Marlborough Express

Memories forged at old smithy

- JACK FLETCHER

Smoke rose from the flue rather unexpected­ly above the Teddington shed, as if a ghost had returned to his workshop.

For years the blacksmith’s forge in the small Lyttelton Harbour community was neglected.

Some of its walls had been removed and it had slumped, ‘‘folded over like a cardboard box’’.

‘‘The building was in a bad way,’’ said David Bundy of the Governors Bay Heritage Trust.

It was built in the late 1880s, at the bottom of Gebbies Pass Rd.

‘‘J. Bryden has started a Blacksmith’s Shop, Head of the Bay, Teddington, where he hopes to receive a fair amount of patronage,’’ an advertisem­ent in The Press in 1889 read.

The building was occupied by land-holder Ra Blatchford in the 1950s as an engineerin­g base for his contractin­g business.

The trust took it over in about 2010, Bundy said.

They feared it would be destroyed if the land was sold.

It is the latest in a string of restoratio­ns they have tackled around Lyttelton Harbour.

‘‘We used all original materials, period iron, period framing materials, lead-head nails.

‘‘We got timber from Ohinetahi. ‘‘[Renowned Canterbury architect] Miles Warren gave us salvage from his house.’’

Bundy said the trust aimed to retain the building long-term and support the craft of blacksmith­ing.

The restoratio­n was completed about five years later and has been a working smithy for just over two years.

Keen to get smoke rising from the workshop again, the trust approached retired blacksmith Les Schenkel to operate the space.

His experience in the trade exceeded 50 years, only retiring from his various Lyttelton-based welding, engineerin­g and blacksmith­ing jobs after injury.

‘‘When I came in here, it was an empty shed, had just been pulled out from the ground,’’ Schenkel said.

The forge – the bay that holds red-hot coals to work iron – was in a ‘‘state of disrepair’’.

‘‘A local man fixed it up and I straighten­ed out the base and refitted it,’’ he said.

‘‘Stuff has been given to us, the bellows for example, which are very precious.’’

Schenkel said they did ‘‘try and re-live the past’’ but he did not see his workshop as a piece of heritage.

‘‘We try and do everything as it was done back then ... we don’t drill too many holes, we punch them,’’ he said.

Tourists and locals, the ‘‘whole league of nations’’, often stop in to watch him work and hear stories, fascinated by the old practices and hard graft.

‘‘What we call blacksmith­ing, general blacksmith­ing, is going to be a lost art, without a doubt.

‘‘The artistic side is popular and a lot of people have got some nice flair, and good on them.

‘‘But the basics, the hard side of it you know, sweating over an anvil for eight or 10 hours a day, swinging a 28-pound hammer, it’s going to go.’’

Murder charge

A 54-year-old man has been charged with the murder of a 27-year-old woman in Christchur­ch. A member of the public found the woman’s body at a Merivale house at 11.40am on Saturday. Detective Inspector Darryl Sweeney said on Sunday the man had also been charged with aggravated burglary. Sweeney said the victim was known to the man. ‘‘It’s not a relationsh­ip as such, but they’re known to each other.’’ Property records show the house is owned by Harcourts Internatio­nal co-owner and Inspire Foundation founder Paul Wright. A former neighbour said a relative of Wright’s had been living at the house.

Fatal crashes

A person is dead after the vehicle they were in crashed into a Fonterra milk tanker near Clandeboye, north of Timaru, early on Sunday morning. A Fonterra spokeswoma­n confirmed a milk tanker was involved and the driver was uninjured. Police were called to the crash, which the Fonterra spokeswoma­n said happened at an intersecti­on about 4 kilometres from Fonterra’s milk factory at Clandeboye, about 1am. Police said one person died at the scene and two others were taken to Timaru Hospital with critical and moderate injuries. And in the Bay of Plenty one person died when a truck and a motorcycle collided in Mt Maunganui about 9.30am on Saturday.

Funeral for shot man

Police are making no comment on their investigat­ion into last month’s fatal shooting by a police officer of Auckland man Jerrim Toms. Toms, 29, of Onehunga in Auckland, was shot on State Highway 1 near Pohuehue in north Auckland on March 31 after allegedly threatenin­g officers with a machete. He was given immediate first aid but could not be revived, police said. Toms’ funeral was held in Auckland on Saturday. The death is subject to two police investigat­ions, as well as another by the Independen­t Police Conduct Authority.

 ?? PHOTO: ALDEN WILLIAMS/STUFF ?? Retired blacksmith Les Schenkel with his dog Anzac at the restored smithy at Teddington, Lyttelton. Tourists and locals, the ‘‘whole league of nations’’, often stop in to watch him work, fascinated by the old practices and hard graft.
PHOTO: ALDEN WILLIAMS/STUFF Retired blacksmith Les Schenkel with his dog Anzac at the restored smithy at Teddington, Lyttelton. Tourists and locals, the ‘‘whole league of nations’’, often stop in to watch him work, fascinated by the old practices and hard graft.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand