Otago Daily Times

Treasures help map life in Dunedin

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter

THE constructi­on of New Zealand’s most modern hospital is giving an insight into Dunedin’s past.

As part of its building consent conditions the new Dunedin hospital project is obliged to meet a range of heritage requiremen­ts, which include allowing archaeolog­ists access to the site and earthworks.

Several treasures were found during demolition of the buildings on the central city lots, including the log books of the former Cadbury factory.

Earthworks and piling have been under way for several weeks on what will eventually be the outpatient building, and the associated drilling has created dozens of test pits for archaeolog­ists from contracted firm Heritage Properties Ltd to delve in to.

‘‘Unfortunat­ely the soil is contaminat­ed so we have to be very careful,’’ principal archaeolog­ist Naomi Woods said.

‘‘But we have found a wide range of material and we are getting a nice sample of what the site was like.’’

Heritage Properties Ltd will continue to explore the site as building requiremen­ts and safety issues permit; the firm will carry out a similar exercise when work begins on the inpatient building on the former Cadbury site.

That block, which is mostly reclaimed land, was almost always used for industrial purposes.

However, the northern site, formerly occupied by Wilson Parking and a range of small businesses, was largely residentia­l, as historic photograph­s show.

‘‘At one point this was one of the most densely populated blocks in Dunedin,’’ Dr Woods said.

‘‘We have been able to access quite a lot of the site and it has given us quite a snapshot of the land; we have uncovered, I think, three stable blocks, and we are holding out hope that we might be able to confirm the location of some of the earliest European occupation on the site.’’

Rubbish and lost items such as an 1830s coin and old bottles, have provided a range of dating evidence and helped create a picture of everyday life about 150 years ago.

Aiding the search is the fact that famed colonial photograph­ers the Burton brothers took a range of photograph­s of central Dunedin in the 1870s.

Although many of the houses in the panoramas they shot of the

Cumberland St/Castle St areas were demolished and upgraded by the turn of the century, their images combined with Dunedin City Council drainage and rates records mean archaeolog­ists had a good idea of who actually lived in the longgone properties they were excavating at certain points of their history.

‘‘The year the photo was taken was, convenient­ly, the year they decided to list all the occupants: they stopped doing it after then,’’ Dr Woods said.

‘‘A lot of the things we are finding are what we would find on other sites in Dunedin, but because we know who was there there is always the chance we might be able to find a personal item . . . we have found a pair of shoes with S W on the sole and we do have one person with the initials S W but they lived on the other side of the site in a different time period, so we are still looking for Mr S W.’’

 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Bottled goodness . . . Principal archaeolog­ist Naomi Woods examines an 1870s soda bottle found under the site of the new Dunedin hospital outpatient site . To her right are a castor oil bottle and another soda bottle also found during excavation­s.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN Bottled goodness . . . Principal archaeolog­ist Naomi Woods examines an 1870s soda bottle found under the site of the new Dunedin hospital outpatient site . To her right are a castor oil bottle and another soda bottle also found during excavation­s.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand