Horowhenua Chronicle

Model ship lands in time for event

Museum to unveil latest addition on Big Dutch Day Out

- Janine Baalbergen

It may look like it is flying and it has already been dubbed the flying Dutchman, but the model of Abel Tasman’s flagship De Heemskerck is certainly no ghost ship desperatel­y trying to get home after a big storm.

The model is 2m long and 2m high and presented the curators at de Oranjehof in Foxton with quite a mission. But they found the perfect spot and a local craftsman constructe­d a cradle for it, so it now sits above the smaller model of another ship of Tasman’s, De Zeehaen.

The newest arrival fills the museum’s cochair Arjan van der Boon with excitement.

“There are other models of De Heemskerck but none are this big,” he said.

The Dutch community gifted a model of the ship, the first European ship to have visited these shores, to Auckland’s Maritime Museum years ago.

Attempts to persuade the Auckland site to hand it over to the country’s only Dutch heritage museum in Foxton failed.

Instead, a model was built in Cambridge and the day Van der Boon was ready to pick it up he got a shock.

“When we acquired the Zeehaen, it fitted in my van, but this one was way too big, much bigger than I had expected. We needed a removal firm to bring it here.”

It will be officially unveiled during the Big Dutch Day Out tomorrow.

De Oranjehof has a drawing on display from 1643 that shows the ship in full flight before the west coast of the South Island.

“Tasman mapped 1000km of New Zealand coastline, mostly west coast, where he couldn’t land.

“He did sail past Horowhenua, though. Based on his mapping work, James Cook knew where to go more than 100 years later.”

De Heemskerck is named after Dutch admiral and Arctic explorer Jacob van Heemskerck, who was part of the ill-fated trip through the Arctic Ocean that ended on Noya Zemlya, one of several trips by the Dutch Navy

and merchants to find an alternate route to India.

Pirates and ships from countries such as England, Spain and Portugal made trips down under rather hazardous at that time.

The ship was owned by the Dutch East India Company and launched in 1638. The company ordered its shipwright­s to build a “small war yacht, measuring 32m by 7.3m”. It had three masts and a bowsprit.

It sailed on April 29, 1639, for Batavia, the capital of the Dutch East Indies, arriving on November 22 that year after a seven-month journey.

The crew sailed via the Cape of Good Hope to Mauritius, taking in supplies, then south of Australia, passing Tasmania and New Zealand, and then on to Tonga and New Guinea, also charting parts of Fiji.

The ship never returned to the

Netherland­s and was scuppered in 1649 after serving as a trade ship in the area around Indonesia. The ship had 60 men on board for this voyage.

The model of De Heemskerck in Foxton was made by Eric Hill of Cambridge, who donated it to De Oranjehof.

Hill is a semi-retired printer who at an early age developed a passion for building models using timber.

“Over 20 years I built 12 ships, including the Endeavour, the Bounty, a few 19th century Waikato River boats and a WWII warship. I always had an interest in ships too and built my first model in primary school, a Viking ship. It sort of stayed with me.”

Hill said his model of the Heemskerck is made from kahikatea.

He said this labour of love was mostly a nocturnal job.

“I may be 76 but I am still working

as I have an interest in a printing business.

“De Heemskerck took me four years to build and I used very detailed plans provided by the Rijksmuseu­m in Amsterdam. They didn’t use drawings to build from in the 17th century.”

“The museum had commission­ed a few people, including a maritime historian, AJ Hoving, to draw up the plans, I think they wanted to build a full-size replica.

“Without his plans I could not have made this model.”

Hoving built the replica that can be found in the Maritime Museum in Auckland.

The Big Dutch Day Out will be held in Foxton on Saturday, April 27, from 10am. Most activities will take place around the windmill/museum in the centre of Foxton.

 ?? ?? Jos Berkhout (left) from Whanganui, trustee of De Oranjehof, and museum co-chair Arjan van der Boon drape a red cloth around the model of De Heemskerck in preparatio­n for its official unveiling on Saturday, April 27.
Jos Berkhout (left) from Whanganui, trustee of De Oranjehof, and museum co-chair Arjan van der Boon drape a red cloth around the model of De Heemskerck in preparatio­n for its official unveiling on Saturday, April 27.
 ?? ?? A model of Abel Tasman’s flagship De Heemskerck, named after an admiral and Arctic explorer, in De Oranjehof in Foxton. The ship was owned by the Dutch East India Company and launched in 1638.
A model of Abel Tasman’s flagship De Heemskerck, named after an admiral and Arctic explorer, in De Oranjehof in Foxton. The ship was owned by the Dutch East India Company and launched in 1638.

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