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Canterbury Stories site plates up 1900s photo collection

Canterbury Stories site plates up 1900s photo collection

Posted on June 17, 2020 by CCC


Images of the early 1900s taken from a collection of fragile photographic glass plates are now in focus on the Christchurch City Libraries’ digital heritage site, Canterbury Stories.

169 old punt

More than 700 images of the city from the 1000-strong collection are online, with the rest appearing on the site over the next few weeks. It is the first time that the images are accessible to the public.

Early Antigua Boat Sheds owner Samuel Anstey – believed to be responsible for the glass-plate negatives – bought the building on the banks of the Avon River in the late 1800s, advertising that he had “70 well-built boats to choose from” and a “photographic dark room for the use of visitors”.

Fendalton-based Anstey, an English surveyor who arrived New Zealand in 1882, soon built up a remarkable photographic record. Many of those glass-plate negatives remained in the space under the roof of the Boat Sheds until the early 1970s, when Canterbury Public Library librarian R. C. Lamb collected the images from the then owner of the site, W. S. Dini.

The Antigua Bridge under construction, circa 1902. Christchurch City Libraries, Samuel Anstey Collection, CCL-Arch892-001-001.

Christchurch City Council Head of Libraries and Information Carolyn Robertson says the Anstey Collection offers a “snapshot of early Christchurch life, capturing people, places and riverside poses”.

“Staff are busy digitising these fragile images, providing a remarkable portal to Canterbury’s past,” Ms Robertson says.

“The striking black and white photos illustrate the early 1900s in the city, including visiting theatrical companies, families, and even the Botanic Gardens, bridges, river rowers and horse riding in Hagley Park,” she says.

“They also show the fashions of the day and early buildings now long gone, along with home and work interiors.

“The images reveal so much about our relationship with the city, and, despite the huge changes, how our love of the outdoors – particularly cycling and being on the water – has remained.

“It is fascinating to see so many interactions with the landscape as the collection encapsulates the early social history of Ōtautahi Christchurch.”

The collection also covers other regions, with viewers able to enjoy a photographic journey to Nelson, Taupō, Auckland and Napier in 1905.

To see more, visit the Christchurch City Libraries digital heritage site, Canterbury Stories. Launched in December last year, the site provides access to more than 10,000 items, including the recently uploaded Anstey Collection.

* The top photo:  Ashbolt, March 1904. Christchurch City Libraries, Samuel Anstey Collection, CCL-Arch892-016-002.



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