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University of Otago 1869-2019

~ writing a history

University of Otago 1869-2019

Monthly Archives: December 2013

Happy Christmas!

22 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by Ali Clarke in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Chromolithograph published by  A R Hornblow & Son, Wellington, c.1920. Image courtesy of the Alexander Turnbull Library, ref Eph-D-CHRISTMAS-1920-01.

Chromolithograph published by A R Hornblow & Son, Wellington, c.1920. Image courtesy of the Alexander Turnbull Library, ref Eph-D-CHRISTMAS-1920-01.

This blog will now take a short holiday break. I’d like to take this opportunity to express my gratitude to all of you who have read and contributed to this project in 2013. When I started the blog in May I was uncertain how it would work out – it has been more popular and helpful than I could have imagined! As well as raising people’s interest in the history of the university and giving me some good writing practice, it has helped considerably with my research. Many people have been in touch – some through comments, others via email – with responses to stories and further information. I am enormously grateful to those people who have identified photographs, added details and shared further stories.

My thanks also go to the Department of History and Art History, the Hocken Collections and the Alumni Office, who have helped share the word about the blog. For images, I am indebted to the wonderful collections held by the Alexander Turnbull Library and especially to the Hocken Collections, keeper of the university archive (my thanks go in particular to Richard Munro and Mary Lewis for assistance with copying at the Hocken). Some of the best images have come from the private collections of university people I have interviewed, and I am most grateful to them for their generosity in allowing me to share them.

It has been interesting to see which posts are the most popular. Predictably, those at the top of the list are mostly those of wider public interest. The top 5 posts so far are:

  1. The best prank? (the UFO hoax of 1952)
  2. The vanishing hall of residence (the story of Helensburgh House)
  3. The McCahon hoax (1961 prank involving a McCahon painting)
  4. How to sit an exam (advice from 1913)
  5. A growing campus (aerial view of the central campus in 1955)

Have a great Christmas, and I look forward to sharing more stories of Otago’s intriguing past with you in 2014!

Ali Clarke

Constructing historic buildings

22 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by Ali Clarke in buildings

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

1960s, 1970s

An aerial view of the central Dunedin campus in the late 1970s. Photograph courtesy of the Hocken Collections, S12-192J.

An aerial view of the central Dunedin campus in the late 1970s. Photograph courtesy of the Hocken Collections, S12-192J.

The old stone clock tower building might be the University of Otago’s best known and most photographed piece of architecture, but this late-1970s image highlights what a profound effect modern design had on the central campus during a period of great building expansion in the 1960s and 1970s. An original concept plan for the campus development, drawn up by assistant government architect J.R. Blake-Kelly in the 1960s, envisioned a series of buildings linked by first-floor aerial walkways. The walkway idea was eventually rejected and instead, with the cooperation of the city council, some of the busy streets crossing the campus were closed to vehicles.

The Hocken Building (now known as the Richardson Building) is under construction, which dates the photograph to 1977-1979. The new building was designed by the much feted Dunedin architect Ted McCoy, who was also responsible for two of the other modern buildings which feature prominently on the left side of this image: the gleaming twin towers of University College (1969) and the striking cross-shaped geometry of the Archway Lecture Theatres (1973).

Several other buildings opened in the 1960s are also visible in this photograph: the University Union (1960); the new Home Science wing, now known as the Gregory Building (1961); the Interim Science Building (1965), with its unusual site crossing the Leith; the Library-Arts Building (1965); and the Arts Building (1969). Smithells Gymnasium opened in 1970. Dunedin architects Miller, White and Dunn drew up the plans for the Union and Mason and Wales were responsible for the design of the Burns Building. The Library-Arts Building was the work of two Auckland architectural students, Roland Adams and Brian Dodd, who won the competition to produce a design. In contrast to the tower blocks which predominated among the new buildings of this period, it was a large low-rise building, just two storeys tall, with an attractive courtyard at the centre.  Construction of this design was relatively economical, but sadly the building soon proved inadequate for the needs of the rapidly growing university. It took up significant ground space, making extensions impracticable, and it was also unsuitable for upwards extensions. The library had little choice but to develop its branch facilities, and eventually the building was replaced by the current Information Services Building (2001).

Across Castle Street from the clock tower is the block of new 1970s science buildings. The Science I building (1970) was designed by the Ministry of Works, but the others were the responsibility of various Dunedin architectural firms. John Aimers of Mason and Wales worked on the Science II building (1973), Allingham Harrison and Partners designed the Biochemistry (1971) and Science III (1977) buildings, while Miller, White and Dunn were responsible for the Microbiology Building (1974). There were also new university buildings which do not appear in this photograph, ranging from extensive new developments at the medical schools in Dunedin, Christchurch and Wellington to a new building at the Portobello Marine Biological Station and new residential college buildings at Studholme and Salmond Halls.

The opening of the Hocken Building marked the end of two decades of extensive construction. The university’s report for 1979 commented that “Dunedin architects and builders have noted the slow-down [in building activity] with considerable concern as the rolling programme of development at the university has been an important source of employment in recent years.” Given the importance of this period for Dunedin’s design and building trades, it seems appropriate that one of these buildings is now formally recognised as “historic”. In 2011 the New Zealand Historic Places Trust registered the Hocken/Richardson Building as a Category I Historic Place, recognising its significance in Otago’s history, and also its architectural value as “a bold and striking modernist building which has particular aesthetic presence in Dunedin.” Of course, not everybody admires Brutalist architecture. Otago design historian Michael Findlay, who reported on the building for the Historic Places Trust, commented: “Like the Otago Dental School before it, McCoy’s building continues to generate polarised opinions on the place of modernist architectural design in Dunedin. The Hocken Building was a critical success with the architectural profession but public resistance to its particular aesthetic has not greatly diminished over time.” The Dental School’s Walsh Building, completed in 1961 at the beginning of this great period of expansion, has also earned a Category I listing with the trust.

Were you at Otago in the 1960s and 1970s? At times, the central campus must have seemed like one huge building site. Do you have any interesting memories to share of reactions to these new buildings?

Capping processions

15 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by Ali Clarke in student life, students' association

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

1940s, graduation

A group of students relax before taking their met office themed float on the 1946 capping procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

A group of students relax before taking their met office-themed float on the 1946 capping procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

As we have just completed a series of December graduation ceremonies, it seems a good time to remember one of the graduation customs no longer with us: the capping procession. This carnivalesque event, involving political satire, cross-dressing and crazy musicians, had its beginnings in 1899 when a group of students drove through Dunedin in a horse-drawn vehicle playing “mixed instruments” during capping week. It gradually evolved into an event with multiple floats parading through the streets, watched by large crowds. Participants begged donations from spectators for their chosen charities. Groups from various faculties and residential colleges put considerable effort into creating their floats.

"Paddy's Band of Angels", featuring the notoriously balding cabinet minister Paddy Webb, perform for a large crowd at the 1946 capping procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

“Paddy’s Band of Angels”, featuring the notoriously balding cabinet minister Paddy Webb, perform for a large crowd at the 1946 capping procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

The School of Mines "SS War Bride" float from the 1946 procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

The School of Mines “SS War Bride” float from the 1946 procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

I am grateful to Arthur Campbell, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, for sharing these wonderful snapshots of the capping “procesh” of the 1940s, during his Otago student years. Capping celebrations were suspended from 1942 to 1945 thanks to the war, so the 1946 procession was a great occasion. In this period, capping floats often reflected current events and political controversies; later they were more centred on the university and student life.

A "tram" from a late 1940s procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

A “tram” from a late 1940s procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

The “Grand National Orchestra” prepares to take part in a late-1940s procession. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

Procesh flourished through the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. By the late 1980s students were starting to lose interest in the event and public tolerance of the procession declined due to the “excessive” behaviour of some participants. Its demise was perhaps inevitable as the number of graduation ceremonies increased and capping became a less important annual event; orientation took over as the major student festival.

A dental student float from the late 1940s. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

A dental student float from the late 1940s. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

After a recess through the 1990s, the procession was reinstated by OUSA in 2000, but did not survive as the major event which students and public had once enjoyed. Do you have any memories to share of capping processions?

Procesh was generally a well-lubricated event. This late-1940s trio were on a float seeking "heftier handles for Highlanders". Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

Procesh was generally a well-lubricated event. This late-1940s trio were on a float seeking “heftier handles for Highlanders”. Photograph courtesy of Arthur Campbell.

The McCahon hoax

08 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by Ali Clarke in student life, students' association

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

1960s, art, chemistry, pranks

The three copies of McCahon's painting on display in the Otago student union. From the front page of the Evening Star, 26 October 1961.

The three copies of McCahon’s painting on display in the Otago student union. From the front page of the Evening Star, 26 October 1961.

Two Otago graduates have just owned up, after more than fifty years, to a prank involving a Colin McCahon painting. McCahon is hailed as perhaps New Zealand’s greatest painter; his works attract premium prices and are held in major international collections. Among the McCahon oils held by the Fletcher Trust Collection, Auckland, is Painting 1958, notable for “its large dark and light forms and the sense of gaps or spaces between”.  This uncompromisingly abstract work is not to everybody’s taste, and when it first came to public attention in 1960 it attracted much derision from  those who did not appreciate “non-representational” painting.

The painting was already notorious when it went on display in the University of Otago student union cafeteria in 1961. In 1960 it was a joint winner of the inaugural Hay’s Art Competition, sponsored by Hay’s Department Store in Christchurch. This was an important event for artists, as New Zealand then had few prizes or scholarships for art, and the existing Kelliher Prize was limited to realist landscapes. As the judges of the Hay’s prize could not reach agreement, they awarded the competition jointly to McCahon and two others. Hay’s, which now owned the painting, offered in 1961 to gift it to Christchurch’s Robert McDougall Art Gallery, but city councillors rejected it, as well as the two other prizewinners, as unfit for exhibition. Since nobody seemed willing to display the painting in Christchurch, the Otago student union was offered as a venue by the OUSA ladies’ vice-president, Jocelyn Wood (now better known as Emeritus Professor Jocelyn Harris of Otago’s Department of English).

The painting prompted a lot of discussion at Otago, not least in the pages of Critic. Ian Devereux and Jimmy Boyne, then masters students in chemistry, devised a scheme which would demonstrate very clearly the opinion of many students on abstract art. Thinking along the lines “any child could paint that,” they made three copies of the painting (retitled “Light on in the flat downstairs” by one wit). This was a top secret operation, carried out at night in one of the chemistry labs. They had to keep returning to the union to check the original, then rush back to their own work. They discovered that oil paints were too expensive for impecunious students, and completed the work using Dulux white house paint and Fletcher’s bitumastic roof sealer, painting over plaster of paris to give the required texture. They thought their scheme was foiled when one of the chemistry lecturers, Arthur Williamson, caught them at their painting one night, but Williamson appreciated the prank, and even offered a donation towards materials.

When Devereux and Boyne, in the dead of night, finally placed their paintings next to the original, they were disappointed at how different they appeared – the sheen of McCahon’s work made it stand out from the others. So they carefully wrapped the original and hid it in a cleaner’s cupboard. They hung their three copies on the union cafeteria wall, together with a notice inviting viewers to pick out which was the original. The cafeteria was abuzz with discussion of the paintings over the next couple of days. Boyne and Devereux could hardly contain their laughter over some of the comments they overheard: one professor commented “I can tell it’s the one on the right because of the power of the brushwork.” A feature story on the prank appeared in the Evening Star newspaper: the pranksters were particularly amused that the reporter assumed they must have been art students, although he or she did manage to detect that the true original had been hidden. The story also made it much further afield, with one of Devereux’s extended family reading about it in Portsmouth, England.

After a couple of anxious nights spent worrying about the safety of McCahon’s original painting, Boyne and Devereux returned it to display. The three copies found homes, although they were not all appreciative. Devereux kept one copy for himself, but it was irreparably damaged in transit during a move to the North Island. They gave one copy to one of their chemistry classmates, Claire Parton, as a wedding gift; she immediately passed it on to her father, Prof Hugh Parton, head of the Department of Chemistry. For many years this copy hung in the departmental library as an exemplar of the ingenuity of chemistry students. The third copy went to Arthur Williamson, who kept it in the garage as his wife refused to have it in the house. Meanwhile, the original passed through the ownership of various well-known businesses, ending up with the Chase Corporation. An employee there rescued it from being used as packaging and it was purchased by the Fletcher Trust at auction in 1987.

McCahon was, unsurprisingly, not impressed with the prank. His lawyer wrote a letter to the OUSA threatening legal action, but as they had no idea who had carried out the prank nothing could be done. Other than the perpetrators and a couple of the chemistry staff, until now nobody has known the identity of the copyists. James Boyne went on to study medicine and has recently retired as a GP in Milton. Ian Devereux worked for the DSIR, completed a PhD at Victoria University of Wellington and then set up a very successful business, Rocklabs, which manufactured crushing and sampling equipment used by mining and geology businesses all over the world. They have been reminiscing recently over their Otago student days and decided to go public about their 1961 exploits. I am most grateful to them for sharing their story!

Out in the field

01 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by Ali Clarke in humanities, mystery photographs, sciences

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, botany, field work, geography

Botanists on a research trip to Secretary Island, Fiordland, in 1964. From left - Alan Mark, Geoff Baylis, George Scott, - Bliss, Peter Wardle, - Jacobs. Photograph courtesy of the Department of Botany.

Botanists on a research trip to Secretary Island, Fiordland, in 1964. From left: Alan Mark, Geoff Baylis, George Scott, Larry Bliss, Peter Wardle, Harold Jacobs. Photograph courtesy of the Department of Botany.

Otago was delighted to be listed as one of the world’s most beautiful university campuses by the Telegraph last year, and by the Huffington Post more recently. Otago has another great advantage in being located in the stunning natural environment of southern New Zealand (not that I’m at all biased!). A major part of the appeal of the university for some staff and students is its proximity to spectacular landscapes and opportunities for snow sports, tramping, and other outdoor recreation.

Of course, for some staff and students, notably those in the botany, geography, geology and marine science departments, getting into the great outdoors is not just recreation, but a significant part of their study and research. Over the years undergraduate geography students have attended field camps in various locations around southern New Zealand, among them Tekapo, Pounawea, Herbert, Gunns Bush, Bannockburn and, more recently, Ruataniwha. While the field camps for geography science majors tended to be out in the wilderness, geography arts majors stayed in more settled locations, such as Queenstown, Invercargill, Oamaru and Wanaka. Conditions were not luxurious – Emeritus Professor Peter Holland recalls the year when it was so cold at Bannockburn that the pipes froze and there was no running water! Residential field camps played no small part in the friendly and family-type atmosphere which made the department very popular with students.

Prof Alan Mark (front left) and botany students on Mt Armstrong, in Mt Aspiring National Park, 1984. Michael Heads is at the back wearing a check shirt - do you recognise anybody else? Photograph courtesy of the Department of Botany.

Prof Alan Mark (front left) and botany students on Mt Armstrong, in Mt Aspiring National Park, 1984. Michael Heads is at the back wearing a check shirt – do you recognise anybody else? Photograph courtesy of the Department of Botany.

For a couple of decades botanist Alan Mark took the students in his combined second and third year course on New Zealand plant ecology on an extensive 10-12 day field trip to experience the varied ecological niches of southern New Zealand. These remarkable trips generally included on the itinerary Oamaru, the Mackenzie country, Mt Cook, Mt Hutt, the Craigieburn Range, Arthurs Pass, Harihari, Haast, Jackson Bay, Central Otago and the Mt Pisa or Old Man Ranges. Accommodation ranged from shearers’ quarters to Forestry Service stations. It was a physically demanding trip, but once they had recovered students came to appreciate all they had learned, and it certainly brought classes closer together. Botany students also took less demanding weekend trips to Manapouri, with the extra attractions of a boat trip and a good lunch courtesy of the Guardians of Lake Manapouri.

Many postgraduate students and staff of these departments carried out their own extensive field trips as part of their research, and of course marine scientists had their own research vessel … but I’ll save that for another post. Do you have any memorable stories to share about university field trips?

A damp party of botanists emerges from sampling forest on Secretary Island, Fiordland, c.1995. From left - Kath Dickinson, Brent Fagan, Alan Mark, Steven Roxburgh, Brent Kelley, Warren King. Photograph courtesy of the Department of Botany.

A damp party of botanists emerges from sampling forest on Secretary Island, Fiordland, c.1995. From left: Kath Dickinson, Brent Fagan, Alan Mark, Steven Roxburgh, Brent Kelley, Warren King. Photograph courtesy of the Department of Botany.

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