The Empire City
Songs of Wellington - Book and CD
The Empire City traces the history of Wellington from the middle of the 19th Century to the present day. Stories are told through song, text, paintings, and photographs, The book includes a CD with songs by Andrew Laking, paintings by Bob Kerr, historical photos and additional new photos by Ines MacMullen. This hard cover, full colour, 64 page book is published by Pirate and Queen in association with Victoria University Press. Here are some of the paintings from the book. For the next few weeks they will be on the walls of my studio at 147 Cuba Street Wellington – drop in and have a look.
Wakefield on the foreshore
Wakefield on the foreshore
Pito-one Pa
The Bucket Fountain
It was the fun of the world
Tim Armstrong writes to his children from Lyttelton Jail
At Whitespace Contemporary Art 12 Crummer Rd. Ponsonby. Auckland Until the 27th. September 2015
On a Sunday afternoon in December 1916
Tim Armstrong, a wharf labourer, spoke at a public meeting in Victoria Square
in Christchurch.
“Let the kings and Kaisers go and
murder one another if they like but the working class have no quarrel one
country with another.” Tim told the crowd, and he urged them to oppose
conscription into the army. He was arrested for sedition and sentenced to
twelve months in Lyttelton Jail.
The quotations under each of these paintings are from a letter he wrote to his children from his prison cell.
“My dear children,
As I sit alone here in my prison cell,
thinking of you all and wondering how you are getting on, I thought I would
write to you and explain just why I am here, in order that you may judge for
yourselves weather I deserve the treatment I am getting. Perhaps I could not
put you in a better position to understand than by writing you a brief story of
my life.”
“I was born in a small village called
Bulls in the North Island in 1875. There were nine of us in the family and we
had no father to help keep the home as far back as I can remember. My mother had
to go out to work to keep us.”
Before I was twelve
years of age
“Before I was twelve years of age I had
left school altogether and had only passed the second standard. I then went to
work in a flax mill about twenty miles from home.”
I worked in the
flax milling industry
“I worked in the flax milling industry
till I was about sixteen years old and used to leave one mill and go to another
whenever I got a chance of higher wages.”
I started out on a
Saturday morning
“I started out on a Saturday morning
and about midday caught up with a man who was also carrying a swag and going in
the same direction. We started talking and both found we were bound for
Palmerston North. We talked of course of our financial positions. He told me he
had two shillings and insisted on me taking half.”
Some other line of
business
“When I was sixteen years of age most
of the flax mills were closed on account of a fall in the price and I had to
look for work in some other line of business. The next place I struck was a
place called Hunterville where I got work from a railway construction
contractor.”
All there for an
adventure
“I was working at a place called
Raetihi in the king country when a boom broke out in gold mining in the
Auckland province, and of course being all there for an adventure, thought that
would be just the place for me. So along with a few other mates made up our
minds to roll up our swags and walk to the gold fields.”
We walked the whole
way
The fun of the world
It was a wonderful trip through the hot
lakes districts of Tokaanu, Taupo and Rotorua. On most places on our trip we
had to get food from the Maoris and sleep out in the open air but it was lovely
weather and we did not mind sleeping out. We went through some places where the
Maoris could not speak a word of English and we could not speak Maori very
fluently. It was the fun of the world at times.”
Not what we
expected
“We arrived at Waihi and found the gold
fields not what we expected and as usual had to look for someone to give us a
job.”
The Golden Cross mine
The Golden Cross mine
“I only stayed a short time at Waihi…
and then shifted on to the Golden Cross mine where I lived for about five years
and which turned out to be the most important time in my life. I took an
interest here in the affairs of the union and was soon an executive officer and
before I was twenty-one years of age I was chairman of the union.”
We could not live
on air
“In February 1909 we found it necessary
to leave Waihi as the employers had blocked me in every way from getting
employment. We did not like the idea of leaving as I was proud of the positions
I held there, however as we could not live on air were obliged to move on. We
had managed to get a nice little home in Waihi and it was just about paid off
so you will understand it was mighty hard to have to sell it and our furniture
at half price and leave.”
The Coal Creek railway
line
“I went to Greymouth on the West Coast
and I got work on the Coal Creek railway line. Your mother with you children
joined me there and we went to live in Runanga. Very soon after arriving on the
West Coast I was elected President of the West Coast Workers Union. So you see
they got me into harness again right away.
“Dear children you will have the
opportunity to read the speech alleged to have been seditious, and I will leave
it to you to judge whether I did wrong in making the statements.”
In 1922 Tim Armstrong was elected to Parliament.
As minister of Labour in 1935 Armstrong promoted the swift improvement in pay
and conditions for the country's numerous relief workers and legislated for the
40-hour week and the statutory minimum wage. In his maiden speech he said, “Mr.
speaker, this is not the first of his majesty’s institutions of which I have
been a member.”
Here is TJ McNamara's review from the New Zealand Herald.
Bob Kerr, at Whitespace, grounds
his painting in a text, from letters written by Tim Armstrong, then a wharf
labourer, to his children from Lyttelton jail. He had been given a year in
prison for sedition because he opposed conscription during World War I.