CHB Mail

Waipawa's oldest home hits market

Family home with bones of kauri looking for new owners to add to its history

- Michaela Gower

Ahome believed to be Waipawa’s oldest is for sale and looking for a family to etch further history into the walls. The house was built in

1857 by early settler Thomas Fitzgerald with kauri shipped to Napier and transporte­d to Waipawa by bullock wagon.

Located at the corner of Rose and Ruataniwha

Sts, it was put on the market after becoming too much for the current owner, 94-yearold Terry McKenzie.

Owner Terry and his wife Elaine emigrated from KwaZuluNat­al in South Africa and decided to settle in Waipawa after they purchased the home in 1998.

Hawke’s Bay Today spoke to

Terry’s son Jack McKenzie, who said he was not in a position to take over the home but said it had immediatel­y grabbed his parents’ attention when they were looking for property in Central Hawke’s Bay.

The Pines offered the perfect combinatio­n of space for Terry and gardening opportunit­ies for Elaine who died in 2016 from cancer. McKenzie said there were several things that “struck a chord” with his parents who were more or less retired when they moved to Hawke’s Bay.

“The house just had a special attraction. It’s an older house which always comes with challenges — but he was up for it, and my mum was always a gardener at heart. Both my parents came from farming stock and my father would never tolerate living on a small piece of land or in an apartment — he needed space.”

The home was previously owned by significan­t members of the Central Hawke’s Bay community including Charles Weber, a German engineer who arrived in Waipawa in 1860.

He went missing in the area now known as Weber in 1886, and his body was found three years later by bush cutters.

The home, although modernised, still holds historical features added by past occupants such as Dr Alex Todd, who built a substantia­l dovecote for the homing pigeons he used to communicat­e with his rural patients.

The four-bedroom and twobathroo­m home is still available and will be sold by negotiatio­n.

 ?? ?? The Pines historic home in Waipawa is for sale. It was once owned by a doctor who kept homing pigeons which he used to communicat­e with his rural patients.
The Pines historic home in Waipawa is for sale. It was once owned by a doctor who kept homing pigeons which he used to communicat­e with his rural patients.
 ?? ?? The four bedroom property is thought to be the town’s oldest surviving home.
The four bedroom property is thought to be the town’s oldest surviving home.
 ?? ?? Elaine and Terry McKenzie at the 150-year celebratio­n of the house in 2007.
Elaine and Terry McKenzie at the 150-year celebratio­n of the house in 2007.

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