Strath-Taieri

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A view of the neighbouring Maniototo Plain. Looking southwest towards Rough Ridge from near Ranfurly
A view of the neighbouring Maniototo Plain. Looking southwest towards Rough Ridge from near Ranfurly

The Strath Taieri is a large glacial valley and river plateau, surrounded by rugged hill ranges located to the north and west of Otago Harbour. Since 1989 it has been part of the city of Dunedin. Middlemarch is located at its southern end.

The name is a hybrid word, from the Scots Gaelic strath, meaning a broad highland valley, and the Māori name Taieri pronunication  (traditional spelling Taiari) of the river which runs through it.

Across the Rock and Pillar range to the north west lies a larger high country plain known as The Maniototo.

Many of the smaller tributaries of the Taieri River have farm animal names, often in Scottish Borders dialect. Those in the neighbouring Maniototo, such as Gimmerburn and Kyeburn, were given by the surveyor John Turnbull Thomson, and are locally known as "Thomson's Barnyard".

Contents

[edit] Ecology

  • Strath Taieri is home to the Otago Skink, an endangered species of skink.
  • Some large salt pans can be found throughout the rocky hills bordering the plateau, a notable one is the Sutton Salt Lake.

[edit] History

There are Archaic (moa hunter) Māori sites on the Strath Taieri, also down stream on the Taieri Gorge and at Deep Stream and Rocklands on the adjacent plateau to the south. (Hamel, 2001, fig 2 p.16.) A principal Māori route from the coast to the interior lay along the valley. A cave was found in the district with its entrance blocked containing the bodies of a Māori woman and child. It isn't clear if they were trapped deliberately or by accident. (Thompson, 1949, pp.6-7.) The remains have been associated with the later Classic period of which type there are several sites in the area. There are rock shelters with mostly domestic articles, wooden bowls, material for garments and gear for hunting weka or fishing. (Hamel, 2001, fig 1. p.10 & p.80.) Charles Kettle saw the area from the top of Maungatua in 1847 and was impressed by the land's pastoral potential.

The Strath Taieri and its surrounding district lay beyond the limit of the coastal Otago Block which Kettle was surveying but following the Otago Association's settlement on that land in 1848 horizons became wider. Kettle was one of the first Europeans known to have visited the Strath Taieri when he led an exploration party up the valley in February 1851. (McLintock, 1949, p.332.) The Otago Provincial government was established in 1852, whose territory included the region.

It seems Duncan Stewart, his wife and their children were living on the site of what was later the Barewood homestead, on the Barewood run, by late 1853 or early 1854. (Thompson, 1949, p.10.) John Sutton was granted the Barewood Run in 1854 before it was surveyed. Between 1857 and 1859 much of the land in and around the Strath Taieri was taken up by pastoralists on lease from the crown.

One of these leaseholds, Cottesbrook, became the centre of several sheep stations put together by the Tasmanian Gellibrand family. A group of buildings, including a homestead, office, cottage, cook house, butcher's shop and large shearing shed were all built from the local stone. They remain, fine examples of masonry and distinctively Australasian design. (Thompson, 1949 p.23; illustrated Porter, 1983 p.220.) A number of the early European settlers came from Tasmania.

From 1861 the Otago gold rushes saw the development of a stage coach route, the Dunstan Trail leaving the coastal Taieri Plain near Outram advancing north and west across the plateau south of Strath Taieri proper, through Clark's Junction and on over the Rock and Pillar Range to the Maniototo. A new road north through the Strath Taieri valley was proposed in 1863. In 1864 gold-bearing ground was reported at Hyde at the head of the Strath Taieri and now the northern limit of Dunedin. Briefly there were two thousand people there. Gold fields to the east and north saw the 'middle Taieri valley', as the Strath Taieri was sometimes called, surrounded by prospering districts.

Alice Humphreys (nee Hawdon)(1848 -1934) moved to her husband's property in the valley soon after their marriage in 1869. He is credited with naming the valley 'Strath Taieri' and she with calling the private township laid out on their property 'Middlemarch' after George Eliot's novel. (Thomson, 1998, p.240.) However this origin of the name has been disputed. From whatever source it got its name the private township of Middlemarch on Mr Humphrey's property of Garthmyl had been surveyed on land adjoining the projected railway and several sections were already sold by 6 November 1880. (Thompson, 1949, pp.44-5.) A stone house was built and occupied by Mr. Kirk and his family by the winter of 1881. (Thompson, 1949, p.105.) By 1891 there was a hotel, eight houses, two blacksmith shops, two stores, a school and twenty tents occupied by workers building the railway.

Following the abolition of the New Zealand provinces in 1876 the Taieri County was formed whose Deep Stream Riding included the Strath Taieri. The county improved the road traversing the plateau from the Taieri Plain, building a bridge over Deep Stream in 1880, a suspension bridge over the Taieri River at Sutton in 1885 and the same year another over the Taieri linking Middlemarch with the Cottesbrook station. The Sutton Stream, south of the township, was bridged in 1884. There was a long pause before the 'centre road', now state highway 87, was extended north to Hyde and the Maniototo.

Construction of the Otago Central Railway from the South Island's main trunk line which lay along the coast, began in 1879. Its route was projected to cross the Taieri Plain and follow the Taieri Gorge upstream to the Strath Taieri which it would then traverse from south to north as the main route to Central Otago. The Gorge presented formidable obstacles to which the existing bridges and tunnels are now picturesque testimony. The line reached Middlemarch in April 1891 spurring the township's development. It was extended to Hyde by 16 July 1894 where it had a similar effect. The line's eventual terminus was Cromwell in the Upper Clutha catchment but it didn't arrive there until 1921. (Thompson, 1949, pp.95-7.)

To develop Middlemarch the March Creek had been diverted and for many years the township was regularly flooded until channel work on the creek ameliorated the problem. A Presbyterian preacher covered the Strath Taieri district in 1886. Anglican and Roman Catholic churches were built in 1901 and a handsome church of the local schist stone was completed for the Presbyterians in 1906.

Goldmining in nearby areas such as Macraes Flat and Nenthorn buoyed up the development of the Strath Taieri and its townships but that stalled in the twentieth century. In the 1880s rabbits became a plague and it was only by strenuous efforts this was contained by the 1940s. Runs were broken up for closer settlement in 1894 and later but the valley remained thinly populated. In 1914 there was a move to have the Strath Taieri Riding transferred to the Maniototo County which was unsuccessful. In the 1930s attempts to get a water supply for Middlemarch were also unsuccessful. However an electricity supply to Middlemarch was made operative on 28 July 1939. (Thompson, 1949, p.141.)

On the 4th of June 1943 the derailment of the Dunedin Cromwell Express on the outskirts of Hyde cost twenty-one lives. Because the accident was attributed to the negligence of the engine driver the government became liable for more than 200,000 pounds in compensation. The modern equivalent would be several million dollars. Post war development was slow and while farm production increased the population expanded only a little and latterly declined.

As the 20th century advanced this large and apparently empty country maintained the character and atmosphere of a pioneering district. Middlemarch could seem to visitors like a set for 'High Noon'. The plateau country to the south, with its fantastic rock formations, 'tors', heightens the impression of antiquity and otherworldliness which inspired artistic responses.

The celebrated New Zealand painter Colin McCahon as a schoolboy in 1936 had what he later described as a 'vision' looking westward from a point on the coastal hills over the Taieri Plain apparently to the plateau country south of the Strath Taieri proper. He later said his art had been an attempt to communicate this vision. He described it as seeing a landscape 'standing far from the sun of Egypt in the Otago cold.' He called it a 'landscape of splendour and order and peace', which he conceived as a pre-Biblical place. (McCahon, 1966, pp.363-4.) In 1945 his younger and also celebrated Otago contemporary, the poet James K. Baxter, wrote 'Upon the upland road/Ride easy, stranger:/Surrender to the sky/Your heart of anger.' The lines certainly capture the effect on some people of the experience of crossing the plateau, approaching the Strath Taieri by road from the south. (Baxter in Weir(ed),1981, p.34.)

That landscape became greener in the 1960s and 70s as native tussock was converted to European pasture, a process protested in the works of the artist Marilynn Webb. But the post war prosperity of farming ended with the 1970s. In October 1977 the Taieri County was merged with its northern neighbour Waikouaiti County. The Strath Taieri became part of the new Silverpeaks County surrounding Dunedin and its boroughs in an inland arc. Rural recession intensified and in 1989 Silverpeaks County was submerged in a new, much enlarged, City of Dunedin. In 1990 the Central Otago Railway was closed and the line from Clyde back to Middlemarch soon uplifted. Nevertheless a tourist train service was being operated from Dunedin to the Strath Taieri by way of the Taieri Gorge on the remaining part of the line. Since 1991 this has been run by the Taieri Gorge Railway Limited owned by the Dunedin City Council. In 1993 the course of the track further inland was opened as the Otago Central Rail Trail for hikers and cyclists, by the Department of Conservation. Both have proved successful in attracting visitors.

As a farming district, strategically located but isolated by geographical barriers, the Strath Taieri's development turned on changes in farming and transport until the late 20th century. While the closure of the through railway saw the end of that means of moving heavy goods between the coast and the interior the completion of the tar sealing of state highway 87, in 1996, was the effective provision of another. With the growth of tourism, much of it motor vehicle based, this, with the rail trail and tourist rail services has added a new element to the mix.

The rural, pioneering atmosphere of the district was perhaps responsible for the unexpected success of its bachelor dances, recently promoted ostensibly to find partners for its single men. That, and the emergence of New Zealand's iconic Southern Man may have led to the events attracting visitors from around the country and overseas. Apparently few marriages have resulted but the Strath Taieri has become known to a much wider audience.

[edit] References

  • Hamel, J. (2001) The Archaeology of Otago Wellington, NZ: Department of Conservation. ISBN 0-478-22016-2.
  • McCahon, C. (1966) Beginnings in Landfall vol. 24 no 4 Christchurch, NZ: Caxton Press.

McLintock, A.H. (1949) The History of Otago Dunedin, NZ: Otago Centennial Historical Publications.

  • Porter, F. (ed) (1983) Historic Buildings of New Zealand South Island Auckland, NZ: Methuen for the New Zealand Historic Places Trust. ISBN 0-456-03120-0.
  • Thompson, H.M. (1949) East of the Rock and Pillar Dunedin, NZ: Otago Centennial Historical Publications.
  • Thomson, J. (ed) (1998) Southern People A Dictionary of Otago Southland Biography Dunedin, NZ: Longacre Press with Dunedin City Council. ISBN 1-877135-11-9.
  • Weir, J.E. (1981) Collected Poems James K. Baxter Wellington, NZ: Oxford University Press.ISBN 0-19-558037-0.

[edit] See also