Taranaki Daily News

Word on the street: Beaconsfie­ld Rd, Midhirst

- – Contribute­d by the Taranaki Research Centre I Te Pua Wānanga o Taranaki at Puke Ariki.

Why might a cyclist on a racing bike, on Beaconsfie­ld Rd, make you think of the rock band Cream?

It depends on the bike’s gears. In 1877 Albert Fookes, the founder of Midhirst, wrote to the Waste Lands Board asking that a road into his proposed new township be named Beaconsfie­ld Rd. In justificat­ion, he said the name would meet the wishes of several new settlers in the area.

In this claim he would have been correct. It was named after the Earl of Beaconsfie­ld, better known as Benjamin Disraeli.

Britain’s prime minister in the 1870s, Disraeli was also a prolific author and one of the great figures of public life in Britain at the time. Perhaps his most significan­t legacy is his role in founding the modern Conservati­ve party.

When Beaconsfie­ld Rd was named, much of it was still being cut through native bush. A sawmill was set up and operated profitably for several years. Later, when pasture replaced the bush, a dairy factory was built near the intersecti­on with Stanley Rd. Three houses were built nearby for staff. Soon a school was opened. The introducti­on of the milk tanker rendered the factory uneconomic. It closed in 1958 and the houses were moved to Midhirst. When the road was sealed in the 1920s, a Stratford cycling club started organising races. The circuit, comprising East Rd, Beaconsfie­ld Rd and Mountain Rd, was about 19 kilometres long. Often the cycle races were over

When Beaconsfie­ld Rd was named, much of it was still being cut through native bush.

three laps.

The racing bikes of today are probably fitted with derailleur gears. The accidental miss-pronunciat­ion of that name led to the title of Cream’s influentia­l 1967 album ‘Disraeli Gears’.

Although separated by nearly 100 years, Albert Fookes and Cream were influenced by the same man.

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