Hastings Leader

Journalist killed in quake

‘Darby’ Ryan a well know figure around region and died in line of duty

- Michael Fowler

On February 3, 1931, a slightstat­ured, bespectacl­ed man, with a modest wispy moustache, stands waiting in the Hastings post office lobby. He clutches a notepad and pencil, anticipati­ng the arrival of Tom Devoy from the Pacific Hotel.

He’s 65-year-old Arthur Lever Ryan, chief reporter of the Hawke’s Bay Tribune (now Hawke’s Bay Today), a man renowned as one of Hawke’s Bay’s best — if not the best — investigat­ive journalist of his time.

Arthur is affectiona­tely known around Hastings as “Darby”. His newspaper colleagues gave their chief reporter this nickname after the Irish poet and patriot, Darby Ryan. This was bestowed due to Darby’s 1865 birth in Waterford, Ireland, and his literary talents.

His father Roderick Ryan was a successful merchant and tobacconis­t in Waterford, and Arthur followed his father by having his own tobacconis­t shop.

Around 1885, aged 20, he left for New Zealand, and settled on the West Coast. He would find employment with the Greymouth Argus.

His move to Hastings came when his employer John Arnott and his son, William, with another Greymouth resident, Anthony Cashion, establishe­d the Hastings Standard in 1896, taking Arthur with them.

He was appointed as Napier representa­tive for the newspaper and was described as a commission agent.

It appears from a history of the Hastings Standard written in 1926 that he was also a reporter.

The Hastings Standard struggled financiall­y, and its owners Arnott and Cashion sold in 1898. William Arnott’s bad health was also a factor in the demise, and he passed away of consumptio­n (tuberculos­is) in June 1898.

Arthur then returned to Greymouth and joined the Greymouth Evening Star.

It was a fortunate move romantical­ly at least.

He would marry in January 1901, to Ada Tomkies from Brunner, near Greymouth.

His newspaper employer in Greymouth announced that same January that Arthur would once again move to the Hastings Standard, now under new ownership.

While in Greymouth, Arthur had an active interest in the Literary Institute and amateur theatrical and was described as “always foremost in good works for the advancemen­t of the people or the district”.

Arthur would also get heavily involved in dramatical, singing and community groups in Hastings.

Two children were born to Arthur and Ada in Hastings — Doreen (1902) and Aileen (1906).

Both girls were given Ma¯ ori names — Owhiti for Doreen and a West Coast connection, Otira, for Aileen. They would train to be nurses.

When Arthur left the now Hawke’s Bay Tribune in the early 1910s to be the Hastings correspond­ent for Napier’s Daily Telegraph, his

employers still recorded his comings and goings on holidays in the newspaper and there appeared to be no ill-will towards him.

He would rejoin the Hawke’s Bay Tribune by 1920.

In May 1930, Arthur and Ada announced that they would making a trip to England and Ireland — the places of their birth.

When they arrived in Waterford, Arthur was somewhat of a celebrity, and recalling his friendship­s of earlier

years, he stated “the greater number of them were now to be found Ballygunne­r cemetery”.

In respect of his own health, the good people of Waterford were amazed that Arthur of “three score years and six [66, but he was actually 64] . . . looks extremely fresh and compliment­ed on his youthful appearance.”

Arthur replied that “New Zealand’s delightful climate is the finest in the world for keeping one rejuvenate­d”.

The couple returned to Hastings in November 1930.

Just over two months later, the 1931, 7.8 magnitude, Hawke’s Bay earthquake struck.

I was told by a member of the Devoy family in 2006 that Tom Devoy had to go back to his Pacific Hotel to sort out a disturbanc­e, leaving Arthur waiting in the Hastings post office lobby when the earthquake struck.

Hotel owners — especially fellow Irishmen — were then great sources of news.

The Hastings post office had a tall clock tower — re-engineered after a 1911 earthquake to fall on to the street, not on to the building.

Along with several others, Arthur was killed by the falling masonry from the tower. His body was found on February 6.

Tributes flowed from his newspaper colleagues and the Hastings community and Arthur was buried in the Hastings cemetery.

Ryan’s colleagues at the Hawke’s Bay Herald remembered him with a memorial notice in the paper every year until the mid-1960s — likely until the last person who remembered him had left employment.

But we remember you this month, Darby, and the other approximat­e 256 victims of the 1931 Hawke’s Bay earthquake.

You are not forgotten.

Michael Fowler is a Hawke’s Bay historian and writer mfhistory@gmail.com. Fowler and Hawke’s Bay Today editor Chris Hyde will be meeting at the Orchard Rd entrance of the Hastings cemetery at 1pm today to pay our respects to Arthur Lever Ryan. Readers who are interested in doing the same are welcome to join us.

 ?? PHOTO / HAWKE’S BAY KNOWLEDGE BANK LOVELL-SMITH 878 ?? A 1923 caricature of respected journalist Arthur “Darby” Ryan created eight years before his death.
PHOTO / HAWKE’S BAY KNOWLEDGE BANK LOVELL-SMITH 878 A 1923 caricature of respected journalist Arthur “Darby” Ryan created eight years before his death.

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