Taranaki Daily News

Word on the street: Erin St, Ha¯wera street

- Contribute­d by the Taranaki Research Centre I Te Pua Wa¯nanga o Taranaki at Puke Ariki.

Ha¯wera’s Erin St, along with four of the town’s other central streets, was named to commemorat­e the union of the four countries of Great Britain.

Erin is an old poetic name for Ireland which seems to have originated from the Irish word for Ireland, ire.

In 1801 Ireland joined the United Kingdom so the naming of this street, along with Albion, (England) Caledonia (Scotland), Cambria (Wales) and Union streets, was a patriotic nod to the home countries of the settlers.

The fortunes of Erin St, which it seems was first developed in 1878, illustrate­s the developmen­t of many a town’s dusty or muddy track, to a formed paved road and the struggles of settlers to have roads created and maintained to suit their needs.

In July 1884 at a meeting of the Ha¯wera Borough Council, councillor Duff complained about the state of Erin and Albion streets and said the roads were so bad that landlords would not lease their houses on the roads becauseE´ access was so bad.

An engineer was instructed to attend to the streets.

Little must have happened, because the following year the council received a petition from the residents of Erin and Albion streets drawing attention to the terrible state of the footpaths. ‘‘After a brief discussion, it was decided to allow the petition to lay on the table, pending the receipt of the estimates,’’ it was reported.

Lay on the table it must have done, as over a year later in August 1886 a resident was motivated enough to write a letter to the editor of the Ha¯wera & Normanby Star expressing anger at the shameful state of Erin St.

Later that year, after another yet another petition from residents, the council voted in favour of gravelling the road, by a small margin.

At this early stage the road only ran from Albion St to Collins St.

The extension through to Cameron St took place in 1903 when well-known farmer and local horticultu­ralist Charles Goodson offered some of his land up for sale.

Advertisem­ents at the time said small blocks of land will be offered for sale; ‘‘to suit the poorest pockets so that all may have a chance to buy land that will only increase in value’’.

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