Thank you, Jardin (I presume that is your real name from your email address – I don't like pseudonyms in groups like this. But any kiwi content on TDU is so rare that I won't quibble).
Well done for posting that delightful talk by Russell Kent on YouTube. Russell is, AFAIK, the only founder of what became the THS in 1961 still alive, and certainly now the only living person to be given a tram driving lesson on part of the original system (Other than those of us who drove the horse tram in Papanui in 1964!)
My own association with trams started in the first weeks of my life when I was a premature baby kept in the Karitane Hospital literally only a few metres from the Barrington Street sub terminus that Russell referred to. We almost certainly went home by tram – my parents had no car – and later moved to my childhood home in Papanui, at the other end of the last tram line. I would have ridden 24 and the other Hills cars – which were the only trams used on the route, even after the hill section past Barrington St closed in 1953. 24 was the last tram to be given a proper overhaul and repaint, in 1949. (Most of the fleet was in a pretty grim condition by last tram day!)
So it was that my father took me to the last tram ceremony at the Papanui terminus on 11 September 1954, just after I started school. My interest in trams was already strong – I observed the motorman through the bulkhead window just as Russell described and this was part of my childhood play.
I joined the tram group in 1963, as its youngest member (after being introduced to John Shanks on a railway excursion) and was part of putting together the Papanui Tram Week event in August 1964, where the California horse car that we had restored was run on the only remaining exposed bit of tram track, coincidentally where that 'last tram' sendoff happened in 1954. The photo shows me in a grey jumper using the brake to control the horse, which wanted to go a lot faster than was considered safe! John Shanks is at the other end of the front seat. The guy with the reins was Peter Armstrong.
The Papanui Tram Week event led to a big outpouring of public interest and support, the formalisation of our group as the Tramway Historical Society, an influx of capable new members – notably David Hinman, the force behind building the Christchurch Tramway after he became a City Council planning manager – and the development of Ferrymead. The rest is history, etc.
The second photo shows me, Russell and John Shanks on the same tram, at Ferrymead during the 50th anniversary celebrations of the founding of what became the THS early in February 2011. We were the last Papanui Tram Week staff still around. Two weeks after that celebratory weekend the massive 22 February 2011 earthquake which killed 185 people struck Christchurch. The Christchurch Tramway survived the devastation, has expanded since, and is now the tourist poster 'icon' of the city as the Cathedral remains only partly rebuilt.
Although I finally moved to Wellington in 1979, I visit Ferrymead quite often, the last time being last November.
Brent Efford
