CHB Mail

Devestatio­n of quake remembered

-

whole town pitching in alongside the Red Cross to help refugees fleeing from Napier and Hastings.

Transport was commandeer­ed for volunteers to go through to Hastings to help dig in the rubble for survivors.

Within hours of the earthquake, Waipukurau had become an important railhead. In the initial shaking, the southbound express train - just going through Takapau - was derailed, but the line was cleared within two hours and soon northbound trains were arriving into the Waipukurau station with food, medical and surgical supplies, tents and bedding.

A newspaper report at the time describes the Waipukurau railway yard as becoming the “principal and most inportant railway centre in the Dominion”, with porters, train crews and shunters working for 16 hours at a stretch to get urgent supplies on their way to Hastings and Napier.

With railway lines and bridges north of Waipukurau destroyed or damaged, the goods were then loaded onto lorries and vehicles of all descriptio­ns, and driven the rest of the way.

At the same time there was an influx into Waipukurau from Hastings and Napier. Just over 200 people injured in the earthquake - some seriously - arrived in the town by motor vehicle, where they were transferre­d to special trains heading for Palmerston North and Wellington.

As well, more than 600 refugees were transferre­d onto trains at the Waipukurau railway station, heading to safety in other North Island towns.

Telephone lines were down north of Waipukurau, so telegrams were sent to Waipukurau by car to be “wired” to their destinatio­n. The Waipukurau telegraph office stayed open all night for people to send messages.

In Ō tāne there were no brick buildings, but the verandahs of businesses in the main street crashed into the roadway and all the crockery at the Railway Hotel was smashed into fragments. Nearly every concrete water tank was smashed, including at St Hilda’s Home where there were three 800-gallon tanks (more than 3000 litres).

Again, not a single brick chimney was left standing.

Little girl lost

In the Waipukurau cemetery is a small child’s headstone, a memorial to Vera Johnston.

Vera was born prematurel­y in Hastings just a month before the Hawke’s Bay Earthquake, to young parents Robert and Mary Johnston. She had an older brother, toddler George.

The earthquake left the family with tiny and vulnerable baby Vera homeless, so they fled to Whanganui where they were taken in by Robert’s

parents.

There, baby Vera came into the care of Whanganui’s Karitane nurses. Noting that Mary was stressed and exhausted they sent her to bed, taking the frail baby to the Karitane centre, where she was literally wrapped in cotton wool for warmth and nursed around the clock.

But all was not well between Mary and her mother-in-law. The older woman - who her remaining granddaugh­ter Eunice calls “a dour woman” - would not hear of Mary taking to bed, or the baby being coddled by Karitane nurses.

Mary told her husband Robert she had to go home “even if it means sleeping in a tent at Nelson Park”.

The family headed for Hastings,

but the tiny baby only made it part of the way. By the time they reached Waipukurau Vera was desperatel­y ill and was admitted to the Waipukurau Hospital.

There, she died.

Vera was buried in the Waipukurau Cemetery. Her parents returned to Hastings, where they raised a family of 13 children.

The tragic loss of baby Vera was rarely spoken of and none of her siblings knew where she was buried, until as adults they searched for their sister, found her and had a headstone placed on her grave: Vera Johnston, 12.1.1931 - 8.1.1931. Lost now found.

Saturday, February 3, will mark 93 years since the 1931 Hawke’s Bay Earthquake.

Services are being held in Napier and Hastings to commemorat­e the anniversar­y of New Zealand’s deadliest natural disaster.

Napier service

Napier City Council is planning a commemorat­ion service at Waiapu Cathedral at noon during the anniversar­y.

It will double as a remembranc­e service for families affected by last year’s cyclone.

“The resilience of Napier people in 1931, looking after each other then moving on to rebuild, has been seen again in the actions of so many over the past year,” Napier Mayor Kirsten Wise said.

“The service is an opportunit­y to share some moments of reflection. The impacts on our city and people’s lives continue to be felt today.”

Commander Fiona Jameson and Lieutenant Commander Paul Eady, representi­ng the Royal NZ Navy, will

ring the Veronica Bell.

“The bell will be rung eight times in commemorat­ion of those who lost their lives, followed by a minute’s silence, and eight times for those who emerged from the dust and ashes and took on the work of rebuilding our city,” Wise said.

The bell is from HMS Veronica, which was in port at the time of the earthquake.

Hastings service

Every year on February 3, Hastings commemorat­es the anniversar­y of the earthquake.

A special ceremony will be held next to the Hastings Clock Tower in the city centre at 10.30am.

Stories of how the event reshaped Hastings will be told and wreaths placed at the clock tower in memory of the lives lost in the earthquake.

The clock tower bell will ring at 10.47am, the exact time the quake struck the region.

 ?? Photo / Central Hawke’s Bay Museum ?? The lower frontage of Limbricks building in the main street of Waipawa collapsed. The building survived and is still standing and in use today.
Photo / Central Hawke’s Bay Museum The lower frontage of Limbricks building in the main street of Waipawa collapsed. The building survived and is still standing and in use today.
 ?? ?? A printed sign from the days following the 1931 Hawke’s Bay Earthquake, forbidding casual motorists from tacking the dangerous roads to Hastings and Napier.
A printed sign from the days following the 1931 Hawke’s Bay Earthquake, forbidding casual motorists from tacking the dangerous roads to Hastings and Napier.
 ?? ?? Lost now found - premature baby Vera Johnston, a forgotten victim of the Hawke’s Bay Earthquake.
Lost now found - premature baby Vera Johnston, a forgotten victim of the Hawke’s Bay Earthquake.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand