| |
|
PO
BOX 17-719
CHRISTCHURCH
NEW ZEALAND
|
=
|
|
| = |
|
| |
HARRY
ELL AND THE SUMMIT ROAD |
| |
To
the first European migrants the Port Hills posed a formidable barrier
as the new arrivals struggled with their few possessions up the Bridle
path from the port at Lyttelton. Once at the summit, however, even
these travel weary folk must have been overwhelmed by the glorious
vistas all around them. Ahead, across the Canterbury Plains they would
have been struck by the splendour of the Southern Alps, stretching
range upon range as far as the eye could see. As they glanced behind
them the hills that shelter the calm waters and charming inlets of
the Lyttelton basin parted here and there to disclose intriguing views
of Lake Ellesmere and the broad Pacific beyond. |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
Pioneer
Womens Memorial at the top of the Bridle Path
|
| |
HARRY
ELL
Harry Ell was fascinated by these hills. He was a public-spirited
man, and a lover of nature. In many ways he was ahead of his
time as a conservationist determined to protect the remnants
of the natural flora. In his dedication to preserve what was
best, he had the brilliant idea of involving the public by ensuring
that they had access to the whole area. Thus arose the exciting
concept of a highway, together with walking tracks, along the
summit of the Port Hills, and indeed extending right around
the peninsula, with rest houses spaced at easy intervals.
To
this end Ell cut short a hitherto successful political career
in order to devote the rest of his life to the pursuit of
his dream. Overcoming political difficulties and incredible
financial constraints (development took place during the great
depression of the 1920's and 1930's) this remarkable man had
laid the foundations for the Summit Road and its rest houses
as we see them today by the time of his death in 1934.
Read
Harry Ell of the
Summit Road, a collection of thoughts by his grandson
John Jameson, founder of the modern Summit Road Society in
1948 - which was formed virtually at the request by the then
director Morris Barnett of the City Council Parks Unit. Since
then the Society continues to maintain a virtual partnership
with the Park Ranger staff of the Christchurch city.
|
= |

|
|
| |
THE
REST HOUSES
Apart
from the Summit Road itself, the Sign of the Takahe is the most
outstanding monument to the memory of Harry Ell. This is the first
rest house encountered as the traveller leaves Christchurch by Dyers
Pass Road. The ornate "baronial late-gothic" structure is undoubtedly
an anachronism, but it would be a sad error simply to dismiss it
as some of sort of architectural freak for this reason.
|
| |
|
| |
 |
| |
Sign
of the Takahe |
| |
In
the first place this striking building was constructed against all
the odds, employing many highly skilled craftsmen who found themselves
out of work during the depression. Materials, sand tools were scrounged,
salvaged, and improvised in a manner that would not be unfamiliar
to pioneer New Zealanders, but on a scale that was truly monumental.
For example, the great kauri beams that are such a splendid feature
of the lounge were salvaged from a former bridge across the Hurunui
river. The historical friezes in the memorial room were made from
packing cases, and the stone work of the building was quarried and
brought down from the surrounding rocky outcrops. Even the tools that
the craftsmen used were, in many cases, forged on the site from scrap
metal.
These
few examples give some idea of the difficulties that had to be faced.
Equally remarkable is the fact that Harry had never been to Europe
or seen the architectural masterpieces of the era he wish to evoke
with this building. However, he had read widely and greatly admired
the skills, artistry, and craftsmanship embodied in such historic
buildings. As for motivation, Canterbury was an essentially English
settlement, and it seemed natural to let the building reflect this
tradition. The heraldic embellishments include a section devoted
to all Governors and Governor's General of New Zealand as well as
the arms of local families with links to the mother country, and
other shields that embody English history.
Within
this framework the Sign of the Takahe succeeds quite spectacularly,
and has rightly become a well-loved landmark and a Christchurch
tradition in its own right.
Of
the other rest houses planned, only the Sign of the Kiwi at the
junction of Dyers Pass and Summit Roads provides refreshment for
the modern traveller. However, further south are the remains of
the Sign of the Bellbird which was a tearooms from 1916 to around
1940 and now a welcome and well-used shelter above Kennedys Bush,
and Sign of the Packhorse above the Kaituna Valley is in regular
use as a trampers' hut.
|
| |
|
| |
 |
| |
Sign
of the Kiwi |
| |
|
| |
 |
| |
Sign
of the Bellbird |
| |
|
| |
 |
| |
Sign
of the Packhorse |
|
|