We loved staying with our Wellington grandparents as
everything was so different from Hastings. My grandparents lived in Kelburn which was an established area of mainly large houses. I now know that the area around Upland Road was only developed after the Cable Car was opened in 1902. My grandparents lived in North Terrace which was the first street on the right after you left the cable car terminus. We used to lie in bed and hear the noises of the cable cars going up and down. Their house was two-storeyed and seemed old because it was built in a Victorian style with sash bay windows. As a child I did not realise that the group of houses immediately outside the cable car had been built by one of the Kirkcaldies for his daughters, nor did I realise I knew all these people until many years later, although at one point my grandmother told me about this 'development'.
2 North Terrace
(Photo taken long after my grandparents lived there. The house next door is more like theirs was)
Almost all the houses in Hastings were one storeyed (possibly because of the Napier earthquake) so having stairs was
very exciting. 2 North Terrace was a large house
which my grandparents had been forced to buy over something more modern,
because my grandmother’s father came to live with them. My great-grandmother had died just before my
mother’s parents moved to Wellington from Wanganui in 1929. My grandmother was the sole surviving
daughter so they had to have enough bedrooms to accommodate members of her
family when they came to stay. My
great-grandfather died in 1941 before I was born but he had had his own sitting
room, called ‘The United Party Room’ which at the time I am writing about was
used as a dining room and study. Next to
it was an identical room that was only used for best. It was the Drawing Room and was famous for
the window panes blowing out if there was a bad southerly. I can remember occasions when we could not
go in there because the window panes were missing. My grandmother used this room for her tea
parties. It also contained the family
gramophone. This had to be wound up to
play a record. It was in a cabinet that
served as a china cabinet and had two drawers which were full of my
grandfather’s collection of photos from the First World War. When we were a little older we would frighten
ourselves by looking at photos of dead horses.
The records were 78 rpm. There
were Sousa marches and ‘Oh, For the Wings of a Dove’ sung by Ernest Lough, a famous boy
soprano and recorded around 1928. You spent a lot of time winding
up the gramophone as otherwise it went flat and stopped playing.
At the back of the house was a room called ‘The Meal Room’
where we ate most of our meals. The
piano was in there and also a bookcase containing my grandmother’s Victorian
novels. Next to the Meal Room was a
large kitchen. The identical house next
door had three narrow rooms including a scullery but my grandparents had
knocked them all in together. There was
a sink in one corner with an Ascot water heater over it. It made a nasty explosive noise when it was
switched on. Along the wall beside it were two clothes tubs for doing the
washing. They were covered with wooden
boards but on Mondays Craigie came to do the washing. This was a major exercise with a
wringer(mangle) put on the edge between the two tubs for wringing out the
sheets. I cannot really remember how the
water was heated but assumed there was also a copper. We certainly had a copper in Havelock North. On Mondays there was always macaroni cheese
for lunch. Criaige worked until early
afternoon and washed the hard floors as well as doing the washing. I think she also cleaned the bathroom. She was Irish and I think spoke with an Irish
accent.
Along the back wall of the kitchen there was a large gas
cooker and what I now know was a gas fridge.
We did not have gas in Hastings.
There was a table in the centre of the kitchen where we children would
sometimes have tea of boiled eggs. My
grandfather bought the eggs direct from a farmer who supplied his office each
Friday so they came in a brown paper bag and you had to be very careful not to
break any of the eggs. My grandmother’s old slate from school, complete with paint spots on it, was used for
writing shopping lists. The kitchen
opened onto a narrow passage known as the conservatory (but it wasn’t a conservatory, simply a lean-to porch). All the garden tools were kept there and it
was very untidy, not to mention smelly.
I expect it was damp.
Upstairs there were five bedrooms and one bathroom plus a
walk-in linen cupboard which smelt peculiar. The bathroom had a red tiled floor and a nasty
water stain below the taps on the bath.
When we moved to Wellington in 1953 the house was big enough to
accommodate all five of us. My
grandparents slept in the room above the United Party room while the one above
the drawing room was called the lumber room. It had been my great-grandfather’s bedroom and
was totally full of junk. I later learnt
that this was partly because my great-grandfather had died during the War and
there had been on-one to clean it out, but when we were a bit older and living
in Wellington we used to go into it sometimes.
It was a treasure trove of old things, ranging from my
great-grandfather’s masonic regalia to army uniform and a couple of guns and my
mother’s school reports. Soon after we moved
to Wellington I discovered her roller skates.
They were not adjustable but fitted me at the age of nine so I learnt to
use them for a few months. I used to go
round and round the bus turning area at the top of the cable car but of course
I was not destined to be a skater and I soon outgrew them.
In addition to the two front bedrooms the house had two single bedrooms and a large room
called ‘the nursery’ which I think had been extended over the back part of the
house at some point. We children
generally slept there. I liked lying in
bed and seeing the last plane coming along Tinakori hill on its way to land at
Rongotai (now Wellington) airport. The
features of this room that I remember, apart from it having room for two beds
and a cot, were the maidenhair fern on the chest of drawers, a toy train set
which my parents had bought for my grandfather after a court case involving
trains which he was involved in, and the Singer sewing machine that later
became my mother’s. I do not remember my
grandmother ever using it. Both my grandmothers
were knitters rather than dressmakers.
View from North Terrace across the Glen., looking south
The house faced south which is the wrong way to face in the southern hemisphere. This photo shows the outlook from the front. It looked across 'The Glen', a sunken area of housing, to the teacher training college and the rest of Kelburn. The window panes in the two front rooms used to blow out because the storms were always southerlies. The house was detached but only by about three feet. A path ran up the side with the front door halfway along the side wall. The house next door was identical. There was a small garden along the front of the house with a couple of hydrangea bushes, a daphne odorata and some cat mint plants. The garden at the back of the house was the ‘main’ garden. It was not very large but my grandfather was a keen gardener and grew flowers there. I do not remember any vegetable plants although there were herbs. There was a square lawn, in the middle of which my grandfather had sunk a tin can so that he could practise his putting. As the house was very close to the botanical gardens there were a lot of birds which would visit and I can remember learning the names of them. They tended to be British birds such as sparrows and thrushes rather than native birds. In the botanical gardens there were plenty of native species.
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