Template for Registration Report for a Historic Place
Transcription
Template for Registration Report for a Historic Place
New Zealand Historic Places Trust Pouhere Taonga Registration Review Report for a Historic Place Oamaru Woollen Factory (Former), Oamaru (Register No.3225, Category 2) Aerial view of the Woollen Mill (photograph supplied by Summit Wool Spinners, 2012). Heather Bauchop DRAFT 13 November 2014 New Zealand Historic Places Trust © TABLE OF CONTENTS PURPOSE OF REVIEW 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4 1. IDENTIFICATION 5 1.1. Name of Place 5 1.2. Location Information 5 1.3. Legal Description 5 1.4. Extent of Registration 5 1.5. Eligibility 6 2. SUPPORTING INFORMATION 6 2.1. Historical Information 6 2.2. Physical Information 13 2.3. Chattels 18 2.4. Sources Available and Accessed 18 3. SIGNIFICANCE ASSESSMENT 18 3.1. Section 23 (1) Assessment 18 3.2. Section 66 (3) Assessment 19 4. APPENDICES 22 4.1. Appendix 1: Visual Identification Aids 22 4.2. Appendix 2: Visual Aids to Historical Information 31 4.3. Appendix 3: Visual Aids to Physical Information 33 4.4. Appendix 4: Heritage Protection 37 4.5. Appendix 5: Significance Assessment Information 39 NZHPT Registration Report 2 PURPOSE OF REVIEW The Woollen Mill was first registered as a Category 2 historic place in 1983, but no information was provided at this time about which structures in the large mill complex were significant. The mill complex has been subject to extensive change throughout the twentieth century. The purpose of this review has been to investigate whether the changes to the mill complex over time may have impacted on its heritage values, and to clarify those values and the appropriate extent of registration, if any. NZHPT Registration Report 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Oamaru Woollen Factory Company opened on this site in 1918 and with its successor companies spans ninety years as a manufacturer of wool products, and as one of the largest employers in Oamaru. The factory buildings reflect the changes in this important industry over the last century. With the company dating from the late 1880s, the mill’s history tells of the development of the industry based on small town capital investment. The mill played an important role during both World Wars providing woollen cloth for the armed services. Relocating to its current site in 1918, the mill’s subsequent history shows the changes in the woollen industry, with alliances between mills and the role of major capital investment as the industry developed new processing technologies. The changes in the buildings also reflect the changes in the industry over the twentieth century. The mill’s association with the wool industry continues in 2014 where the factory now produces yarn for carpets. The history of the Oamaru Woollen Factory illustrates the cultural change in the mill as a workplace over its history of operation. Nineteenth century mills had a hierarchy of employment that created a particular work culture. The mill was a significant employer of women, an important theme of cultural change in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Oamaru Woollen Factory features in the writing of Oamaru author Janet Frame who recalls the mill girls on their way to work and defines her own life in opposition to their experience. In the twentieth century the replacement of individual labour with automated production also illustrates the history of change in the industry. The Oamaru Woollen Factory is a 20,000 square metre industrial site made up of a large complex of factory, store and administration buildings. The site has been extensively developed, altered and added to over its long years of operation. The buildings are a mix of the limestone buildings from the 19181920 period, concrete block additions and corrugated iron sheds from various times. All machinery is modern. In 2014, the 20,000 square-metre factory is home to Canterbury Wool Spinners, a subsidiary of carpet manufacturer Godfrey Hirst. NZHPT Registration Report 4 1. IDENTIFICATION 1 1.1. Name of Place Name: Oamaru Woollen Factory (Former) Other Names: Woollen Mill, Summit Wool Spinners, Oamaru Woollen and Worsted Mills 1.2. Location Information Address 3 Spey Street OAMARU Additional Location Information The extensive site covers a half a town block. The main entrance is on a side street (Spey Street) at the end of Weaver Street before the railway line. Local Authority: Waitaki District Council 1.3. Legal Description Pt Sec 1 Blk I Oamaru SD (OT374/198), Pt Sec 3 Blk I Oamaru SD (OT184/228), Pt Lot 21 Deeds Plan 60 (OT355/27), Legal Road, Otago Land District. 1.4. Extent of Registration Extent includes the land described as Pt Sec 1 Blk I Oamaru SD (OT374/198), Pt Sec 3 Blk I Oamaru SD (OT184/228) and Pt Lot 21 Deeds Plan 60 (OT355/27), part of the land described as Legal Road,Otago Land District and the buildings associated with the Oamaru Woollen Factory (Former) thereon, excluding the wool store constructed in 2005. (Refer to map in Appendix 1 of the registration report for further information). 1 This section is supplemented by visual aids in Appendix 1 of the report. NZHPT Registration Report 5 1.5. Eligibility There is sufficient information included in this report to identify this place. This place is physically eligible for consideration as a historic place. It consists of buildings that are affixed to land that lies within the territorial limits of New Zealand. 2. SUPPORTING INFORMATION 2.1. Historical Information The Waitaki area is traditionally associated with the Kahui-tipua, Te Rapuwai, Waitaha and Kati Mamoe peoples. The land around the Waitaki River Mouth shows evidence of extensive settlement, while Moeraki was one of the early 2 cradles of knowledge for Waitaha and Kati Mamoe histories. Key coastal settlements were at Moeraki, Shag Point, Waikouaiti, and Huriawa (the Karitane 3 Peninsula). Ngai Tahu’s prehistoric presence is shown through a range of archaeological sites from middens and urupa, to rock art. Developing new industries The land around Oamaru was included in Kemp’s 1848 Crown purchase, and 4 the town surveyed in 1859. Oamaru’s exuberant Victorian architecture shows the town’s wealth in the 1860s and 1870s. From the grand estates in the backcountry inland of Oamaru came wool and grain – estates like Elderslie, 5 Kuriheka, Tokarahi, Otekaieke, and Benmore. Merchants and warehouseman were busy with the grain and wool carted to Oamaru. Grain and wool stores in 6 built in Oamaru’s Harbour/Tyne Street area show the large production. Ships 2 McKinnon, Malcolm, 'Otago', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, URL: http://www.teara.govt.nz/Places/Otago/Otago/4/en, accessed 23 June 2009. 3 ‘The Original Karitane’, The New Zealand Railways Magazine, 11(9), Dec 1936, URL: http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-Gov11_09Rail-t1-body-d6-d3.html, accessed 23 June 2009, p. 19. 4 K.C. McDonald, White Stone Country: The story of North Otago, North Otago Centennial Committee, Oamaru, 1962, p.64. 5 There are a number of registered places which are examples of the estates which produced the grain and wool in North Otago. These include: Elderslie Stables (Former) (Register No. 2420), and Elderslie Men’s Quarters (Former) (Register No. 3251); Kuriheka Station Stables (Register No. 347), Two Cookshops (Register No. 2423), Woolshed (Register No. 2424) and Implements Sheds (Register No. 2425); Tokarahi Homestead (Register No. 2431), Cookshop (Register No. 2432) and woolshed (Register No. 2433); Benmore Station Complex (Register No. 7805); and the structures associated with Robert Campbell’s estate – his house (Register No. 4378), stables (Register No. 4377) and cottage (Register No. 4887). 6 Examples of the grain stores include the New Zealand Loan and Mercantile Company Warehouse (Former) (Register No. 354); Smith’s Grain Store (Register No. 4380); J and T Meek’s Grain Store (Register no. 2288); and Neill Brothers Store. NZHPT Registration Report 6 called at the bustling port to transport these products to market (Oamaru Harbour Historic Area, Register No. 7536). In Oamaru industries developed to process grain and wool. The first flourmill opened in 1864, others soon followed. The frozen meat industry began near Oamaru in the early 1880s at Totara Estate (Category 1 historic place, Register No.7066). The New Zealand Refrigerating Company were operating their freezing works by February 1886 (Category 2 historic place, Register No. 3217). Making woollen fabric and other woollen products was another of the country’s emerging industries. New Zealand’s population grew through the 1860s and 1870s, and more people needed clothing they could afford. During these years, 7 the wool clip (annual crop of wool) also increased. These two factors enabled New Zealand to develop its own woollen industry. Through the 1870s, 1880s and 1890s woollen mills opened in many New Zealand towns, providing a local market for the wool clip. The Joint Committee on Colonial Industry proposed that a temporary duty be imposed on importing tweed, cloth and other woollen 8 goods, to foster local industry. Where such mills opened, they were an economic hub for their community. While some mills, such as Ross and Glendinning in Dunedin, employed more than 1,000 workers, mills in smaller towns tended to be smaller, and perhaps less economically dominant. 9 Mills opened in the bigger towns or cities, spurred on by political enthusiasm. 10 In the late 1860s, for example, the Otago Provincial Government offered a bonus to the first mill to produce 5,000 yards (4572m) of woollen cloth. Arthur Burns, proprietor of the Mosgiel Woollen Factory (Category 1 Register No. 351), won the prize. 11 The success of Burns’ mill encouraged other investors. Williamson, Ure and Booth, backed by warehousemen Ross and Glendining, opened the Kaikorai Mill in Dunedin in 1874. Ross and Glendining opened their own mill in 1879 (the Roslyn Mill, also in Kaikorai Valley). 12 The Bruce 7 Thornton, p.91; Stewart, p.19. 8 S.R.H. Jones, Doing Well and Doing Good: Ross & Glendining, Scottish Enterprise in New Zealand, Otago University Press, Dunedin, 2010, p.77. 9 McLean, p.131. McLean compares Ross and Glendinning’s over 1000 workers in 1910, with Oamaru’s 115. As a percentage of the population, however, Oamaru’s mill workforce is larger – 2.1% compared to 1.6% going by New Zealand Yearbook population figures for greater Dunedin and Oamaru in 1910. http://www3.stats.govt.nz/New_Zealand_Official_Yearbooks/1910/NZOYB_1910.html accessed 4 Sep 2013. 10 11 12 Stewart, p.52. Thornton, p.81.; Peter J. Stewart, Patterns on the Plain: A Centennial History of Mosgiel Woollens Limited, Mosgiel Limited, Dunedin, 1975, p.17. Thornton, p.81. NZHPT Registration Report 7 Manufactory Company built a woollen mill at Milton in 1897. 13 Throughout the country, mills opened. In Canterbury, the Kaiapoi Woollen Manufacturing Company began production in 1875. 14 Timaru’s woollen mill opened in 1885. In the North Island, the New Zealand Woollen Manufacturing Company began operations in 1885 at Te Papapa near Onehunga. The Onehunga Woollen Syndicate bought the mill in 1891 and it became the Onehunga Woollen Mills. 15 The Wellington Woollen Mills opened at Petone in 1886 and the Napier Woollen Mills in 1902. 16 A woollen mill for Oamaru In 1881, a group of businessmen, led by George Sumpter formed the Oamaru Woollen Factory Company with a view to building a woollen mill in the town. 17 A Mr Collins offered the site just north of the town boundary, between the railway line and the coast. The Company appointed George Ballantyne as manager. Ballantyne, from the well-known Scottish family of woollen manufacturers, went to Britain and selected the plant for the factory, had the plans for the mill drawn up, and engaged key staff. 18 Builder A. Watson won the contract for the construction of the plant, with his £3,759 tender. The contract covered the construction of the weaving shed, teasing house, dyeing and finishing rooms. 19 Watson won a further contract for the construction of the engine room, boiler house and the chimneystack. By June 1882, the machinery was on site. It was trialled in August, and scouring and dyeing started later that month. 20 The Long Depression of the 1880s stalled the mill’s progress. The business was undercapitalised and finance was precarious. Ballantyne was a poor manager and was dismissed in May 1883. His replacement, David Patterson, took up the manager’s role – a position he would hold until 1917. The Patterson family’s association with the mill lasted until 1955. 21 David Patterson proved an able manager, the company made its first profit in 1885. 13 Thornton, p.86. 14 Thornton, p.86. 15 Thornton , p.86. 16 Thornton, p.86. 17 McLean, pp.19-20. 18 McLean, pp.22-23. 19 McLean, p.23. 20 McLean, p.25. 21 McLean, p.26. NZHPT Registration Report 8 By the early 1890s, the economic climate was brighter and the company pushed ahead with additions to the factory. The company installed a new boiler plant in 1893 and in the following year built a new warehouse and office. 22 Business was still tough because of competition between mills, and because New Zealand’s population was now static. Cheap imported fabrics harmed local business. 23 Economic pressure eased in the twentieth century. As ever, war was good for production – the South African War gave production a lift and the First World War provided more steady growth. 24 The Oamaru mill supplied tunic cloth and over-coating for the war effort. Production and profitability increased. 25 A new factory Unexpected expenses coincided with the end of the war. In the 1890s, measurements had shown that waves were eroding the cliff face behind the factory. While protection works slowed the erosion, it was clear that the factory would have to move. The company purchased a four-acre site across the railway line from the factory. 26 Manager D.L. Patterson (David Patterson’s son, manager 1917-1947) drew up plans for the new mill. The contract for the chimneystack was awarded in December 1917. By May 1918, all the new buildings were nearly finished. Racing the sea, which by April 1918 was threatening the wool-sorting room in the old factory, the contract for the remaining buildings was let. This contract was for the winding, weaving, finishing and milling departments, offices and warehouses. Builders reused materials from the old factory where they could, and transferred the machinery from the old mill. The old mill closed on 13 April 1921. Patterson designed the new mill as a complete unit with room to expand on the generous site. 22 McLean, p.32. 23 McLean, p.28. 24 27 Jane Tolerton. 'Agricultural processing industries - Woollen mills in the 20th and 21st centuries', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 13-Jul-12 URL: http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/agricultural-processing-industries/page-4 accessed 2 September 2013. 25 McLean, p.34. 26 McLean, p.35. 27 McLean, p.37. NZHPT Registration Report 9 Takeover Meanwhile Macky, Logan, Caldwell Ltd (who had also acquired the South Canterbury Woollen Mill Company in Timaru in 1919) took over the Oamaru Woollen Factory Company. 28 These Auckland warehousemen were expanding their interest into the manufacture of woollen goods. The company still traded as the Oamaru Woollen Factory Company and remained a separate entity. 29 Although business boomed in the 1920s, difficulties were to follow. The company extended the factory in 1932 building a new yarn store and yarndrying shed, but their business contracted. The Great Depression saw a collapse of the industry. Macky, Logan, Caldwell Ltd went into liquidation in 1932 owing the Oamaru Woollen Factory Company a substantial sum. 30 Hope was restored in 1935 when W.E. Winks and T.A. Daley made an offer for the company on behalf of Winley and Company. Winley and Company had stakes in the Manawatu Knitting Mills among other concerns. They represented the ‘monopolisation of capital and the accompanying professionalism of directors’ that was developing in the New Zealand business world. 31 It was agreed that the old company would go into liquidation and that a new company, Oamaru Worsted and Woollen Mills Ltd, would be formed. High tariffs on textiles and import restrictions protected the woollen mills from the late 1930s. These measures meant that locally made fabric was cheaper than imported fabric. The regulated industry did have its downsides – it was hard for mills to diversify because those who held an import license could oppose local mills wanting to make a similar product. Both importers and other mills could oppose a mill’s request to import machinery to make a new product. 32 Once again, the climate for the woollen industry improved with war. The Second World War posed the next challenge for the new company with the huge demands for wartime production. The Government declared woollen manufacturing an ‘essential industry.’ Production for the army and the air force 28 McLean, p.63. 29 McLean, pp.37-38. 30 McLean, p.44. 31 McLean, p.43. 32 http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/agricultural-processing-industries accessed 12 July 2012. Jane Tolerton ‘Agricultural Processing industries’. NZHPT Registration Report 10 took over most of the capacity of the mill, although labour was hard to find. 33 This increased production did mean the plant had to expand. A conditioning room was finished in 1950 and in 1952 two wool stores were added. th In 1956, the Company celebrated its 75 anniversary, producing a souvenir booklet and holding celebrations. Woollen mills were very important as employers of women, particularly in small towns when there were few other employers who would take them on. Women usually only worked until they were married (or soon after). Women did the lighter factory work, particularly in the hosiery, darning and mending departments. 34 The conditions in the mill depended on the department. Some departments were unpleasant, such as the dyehouse with its running water and continual steam. Others were noisy and the work monotonous, and sometimes dangerous. The carding department, with machines unguarded until after the Second World War was particularly hazardous. 35 The Oamaru mill did offer social facilities and events for employees that helped to create a sense of identity. 36 The woollen mill features in the fiction and autobiographical writing of Janet Frame. It kept time, the mill hooter like a fire siren each morning at eight, and the buildings were a landmark. 37 The mill is where girls who left school early went to work. In Frame’s Owl’s Do Cry Fay Chalkin works in a woollen mill, and the ‘mill girls’ ride six abreast to the mill. For Frame’s protagonist Daphne, ‘to end up at the woollen mill’ is the pit of her despair. 38 But for many women, the woollen mill provided a place of employment and companionship outside the four walls of the home. Alliances between mills: a changing industry Industry changes, however, heralded further restructuring. The new 33 McLean, p.45. 34 McLean, p.121. 35 McLean, p.129. 36 McLean, p.130. 37 Sheila Leaver-Cooper, Janet Frame’s Kingdom by the Sea: Oamaru, Lincoln University Press, 1997, Canterbury, pp.55-56. 38 Sheila Leaver-Cooper, Janet Frame’s Kingdom by the Sea: Oamaru, Lincoln University Press, 1997, Canterbury, pp.55-56. References to the woollen mill are in To the Is-land (pp.91, 94, 130, 179, 185) and Owls Do Cry (pp.27-31, 75). NZHPT Registration Report 11 technologies developing in the textile industry needed huge capital requirements, which were beyond the capacity of small companies. Mills needed to cooperate to survive. Alliances between mills became necessary and many woollen mills merged in the 1960s. In 1960, sixteen companies operated 18 mills. They produced carpet, weaving, woven fabric, yarn, blankets and rugs. The development of synthetic fabrics in the 1950s offered direct competition to New Zealand’s wool industry. As a result, many mills merged or closed. Petone merged with Kaiapoi. The Mosgiel and Roslyn mills merged. UEB Industries took over Ross and Glendining and the Napier Woollen Mills. 39 The Timaru and Oamaru mills formed Alliance Textiles, which then took over the Bruce Woollen Manufacturing Company in Milton. 40 At Oamaru, the office building was extended to accommodate the new Alliance staff, and a new dye house, wool store and cafeteria were built. 41 The Oamaru mill developed its woollen capacity, while Timaru specialised in worsted production. 42 These alliances saw machinery moved from mill to mill as specialisations changed or developed. For example, the Oamaru carpet yarn section moved to Milton in 1970, and back to Oamaru again in 1976. 43 Even with the mergers, the woollen industry remained under threat. In 1969, a committee set up by the Department of Industries and Commerce concluded that there were still too many mills producing ‘short runs’ of products – mainly blankets, and serge and flannel fabrics. More mills closed. By 1980, there were only eight mills, and by 2000, all the major mills had closed. 44 Textile producers did continue to make carpet yarn and spin Merino wool for clothing. The largest mills in New Zealand in 2009 were South Canterbury Textiles in Timaru, Interweave in Auckland and Masterweave in Masterton. A few firms continued to spin yarn, while the largest textile firm knitting fine merino were Levana Textiles in Levin and Designer Textiles in Auckland. 45 Oamaru’s woollen mill survived into the new century. Up until 2012 the mill was 39 http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/agricultural-processing-industries accessed 12 July 2012. Jane Tolerton ‘Agricultural Processing industries’. 40 McLean, pp.51-52. 41 McLean, p.139., p.141. 42 McLean, p.141. 43 McLean, p.166 and p.175. 44 http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/agricultural-processing-industries/4 . Accessed 23 October 2012.. Jane Tolerton ‘Agricultural Processing industries’. 45 http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/agricultural-processing-industries/4 . Accessed 23 October 2012. Jane Tolerton ‘Agricultural Processing industries’. NZHPT Registration Report 12 owned by Summit Wool Spinners Ltd. Summit was New Zealand’s largest independent yarn spinner. The company specialised in yarn production through both woollen and semi-worsted spun processes, producing yarns for both carpets and rugs. 46 In early 2013, Canterbury Wool Spinners bought the mill. The company is a subsidiary of carpet manufacturer Godfrey Hirst. One hundred and ninety two people lost their jobs as a result of the sale. A skeleton staff was retained while the feasibility of the mill was reviewed. In 2014 the mill is still operating, carrying on its close to 100 years of production. Associated NZHPT Registrations None 2.2. Physical Information Within Oamaru and more widely in North Otago, the former Oamaru Woollen Factory is one of several significant buildings associated with industries that processed the wool, grain, and meat. Grain stores were located in the Harbour/Tyne Street area near the wharf. Meek’s flourmill sat alongside the Oamaru Creek close to both a water supply and the warehouses by the waterfront. The Oamaru Freezing Works sat next to the railway line, close to the harbour. The Oamaru Woollen Factory, with its rail-side location, links to these places. They are all associated with the primary industries that gave the town its economic heart. Like the mills, the grain stores and the freezing works, the former Oamaru Woollen Factory (and many other buildings) is built of limestone. The Woollen Factory is one of the largest groups of buildings constructed of limestone. Although it does not have the landmark status of the multi-storey Meek’s Grain Elevator and Meek’s Flour Mill, the scale of the Oamaru Woollen Factory is significant. The mill complex takes up a large part of a town block between Weaver and Foyle Streets. The use of limestone gives Oamaru the architectural character for which it is now recognised. The Oamaru Woollen Factory’s main entrance is on Weaver Street. The factory is set back from the street. Across the road are some light commercial buildings, while back towards Thames Street are modest houses. On Foyle 46 http://www.summitwool.co.nz/profile.htm (accessed 23 October 2012) NZHPT Registration Report 13 Street, the factory’s long single storey façade dominates this otherwise residential street. On the seaward side, facing the railway line, another unbroken façade that can be seen from a public walkway, shows the scale of the factory. Current Description The Oamaru Woollen Factory, now Summit Wool Spinners, is a 20,000 square metre industrial site. The factory consists of a large complex of factory and store buildings, with an associated administration block and social club rooms. The plan in Appendix 3 shows the layout of the buildings. The site has been extensively developed, altered and added to over its more than 92 years of operation. Photographs included below show the degree of change over the years of operation. The buildings are a mix of the limestone buildings from the 1918-1920 period, concrete block additions and corrugated iron sheds from various times. A new yarn store and yarn-drying shed were built in 1932, a new wool store was constructed in 1950 and the social club, additions to the office, a new dyehouse, wool store and loom weaving shed were all built in the 1960s. In the 1970s a new boiler house was built. The chimney stack was removed in 1986. In the 2000s the timber floors were largely replaced with concrete, and there has been ongoing replacement of asbestos roofing. The latest addition is the 2005 wool store close to Weaver Street. The 2005 store is not included in the registration. All the machinery is modern. The photograph below shows the structures associated with the new mill when it opened around 1920. NZHPT Registration Report 14 Figure 1: The structures associated with the new mill when it opened around 1920 (North Otago Museum, Accession No. 4064) Figure 2: Above is an image of the Woollen Mills in 1956 (Summit Woollen Mills Collection), showing the large number of additions and alterations to the site in the twenty five years following the mill’s relocation to its new site. NZHPT Registration Report 15 Dying and scouring Worsted production Office and warehouse Spinning and carding Finishing, milling and weaving Wool sorting and stores Figure 3: Basic functions of the various buildings drawn from 1950s plan Semi-worsted carding and spinning Dyestore Twisting and Spinning Main office Social clubrooms Wool store Wool store (2005) Figure 4: The photograph above shows the further extension of the complex since the 1950s, with the 2005 wool store in the foreground (excluded from the registration) (Summit Woollen Mills Collection, 2012) NZHPT Registration Report 16 Interior Similarly, the interior has undergone a continual process of adaptation and change to new manufacturing and processing requirements and machinery. In 2012 the main functional divisions within the complex were: • Administration (in the original office block and former showroom (now meeting room); • Wool stores • Spinning, carding, and twisting facilities • Maintenance: boiler house, maintenance area and workshops • Dyehouse Construction Professionals Designer: David Patterson (1918-1921 period) Construction Materials Limestone, corrugated iron, timber, concrete block Key Physical Dates The alterations and additions to the complex are extensive. What follows is a basic outline. 1918-1920 Original construction 1932 New yarn store and yarn-drying shed 1950 New wool store constructed 1960s Alteration of what is now the semi-worsted spinning room. Cafeteria/social club rooms built. Addition to the office block. New dyehouse constructed. Wool store constructed. Loom weaving shed constructed. 1970s New boiler house constructed. Alterations to dye house. NZHPT Registration Report 17 1986 Chimney stack removed 2000s Timber floors largely replaced with concrete to allow for operation of forklifts. Asbestos removal and replacement of roofing (ongoing). Acoustic tiles installed for noise control. Boilers replaced. Uses Manufacturing – Textile Mill 2.3. Chattels There are no chattels included in this registration. 2.4. Sources Available and Accessed There is a wealth of information written about the woollen industry and it significance to New Zealand. Much of the material is about the ideas rather than the history of the buildings. There is relatively little written about the buildings themselves. The information has been sufficient for the purposes of registration. Bibliography – Selected Sources Gavin McLean, Spinning Yarns: A Centennial History of Alliance Textiles Limited and its predecessors, Alliance Textiles Ltd, Dunedin, 1981 Geoffrey Thornton, New Zealand’s Industrial Heritage, A.H. & A.W. Reed Ltd, Wellington, 1982 Website: http://www.summitwool.co.nz/profile.htm (accessed 23 October 2012) 3. SIGNIFICANCE ASSESSMENT 47 3.1. Section 23 (1) Assessment It is considered that this place qualifies as part of New Zealand’s historic and cultural heritage. This place has been assessed and found to possess architectural, cultural, and historical significance or value. 47 For the relevant sections of the HPA see Appendix 4: Significance Assessment Information. NZHPT Registration Report 18 Architectural Significance or Value The Oamaru Woollen Factory represents the development over time of an extensive complex of industrial buildings built in the local vernacular material – Oamaru limestone. The factory has typical industrial buildings and the associated administration block and social club rooms. Cultural Significance or Value The history of the Oamaru Woollen Factory illustrates the cultural change in the mill as a workplace over its history of operation. Nineteenth century mills had a hierarchy of employment that created a particular work culture. The mill was a significant employer of women, an important theme of cultural change in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Oamaru Woollen Factory features in the writing of Oamaru author Janet Frame who recalls the mill girls on their way to work and defines her own life in opposition to their experience. In the twentieth century the replacement of individual labour with automated production also illustrates the history of change in the industry. Historical Significance or Value The Oamaru Woollen Factory represents the history of the woollen industry in New Zealand. With the company dating from the late 1880s, the mill’s history tells of the development of the industry based on small town capital investment. The mill played an important role during both World Wars (in the old building for the First World War), providing woollen cloth for the armed services. Its subsequent history shows the changes in the woollen industry, with alliances between mills and the role of major capital investment as the industry developed new processing technologies. Its association with the wool industry continues in 2014 where the factory now produces yarn for carpets. 3.2. Section 66 (3) Assessment This place was assessed against, and found to qualify under the following criteria: a, b, e and k. It is considered that this place qualifies as a Category 2 historic place. (a) The extent to which the place reflects important or representative aspects of New Zealand history NZHPT Registration Report 19 The history of the Oamaru Woollen Factory reflects the general development of the woollen industry in New Zealand. Its history spans the early establishment of small town mills built with local capital using steam technology. Its later history is typical of woollen mills in New Zealand, with the takeover by outside interests, and the eventual alliance between mills which saw a rationalisation of production. (b) The association of the place with events, persons, or ideas of importance in New Zealand history The Oamaru Woollen Factory is associated with the development of New Zealand’s home grown wool manufacturing industry, a significant element in the economic development of Otago, and New Zealand more generally. The Oamaru Woollen Factory Company has links to some of Oamaru’s significant businessmen and politicians such as George Sumpter. (e) The community association with, or public esteem for the place The Oamaru Woollen Factory Company and its successors have been local employers since the 1880s, and as such the factory has a significant association with the community. (k) The extent to which the place forms part of a wider historical and cultural complex or historical and cultural landscape The Oamaru Woollen Factory is part of Oamaru’s historical landscape. The factory takes up the large part of a city block, and is a landmark in the town, visible from the hill suburbs that look down on the coast. Built of Oamaru stone, it links to Oamaru’s well recognised ‘White Stone’ image. Summary of Significance The Oamaru Woollen Factory has cultural and historical significance and meets the criteria as a Category 2 historic place. The Oamaru Woollen Factory is associated with the development of New Zealand’s home grown wool manufacturing industry, a significant element in the economic development of Otago, and New Zealand more generally. The Oamaru Woollen Factory Company has links to some of Oamaru’s significant businessmen and politicians. Though there have been changes to the buildings over time, the Oamaru Woollen Factory represents the development of an extensive complex of industrial buildings built in the local vernacular material – Oamaru limestone. NZHPT Registration Report 20 The factory includes typical industrial buildings and the associated administration block and social club rooms. NZHPT Registration Report 21 4. APPENDICES 4.1. Appendix 1: Visual Identification Aids Location Maps Oamaru NZHPT Registration Report 22 Map of Extent Figure 5: Extent of registration, Quickmap NZHPT Registration Report 23 Figure 6: An aerial view of the land associated with the Oamaru Woollen Mill, Google Earth and Quickmap, accessed 2013 NZHPT Registration Report 24 Current Identifiers NZHPT Registration Report 25 NZHPT Registration Report 26 NZHPT Registration Report 27 NZHPT Registration Report 28 NZHPT Registration Report 29 NZHPT Registration Report 30 4.2. Appendix 2: Visual Aids to Historical Information Historical Photographs Figure 7: Woollen Mill – 1956. (Photograph in Summit Wool Spinners collection) Figure 8: The Woollen Mill c.1920 (North Otago Museum, No.3329) NZHPT Registration Report 31 Figure 9: New Oamaru Woollen and Worsted Mill (left) and the old Mill on its original site (right) (North Otago Museum collection P4064, circa 1920) Figure 10: Woollen Mill site in the 1970s (North Otago Museum collection, P9314) NZHPT Registration Report 32 4.3. Appendix 3: Visual Aids to Physical Information Current Plans Figure 11: Site Plan (Summit Wool Spinners, 2012). Weaver Street runs along the bottom of the complex, Foyle Street along the top Figure 12: Plan of the Oamaru Worsted and Woollen Mills in 1959 (North Otago Museum Collection, no accession number) NZHPT Registration Report 33 Current Photographs of Place (Heather Bauchop, Heritage New Zealand, 17 October 2012) Figure 13: Oamaru Woollen Mill Site (Summit Wool Spinners Image). Weaver Street is in the foreground, Foyle Street to the rear of the complex. The railway line runs along the west of the complex Figure 14: Elevation to Foyle Street (Google Earth, 2012) NZHPT Registration Report 34 Figure 15: The office building Figure 16: The exterior of the store NZHPT Registration Report 35 Figure 17: Typical truss detailing Figure 18: Typical sawtooth detailing NZHPT Registration Report 36 Figure 19: Interior, twisting room. Typical altered interior where the ceiling has been closed in to control noise levels 4.4. Appendix 4: Heritage Protection Local Authority and Regional Authority Plan Listing Waitaki District Plan Operative (last updated 4 June 2013), Appendix BHeritage Items, No. 51. Scheduled along with ii. Wall. Other Protection Measures Archaeological sites are protected by the Historic Places Act 1993, regardless of whether they are registered or not. Archaeological sites include ‘places associated with pre-1900 human activity, where there may be evidence relating to the history of New Zealand’. Places associated with post-1900 human activity may be declared archaeological sites. It is unlawful to destroy, damage or modify an archaeological site without prior authority from NZHPT. NZHPT Recommendations To ensure the long-term conservation of this place, the NZHPT recommends that the Oamaru Woollen Factory remains scheduled in the Waitaki District Plan. NZHPT Registration Report 37 Disclaimer Please note that registration of this historic place by the NZHPT identifies only the heritage values of the property concerned, and should not be construed as advice on the state of the property, or as a comment of its soundness or safety, including in regard to earthquake risk, safety in the event of fire, or insanitary conditions. NZHPT Registration Report 38 4.5. Appendix 5: Significance Assessment Information Part II of the Historic Places Act 1993 Chattels or object or class of chattels or objects (section 22(5)) Under section 22(5) of the Historic Places Act 1993, an entry in the Register in respect of any historic place may include any chattel or object or class of chattels or objects – (a) Situated in or on that place; and (b) Considered by the Trust to contribute to the significance of that place; and (c) Nominated by the Trust. Significance or value (section 23(1)) Under section 23(1) of the Historic Places Act 1993, the Trust may enter any historic place or historic area in the Register if the place possesses aesthetic, archaeological, architectural, cultural, historical, scientific, social, spiritual, technological, or traditional significance or value. Category of historic place (section 23(2)) Under section 23(2) of the Historic Places Act 1993, the Trust may assign Category 1 status or Category 2 status to any historic place, having regard to any of the following criteria: (a) The extent to which the place reflects important or representative aspects of New Zealand history (b) The association of the place with events, persons, or ideas of importance in New Zealand history (c) The potential of the place to provide knowledge of New Zealand history (d) The importance of the place to tangata whenua (e) The community association with, or public esteem for, the place (f) The potential of the place for public education (g) The technical accomplishment or value, or design of the place (h) The symbolic or commemorative value of the place (i) The importance of the identifying historic places known to date from early periods of New Zealand settlement (j) The importance of identifying rare types of historic places (k) The extent to which the place forms part of a wider historical and cultural complex or historical and cultural landscape (l) Such additional criteria for registration of wahi tapu, wahi tapu areas, historic places, and historic areas of Maori interest as may be prescribed in regulations made under this Act (m) Such additional criteria not inconsistent with those in paragraphs (a) to (k) of this subsection for the purpose of assigning Category 1 or Category 2 status to any historic place, and for the purpose of registration of any historic area, as may be prescribed in regulations made under this Act NOTE: Category 1 historic places are ‘places of special or outstanding historical or cultural heritage significance or value.’ Category 2 historic places are ‘places of historical or cultural heritage significance or value.’ NZHPT Registration Report 39