Taranaki Daily News

Doctor’s name forever linked to Bath St

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Word on the street

George Alfred Harrison was a much-loved doctor in Eltham in the two decades prior to World War I.

His name is forever linked to Bath St. Harrison was born in England in 1867. After qualifying as a doctor, he came to New Zealand in 1894 and started a practice in the small Taranaki town.

He married Mabel Valintine, the daughter of Stratford’s doctor, and the couple had three children.

The family lived in a house on High St, where Eltham’s “stone wall” house stands today, beside the library.

Bath St was given its name because when the Harrison family emptied their bath, the water drained out into the street.

Dr Harrison believed firmly in the importance of his work as a doctor.

One day, visiting a very sick patient, he was delayed by a religious minister, reciting prayers.

Annoyed, Harrison burst into the room. “I say Parson, your horse has bolted.”

The minister rushed off, leaving Harrison free to attend his patient.

His early death caused much shock and sadness in Eltham.

One day in February 1913, he was performing an operation on a child’s neck to drain an abscess.

Bandaging the incision, he accidental­ly pricked his left thumb with a safety pin. A few days later he began to feel unwell, as a result of blood poisoning.

His condition rapidly worsened, even after his arm was amputated, and he died on Sunday, February 23, 1913, aged only 46.

While he was sick, there were regular updates in the newspapers about his condition and, after his death, there was an outpouring of grief.

An editorial in the Eltham Argus newspaper said of him that he had a “bright and happy personalit­y and sympatheti­c bearing” and was “respected and beloved… his loss will create an absolute void”.

Harrison’s property was bought by the doctor who replaced him, Harold Cooper.

Cooper later built the “stone wall” house and a maternity hospital at the top of Hill St. Today, the hospital is a private dwelling.

In 1918, memorial gates were erected in Park St in Eltham, a lasting tribute to Dr George Harrison.

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: https://terangiaoa­onunui. pukeariki.com/story-collection­s/word-onthe-street

 ?? VANESSA LAURIE/STUFF ?? George Alfred Harrison lived in the stone wall house on High St.
VANESSA LAURIE/STUFF George Alfred Harrison lived in the stone wall house on High St.
 ?? VANESSA LAURIE/STUFF ?? Bath St in Eltham is named for the bathwater that used to flow onto it when one of its more prominent families pulled the plug.
VANESSA LAURIE/STUFF Bath St in Eltham is named for the bathwater that used to flow onto it when one of its more prominent families pulled the plug.
 ?? CHARLOTTE CURD/STUFF ?? The gates at Eltham’s Taumata Park were built in memory of Harrison.
CHARLOTTE CURD/STUFF The gates at Eltham’s Taumata Park were built in memory of Harrison.

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