Devonport, New Zealand

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Devonport
Devonport and the Waitemata Harbour from atop Mount Victoria. Auckland CBD in the distance.
Devonport and the Waitemata Harbour from atop Mount Victoria. Auckland CBD in the distance.
Location of Devonport in Auckland.
CountryNew Zealand
CityAuckland Council
Electoral wardNorth Shore Ward
Local boardDevonport-Takapuna
Established1840s
Population
 (2018 census)
 • Total3,348
Postcode(s)
0624
Ferry terminal(s)
Hospitals(s)Navy Hospital
(Duders Point) Vauxhall Cheltenham
Stanley Bay
Devonport
(North Head)
(Waitematā Harbour) (Waitematā Harbour) (Waitematā Harbour)

Devonport is a harbourside suburb of Auckland, New Zealand. It is located on the North Shore, at the southern end of a peninsula that runs southeast from near Lake Pupuke in Takapuna, forming the northern side of the Waitematā Harbour. East of Devonport lies North Head, the northern promontory guarding the mouth of the harbour.

The population of Devonport and the adjoining suburb of Cheltenham was 5,340 in the 2013 census, an increase of 3 since 2006.[1] With the additional suburbs of Stanley Bay, Vauxhall and Narrow Neck, the 2006 population was 11,142.[2]

The suburb hosts the Devonport Naval Base of the Royal New Zealand Navy, the main facility for the country's naval vessels, but is best known for its harbourside dining and drinking establishments and its heritage charm. Devonport has been compared to Sausalito, California due to its setting and scenery.[3]

Character[]

The Devonport shops contain a variety of antique, gift and book shops, and a number of cafes and restaurants, making it a popular destination for tourists and Aucklanders.[citation needed]

Day trips combining a meal in Devonport with a trip up Mt Victoria or an exploration of the military emplacements on nearby North Head are popular. Of note is the Devonport Museum,[4] located near Mt. Cambria. In April 2017 the museum was given a complete makeover[5] by local volunteers and a TV production company.[citation needed]

The navy base at Devonport features strongly in the local character, with the North Shore City Council having signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Navy which recognises the developing partnership between them.[6] The Torpedo Bay Navy Museum is also located in Devonport.[7]

Demographics[]

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
20063,417—    
20133,414−0.01%
20183,348−0.39%
Source: [8]

Devonport had a population of 3,348 at the 2018 New Zealand census, a decrease of 66 people (-1.9%) since the 2013 census, and a decrease of 69 people (-2.0%) since the 2006 census. There were 1,275 households. There were 1,590 males and 1,758 females, giving a sex ratio of 0.9 males per female. The median age was 45.5 years, with 615 people (18.4%) aged under 15 years, 534 (15.9%) aged 15 to 29, 1,575 (47.0%) aged 30 to 64, and 627 (18.7%) aged 65 or older.

Ethnicities were 92.2% European/Pākehā, 5.2% Māori, 2.2% Pacific peoples, 4.1% Asian, and 3.0% other ethnicities (totals add to more than 100% since people could identify with multiple ethnicities).

The proportion of people born overseas was 35.7%, compared with 27.1% nationally.

Although some people objected to giving their religion, 58.7% had no religion, 32.2% were Christian, and 4.0% had other religions.

Of those at least 15 years old, 1,251 (45.8%) people had a bachelor or higher degree, and 189 (6.9%) people had no formal qualifications. The median income was $45,800. The employment status of those at least 15 was that 1,320 (48.3%) people were employed full-time, 513 (18.8%) were part-time, and 54 (2.0%) were unemployed.[8]

History[]

Around 40,000 years ago Devonport consisted of three islands of volcanic origin, Mount Victoria, North Head and between them Mount Cambria (now largely quarried away).[9]

The earliest evidence for Māori settlement dates from the mid-14th century (roughly the same time as the believed landing of the Tainui migration canoe, which is commemorated by a stone memorial on the foreshore).[10] A significant Māori settlement on North Head was ended by attacks from rival tribes in the 1790s.[11] About 50 Māori were still living in Torpedo Bay, with their meeting house just east of Cambridge Terrace, until they fled to the Waikato when the colonial government launched war on Waikato Māori in 1863.[12][13]

Jules Dumont d'Urville, a French explorer, is thought to have gone ashore in the area in 1827, possibly as the first European.[10] The first European building on the foreshore was a gunpowder magazine built in 1840.[14]

Devonport is one of the oldest colonial settlements in Auckland, and the first on the North Shore. In 1841 a signal station for Auckland's shipping was erected on Mount Victoria (Takarunga), and the signal master, Robert Snow, and his family became the first Europeans to live in the area permanently.[14] From then until the 1860s, the settlement was called Flagstaff, because of the flagstaff at the signal station.[15] Flagstaff was subdivided for town sections and farms in the early 1850s.[14]

For the first half century or so of its existence Devonport was geographically isolated from the rest of the North Shore, and was sometimes called "the island" by the local inhabitants.[16] Only a thin strip of land beside the beach at Narrow Neck connected Devonport to Belmont and the rest of the North Shore peninsula. In the late 19th century the mangrove swamp that stretched from Narrow Neck to was filled in to form a racecourse, now a golf course.[16] A new road was built along the western edge of the racecourse allowing more direct travel to the north.

On the southern shore, to the west of the centre of Devonport, a nearby deep water anchorage suitable for Royal Navy vessels, the Devonport Naval Base was established. William Hobson, then the Governor of New Zealand, considered the sandspit-protected area a better choice for a naval installation than the shallower Tamaki waters on the southern side of the harbour.[10] While some facilities have expanded and shifted in location over time, the area is still the primary base for the Royal New Zealand Navy. The Calliope Dock at Stanley Bay, part of the base, was opened on 16 February 1888 and at the time was the largest dock in the Southern hemisphere. The suburb also had one of the oldest New Zealand shipyards, now part of the Devonport Yacht Club area.[10]

The main centre of the suburb slowly shifted west from Church Street and the original wharf at Torpedo Bay, to its current location around the ferry wharf.[10] The settlement itself was renamed Devonport by 1859 after the English naval town of Devonport.[17] Devonport achieved Borough status in 1886 and was incorporated into North Shore City in 1989.

Devonport played a special role in the nuclear free movement. In 1981 the Devonport Borough Council voted to declare Devonport a nuclear-free zone, the first local council in New Zealand to do so.[18]

Devonport as seen from Mt Victoria. Victoria Road on left, at the rear.

In July 2007, Devonport was given permission to be excluded from a list of local Auckland growth node centres. The Auckland Regional Council accepted that while it was encouraging intensified growth (such as higher-density housing) around transport nodes such as Devonport, the character and historical nature of the Devonport Wharf area would make such a designation inappropriate in this case.[19]

In 2011 the Devonport community, led by parents and local publication the Devonport Flagstaff, launched a grassroots movement protesting the sale of the synthetic cannabis Kronic in local dairies. The battle was a success, and Kronic was banned from the area.[20]

Ferries[]

The first ferry services to Auckland city began in the 1840s. These were open sailing cutters operated by local seamen running passengers to the foot of Queen Street, Auckland's main road. In 1860 the first paddlesteamer ferries began operation.[9][16]

These were in turn replaced by double-ended, screw-driven ferries in 1904.[16] Both passenger and vehicle ferries operated on the Devonport run until the opening of the Auckland Harbour Bridge in 1959. Immediately after the opening of the bridge, passenger ferry services to other North Shore destinations (such as Northcote and Birkenhead) were cancelled, as were all vehicular ferries. The Devonport passenger ferry was retained on a much reduced timetable. The majority of the ferries were scrapped, only a handful being retained until being replaced by more modern vessels. The last of the old-style double-ended ferries, the diesel-engined Kestrel (built in 1905), was retired from the commuter run in 1988 and was then operated for cruises and sightseeing.

In 2002 the Kestrel was moved to Tauranga to serve as a floating restaurant. The Kestrel changed hands again in 2010 and moved back to Auckland.[21] On 8 March 2016 the Kestrel broke up and sank while tethered in its Wynyard Quarter berth.[22] She was refloated, but her future remains uncertain.[23]

Local government[]

Devonport had a local government just like other suburbs in Auckland at that time. The local government was called Devonport Borough Council, which started in 1886 and merged into North Shore City Council and then eventually amalgamated into Auckland Council.

Mayors during Devonport Borough Council[]

During its existence from 1886 to 1989, Devonport Borough had 19 mayors. The following is a complete list:

Name Portrait Term of office
1 Malcolm Niccol Malcolm Niccol.jpg 1886–1890
2 Ewen Alison Ewen Alison.jpg 1890–1895
(1) Malcolm Niccol Malcolm Niccol.jpg 1895–1896
3 Joseph Macky Joseph Cochrane Macky.jpg 1896–1901
(1) Malcolm Niccol Malcolm Niccol.jpg 1901–1902
(2) Ewen Alison Ewen Alison.jpg 1902–1907
4 William Handley William Handley.jpg 1907–1915
5 Alick Pickford No image.png 1915–1916
6 John Henderson No image.png 1916–1919
7 Horace King No image.png 1919–1923
8 Thomas Lamont Thomas Lamont.jpg 1923–1927
9 Ernest Aldridge Ernest Aldridge.jpg 1927–1930
10 John Hislop No image.png 1930–1931
11 Hugh Ferry-Wheir Meikle Hugh F.-W. Meikle.jpg 1931–1941
12 Robert Gordon May No image.png 1941–1944
13 John Raymond Miller John Raymond Miller (cropped).jpg 1944–1950
14 Clem Woodall Clement Woodall (cropped).jpg 1950–1959
15 Fred Stevens Frederic Stevens.jpg 1959–1965
16 Jack Seelye No image.png 1965–1968
17 Ted Jackson No image.png 1968–1973
18 Pat Sheehan No image.png 1973–1980
19 Jim Titchener Wray Davies Titchener.jpg 1980–1989

Landmarks[]

Between the wharf and Mt Victoria are the Devonport shops; located here are a number of interesting landmarks:

  • The Esplanade Hotel – this is an elegant example of an 1890s seaside hotel, reminiscent of many an English seaside resort of the period. A modern extension was added on in the 1950s which has now been replaced by an apartment complex. The Edwardian building was sold for $7 million in 2015.[24]
  • Windsor Reserve – located just to the east of the Devonport Wharf; it is an area of open lawn notable for the 1980s toilet block[citation needed] and the Edwardian archway at the northern end.
  • King Edward Parade Reserve – to the north of the Windsor Reserve on the other side of the road is the King Edward Parade Reserve; here are located the Public Library, the War Memorial (a bronze soldier figure by Richard Gross) and under the Moreton Bay Fig trees a charming 1950s styled bandstand.
  • The former Post Office – an Art Deco gem from the 1930s.
  • The Left Bank – a 1920s neoclassical building now housing a cafe/bar/restaurant.
  • The Victoria Cinema – built in 1912 and remodelled internally and externally in the 1930s in the then fashionable Art Deco style; this is apparently the oldest cinema in the Southern Hemisphere in continuous use. The cinema was purchased for $1.55 million in 2006 by the North Shore City Council on behalf of the city.[25]

Devonport Wharf[]

Today, ferry services to Devonport Wharf are more numerous again, and are subsidised by Auckland Transport, . A crossing between the Auckland CBD and Devonport takes about 12 minutes, usually on the 'Seabus Kea', a newer double-ended ferry.[16]

The Devonport Wharf / Ferry Terminal received a variety of maintenance and repairs during 2011 in advance of the Rugby World Cup. Further structural works were carried out in 2012.[26]

In 2015 a $24 million redevelopment project to upgrade parts of Devonport including the wharf began. The renovation of the Devonport wharf is all but complete, with applications for retail services currently underway. The project includes an improved car park and an overall modernization of the building itself, as well as structural improvements and refurbishments.[27]

The Flea FM
Broadcast areaDevonport, Auckland, New Zealand
Ownership
OwnerNorth Harbour Community Radio Trust
History
First air date
May 1999
Links
Websitetheflea.co.nz

Local media[]

The Flea 88.2 FM &107.1FM is a community radio station in Auckland, New Zealand.[28] It broadcasts with a legally restricted 1000 milliwatts from Mount Victoria, Devonport & also from Takapuna. The station is widely heard because of superior aerial location, with a studio located in the Devonport Ferry Building. The station was created by Mike Baker, in May 1999. It was originally developed to serve Devonport and the neighbouring suburbs. In recent times a second transmitter was added in the Takapuna area and the station now covers the Takapuna and Milford suburbs as well. The station founder, Mike Baker, died on 4 April 2009, at the age of 71.[29]

Education[]

Devonport Primary School is a contributing primary (years 1–6) school with a roll of 254[30] located on the side of Mount Victoria with the address of 18 Kerr Street. The school was established in 1870 on a plot of land given to them by the Trevarthen family for the purposes of a chapel, before it was later renegotiated to be used as a school.[31]

St Leo's School is a state-integrated Catholic primary (years 1–6) school with a roll of 61.[32] It was founded in 1893.[33]

Both these schools are co-educational. Rolls are as of March 2021.[34]

Sport[]

North Shore United AFC[]

North Shore United are an association football club that play their football at Allen Hill Stadium, located near the southern end of Lake Road. The club, founded in 1887, currently play in the NRFL Division 1, a league in the third tier of New Zealand Football. The club is the oldest in both New Zealand and Oceania, winning the Chatham Cup 6 times and the New Zealand Club Championship twice.

North Shore RFC[]

North Shore Rugby Football Club is a Rugby Union club located in Devonport that play their games at Devonport Domain. Founded in 1873, it is one of the oldest clubs in New Zealand.

Notable people[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ The statistical area used by the Census is called Mt Victoria. 2013 Census QuickStats about a place  : Mt Victoria
  2. ^ "The North Shore". Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
  3. ^ In Auckland, Life Is AlfrescoThe New York Times, 5 October 1997
  4. ^ Devonport Museum
  5. ^ Devonport Museum reopens after major revamp
  6. ^ Navy and North Shore City Council Join Forces (from the Royal New Zealand Navy website. Accessed 2008-05-11.)
  7. ^ "Visit us". Torpedo Bay Navy Museum. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b "Statistical area 1 dataset for 2018 Census". Statistics New Zealand. March 2020. Devonport (133000). 2018 Census place summary: Devonport
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b About Devonport 1 (from the devonpporttours.co.nz website)
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Set sail for adventure on dry landThe New Zealand Herald, Travel: NZ Special Issue, Tuesday 6 November 2007, Page D7
  11. ^ About Devonport 2 (from the devonpporttours.co.nz website)
  12. ^ Verran, David. "Maori and Pakeha on the North Shore, 1840 - 1926". Birkenhead Heritage Society. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  13. ^ "Torpedo Bay Timeline". Torpedo Bay Navy Museum. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b c North Shore Heritage. Volume 2: North Shore Area Studies & Scheduled Items List (PDF). Auckland Council. 2011. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-927169-23-0. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  15. ^ North Shore Heritage. Volume 2: North Shore Area Studies & Scheduled Items List (PDF). Auckland Council. 2011. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-927169-23-0. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Destination History – Devonport Archived 14 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine (from the Fullers Ferries website. Retrieved 2007-09-14.)
  17. ^ Wises New Zealand Guide, 7th Edition, 1979. Page 83
  18. ^ "Shore now a Peace City". North Shore Times. 1 December 2009. Retrieved 30 March 2014.
  19. ^ Development gets thumbs downThe New Zealand Herald, Tuesday 17 July 2007, Page A9
  20. ^ http://tvnz.co.nz/national-news/grassroots-battle-against-kronic-proves-success-4271298
  21. ^ "The Kestrel Plans A Return To Devonport". The Devonport Speculator. 24 August 2010. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 9 September 2011.
  22. ^ "Historic Auckland ferry the Kestrel sinks". The New Zealand Herald. 8 March 2016. ISSN 1170-0777. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  23. ^ "Harbour ferry Kestrel and our waterfront in danger from bureaucratic group-think – Mike Lee". Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  24. ^ "Grand old Devonport lady gets new owners". Stuff.co.nz. 9 November 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  25. ^ "Heritage status stymies plans for theatre". Stuff.co.nz. 12 May 2008. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  26. ^ "Devonport Wharf's makeover completed". Media release from Auckland Transport. 9 September 2011. Archived from the original on 24 September 2011. Retrieved 9 September 2011.
  27. ^ Transport, Auckland. "Devonport Wharf redevelopment". at.govt.nz. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  28. ^ "Battle of the Auckland airwaves". The New Zealand Herald. 12 December 2004. Retrieved 22 March 2009.
  29. ^ "Dunedin radio identity dies", Otago Daily News, 6 April 2009, retrieved 4 August 2012
  30. ^ Education Counts: Devonpost Primary School
  31. ^ "Archives". www.devonport.school.nz. Archived from the original on 7 November 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  32. ^ Education Counts: St Leo's School
  33. ^ "Our History". St Leo's School. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  34. ^ "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  35. ^ Peacocke, Isabel Maude (entry in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography)
  36. ^ Robinson, Dove-Myer (entry in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography)
  37. ^ "Taylor, Mary". findnzartists.org.nz. Retrieved 16 October 2017.

External links[]

Coordinates: 36°49′54″S 174°47′47″E / 36.831667°S 174.796278°E / -36.831667; 174.796278

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