Denniston, New Zealand

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Denniston
Denniston
Coordinates: 41°44′17″S 171°47′44″E / 41.73806°S 171.79556°E / -41.73806; 171.79556
Country New Zealand
Region West Coast
District Buller District

Denniston is a small settlement in the northwestern South Island of New Zealand, in the West Coast region. It is on the small Mount Rochfort Plateau in the Papahaua Ranges 600 metres above sea level, 18 kilometres north-east of Westport.

During the early years of the 20th century Denniston's population was close to 2000, due to the large coal mine close to the town. It is now little more than a ghost town, with a population of less than 50. The location, history and fate of Denniston are similar to those of Millerton, New Zealand.

Coal is still mined at the nearby Burnett's Face and at the Stockton Mine. In 2010 Bathurst Resources announced the Escarpment Mine Project to mine for coal on the Denniston Plateau, a move strongly opposed by environmentalists.[1]

In March 2013 the Environment Court gave Bathurst the go-ahead, though groups such as Forest & Bird vowed to continue fighting.[2]

History

Overview

At one stage Denniston had a population that could justify having its own lodges, churches and sports clubs. It had its own RSA, its own Masonic Lodge, Druids Lodge, Oddfellows Lodge, Orange Lodge and Buffaloes Lodge. Of the Buffaloes the history is worth noting briefly because much of it has just come to light and been assembled from "Fragments". The Lodge was called the Mt Rochfort Lodge. It was No 29 on the Roll of Lodges of the Grand Lodge of New Zealand of the Grand Lodge of England, Its English Number being 4656. The founder of the Mt Rochfort Lodge No 29 was Bro. James Henry Insull whom emigrated to New Zealand from Abertillery South Wales in 1923-24. He being a buff in the old country was desirous of forming a lodge in his new home of Denniston. It took a short time but he managed to be put in touch with another Welshman, Bro D.S.Jones the Provincial Grand Secretary of Canterbury and it didn't take long to organise for the Establishment of the Lodge, The founders of the lodge recorded on the lodge Dispensation being Bro. Thomas J Thomas, Bro James Henry Insull, Bro Harry Pearson and Bro James Smalley. The Lodge was opened in the Orange Lodge Hall in 1925 (date unavailable at this time) by the Grand Primo of New Zealand Bro Smith. The first Officers were as follows Bro. Pearson KoM (Worthy Primo) Bro. Insull C.P. (Alderman of Benevolence) Bro. J. Jones(City Marshall) Bro. T.J.Thomas (City Secretary) Bro. E Jones (City Tyler) Bro. B Blake (City Chamberlain) Bro. T Bethell (City Treasurer) Bro. Smart (City Registrar) Bro Hearne (City Constable) Bro. E Bethell (City Waiter) Bro. S Holbrock (City Minstrel) Trustees were Bro Pearson KoM and Bro. Holbrock. Auditors were Bro Smart and Primo Insull. The registration fee at the Lodge was 2/- out of which the Brothers decided that 6ds from each Registration would go into the benevolent fund of the Lodge. It wasn't long before the lodge was thriving and getting good attendances. These were somewhat reduced during the depression however the lodge bounced back and continued to meet on Denniston until 1967 when it relocated down to Waimangaroa. A number of years elapsed and in the late 1970s the lodge purchased the old Waimangaroa RSA Hall as its lodge rooms. In 1996, Owing to declining membership Mt Rochfort Lodge No 29 was forced to close up and surrender its dispensation Bro. R Gower being the last Secretary signing off the final minutes with the words "Closed in Sorrow" in brackets..

Aside from the lodges that played an extremely valuable role in the life of the community on Denniston there was also a self-help medical society, and even at one time a few pubs, the last of these being the "Red Dog Saloon" at Burnetts Face Run By Johnny Cotter which closed in the 1960s. With the ground being too hard to dig graves, the deceased in early years were often shipped down the Denniston Incline to the cemetery at Waimangaroa. Later, when the road was constructed, it made things easier on the people living and working on the “Hill”. However in its early days, Denniston’s communities were well and truly isolated, the incline and the skipways forming the only real means of transportation around and off the plateau.

Industrial history

Denniston Incline, ca 1880s-90s.

The Denniston incline was a steeply graded incline railway that connected Denniston at the top with the Conns Creek Branch. It carried coal from the mines on the Denniston Plateau. The incline fell 510 metres in 1.7 kilometres, with some sections having gradients over 1 in 1.3.[3] The track gauge was the standard NZR track gauge of 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) and the system was designed to supply coal ships at Westport. The wagons used on the incline were the ubiquitous “Q” class hopper wagons that could be detached from their wagon bodies and lifted by wharf crane over the hold of a ship, and the bottom discharge doors of the wagons opened manually to discharge coal into the ships' holds.

The 'Incline' was actually two inclines. The higher of the two began at Denniston, and descended steeply to the appropriately named "Middle Brake". Here wagons were disconnected from the first incline's rope, and placed on the rope of the second incline for a more gentle descent to Conns Creek, where the accumulated wagons would then be marshalled into trains to be taken to Westport. The Denniston incline worked by gravity: the descending loaded wagons of coal pulled up the empty wagos. The braking system of the winding drums used hydraulic pistons to slow them rotation of the drums. The drum from Middle Brake, is on display at Westport's Coaltown Museum. The ascending side was known as the "Donkey Side", the descending side was the "Company Side".

The two inclines were single line operation with passing loops, where the empty and full wagons crossed. Collisions were not unknown: the remains of several wrecked wagons still lie beside the incline formation. A number of workers or people travelling on the inclinedied as a result of collisions and runaways. [citation needed]

The town

Denniston was always a working town; its life was the coal. The community at Denniston served no other purpose than to support the operations of the coal mines and the incline. Once the road was put through, people started to drift off Denniston to the warmer climate of Waimangaroa since it is said that the weather on Denniston is not for the faint of heart and is not the place many would consider to be an idyllic existence. The first of Denniston's communities to suffer the pinch were quite naturally the smaller settlements such as Burnett’s Face, the town half a mile up the plateau, whose main road was the constantly running narrow gauge skipway linking the coal face with the Bins at the head of the Denniston Incline. Burnett's Face was always a rough and ready outpost on the edge of civilisation, and by the 1950s little remained of the settlement. The skipway which had been used to convey coal from the mines to Denniston since the early days of the Denniston Incline, was replaced in 1952 with an aerial ropeway.

By the 1960s the writing was on the wall for the Denniston Incline and the decision was taken to close it by 1969, the actual last day of operation being 16 August 1967. The Conns Creek branch which connected to the foot of the incline was cut back to a siding about 1 mile long where the coal was loaded from trucks. A few months later the aerial ropeway from the mines also closed down in favour of direct trucking of coal from the mine to Waimangaroa. In May 1968 the Inangahua earthquake caused much damage to the incline, making the closure irreversible. With declining coal markets, and the fact the system was almost entirely reliant on the outdated "Q Class Wagons", it was seen to be more cost effective to truck any remaining coal from the plateau down the hill via the public road, rather than rebuild the Incline. Thus what was once described as the "Eighth Wonder of the World" by locals, faded into history. An estimated 12 million tons of coal was carried in the incline's working life.[4]

The closure of the incline didn’t necessarily mean the end of mining, and some coal mining activity remained on the plateau, albeit with the output being trucked down the hill.

The Incline’s remains and the formidable community of the Denniston Plateau slowly diminished over time following the closure of the incline in 1968, the relics of the past slowly disappearing. However, interest in Denniston has continued to grow, and this growth and interest in Denniston has been aided by The Denniston Rose, a novel by Jenny Pattrick.

With recognition of the historic nature of Denniston and its increasing status as a local tourist icon and one that is close to Westport, attention was needed immediately to ensure that what was left of the settlement and its coal mining past wasn’t completely lost forever. As a result a band of enthusiastic dedicated locals set about working to preserve Denniston’s heritage and interpret it in an effective way for the benefit of people making a pilgrimage to one of NZ's most infamous coalfield settlements.

Recent works include restoration of some of the rail tracks in the yard area where the coal loading bins were located, and this work also includes the restoration of a genuine "Q" Class coal wagon, permanently moored to some rail track laid on the precipice that is the top ledge of the incline just as it drops down from the yard level onto the incline, thus giving visitors an insight into what the incline would have been like in its operating days.

References

  1. Westport News (2011-12-08). "West Coast mayors tell Aucklanders to back off". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2011-12-16. 
  2. "Bathurst closer to Denniston Plateau mine". 3 News NZ. March 28, 2013. 
  3. Westcoast.org http://www.westcoast.org.nz/index.php?option=com_content&task=blogcategory&id=17&Itemid=56 Westcoast.org.  Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. Coaling From the Clouds, R J Meyer, NZRLS 1971.

External links

Coordinates: 41°44′S 171°48′E / 41.733°S 171.800°E / -41.733; 171.800

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