Abridged with permission from the Canterbury Mountaineer 1995
A love of the mountains was only one facet of the long, rich life of
Will Kennedy, but giving others the chance to experience being in the
mountains was a keen ambition.
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Will Kennedy
Photo source:
Will's niece, Frances French-Wright
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Will Kennedy was the right build for a climber: light, clean cut and
energetic. So said Huia Beaumont, aged 94, who was a student teacher at
Woolston Primary School with Kennedy in 1920. Will took a keen interest in
Huia's tramps around Banks Peninsula and gave him his first pattern for a
haversack. Will was always quietly helping someone else to achieve their
goal, or giving them a goal to reach. "From him" wrote Andy Anderson,
"many an exuberant youth learned that the scaling of peaks or the blazing
of new trails was not everything."
Huia remembers Will as a lovable man. "I have always been grateful for the
experience with that class of 105 nine-year-olds and the year with Will
Kennedy, the mountaineer, the arranger of picnics to Kennedy's Bush and the
supplier of fortnights of wonderful holidays at his house in Arthur's
Pass."
Will Kennedy as teacher
William Alexander Kennedy ('Wak' behind his back) was born on 12 February
1865 at Carleton, an area between Cust and Oxford. His father Hans farmed
there, but his daughter Rose saw a better future in teaching for herself
and her three brothers, William, John and Hans. At fifteen Will was
apprenticed to a school in Christchurch, moving at one stage to Ashburton
for two and a half years. In 1890, when he was twenty-five he came to the
Woolston Primary School as first assistant, and there he taught standards
four and five for the next thirty-three years, retiring in 1923.
He was a much loved teacher according to a former pupil. "He rode a bike
to school and a gathering swarm of youngsters joined him, some hanging on,
either pushing or pulling, shouting and laughing and sometimes squabbling,
till we arrived in state." An adoring niece who used to help collect the
flowers he was given each day by his appreciative pupils said that his
class usually numbered about eighty, but he sometimes had up to 107. This
wasn't as chaotic as it sounds. Everyone filed in without talking, greeted
the teacher, pulled up benches and took out slates with military precision
on the count of 1, 2!
Will took his pupils on walking expeditions all over the Port Hills.....
They caught the tram to the Takahe, fought for the honour of carrying Mr
Kennedy's satchel, and then walked along a much lower road to the Sign of
the Bellbird where they ate their snacks....
(read more about this walkway).
Never missing out on his passions, Will also taught music and singing, and
used the names of lakes, rivers and mountains for his spelling tests....
He introduced his young pupils to passions as diverse as astronomy, chamber
music and tobogganing on the snowy slopes of Temple Basin, quietly sharing
his infectious enthusiasm and wisdom.
Cycling to the Hermitage at Mt Cook in 1895
There's little record of Will's early years, but in 1895 he with his
brothers John and Hans and a friend were the first cyclists to reach the
Hermitage at Mt Cook. The bulk of their supplies was staggering. "We
carried a tent and fly, six single blankets, an oilcloth floor, two
billies, a frying pan, a tomahawk, bowls, enamelled cups, plates, etc., a
gun and ammunition, maps, a compass, a kit of tools and cycling requisites,
a forty-foot flag-rope, a change of clothes, light capes and often four
days' provisions, including ten pounds of flour and the same weight of
potatoes ..."
They cycled from Temuka to Fairlie where they stocked up with food,
celebrating Christmas Day another eight miles on. The next two nights saw
them at Irishman's Creek and Simon's Pass stations. The road was very
rough and at times invisible or deeply rutted; so rough and bumpy after
Pukaki that it defied description. They mostly walked, forcing their
machines through bogs and long grass, and all four lifting each cycle
across never ending streams.
At the Hermitage they had a glorious scramble up the Mueller Glacier to
Mount Ollivier on the Sealy Range before they cycled on to Wanaka, Cromwell
and Dunedin. Among future cycle trips were expeditions to the North Island
and many trips to the Hollyford area with Mr Adams, a fellow teacher at the
Woolston School. But that day among the mountains was a turning point for
Will Kennedy....
The first private hut at Arthur's Pass
He leased one and a half acres (0.6 of a hectare) of beech forest at
Arthur's Pass from the Crown and during the school holidays of 1911 when
the railhead was still at Cass he and fellow teachers built the first
private hut at Arthur's Pass. They had to wear gloves as their fingers
stuck to the corrugated iron in the frost. The hut is still there in the
bush above Maori Flat, on the east side of Rough Creek. (A local told me
that Will ran a line of No. 8 fencing wire around his land to protect his
bush from construction workers who cut down the beech trees to use as props
for the Otira Tunnel.) For many years, parties of children, student
teachers, musicians, climbers, or simply nature-loving friends, were
invited to share the joys of his simple retreat. In the sixth standard,
Rosa Webb recalled a holiday at Arthur's Pass with other twelve-year-olds,
climbing B'limit and other lesser peaks with Jack Lippe as their friendly
guide. There was endless joy for children who could never otherwise have
discovered the mountains
(read more about the road to the pass today...).
Will's climbs
With no climbing clubs at the time to report activities, there is little
record of what Will achieved in the outdoors before 1916, although he made
climbing expeditions into the Southern Alps, particularly to the Godley
region. He also knew the Hermitage and Hollyford areas.....
In 1920 Will led his final party to the Godley area. Instead of cycling
they put their gear and themselves in a hired motor lorry and travelled in
majestic splendour. Jack Lippe joined the party in the climb of Mount
Dennistoun which they also named. Then Will and Jack Lippe climbed Cumine,
McKinnon and Mount Wolseley over the next few days. It is claimed that
Mounts Brodrick, Seymour, Francis, Walton and Malthus were other first
ascents by Will's early parties.
Groups of former students visit the hut at the Pass.
In 1919 Will met the McLeod family and recognised seventeen-year-old Alison
McLeod's passion for the mountains. "He was very pleased I am so keen on
alpine climbing," she wrote in her diary, "and said 'I see you are going to
be one of the mad ones, too!' I said, 'Yes, I think I am going to be very
mad.' "
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A group of ex-pupils including Rita and Gwen Purdue, their
chaperone and their guides, waiting for the train at the old Arthur's Pass
station in the late 1920s
Photo source:
Lesley Moore, Rita's daughter
Click
here
for a larger version.
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Alison wrote that every May holidays he took six girls who had left school
to his bach at Arthur's Pass "not for special cleverness but for any good
points, as a reward".
To her delight Alison was asked to join the club that year with five other
girls, two chaperones, Jack Lippe the guide, and Jack, Hans and Will
Kennedy. The redoubtable Miss Mahalia Mills, the infant mistress at
Woolston Primary, is said to have nursed an unrequited passion for Will, so
came on most of the expeditions as chaperone and general factotum. She had
her own bedroom while the girls slept in bunks in the living room and the
young men dossed down in an outbuilding.
They walked everywhere: to Otira, Klondyke corner, to the waterfall on
Halpins Creek, the Punchbowl, part of the way up Blimit. Will was much
impressed by Alison's agility. They played and sang around the piano,
somehow keeping warm although the water jug in their bedroom was frozen
solid.....
Slide collection held by the Canterbury Mountaineering Club
Upon his retirement from school work in 1923, Will devoted himself to
developing his slide collection, which grew to about 20,000, and was freely
available to members of both the Canterbury Mountaineering Club (C.M.C.)
and Alpine Clubs throughout New Zealand.....
Jean Lawrence, describing the deserted, rotting railway camp at Arthur's
Pass in 1924 (the tunnel was opened in August 1923), wrote that in those
days "Mr Kennedy's young school teachers were the only other visitors one
was likely to meet on the road to the divide or on scrambling up the
creeks."....
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The young women teachers outside the hut doing "men's work"
Photo source:
Album given by pupil teachers to R. B. Clarke, the headmaster of Addington
school in 1926
Click
here
for a larger version.
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Beside one of the waterfalls in the Park
Photo source:
Album given by pupil teachers to R. B. Clarke, the headmaster of Addington
school in 1926
Click
here
for a larger version.
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Looking up the Bealey
Photo source:
Album given by pupil teachers to R. B. Clarke, the headmaster of Addington
school in 1926
Click
here
for a larger version.
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Moves to establish Arthur's Pass National Park
As motor cars and rail travel became more common, there was growing concern
at the amount of damage done in the Arthur's Pass area along roadsides,
where plants were taken and shrubs destroyed. Will Kennedy, described by
Mac Vincent, a Sun reporter, as "a well-known authority on alpine
scenery", showed lantern slides of the threatened area at a public meeting
in the Christchurch City Council Chambers on 3 April 1928.
Soon after a committee was formed, including Kennedy to represent the
Christchurch Tramping Club, to submit proposals to the government for an
Arthur's Pass National Park. All through this period Will was holding
slide evenings in order to raise money for the first Carrington Hut, which
was finally opened in 1929. In 1936, The C. M. C. built a hut at Arthur's
Pass and at Andy Anderson's insistence it was called the Kennedy Hut (now
Kennedy Lodge) in his honour.
Will often lamented in Jack Mitchell's hearing how little time was left to
finish all the jobs he had in hand, and this was so. In May 1939, when
Will was seventy four, he gave up the hut at Arthur's Pass that for nearly
thirty years had offered warm hospitality to hundreds of friends of all
ages. He retired from the C. M. C. in 1947 on account of his failing
health and was then unanimously installed as Patron until his death in
1950. Ill over the last three years of his life and often in great pain,
he never complained and still loved to hear the latest climbing
exploits.....
After Will's death on 12 October 1950 Andy Anderson wrote: "It will never
be known how many men were inspired to go into the mountains as a result of
meeting him and seeing his slides". Those who came "under the influence of
that most lovable man came to look on him as the very personification of
what is best in mountaineering."