Bay of Plenty Times

Facelift for Waihi's oldest retail store

- Alison Smith

Waihi’s oldest surviving retailer and New Zealand’s longest serving shoe store is being restored to its former glory after its original facade was unwittingl­y unveiled.

Building owner Jan Isles says townsfolk are buzzing at the notion that more of Waihi’s precious heritage could be preserved, with comparison­s being made to towns like Art Deco Capital Napier.

She committed to restoring the front of Mcleay’s Shoes in Seddon St after builder Bruce Munro of Baker Constructi­on rang while repairing a rusted roof section.

“He said ‘you might want to see this’,” says Isles. “It was pretty exciting, a lot of the locals are getting excited too.”

Isles, an architectu­ral draughtswo­man from Tauranga, says protecting and restoring heritage is costly but important. “We’ve become too commercial with shopping malls and we need to value where we came from. It will give everyone a bit of a boost. This is certainly a labour of love.”

Earnest Mcleay came to Waihi to make miner’s boots in 1892 and bought the Seddon St store in 1918 from Hallenstei­n Brothers.

Rich in stories and built completely from native timbers, the store still contains old tools including an anvil used to make boots customised to withstand the acidic conditions undergroun­d in Waihi.

Isles is researchin­g the restoratio­n with the help of 85-year-old Waikinobor­n Ian Robinson, who owned the store with Mcleay’s granddaugh­ter Heather.

They took it over from her father

Pat, born Erik Daniel Mcleay.

It remains the oldest footwear retailer in New Zealand and was in the hands of the Mcleay-robinsons until it was sold to Christchur­ch shoe retailer Ken Jackson of Walkable Friends.

“My father-in-law Pat had it 60 years, and before that it was his father’s [Earnest],” says Ian Robinson. “There used to be shops like this from where the lookout over the mine is all the way to East End Dairy [Maybelle Superette], it was one of those [shops], then they started burning them all down to get the insurance.

“Mr Mcleay’s brother left Scotland to make boots for the miners in Thames,” explains Robinson. “When [Earnest] got to Thames, there were too many bootmakers already so he started out in Waihi.”

Mcleay was an innovator and his boots were tailored to local conditions. Robinson kept some of the tools including a “very unusual” sewing machine.

“The tacks they used on the boots only lasted six weeks because of the acid in the mines. He got hardwood and hammered them into the holes and when they got wet, they expanded. It would’ve been a completely new way to make boots. I’ve got some of those blocks of wood that he used. Then they used a lot of brass as well,” says Robinson.

Ian and Heather are equally excited at the restoratio­n. Ian did a renovation on the building 50 years ago and says the first renovation was after WWII by well-known builder Des Spiers.

Says Ian Robinson:

“I had the whole thing changed around because it was a grubby looking shop and had little wee windows you had to peer through and a little skinny door to walk through. It didn’t suit me at all.”

Builder Bruce Munro says many Waihi heritage property owners faced a lot of cost because of local government regulation­s.

“Maybe it’s something Lottery grants could help with, so people could be allowed to apply for a grant to restore an old building. There doesn’t seem to be anything there to help these people.”

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 ?? Photo / David Isles ?? Jan Isles says the townsfolk are buzzing over the discovery of the original facade on the historic building in Waihi’s main street.
Photo / David Isles Jan Isles says the townsfolk are buzzing over the discovery of the original facade on the historic building in Waihi’s main street.

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