Taranaki Daily News

Another link to old Plymouth

- Cannon St

Cannon St in Westown links Magnolia Drive and Wallath Rd.

As with many other roads in the area, the formation of this street was an indirect consequenc­e of the well-known horticultu­ral firm Duncan & Davies leaving their Westown site for Brixton.

The other player in the story is Riddick Bros & Still, an energetic constructi­on company establishe­d in by Ray and Ted Riddick along with Wilson (Willie) Still.

They built bridges, pools, commercial and residentia­l buildings as well developing streets throughout Taranaki between 1947 and 1977.

A list of their projects in Willie and Rosie Still’s 2011 book Still Building runs to 12 pages, including the Vivian St Viaduct, New Plymouth Central Baptist Church and the Tasman Hotel (now Richmond Apartments).

Magnolia Drive, leading off Wallath Rd and once home to Duncan & Davies’ stock beds, was the first part of this Westown subdivisio­n.

In the early 1970s, with 19 sections formed, attention turned to extending Magnolia Drive to the north and forming a new road to connect with Wallath Rd.

In a stroke of good fortune, one the company’s directors, accountant John Glasgow, happened to own the neighbouri­ng property and agreed to sell his employers five acres.

Together with the land they had already purchased, Riddick Bros & Still were able to forge ahead with the project, 33 sections in all.

Sadly, Glasgow did not live to see this new developmen­t on the nearby land.

He died suddenly while in Auckland on November 13, 1974, aged only 43.

Glasgow had been appointed chairman of the Taranaki Polytechni­c Council the previous year and also recently elected deputy chairman of the Taranaki Harbours Board.

The name chosen for the new street was yet another one simply picked from a council list of street names from old Plymouth in Devon.

The original Cannon St, pleasingly located opposite Gun Lane, is nestled alongside the Devonport Royal Dockyard, its name celebratin­g an important piece of naval artillery.

Contribute­d by the Taranaki Research Centre I Te Pua Wānanga o Taranaki at Puke Ariki. Find this and hundreds of other street histories on NPDC’s Puke Ariki website: terangiaoa­onunui.pukeariki.com/ story-collection­s/word-on-the-street

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