Sunday Star-Times

Shipwreck mystery

Can a historian solve the enduring mystery of who built a hut on New Zealand’s most isolated island? Andrea Vance

- Reports.

A historian is hoping to solve the mystery of who built a sod hut on New Zealand’s southernmo­st island.

Norman Judd is in a race against time to uncover the secrets of the isolated dwelling on Campbell Island/Motu Ihupuku before nature takes over.

He believes the peat shelter may have been built by sailors, shipwrecke­d by a tsunami early in the 19th century.

But Judd believes more support and funding is needed before the site can be properly explored and protected.

Judd, from Auckland, has been researchin­g the history of Campbell Island, and its sealers, whalers and farmers, for four decades.

He spent years searching for the lost grave of French mechanic Paul Duris, who died of typhoid in 1874, using a century-old photograph of the site.

He eventually found the remains in Venus Cove, marked with a metal cross, buried under tree roots and a half-metre layer of peat.

‘‘It wasn’t ’til the fourth expedition, after 18 years of research, that I eventually found the grave,’’ he said. ‘‘And over those 18 years a bigger picture started to form, of our cultural heritage.

‘‘There was a lot more happening. There was a lot more on the island.’’

Judd first learned about the existence of the sod hut in the 1980s from Robin Stanley, a former weatherman who was stationed on the island in 1952.

‘‘His last two or three days on the island, he decided to go for a long tramp and, coming back late in the day it was starting to get a bit dark. So, he decided to take a shortcut, all tussock.

‘‘And he found he was standing within four walls of a sod hut, coming back through Tucker Cove.’’

Stanley’s duties meant he was unable to return to look more closely at the crumbling dwelling.

‘‘He never got a chance to go back. And in ’86/’87 he wrote to me and said: ‘Here’s a photograph of where I think the hut is’.’’

Judd, who also works as a guide and lecturer on Heritage Expedition­s’ sub-Antarctic trips, searched fruitlessl­y for the site. In 1995, he gave directions to meteorolog­ical officer Mike Fraser, just before the island’s weather station closed down.

‘‘And he found it. It was a wonderful thing that happened in [the weather station’s] last year.’’

Judd returned to the island for the closure of the station, and took photograph­ers.

But it is only in the past few years that he has been able to make further physical investigat­ions. In March 2018, he visited with an archaeolog­ist.

The following year, with another archaeolog­ist, they discovered some artefacts and built a barrier to keep out the island’s curious seals and seal lions. The site gave Judd some clues. ‘‘The reason it wasn’t found is it is so far back from the shoreline,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s about eight metres above sea level.

‘‘And it is as big as 10 metres long.’’

There aren’t trees big enough on the island to support a roof of that size, so Judd believes the beam may have been constructe­d from a ship’s mast.

His theory is a ship came aground in a tsunami, and the hut was built to shelter survivors.

‘‘They seemed to behave like survivors. There were bird bones everywhere, they were chucking food out the door. There was a dog’s tooth there. Four bits of broken plate, almost the size of bedpans.’’ Norman Judd

In 1868, powerful earthquake in the port city of Arica – then in Peru, but now part of Chile – sent a deadly wall of water racing across the Pacific, killing 20 New Zealanders.

The waves would also have hit Campbell Island. Judd points to witness accounts from another tsunami in 1877.

‘‘[The water] dropped 2.4 metres and they saw two squarecut timber beams on the floor of

Tucker Cove... they were fresh, and they didn’t have crustacean­s barnacles them.’’ French sailors arriving in Perseveran­ce Harbour for the 1874 Transit of Venus expedition also reported seeing a wreck in the cove.

From the descriptio­ns, Judd believes it was the keel of a ship. The siting is close to where the hut stands. ‘‘The idea that I have is that a major tsunami hit, and pushed the keel of the vessel right up in there, before 1877.’’ Evidence close to the hut backs his theory. ‘‘They seemed to behave like survivors. There were bird bones everywhere, they were chucking food out the door. There was a dog’s tooth there. or on

Four bits of broken plate, almost the size of bedpans.’’

He believes the hut could have slept 15 people, whereas sealers that used the islands tended to hunt in gangs of six or seven.

‘‘The other unusual thing was that they must have built that hut in a reasonable hurry, not understand­ing their environmen­t, because the hearth is at the western end and that would drive the smoke into the hut and the sparks across the room.’’

The great mystery is who these inhabitant­s were and where they came from. Judd would like to solve it.

‘‘There is the need for an archaeolog­ical investigat­ion and that needs to be in the hands of the profession­als. Then after getting all the informatio­n they can make a decision on how important a site it was and preserve it.

‘‘In the meantime, as a historian, I will research everything.’’

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS: IAIN MCGREGOR/STUFF ?? The January 1864 wreck of the 56-ton schooner Grafton, left, in Carnley Harbour, Auckland Island, demonstrat­es how sailors, sealers and whalers found themselves stranded in the New Zealand Subantarct­ic Islands, nearly 480km south of the South Island. Now Norman Judd has discovered a 10m structure on Campbell Island/Motu Ihupuku, below, and built a protective wall around it to keep out inquisitiv­e wildlife ahead of further investigat­ions into who built it.
PHOTOS: IAIN MCGREGOR/STUFF The January 1864 wreck of the 56-ton schooner Grafton, left, in Carnley Harbour, Auckland Island, demonstrat­es how sailors, sealers and whalers found themselves stranded in the New Zealand Subantarct­ic Islands, nearly 480km south of the South Island. Now Norman Judd has discovered a 10m structure on Campbell Island/Motu Ihupuku, below, and built a protective wall around it to keep out inquisitiv­e wildlife ahead of further investigat­ions into who built it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand