Whanganui Chronicle

The Sarjeant Gallery’s secret shame

Designer of our most iconic building denied recognitio­n

- By November 1916 he was in uniform and in training. Anscombe got the reward both ways: Employed to oversee constructi­on and recorded in Rachel Rose

In October 101 years ago, families the length of New Zealand were learning that their beloved sons, husbands, brothers and sweetheart­s were never coming home from the foreign fields in which they fought.

October 12 slipped by two Fridays ago, the day we hunkered down as the southerly roared in and temperatur­es plummeted.

One hundred and one years ago that day, Donald Hosie was one of 843 soldiers in the New Zealand Expedition­ary Force who died at Passchenda­ele.

Pore over the cramped copperplat­e handwritin­g of his service record and one gleans the brutal reality of that horror-filled day: Donald is officially “Missing Believed Killed” because his body was never found.

He likely died from the direct impact of a shell and there was no body to find or identify.

Whanganui should know the name of Donald Hosie because this 21-year old trainee architect designed our city’s most iconic building.

Yet he receives no official credit and the Sarjeant Gallery foundation stone bears the name of his employer, due to a sustained and brazen deceit nearly a century ago.

It’s time the Sarjeant Gallery put that right.

I first heard this story from local historian Kyle Dalton during one of the historic walking tours he was leading a few years back.

It goes like this: Hosie’s outstandin­g entry into the

competitio­n to design the Sarjeant Gallery is declared the winner. He works for Edmund Anscombe, a notable Dunedin architect, who promptly claims Hosie’s work as his own and maintains that lie throughout an extensive investigat­ion.

Competitio­n judge S Hurst Seager travels to Dunedin to interview Hosie and Anscombe.

He learns in a private meeting with Hosie that the work was Hosie’s own, done on his own time with no input from Anscombe. But Hosie declines to press his authorship, not wanting to displease his boss.

Anscombe maintains that the design was his and his apprentice had simply drafted the drawings based on his instructio­ns. His claim proved tenuous under questionin­g by Seager, who declared to the council that Hosie was indisputab­ly the author.

Dalton thinks that the councillor­s of the Wanganui Borough Council had some reservatio­ns about their illustriou­s new gallery being designed by a student, rather than an establishe­d architect of renown.

It may have suited those conservati­ve men to have Anscombe’s name attached to the gallery — he was already well- known, an elected fellow to the New Zealand Institute of Architects and had recently been appointed architect to the University of Otago.

Legal opinions were sought and the council settled on naming Anscombe as the architect despite the evidence.

There was little financial reward in drawing up plans for new civic buildings; the money was in the subsequent appointmen­t as the onsite architect during a building’s constructi­on. Hosie wasn’t available for that job anyway given the momentous events a world away.

He was the youngest of nine children born to Scottish parents in Central Otago. Donald was 19 when World War I broke out; he tried to volunteer early on but was judged unfit because of his poor eyesight.

But as the war dragged on, the need to reinforce NZ companies decimated by fighting in Gallipoli and the Somme was urgent — and Hosie was “a fine manly type of young fellow who is anxious to go to the war”, according to Seager’s approving descriptio­n. history as the architect. It is his name etched into the gallery’s foundation stone, perfectly legible a century later.

But it was Hosie’s own hand that drew up the preliminar­y studies for the Sarjeant, drawings Seager described as a “beautiful . . . [showing] evidence of the greatest skill in design”.

An appeal was made all the way up to New Zealand’s major general and Hosie was accordingl­y given leave from camp in order to complete the detailed drawings required for constructi­on.

He sailed for Europe in March 1917. He was in France for just three months before his brutal, bewilderin­g death.

Constructi­on of the Sarjeant Gallery extension begins next year. It would seem fitting to then correct this long-standing injustice, by noting Donald Peter Brown Hosie’s contributi­on to the original building in some suitable, public way.

I’d like to see a small permanent exhibition that includes some of his beautiful drawings for the buildings.

We can only imagine how Donald Hosie’s talent would have shaped the built face of post-war New Zealand.

World War I was a personal tragedy for all whose lives were destroyed or altered. It was also a tragedy for society, a gaping tear in the cultural fabric of nations.

We will never know what we lost, what vision and genius and goodness would have arisen, were it not for the destructio­n of this senseless war.

■ Rachel Rose is a Whanganuib­ased writer with a BA (History) from VUW. She would like to hear from any descendant­s of Donald Hosie: www.facebook.com/ rachelrose.writer

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 ??  ?? Whanganui’s iconic Sarjeant Gallery — “evidence of the greatest skill in design” by a young architect student called Donald Hosie.
Whanganui’s iconic Sarjeant Gallery — “evidence of the greatest skill in design” by a young architect student called Donald Hosie.
 ??  ?? Donald Hosie
Donald Hosie
 ??  ?? The gallery plaque dating from 1917 that names Edmund Anscombe as the architect.
The gallery plaque dating from 1917 that names Edmund Anscombe as the architect.
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