In the mornings, our train often pauses here, waiting for a signal to proceed. If I’ve been sleeping, I’m woken by the changed sound as we go through the tunnel under the motorway, and the jolting as multiple tracks join. If I’m awake, I look up from my work or my book, and search the landmarks – the island of Kaiwharawhara station between the tracks, the poster-coated and graffiti-painted warehouse behind it, the bushes beside the motorway which reach over and scrape the train’s roof, the stream where it tunnels under the road – looking for something, anything to tell me that this, right here, is where our life in New Zealand began.
In a rhyme of reminiscence written for her family, Sarah tells of their arrival :
The voyage was weary and long, we were twenty weeks in the ship.
We all landed safe and strong, on the beach at Kaiwawa slip the second day of November eighteen forty one
We came on shore and commenced to make our new home.
Your Father lighted a fire and boiled fresh water for tea.
Our shipmates said “What a treat, will you give some to we”.
He said “You are welcome my friends mine is a large kettle you see”.
The clearest of water close by enough for you and me”.
When your Father began to unpack saw, hammer and nails, there were some who stood by him and said “we ought to have brought they ourselves”
He said “Mates we must all set to work for our dear little
children and wives, you know they must all have food, I feel sure you have brought Knives”.They said “how funny you be, you have cheered us a bit today, and we will let you see us try to do as you say”.
When your Father a table had made, a clean cloth on it I spread, we thankfully sat down in that old Kiwarawara shed.
The old Kaiwharawhara shed was in fact several very basic raupo huts, built by Maori for the New Zealand Company as immigration barracks. They were hardly better than Gertrude’s steerage accommodation, and no-one stayed there longer than they had to. According to Sarah, the next day William walked to town and rented their first home in New Zealand.
The only other account of this landing is a reminiscence by ship-mate John Plimmer, quoted in The Life of John Plimmer :
“Our first experience of life in Maoriland, and of the Maori character, was of an unpleasant kind, although rather unique and original. When we landed on the beach there were great numbers of Maoris, both men and women, gathered around us. They willingly assisted us to carry our luggage to the sheds, and we noticed that they examined everything carefully. Just after dark, six of the largest men walked up to us, as we, with our wives and families, were sitting upon our luggage, their only covering being mats over their shoulders; the children were much frightened, and all of us disgusted. During the night they managed to convey away, in some mysterious manner, a large sack of biscuits, weighting two hundredweight, belonging to me….As I had soon had as much as I wanted of Kaiwarra, I hailed a man who was driving a team of bullocks, and asked him if he would take my luggage to town (which, by the way, was not town at all) and what he would charge for the job; he agreed to take it for thirty shillings. This was an extortion, being at the rate of about six shillings per cwt. for two miles. I was obliged, however, to accept his terms, as I did not like the alternative of stopping with our Maori neighbours.”