Jump to content

Ferrymead Heritage Park

Coordinates: 43°34′2.23″S 172°42′7.92″E / 43.5672861°S 172.7022000°E / -43.5672861; 172.7022000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Main street with tram tracks
A rare steam tram pulling double-decker tram trailers on the Ferrymead Tramway

Ferrymead Heritage Park is a museum in Christchurch, New Zealand, housing groups with historical themes, mainly transport related. Formerly known as Ferrymead Historic Park, it was founded in 1964 by groups, local government bodies and other interested parties. It is in the Heathcote Valley, at the site of New Zealand's first public railway.

History

[edit]

Museum of Science & Industry

[edit]

Ferrymead Heritage Park opened in 1965 as the Museum of Science & Industry with an initial focus on rail.[1]

Ferrymead Heritage Park

[edit]
Inside Ferrymead Heritage Park's General Store

Eventually the park would grow and house Edwardian buildings, mid-20th century technologies, and old motor vehicles.[1]

8,000 school children visit the park per annum.[1]

Member societies

[edit]
View from a tram of a Ferrymead Heritage Centre sign

The following societies are currently active:

  • Canterbury Centre for Historic Photography & Film Inc.
  • Canterbury Railway Society Inc. (operators of the 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) narrow gauge Ferrymead Railway)
  • Diesel Traction Group Inc.
  • Ferrymead Aeronautical Society Inc.
  • Ferrymead Post and Telegraph Historical Society Inc. (with display of early Rotary system automatic telephone exchange)
  • Ferrymead Printing Society Inc.
  • Fire Services Historical Society Inc.
  • Friends of Ferrymead Fraternity Inc.
  • Garden City Model Railroad Club Inc.
  • Heathcote Studios Theatrical Society Inc.
  • Lions Club of Ferrymead Inc.
  • Radio Preservation Society of New Zealand (Ferrymead) Inc. (Radio Ferrymead)
  • Society of Rural History Inc.
  • Tramway Historical Society Inc. (operators of the standard gauge Ferrymead Tramway)

Other societies have come and gone, notably the Ferrymead Military Museum Society. Heathcote Studios Theatrical Society is the most recent member.

Geography

[edit]

The park is in the Heathcote Valley. Being close to the sea and low-lying, it was historically subjected to frequent flooding. A major event was the "Wahine Storm" of 1968, in which a large part of the site, then in embryonic development, was under water. This is no longer a major issue due to the filling of large parts of the site. Since the active involvement of the CCC began in the mid-1990s, flood and stormwater management have been implemented in the park and surrounding lands. The major project of the Heathcote Valley Park aims to integrate these along with the development of wildlife habitat areas and native plantings.

In the days of being managed by the Heathcote County Council, prior to local government amalgamation of 1989, part of the site was used as a rubbish dump. The raised location known as "Woods Hill" was formed artificially by the large-scale compacting of refuse dumped there over a number of years. This area is rather unstable land and buildings constructed there without appropriate foundations have been damaged by subsidence. The Tamaki Brothers of Rotorua received substantial CCC assistance to construct a tourist Māori village on the site, which opened in 2007.

Radio Ferrymead

[edit]

Radio Ferrymead is a radio station operated by the Radio Preservation Society (RPS) in Christchurch, New Zealand. The RPS is a non-profit incorporated society based at the Ferrymead Heritage Park, whose aim is to collect, preserve and display radio and radio related historical items. The station normally broadcasts from Friday 8.00am through until Monday midnight and from 8.00am to 6.00pm during Statutory and Christmas/New Year Holidays. The studio is open to the public on weekends between 10.00 am to 4.30 pm. Live broadcasts are done by volunteers during daytime and automated music plays at night.

The station broadcasts a mix of historical musical recordings from dancebands, stage, screen, radio and television covering music from the 1930s to the 1980s. The station transmits on 1413 kHz AM at 900W from a nearby aerial, and its historic call sign was 3XP. The station plays music from 78rpm recordings as well as vinyl LPs and 45s, compact discs, cassette tapes, reel-to-reel tapes and automated mp3 music on computer.[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]
  • "Ferrymead Railway and Heritage Park", Engineering New Zealand, archived from the original on 26 August 2023, retrieved 5 November 2024

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Philp, Matt (Spring 2024). Dunlop, Anna (ed.). "Park life". Heritage New Zealand. No. 174. Heritage New Zealand. pp. 40–45. ISSN 1175-9615.
  2. ^ Radio Ferrymead
[edit]

43°34′2.23″S 172°42′7.92″E / 43.5672861°S 172.7022000°E / -43.5672861; 172.7022000