival Marketplace' or 'Market Hall'.[73] The retail centre opened in 1995 but was an immediate failure and the building was sold in 1998.[74] Other early projects included the redevelopment of Frank Kitts Park, begun in 1989,[75] and the refurbishment of Shed 3 as Dockside restaurant, begun in 1991.[76]

 
Lambton Harbour, with Chaffers marina in foreground

Wellington Harbour Board was disestablished after the passing of the Port Companies Act 1988 and the Local Government Act 1989, as part of the 1989 local government reforms. Operational port assets were transferred to a new commercial company called Port of Wellington (now known as CentrePort) formed on 1 October 1988.[77][78] Ownership of the Port of Wellington company was vested in Greater Wellington Regional Council and Horizons Regional Council. When the port company was formed, it owned approximately 72 hectares (180 acres) of Wellington waterfront property including wharves. The remainder of the Wellington waterfront area, from Shed 21 to Clyde Quay Wharf, including all the buildings and the area covered by the Lambton Harbour Development Project, was transferred to Wellington City Council.[79]: 13  In 1988, Australia was New Zealand's biggest trading partner but most of the new Port of Wellington's business was with Europe and Japan.[78]: 24  Meat and manufactured goods were the main products exported from Wellington, and other products shipped through the port included bulk wheat and cement, machinery, steel, imported cars, meat, dairy and wool.[78]: 35 

The Harbour Board's interest in the Lambton Harbour Development Project was transferred to Wellington City Council under the provisions of the Local Government (Wellington Region) Reorganisation Order 1989. From this time, Lambton Harbour Management was wholly owned by Wellington City Council but operated separately.[76]: 18  Wellington Harbour Board was officially dissolved on 1 November 1989.[76]: 15 

Chairmen of Wellington Harbour Board edit

The following is a complete list of chairmen of Wellington Harbour Board.[80]

No. Chairman
(Birth–Death)
Portrait Term of office Constituency
1 William Levin
(1845–1893)
  1880 1881 Governor[81]
2 William Valentine Jackson
(1832–1900)
  1881 1883 Wellington
3 Edward Pearce
(1832–1922)
  1883 1887 Governor
4 John Duthie
(1841–1915)
  1887 1888 Wellington
5 Henry Rose
(1833–1912)
  1888 1891 Shipowners[82]
6 William Booth
(1837–1903)
  1891 1892 Wairarapa[83]
7 John Honeycombe Cock
(1848–1892)
  1892 1893 Chamber of Commerce[84]
8 John Jack
(1827–1909)
  1893 1895 Wellington[85]
9 Thomas John William Gale
(1853–1903)
  1895 1897 Chamber of Commerce[86]
10 Francis Humphris Fraser
(1833–1911)
  1897 1899 Governor[87]
11 John Hutcheson
(1854–1940)
  1899 1900 Government[88]
12 Harold Beauchamp
(1858–1938)
  1900 1903 Wellington
13 Nicholas Reid
(1837–1915)
  1903 1904 Shipowners[89]
14 William Cable
(1848–1922)
  1904 1906 Wellington[90]
15 Kennedy Macdonald
(1847–1914)
  1906 1908 Governor[91]
16 Thomas Wilford
(1870–1939)
  1908 1910 Governor
17 Robert Fletcher
(1863–1918)
  1910 1915 Wellington
18 Charles Edward Daniell
(1856–1939)
  1915 1919 Wellington[92]
19 Joseph Harkness
(1850–1930)
  1919 1923 Governor
20 George Mitchell
(1877–1939)
  1923 1925 Wellington
21 Maurice Cohen
(1862–1934)
  1925 1927 Manawatu[93]
22 John Cobbe
(1859–1944)
  1927 1929 Manawatu[94]
23 John William McEwan
(1856–1942)
  1929 1931 Hutt[95]
24 Charles Norwood
(1871–1966)
  1931 1933 Wellington
25 Charles Murray Turrell
(1868–1944)
  1933 1934 Shipowners
26 Thomas Robert Barrer
(1863–1951)
  1934 1936 Wairarapa[96]
27 Dougall John McGowan
(1880–1940)
  1936 1939 Payers of Dues[97]
28 Meldrum Alfred Eliott
(1867–1946)
  1939 1940 Manawatu
29 William Lockhart Fitzherbert
(1877–1956)
  1940 1941 Manawatu
30 William Henry Price
(1872–1963)
  1941 1954 Shipowners
31 Sir Will Appleton
(1889–1958)
  1954 1957 Wellington
32 Brian Edwin Keiller
(1901–1977)
  1957 1961 Manawatu
33 Ernest Toop
(1895–1976)
  1961 1966 Wellington
34 Barry Barton-Ginger
(1892–1969)
  1966 1968 Makara
35 Eric Malcolm Hodder
(1897–1987)
  1968 1971 Wairarapa
36 Rolland O'Regan
(1904–1992)
  1971 1974 Wellington
37 Henry Alan James
(1924–2001)
  1974 1980 Wairarapa
38 John King
(1917–2012)
  1980 1986 Feilding
39 Nigel Gould
(born 1948)
  1986 1989 Lower Hutt

See also edit

References edit

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41°17′07″S 174°46′41″E / 41.285161°S 174.778039°E / -41.285161; 174.778039

wellington, harbour, board, this, article, about, organisation, established, 1989, present, port, company, centreport, wellington, body, which, formerly, managed, shipping, commercial, affairs, port, wellington, zealand, constituted, 1880, disestablished, 1989. This article is about the organisation dis established in 1989 For the present port company see CentrePort Wellington Wellington Harbour Board was the body which formerly managed the shipping and commercial affairs of the port of Wellington in New Zealand It was constituted in 1880 and was disestablished in 1989 Wellington Harbour BoardCoat of arms of the Wellington Harbour BoardAbbreviationWHBSuccessorCentrePort WellingtonFormation1 January 1880 144 years ago 1880 01 01 Dissolved1 November 1989 34 years ago 1989 11 01 PurposePort operatorHeadquartersWellington New Zealand During its 110 year tenure the Harbour Board reclaimed land around Wellington Harbour and built and maintained facilities including quays wharves goods sheds a marina and a floating dock for ship repairs The Board managed goods and passengers passing through the port from domestic and international locations and was responsible for the safe movement of vessels within the harbour Contents 1 Background 2 Establishment 3 Facilities 3 1 Wharves 3 2 Head Office and Bond Store 3 3 Wharf Office Building 3 4 Evans Bay Patent Slip 3 5 Clyde Quay boat harbour 3 6 Dredges tugs and launches 3 7 Hikitia floating crane 4 Progress 4 1 Reclamation 4 2 1930 New Zealand s main port 4 3 1940 1960s 4 4 Container handling capability 5 Organisational change 6 Chairmen of Wellington Harbour Board 7 See also 8 ReferencesBackground editWellington city was settled by British colonists in 1840 and quickly became an important port and business centre Small private wharves built in the 1840s became inadequate as trade grew and visiting ships became larger From 1856 the Chamber of Commerce began agitating for a large publicly owned wharf Wellington Provincial Council gave permission and Queens Wharf was built in 1862 It was managed by a Wharf Committee of the Provincial Council 1 11 In 1870 Wellington City Corporation now Wellington City Council came into being and in 1871 the Provincial Council sold its interest in Queens Wharf to the City Council along with the bond store at the wharf and some newly reclaimed land 2 45 64 The City Council leased wharf operations to a private company until 1876 when it took over direct responsibility for the wharf Continuing expansion of the city and shipping trade led the Chamber of Commerce to push for a separate entity to manage the business of the port The government passed the Harbours Act in November 1878 to regulate management of harbours around New Zealand and this led to the establishment of Wellington Harbour Board under the Wellington Harbour Board Act 1879 The act came into effect on 1 January 1880 and the board held its first meeting in February 1880 The Board was an autonomous authority with responsibility for planning and constructing harbour facilities regulating the use of wharves determining port charges and controlling navigation within the harbour limits 3 4 3 Establishment editThe Harbour Board initially consisted of 10 members three appointed by the Government the mayor one person elected by the Chamber of Commerce two members elected by Wellington ratepayers one representing shipping interests one elected by Hutt County Council and one to represent the Wairarapa County Councils 1 11 The members of the first Harbour Board were William Hort Levin Edward Pearce and William Robert Williams government appointees 5 William Hutchison Mayor of Wellington Joseph Edward Nathan representing the Chamber of Commerce William Valentine Jackson and Paul Coffey elected by ratepayers Henry Rose of the New Zealand Shipping Company representing shipping interests Stephen Lancaster representing Hutt County Council and Frederick Augustus Krull a Wellington businessman representing Wairarapa 6 7 Wellington Harbour board was unique amongst New Zealand harbour boards because as well as control and regulation of the port supplying water to ships and providing cool storage it acted as wharfinger responsible for taking goods from ships and delivering them to other ships or to destinations in the city This was said to be cheaper and more efficient than having other businesses do the work and gave the harbour board strong authority 8 Although the Harbour Board was set up with powers to manage shipping wharf charges and trade in the harbour it initially had no assets The board was entitled to take a loan from central government 9 In October 1881 the Harbour Board paid the City Council 64000 for Queens Wharf and the bond store and the wharf became its centre of operations 2 65 10 Harbour Board employees in October 1881 consisted of the harbourmaster outward pilot four boatmen pilot coxswain and two signalmen 10 The board members did not receive a salary 9 Another deep water wharf was completed in April 1880 Railway Wharf had been built by the government on newly reclaimed land near Wellington Railway Station Three railway tracks were laid down on the wharf so that goods could be transported directly from the railway station The wharf was angled on a north north west south south east axis the same as Queens Wharf because at the time it was important to moor vessels fore and aft to Wellington s prevailing winds 11 Following passage of the Wellington Harbour Board and Corporation Land Act in September 1880 control of Railway Wharf was transferred to the Harbour Board 12 13 Facilities editWharves edit Main article Wharves in Wellington HarbourMore wharves were built around the inner harbour The first wharf built by the Harbour Board was Wool Wharf now Waterloo Quay Wharf completed in 1883 to handle the wool trade This was followed by Ferry Wharf 1897 Glasgow Wharf 1901 Taranaki Street Wharf 1906 Kings Wharf 1909 Clyde Quay Wharf 1910 Tug Wharf 1914 and Pipitea Wharf 1923 In addition to the big wharves built in the inner harbour for movement of goods and passengers the Harbour Board oversaw construction of suburban wharves in the eastern bays from Petone around to Eastbourne as well as at Evans Bay and Seatoun and Karaka Bay at the harbour entrance nbsp Head Office and Bond Store on Queens Wharf Head Office and Bond Store edit Main article Wellington Harbour Board Head Office and Bond Store With the business of the port expanding the Harbour Board commissioned a new administration building and bond store to replace earlier wooden buildings The building was built on Jervois Quay at the entrance to Queens Wharf and was completed in 1892 As of 2023 it houses the Museum of Wellington The Harbour Board s board room is still on site and open to the public Wharf Office Building edit Main article Wellington Harbour Board Wharf Office BuildingIn 1896 the Wharf Office Building was built opposite the Head Office and Bond Store at the entrance to Queens Wharf Art Nouveau gates made of iron were installed in 1899 between these two buildings at the wharf entrance 14 As of 2023 the Wharf Office Building houses apartments and the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts nbsp The former wharf offices seen from Post Office Square Evans Bay Patent Slip edit Main article Evans Bay Patent Slip A patent slip for hauling up ships for repair was built at Evans Bay in 1873 It was operated by the Wellington Patent Slip Company and didn t come under Wellington Harbour Board control until 1908 The Patent Slip Company which was 90 owned by the Union Steam Ship Company from 1908 continued to operate the slip and a second slip built in 1922 under lease from the Harbour Board until 1969 when the Harbour Board took over direct management of both slips The first slip was taken out of commission and the second one was upgraded It closed in 1980 One of the triggers of the 1913 Great Strike was a demand by Wellington shipwrights that they be paid travelling time when they had to go to Evans Bay to work at the patent slip 15 Clyde Quay boat harbour edit In 1898 local yachtsmen complained that reclamation at Te Aro and other work around Railway Wharf was displacing moorings for small boats The Harbour Board suggested that yachts could be moored at Evans Bay but the yachting community objected saying it was too far away and isolated boats would be vandalised and the winds there were not ideal 16 in 1900 the Harbour Board approved construction of a boat harbour and baths at Clyde Quay 17 Old structures on the beach were removed Clyde Quay and Oriental Terrace now Oriental Parade were widened and a sea wall built and public salt water baths and a boat harbour for pleasure craft were created 17 Some land was reclaimed so that the board could build a row of 24 reinforced concrete boatsheds in two sections with stairs leading down from the footpath 18 The boatsheds were designed with their roofs below the height of the sea wall so that views of the harbour would not be obstructed The boatsheds were completed in 1907 and along with another group of sheds built in 1922 are still in use 19 20 21 Dredges tugs and launches edit nbsp The dredge Whakarire in the harbour 1904 Queens Wharf is to the left In 1882 the board bought a Priestman dredge so that it could remove silt and increase the depth of some berths 22 In 1902 that dredge was replaced with a new steam dredge The dredge named Whakarire to deepen water was built by Lobnitz and Co in Renfrew Scotland and sailed to New Zealand via the Suez Canal and Torres Strait 23 24 Whakarire was sold to Napier Harbour Board in 1934 and replaced by Kerimoana to dig the sea in 1938 25 26 Kerimoana was scrapped in 1981 27 Various privately owned vessels acted as tugs and pilots on the harbour during the 19th and 20th centuries For example Wellington Harbour Ferries operated a tug called Duco between 1892 and 1909 and the Union Steam Ship Company bought a tug named Natone in 1904 28 In 1900 Wellington Harbour Board bought a launch it named Uta to use as a pilot boat 29 30 Uta served the Harbour Board until 1950 31 and was replaced by Tiakina in 1953 32 In 1925 Wellington Harbour Board acquired a purpose built deep water salvage tug which it named Toia to pull on loan from the British Admiralty The Board also commissioned construction of a floating crane HIkitia to lift and a new harbourmaster s launch Arahina to lead 33 34 In 1949 Toia was returned to the New Zealand Navy to be based at Devonport Naval Base and not replaced because the Union Steam Ship Company had two tugs for use in Wellington harbour 35 Arahina rescued many people from the passenger ferry Wahine when it ran aground at the entrance to Wellington Harbour in 1968 36 Arahina was sold in 1990 37 but as of 2023 was still afloat and moored at Queens Wharf 36 nbsp Kupe Ngahue and Toia 2007The Harbour Board bought another pilot launch the Tiakina in 1953 32 Tiakina arrived in Wellington in 1954 and was in service until 1992 38 As of 2023 it is used as a private charter boat in Dunedin 39 When the Wahine ran aground in 1968 killing 51 people the Union Steam Ship Company s tug Tapuhi was not strong enough to assist the ship 40 41 Responding to the disaster the Harbour Board bought new bigger tugs Kupe which went into service in 1971 42 Toia 1972 and Ngahue 1977 43 The Harbour Board s successor CentrePort sold Kupe in 2009 42 and Toia and Ngahue in 2014 43 Hikitia floating crane edit Main article Hikitia The Harbour Board bought Hikitia a self propelled floating steam crane in 1925 Hikitia was constructed in Scotland and sailed to Wellington under its own power 44 As of 2023 it is still in working order and thought to be the only working steam crane of its kind in the world Progress edit nbsp An animation showing the phases of reclamation by year in Wellington Harbour Reclamation edit Main article Reclamation of Wellington Harbour Although the Harbour Board controlled the wharves Wellington City Council retained control of the Te Aro seabed and foreshore From 1884 to 1889 the Council conducted a programme of reclamation which brought it into conflict with the Harbour Board 2 66 Further reclamation would continue throughout the life of the board Major reclamation at Thorndon was proposed in 1916 but work did not begin until 1923 45 46 47 1930 New Zealand s main port edit In 1930 Wellington was the main trans shipping port in New Zealand with over 3000 trading vessels visiting in the previous year 8 The port handled 62 of New Zealand s hemp exports 50 of cheese exports and 28 of the country s wool exports Other products exported from Wellington included butter frozen meat and apples in total an average of 26 of New Zealand s exports 8 By this time there were 14 members on the board and almost 400 permanent staff In addition the board employed an average of around 350 casual wharf labourers each day 8 Harbour Board facilities included 10 inner harbour wharves oil wharves at Evans Bay and Point Howard suburban wharves Clyde Quay marina for pleasure craft 35 goods stores along the wharves and waterfront a variety of cranes including its large new floating crane Hikitia weighbridges a repair shop and a tug 8 A floating dock was being built and reclamation of land at Thorndon was continuing 1940 1960s edit The Harbour Board continued to upgrade and expand its wharves and facilities A new breastwork and reclamation in Thorndon begun in the 1920s was completed in late 1939 48 49 During World War 2 Wellington was an important port for troop movements United States authorities were given sole use of the newly developed Aotea Quay 50 69 In October 1943 the 2nd Division of the United States Marine Corps embarked at Aotea Quay on their way to the Battle of Tarawa 50 72 The marina and boatsheds at Clyde Quay were also made available to the United States as a base for repairs and maintenance of their small craft and landing barges 50 69 Almost 72 of 120000 troops in the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force embarked from Wellington 50 65 In 1946 Wellington was still New Zealand s busiest trans shipping port with 70 of New Zealand s tonnage moving through the port By weight Wellington accounted for 43 of New Zealand s cheese exports 24 of frozen meat 19 of wool bales and 14 of butter exports 50 23 In February 1951 major industrial action now known as the Waterfront Dispute took place Waterfront workers around New Zealand refused to work overtime on the wharves demanding more pay better working conditions and a repeal of restrictions enforced by the Government during World War 2 51 Shipping companies refused to employ workers unless they agreed to work overtime Workers were then locked out of the wharves which at that time were fenced and able to have access restricted On 15 February 1951 there were 21 foreign ships berthed in Wellington and a queue of freighters waiting to berth 52 and by the end of March 38 ships were in the harbour waiting to discharge 70 000 tons of cargo 53 As Harbour Board employees refused to work the government called in hundreds of army and navy servicemen to unload ships 54 At the end of March Harbour Board employees voted to return to work 55 but other workers on the wharves remained on strike The dispute lasted 151 days and led to changes in the unionisation and employment conditions of waterfront workers Between 1950 and 1960 the board built bulk handling facilities for coal and wheat at Aotea Quay and began development for a roll on roll off road and rail ferry at Interisland Wharf The ferry Aramoana came into service in 1962 Development of Wellington Airport which opened in 1959 required land foreshore and harbour areas controlled by the Harbour Board so in an arrangement with the Government the board ceded these areas to the airport development and received land near the Hutt River estuary in exchange 56 66 The board reclaimed 47 5 acres 19 2 ha of land near its Point Howard oil wharf for leasing to oil companies 56 52 By 1960 there were 15 men on the board representing Manawatu Wairarapa Upper Hutt Lower Hutt Petone Hutt County Eastbourne Tawa and Wellington city 56 The board had 739 permanent staff in four departments the Traffic Department received and delivered cargo the Harbour Department controlled the movement of ships in the harbour mooring and pilotage the Engineers Department handled repairs to facilities and planned new works and the Accounts Department handled financial matters and statistics The board also employed almost 500 casual workers on the wharves During 1959 there were 2579 shipping arrivals in Wellington from New Zealand and foreign ports The port handled 68 of New Zealand s trans shipment tonnage Primary produce made up much of the goods exported 30 of New Zealand s cheese exports by weight and 16 of its frozen meat exports left from Wellington Other commodities exported included wool hides and skins and apples Imports coming through Wellington included cars tractors iron and steel cotton and synthetic piece goods petrol and tobacco 56 82 Container handling capability edit nbsp The container terminal seen from Whairepo Lagoon In 1969 the Government approved a recommendation from the New Zealand Ports Authority for the installation of a container crane at the ports of Auckland and Wellington 57 58 Construction of the Wellington container handling terminal was underway by 1971 including a 49 ha 120 acres reclamation at the end of Aotea and Fryatt Quays Two new tugs Kupe and Toia were purchased to handle the larger ships expected and a 40 tonne container crane was ordered 59 Erection of the container crane began in early 1971 60 The first container ship arrived in Wellington in June 1971 but was unloaded with conventional cranes because an industrial agreement with unions had not yet been reached for the operation of the container crane 61 A second container crane was ordered for the port and delivered in 1975 62 but an industrial dispute with the boilermakers union caused delay to the construction 63 A separate industrial dispute involving demarcation issues caused a 3 year delay to the commissioning of a crane intended to load containers onto railway wagons at the port The crane was finally put into service in August 1975 64 In November 1976 funding was approved for a third container crane at the port 65 Industrial disputes involving the Wellington boilermakers and the Federation of Labour caused a delay of almost 12 months in the construction and commissioning of the crane 66 67 The delays to the construction of the container crane along with more protracted delays to the construction of the steel structure of the BNZ building in Willis Street led building developers to change designs and move away from the use of steel as a main structural element in building construction 68 In the 1979 financial year the Harbour Board reported 85 257 container movements 69 Organisational change edit nbsp Rail yards and sports stadium on reclaimed land at Thorndon With the shift of port facilities to the Thorndon container terminal other parts of the waterfront could be redeveloped In 1986 the Lambton Harbour Group a collection of architects urban designers and town planners was formed to develop concept plans for 22 hectares of the waterfront between Wellington Railway Station Waterloo Quay and the Overseas Passenger Terminal formerly Clyde Quay Wharf 70 71 Lambton Harbour Group was later renamed Lambton Harbour Management About 80 of the area was owned by the Harbour Board The Board and Wellington City Council would together choose which concept they preferred for the area 71 Wellington Harbour Board Wellington City Council and the Wellington Civic Trust jointly won an award from the New Zealand Planning Institute for the Lambton Harbour Development Project in April 1988 The president of the Institute said that the Lambton Harbour project was a good example of the enterprise planning which can be promoted to local authorities in New Zealand to ensure more efficient use and enjoyment of public resources by the people of New Zealand 72 One of the first projects proposed by the Lambton Harbour Development Project was the Queens Wharf Retail Centre initially described as a Festival Marketplace or Market Hall 73 The retail centre opened in 1995 but was an immediate failure and the building was sold in 1998 74 Other early projects included the redevelopment of Frank Kitts Park begun in 1989 75 and the refurbishment of Shed 3 as Dockside restaurant begun in 1991 76 nbsp Lambton Harbour with Chaffers marina in foregroundWellington Harbour Board was disestablished after the passing of the Port Companies Act 1988 and the Local Government Act 1989 as part of the 1989 local government reforms Operational port assets were transferred to a new commercial company called Port of Wellington now known as CentrePort formed on 1 October 1988 77 78 Ownership of the Port of Wellington company was vested in Greater Wellington Regional Council and Horizons Regional Council When the port company was formed it owned approximately 72 hectares 180 acres of Wellington waterfront property including wharves The remainder of the Wellington waterfront area from Shed 21 to Clyde Quay Wharf including all the buildings and the area covered by the Lambton Harbour Development Project was transferred to Wellington City Council 79 13 In 1988 Australia was New Zealand s biggest trading partner but most of the new Port of Wellington s business was with Europe and Japan 78 24 Meat and manufactured goods were the main products exported from Wellington and other products shipped through the port included bulk wheat and cement machinery steel imported cars meat dairy and wool 78 35 The Harbour Board s interest in the Lambton Harbour Development Project was transferred to Wellington City Council under the provisions of the Local Government Wellington Region Reorganisation Order 1989 From this time Lambton Harbour Management was wholly owned by Wellington City Council but operated separately 76 18 Wellington Harbour Board was officially dissolved on 1 November 1989 76 15 Chairmen of Wellington Harbour Board editThe following is a complete list of chairmen of Wellington Harbour Board 80 No Chairman Birth Death Portrait Term of office Constituency 1 William Levin 1845 1893 nbsp 1880 1881 Governor 81 2 William Valentine Jackson 1832 1900 nbsp 1881 1883 Wellington 3 Edward Pearce 1832 1922 nbsp 1883 1887 Governor 4 John Duthie 1841 1915 nbsp 1887 1888 Wellington 5 Henry Rose 1833 1912 nbsp 1888 1891 Shipowners 82 6 William Booth 1837 1903 nbsp 1891 1892 Wairarapa 83 7 John Honeycombe Cock 1848 1892 nbsp 1892 1893 Chamber of Commerce 84 8 John Jack 1827 1909 nbsp 1893 1895 Wellington 85 9 Thomas John William Gale 1853 1903 nbsp 1895 1897 Chamber of Commerce 86 10 Francis Humphris Fraser 1833 1911 nbsp 1897 1899 Governor 87 11 John Hutcheson 1854 1940 nbsp 1899 1900 Government 88 12 Harold Beauchamp 1858 1938 nbsp 1900 1903 Wellington 13 Nicholas Reid 1837 1915 nbsp 1903 1904 Shipowners 89 14 William Cable 1848 1922 nbsp 1904 1906 Wellington 90 15 Kennedy Macdonald 1847 1914 nbsp 1906 1908 Governor 91 16 Thomas Wilford 1870 1939 nbsp 1908 1910 Governor 17 Robert Fletcher 1863 1918 nbsp 1910 1915 Wellington 18 Charles Edward Daniell 1856 1939 nbsp 1915 1919 Wellington 92 19 Joseph Harkness 1850 1930 nbsp 1919 1923 Governor 20 George Mitchell 1877 1939 nbsp 1923 1925 Wellington 21 Maurice Cohen 1862 1934 nbsp 1925 1927 Manawatu 93 22 John Cobbe 1859 1944 nbsp 1927 1929 Manawatu 94 23 John William McEwan 1856 1942 nbsp 1929 1931 Hutt 95 24 Charles Norwood 1871 1966 nbsp 1931 1933 Wellington 25 Charles Murray Turrell 1868 1944 nbsp 1933 1934 Shipowners 26 Thomas Robert Barrer 1863 1951 nbsp 1934 1936 Wairarapa 96 27 Dougall John McGowan 1880 1940 nbsp 1936 1939 Payers of Dues 97 28 Meldrum Alfred Eliott 1867 1946 nbsp 1939 1940 Manawatu 29 William Lockhart Fitzherbert 1877 1956 nbsp 1940 1941 Manawatu 30 William Henry Price 1872 1963 nbsp 1941 1954 Shipowners 31 Sir Will Appleton 1889 1958 nbsp 1954 1957 Wellington 32 Brian Edwin Keiller 1901 1977 nbsp 1957 1961 Manawatu 33 Ernest Toop 1895 1976 nbsp 1961 1966 Wellington 34 Barry Barton Ginger 1892 1969 nbsp 1966 1968 Makara 35 Eric Malcolm Hodder 1897 1987 nbsp 1968 1971 Wairarapa 36 Rolland O Regan 1904 1992 nbsp 1971 1974 Wellington 37 Henry Alan James 1924 2001 nbsp 1974 1980 Wairarapa 38 John King 1917 2012 nbsp 1980 1986 Feilding 39 Nigel Gould born 1948 nbsp 1986 1989 Lower HuttSee also editJames Marchbanks general manager chief engineer Wellington Harbour Board Head Office and Bond Store Wellington Harbour Board Wharf Office BuildingReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wellington Harbour Board a b The Wellington Harbour Board Collection Wellington New Zealand Wellington Harbour Board 1980 ISBN 0908582447 a b c Yska Redmer 2006 Wellington Biography of a city Auckland New Zealand Reed ISBN 9780790011172 Wellington Harbour Board Act 1879 Local 43 Victoriae 1879 No 13 New Zealand Parliamentary Counsel Office Retrieved 27 August 2023 via Australasian Legal Information Institute Port of Wellington World Port Wellington Harbour Board March 1978 Retrieved 27 August 2023 via Wellington City Recollect Latest telegrams Marlborough Press 13 February 1880 via Papers Past New Zealand telegrams New Zealand Herald 11 February 1880 via Papers Past Wellington Lyttelton Times 11 February 1880 via Papers Past a b c d e Jubilee Yearbook of Wellington Harbour Board 1930 Wellington City Libraries Retrieved 17 August 2023 a b Harbor Board duties New Zealand Mail 7 February 1880 via Papers Past a b Wellington Harbor Board New Zealand Times 1 October 1881 via Papers Past untitled Evening Post 7 February 1879 Retrieved 17 July 2023 via Papers Past Cochrane amp Murray Kelly Michael Dodd Andy 30 June 2012 Coastal historic heritage of the Wellington Region Survey for the coastal plan review report PDF Wellington New Zealand Greater Wellington Regional Council updated 31 October 2014 The Harbor Board Bill New Zealand Times 10 September 1880 via Papers Past Harbour Board Gates wellingtoncityheritage org nz 28 September 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2023 The shipwrights dispute Press via Papers Past Yachting Yachtsmen s grievance New Zealand Mail 7 April 1898 via Papers Past a b Improvements at Oriental Bay New Zealand Times 19 October 1900 via Papers Past Local and General New Zealand Times 2 March 1905 via Papers Past Ferro concrete boatsheds New Zealand Times 10 April 1907 via Papers Past Take a peek inside Wellington s iconic Clyde Quay boat sheds thisNZlife 29 November 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2023 Boat Sheds www wellingtoncityheritage org nz 31 July 2017 Retrieved 26 August 2023 Harbour Board Evening Post 23 February 1883 via Papers Past The new dredge for Wellington Evening Post 16 June 1903 via Papers Past The Whakarire arrives New Zealand Times 26 October 1903 via Papers Past Dredge departs Evening Post 1 March 1934 via Papers Past Kerimoana Evening Post 24 March 1938 via Papers Past Kerimoana dredge natlib govt nz Retrieved 29 August 2023 Shipping news New Zealand Times 3 May 1904 via Papers Past The Harbour Board s new steam launch Evening Post 20 April 1900 via Papers Past The Wellington Harbour Board s oil launch Uta Evening Post 4 May 1900 via Papers Past New pilot launch Gisborne Herald 7 November 1950 via Papers Past a b Harbour Board launch Press 17 August 1953 via Papers Past Toia and Hikitia Evening Post 23 July 1925 via Papers Past Local and general Evening Post 25 June 1925 via Papers Past Tug placed in reserve Greymouth Evening Star 28 May 1949 via Papers Past a b Davis Joanna 7 January 2023 From a concrete high rise in Singapore to living on a boat in Wellington Harbour I love it Stuff Retrieved 29 August 2023 Historic launch at Queens Wharf left undamaged after smoke on board Stuff 9 August 2016 Retrieved 29 August 2023 Tiakina A visitor from Dunedin WaitemataWoodys 16 March 2021 Retrieved 29 August 2023 ABOUT US tiakina Retrieved 29 August 2023 Donoghue Tim 11 March 2013 Tugboat Tapuhi begins Wellington voyage Stuff Archived from the original on 29 May 2023 Retrieved 1 June 2023 Union Co to sell tug Press 6 January 1972 via Papers Past a b Farewell tugs at heartstrings Stuff 31 January 2009 Archived from the original on 30 May 2023 Retrieved 30 May 2023 a b Donoghue Tim 6 June 2014 Little red toots Toia and Ngahue up for sale Stuff Archived from the original on 30 May 2023 Retrieved 30 May 2023 The floating crane Dominion 3 December 1925 via Papers Past Five years behind New Zealand Times 6 May 1921 via Papers Past Harbour year Dominion 10 January 1922 via Papers Past Thorndon wall New Zealand Times 19 January 1923 via Papers Past Thorndon breastwork Evening Post 18 October 1939 via Papers Past The story of Wellington s Front door Evening Post 7 November 1939 via Papers Past a b c d e Handbook of the Wellington Harbour Board 1947 Wellington City Libraries Retrieved 24 August 2023 War on the wharves nzhistory govt nz Retrieved 4 September 2023 Most ports to be idle to day Press 15 February 1951 via Papers Past Waterfront strike Press 27 March 1951 via Papers Past Services work ships Press 28 February 1951 via Papers Past Harbour Board employees Press 28 March 1951 via Papers Past a b c d The Port of Wellington New Zealand 1960 Wellington City Libraries Retrieved 26 August 2023 Container Ports Authority supports North Island The Press 8 October 1969 via Papers Past Container plan approved Government accepts North Island The Press 15 October 1969 via Papers Past Wellington complex The Press 20 May 1971 via Papers Past Tall crane in Wellington The Press 7 January 1971 via Papers Past First container ship The Press 23 June 1971 via Papers Past Awkward The Press 12 March 1975 via Papers Past Conference bit of a tragedy The Press 10 February 1975 via Papers Past Crane in use at last The Press 2 August 1975 via Papers Past New crane approved The Press 23 November 1976 via Papers Past Crane job The Press 25 August 1979 via Papers Past Fast discharge of bulk cargo achieved The Press 14 September 1979 via Papers Past Disputes cause shift away from steel The Press 28 February 1979 via Papers Past Crane hire rate to rise The Press 27 February 1981 via Papers Past Lambton Harbour Development Project Concept Plan advertisement Press 8 February 1986 via Papers Past a b Chch based team for Wgtn plans Press 26 April 1986 p 8 via Papers Past Lambton Harbour project wins award of merit Press 8 April 1988 via Papers Past Lambton Harbour Development Project advertisement Press 13 May 1987 via Papers Past O Neil Andrea 17 July 2015 Wellington s Queens Wharf failed to fire 150 years of news Stuff Retrieved 10 July 2023 Park contract let Press 29 July 1989 via Papers Past a b c Lambton Harbour Annual Report 1991 Wellington City Libraries February 1992 Retrieved 31 August 2023 McLean Gavin 2001 Captain s log New Zealand s maritime history Auckland New Zealand Hodder Moa Beckett p 189 ISBN 1 86958 881 9 a b c Wellington A Regional Economic Profile 1989 Wellington City Libraries Retrieved 31 August 2023 Fill Barbara Astwood Karen 2012 Registration Report for a Historic Area Wellington Harbour Board Historic Area Volume I PDF New Zealand Historic Places Trust Archived PDF from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 31 May 2023 Johnson David 1996 Members and Officers of the Wellington Harbour Board Appendix 1 Wellington Harbour Wellington Maritime Museum Trust p 475 ISBN 0958349800 To The Editor The Evening Post Vol LXII no 80 1 October 1901 p 6 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Death of Captain Henry Rose The Evening Post Vol LXXXIV no 105 30 October 1912 p 8 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Death of Mr William Booth The Evening Post Vol LXV no 73 27 March 1903 p 5 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast The Late Mr John H Cock The Evening Post Vol XLIV no 111 8 November 1892 p 2 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Personal Matters The Evening Post Vol LXXVIII no 105 30 October 1909 p 5 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Death of Mr T J W Gale The Evening Post Vol LXV no 136 10 June 1903 p 6 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Personal Matters The Evening Post Vol LXXXII no 32 7 August 1911 p 6 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Obituary Mr John Hutcheson The Evening Post Vol CXXX no 84 5 October 1940 p 13 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Death of Mr Nicholas Reid The Evening Post Vol XC no 142 13 December 1915 p 2 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Obituary Mr William Cable The Evening Post Vol CIV no 8 10 July 1922 p 6 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Personal Matters The Evening Post Vol LXXXVIII no 95 19 October 1914 p 6 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Mr C E Daniell The Evening Post Vol CXXVIII no 10 12 July 1939 p 8 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Obituary Mr Maurice Cohen The Evening Post Vol CXVIII no 9 11 July 1934 p 13 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast The Hon J G Cobbe The Evening Post Vol CXXXVIII no 156 30 December 1944 p 8 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Obituary Mr J W McEwan The Evening Post Vol CXXXIV no 73 22 September 1942 p 3 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Obituary Mr C M Turrell The Evening Post Vol CXXXVII no 84 10 April 1944 p 3 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast Obituary Mr D J McGowan The Evening Post Vol CXXX no 25 29 July 1940 p 9 Retrieved 14 September 2016 via PapersPast 41 17 07 S 174 46 41 E 41 285161 S 174 778039 E 41 285161 174 778039 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wellington Harbour Board amp oldid 1214442260, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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