Hawke's Bay Today

Who stole the steam train?

Fears 60-year-old Anderson Park ride-on miniature locomotive sold as scrap metal

- Doug Laing

Ahistoric working model steam locomotive which has been a children’s attraction in Napier for 60 years has been stolen amid fears that it will be broken down and sold as scrap metal – for as little as $100.

The theft of the Maid of Kent, a metre-and-a-half long with tender included and weighing at least 70kg, was discovered on Wednesday by Graham Leabourn as he checked the track at Anderson Park, Greenmeado­ws, and shed of the Hawke’s Bay Model Engineerin­g Society, of which he has been a member and volunteer for all but three of its 60 years.

It would be impossible to sell as a working engine, he said, although there is a demand with similar engines still being built in New Zealand.

He and new society president Ryan Lawson say that with the weight and a degree of difficulty, it would have taken at least two people to lift it from a track in the shed off the Park Rd side of the park, where volunteers operate rides for children and family amusement most weekends.

Both said it seemed thieves targeted the “Maid”, bypassing at least two lighter engines after forcing entry to the shed some time since Sunday evening.

Dating back to a Sunday afternoon confrontat­ion, in which a youth pulled a knife on one of the society volunteers, there have been many incidents of graffiti and vandalism, and notable thefts of gates on a track bridge over a pond and, in the past few weeks, two mowers and a wheelbarro­w.

In one incident four padlocks securing the premises had been cut, at a cost of about $200, at a park amusement where Sunday takings are considered good if they’re over that mark.

But the theft of the five-inch gauge locomotive the Maid of Kent, along with its tender, shovels and coal, is a major step up, thieves having bypassed lighter engines before lifting the steamer from its track to steal a significan­t item that is almost impossible to offload in New Zealand, even as scrap.

Thieves have also stolen other items from around the park.

Lawson says the theft has devastated volunteers of the not-for-profit society, who include members of retired age who turn out at weekends to run the trains, which also include diesel locomotive replicas.

The use of the “Maid” to provide rides in Napier dates back to an approach by Westshore Residents Developmen­t Associatio­n member Cedric Alexander to model engineerin­g enthusiast­s Bob Finlay and Tom Frater in 1960 to finish building the locomotive.

A track was laid beside the Westshore Surf Lifesaving Club offering rides at sixpence each (five cents) during the busy times in the summer.

The two enthusiast­s were able to operate their own engines on the tracks, and the proceeds would fund developmen­t associatio­n activities beautifyin­g the Westshore reserve.

A new boiler was fitted to the Maid of Kent in 1982 and the trains continued running at Westshore until 1994. At one stage they were encouraged to link with the newer Keirunga facilities in Havelock North, the locomotive society re-establishe­d facilities at Anderson Park.

Lawson says the steam locomotive has nostalgic value, with emotional connection­s made with Percy, of Thomas the Tank Engine fame, and to Sunday-morning radio time story favourite Sparky and the Talking Train.

Police investigat­ing the burglary have completed a scene examinatio­n. Anyone with informatio­n should call 105 quoting file number 220511/1883.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? A recent photo of the Maid of Kent, the working, 60-year-old, ride-on miniature steam locomotive which was stolen from Anderson Park, Greenmeado­ws.
Photo / Supplied A recent photo of the Maid of Kent, the working, 60-year-old, ride-on miniature steam locomotive which was stolen from Anderson Park, Greenmeado­ws.
 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Ryan Lawson, now the Hawke’s Bay Model Engineerin­g Society president, driving the Maid of Kent through a tunnel at Anderson Park in 2019.
Photo / NZME Ryan Lawson, now the Hawke’s Bay Model Engineerin­g Society president, driving the Maid of Kent through a tunnel at Anderson Park in 2019.

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