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Memorial Park, Masterton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Trust House Memorial Park
Map
Former namesCameron and Soldiers' Park (1918–2008)[2]
LocationMasterton, Wellington region, New Zealand
Coordinates40°57′24″S 175°39′17″E / 40.9568°S 175.6548°E / -40.9568; 175.6548
OwnerWairarapa Bush[1]
Capacity10,000[3]
SurfaceTurf
Construction
Broke ground1918
Renovated2015[1]
Tenants
Wairarapa Bush (Heartland Championship)
Wairarapa United (Central Premier League)
Hurricanes Development team

Memorial Park, also known as Trust House Memorial Park[4] for sponsorship reasons and formerly as Cameron and Soldiers' Park,[2] is a sports facility which is located in Masterton, Wellington region, New Zealand. The two main sports that are played on the ground are Rugby and Football. It has a capacity for 10,000 spectators.[3]

It is the home ground of Heartland Championship side Wairarapa Bush Rugby Football Union.[3]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Featherston's camp - Roadside Stories
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Transcription

[Song: 'Promises to keep' by the Wild Geese] Gallant heroes all good men Drilled and honed in Featherston March stoic, ripe and eager to their fate Brothers, cousins, husbands, sons Wagons, horses, bugles, drums Trooping to the summit like a snake [Narrator] During World War I, the first job for new recruits arriving at Featherston's army camp was picking up rocks. They had to move big, round, river stones left behind by the Tauherenīkau River as it meandered across the South Wairarapa. This arduous, backbreaking job is recalled in the riverstone memorial on Featherston's main street, one of New Zealand's more distinctive war memorials. In spring, it is enlivened by the blossoms of the cherry trees planted around it. Two kilometres north of the town, a less obvious roadside memorial marks the site of the Featherston camp. A faded noticeboard, almost hidden by flax bushes, tells us that up to 8000 troops lived here during training before leaving for the war. At the end of the eight weeks basic training, the recruits' route marched across the Rimutaka Range to Wellington where they embarked for service overseas. The camp hardened men for the rigours of war. But the closeness of their accommodation led to of disease. Influenza and meningitis outbreaks claimed a number of lives. Near the roadside memorial, there is an inscription on a small plaque: [Actor's voice] Behold the summer grass All that remains Of the dreams of warriors [Narrator] This Japanese-style inscription is a reminder of a very different sort of camp that existed here during the Second World War. Over 800 Japanese prisoners of war were held in the old Featherston army camp. The Japanese were made to work growing vegetables, making furniture, running a jute mill and a piggery as well as shifting rocks. To the Japanese, however, capture and internment meant a 'loss of face'. Being made to work added to their humiliation. In February 1943, the Japanese refused to work and instead congregated within the prison compound. Armed guards trained rifles and machine guns on the discontented group. The senior officer of the Japanese prisoners, Lieutenant Commander Adachi, did little to help resolve the impasse. When the New Zealand soldier in charge shot Adachi in the shoulder, the Japanese prisoners rushed the guards, who, in turn, opened fire. When the shooting stopped, 48 Japanese prisoners lay dead and a further 74 were injured. One of the New Zealand guards received severe injuries during the incident and died a few days later. Another small memorial in the roadside reserve remembers Private Walter Pelvin. Though it was a major event, the riot never made the news due to the strict press censorship that was in effect during wartime. A later inquiry attributed the cause to cultural misunderstanding. The Japanese apparently did not understand their obligation to work, and the New Zealand authorities had not made the text of the Geneva Convention available in the camp. There was much ill-feeling towards the Japanese amongst New Zealanders during World War Two. New Zealand feared invasion from their enemy. And Kiwi troops taken prisoner by the Japanese in the Pacific were made to work like slaves on arduous projects such as building railways. With little food and regular beatings, these men often laboured until they dropped dead. More than half a century after the war, little sign remains of the Featherston camp. Yet in in the 1980s, the creation of this roadside memorial reserve led to reconciliation with the Japanese, and a memorial to the slain prisoners. Forty-eight flowering cherry trees stand in a grid, creating a garden of remembrance, each tree marking a Japanese prisoner who died.

History

The previous Masterton showground was acquired by a local committee in 1918. Brothers Donald and Robert Cameron acquired the land for Memorial Park and the park commemorated their last name and their father and uncle Lieutenant Norman Cameron, killed at Gallipoli.[2]

The grandstand was blown by a storm in 1934, and during the Second World War the grounds were used by the New Zealand Army.[4]

In 2008 the park was renamed Trust House Memorial Park for sponsorship reasons.[4] In 2015 at the cost of NZ $2.1 million the park was renovated to add a turf ground, stadium lighting and redesigned fence lines and footpaths.[1]

Tenants

Rugby union team Wairarapa Bush uses Memorial Park for all its home games.[3] It has also been the home ground on some occasions for the Hurricanes Development team.[1]

In association football, Wairarapa United use the home ground for their home games. Wairarapa United won the Chatham Cup, New Zealand's most coveted football trophy, in 2011.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Dickson, Walt (22 April 2015). "New turf a winner for Wairarapa stadium". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  2. ^ a b c "Cameron and Soldiers' Memorial Park". Wairarapa First World War Centenary. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d "2013 Pink Batts Heartland Championship Media Guide". AllBlacks.com. 13 August 2013. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  4. ^ a b c Morton, Jamie (7 November 2008). "Rugby ground now Trust House Memorial Park". The New Zealand HeraldThe Wairarapa Times-Age. Retrieved 13 April 2016.

External links

This page was last edited on 25 March 2022, at 04:12
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