Appeal to recover heirloom
You don’t sort of realise what something like that means to you until you’re suddenly without it.
Rachel Rogan
An Auckland mum is appealing to the public to help find a doll’s house her husband mistakenly gave away.
This isn’t just any doll’s house — it is a family heirloom made in secret during World War II by RAF pilots.
“Please return my daughter’s doll’s house — recently collected from Eversleigh Rd. Her Dad threw it out without permission,” Rachel Rogan posted on her local Facebook page.
“Really sorry to those ladies who collected it . . . but please may we ask for it back?”
On Saturday, November 27, the Rogan family were having a clear-out of their Belmont home, on Auckland’s North Shore.
Rogan’s husband put the house — which had been in storage for about a decade — on the back deck, and Rogan and her daughter were looking inside it, reminiscing about when the children were young and used to play with it.
Twenty minutes later Rogan walked past the deck, noticed it was gone and called out to her husband to ask where he had put it.
“He said, ‘It’s gone, I took it out to the gate and some people took it away’.”
Two couples were walking past, liked the look of it, and took it.
“My daughter just burst into tears. The first thing she said was, ‘I wanted my grandchildren to play with that’,” Rogan said.
“I still feel the ripping in my stomach. It was just one of those really gut-wrenching whoopsie moments.”
Her husband made a genuine mistake, and now the family is just wanting the heirloom back.
But despite Rogan’s Facebook post being shared more than 100 times, they still haven’t tracked it down.
“The reason we want it back is not because of how beautiful it is or anything like that, it’s because of who made it and who they made it for and the fact it was this symbol of love and hope and just something that could be fun for other people to play with, but it will never have the value for other families as it does to ours,” Rogan said.
The house was painstakingly made over one year, in secret. Rogan’s husband’s grandfather was an RAF pilot and made the house in the workshop of his training headquarters in the South Island, enlisting other pilots to help him.
He had a 1-year-old daughter at the time and wanted her to have something to remember him by should he not return from the war. It was given to his daughter Patricia, who passed it on to Rogan’s daughters — her great-nieces.
“You don’t sort of realise what something like that means to you until you’re suddenly without it,” Rogan said.
Rogan would love for it to make its way home, for her daughters to be able to share it with their children one day, and for it to stay in their family.
She’s also concerned there could be lead in the paint, as she was going to get it tested before it was enjoyed by the next generation.
“It’s just a mistake. An unfortunate situation that’s arisen from a mistake, and I’m just appealing to [whoever took it] for forgiveness or something, and just hope they haven’t gotten quite so attached as we are.”