Rural Heritage Day

The way we were in the 1950's

RURAL HERITAGE DAY

Donovan Park, Invercargill

21 November 2009.

Rural Heritage Day has become established as a Southland biennial icon event for the whole family.

Brief Background

  • Rural heritage Day is organised by the Southland Rural Heritage Trust.  it utilises hundres of volunteers and is funded by grants and sponsorship.
  • The inagural event in 2002 attracted 2,500 visitors.  Events in 2005 and 2007 doubled those numbers with more than 5,000 visitors.
  • Survey results reflected the visitor target market: 72% were from Invercargill, 24% from rural Southland and 4% from outside Southland.

Purpose of Rural Heritage Day

  • To celebrate heritage through activities that provide first-hand experience of the life and times of Southland's rural past.
  • To increase awareness of at-risk rural trades and crafts.
  • To bring together a wide range of heritage interests and organisations.  (In 2007 more than 30 heritage interests were represented).

Rural Heritage Day 2009

  • The theme is on Southland life during the 1950s.
  • This year's event will build on the template of past successes by introducing improvements on the basis of feedback and experience.
  • A risk management plan and management processes are well established.
  • A wide range of interactive, interesting and educational activities, displays and entertainment is planned.
  • Marketing is pitched at extended families as a fun and affordable event; includes educational resources for schools.
  • Offers younger people the opportunity to experience the resourcefulness, improvisation, innovation and of that period.  For other it is a chance to reminisce and share stories.  Southland Rural Heritage Day is a fun reminder of our rural roots that brings together business and community interests from throughout Southland.

SOUTHLAND RURAL HERITAGE DAY

CELEBRATING SOUTHLAND'S LIVING HISTORY

 Website: www.ruralheritagesouthland.co.nz

 

Rural Heritage Day 2009

The Way We Were in the 1950's

Highlights will include

Opening by HM Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phillip on their 1954 visit to Southland

Milk Bar entertainment with live music provided by Peter Cairns

Elvis and Marilyn look-alike competitions

Have-a-go Rock n’ Roll

On  stage entertainment includes

 

Deep South Rhythm Brass Band

Clan nan Gael Pipe Band

Russdickbil Skiffle Group

Aurora College kapa haka group. Te Topu Kapahaka o Te Muranga o Rangi.

Lipstick

Scandrett School of Dance

Irish Dancing

Scottish Highland and Country dancing

1950s drama skits

 

Traction engines and vintage machinery in action

Working horses in action

Carriage rides

Cars of the 50s

‘A Woman’s Place’ -  a slice of 50s life for Southland women from butter making, gardening and sewing to fashion and make-up

Children’s games and activities including

 

1950s schoolroom

sand saucers

model railway

sheaf tossing

farmyard animals and donkey rides

 

Southland in the 50s – archival film and images

Memory Lane marquee featuring

1950s quizzes

photographic displays

opportunities to ‘Have a Yarn’ with guest story tellers

Southland Oral History Project interviews

Guest appearance by children’s author Gavin Bishop, author of ‘Piano Rock’ – story of his 1950s childhood at Kingston

 

PRIZES for Best Dressed visitors in 1950s costume

STALLS

DELICIOUS FOOD OF THE 50s

 

 

 

 

 Written for Heritage Matters Issue 6, Autumn 2006 by Cathy Macfie

How often do you see working horses and lace-making (almost) side by side. Both came together on 26 November 2005 to celebrate Rural Heritage Day at Invercargill's Donovan Park. They were among 25 different heritage interests in action, together providing a snapshot of Southland rural life, agricultural and domestic, in the 1920s and 30s.

The 'Home Sweat Home' tent brought to life kitchen and laundry appliances that were familiar before electricity revolutionised our way of life. Children helped to make and sample a typical school lunch of home-made bread, butter and jam. "It tastes normal", was one slightly surprised comment about the butter she had just made. Families thronged the tent all day, having-a-go at spinning and the variety of domestic crafts and activities on offer.

The smell of hot grease and ponderous chug of vintage steam engines provided a fitting backdrop to the huge Vintage and Traditional Trades paddock. Here, horse power went head to head with traction engines and vintage tractors in dusty, chaff-cutting demonstrations. Sweat poured from the cheerful face of Albie Edwards, traditional blacksmith and farrier, who won "Best Presented Activity" for his ability to draw and involve an audience with creations from the heat of his forge. Long queues formed to ride in horse- and traction engine-drawn carriages and everyone appreciated the skills demonstrated by blade shearing and working dogs.

Children saw their grandparents through new eyes as the window opened on a completely different and challenging way of life. Nowhere was this more apparent than in the sheaf-tossing arena where kids experienced first hand the strength and technique required using a pitchfork to toss a sack of hay over an adjustable rugby post. Youngsters made their own fun too with a wide range of organised games and a very popular "Punch and Judy" show.

Warm sunshine, roving musicians, entertainers and swaggers, wholesome farm fare and toffee apples all added to the spirit of celebration. Yet through celebration, Rural Heritage Day contributed equally to safeguarding rural heritage. Such opportunities are essential to practise traditional trades, operate vintage machinery and keep stories alive. The Have-a-Yarn tent in particular provided a gathering place for reminiscing and story-telling with heritage quizzes and many memory-jogging prompts. Oral historians were on hand to encourage follow-up interviews with those willing to share their stories.

Over 200 volunteers were involved on the day with untold volunteer hours needed to bring the event to fruition. At a time when volunteer help is becoming an increasingly rare commodity, why did Rural Heritage Day enjoy such generosity? The answer, perhaps, is that it tapped into a passionate resource; people who recognise the importance of Southland's rural roots in defining who we are. Whether their interest was in traditional trades, vintage machinery, heirloom breeds or domestic crafts, all cared sufficiently about keeping alive Southland's rural traditions to commit time and energy to the day.

The level of school involvement with Rural Heritage Day was also heart-warming, encouraged by the production of an associated resource called "What was it like?" growing up in rural Southland during the 1920s and 30s. Written by Lloyd Esler for the Southland Rural Heritage Trust, the resource covered various aspects of rural life based on quotations from local people. Among the follow-up activities was a Southland Times sponsored story competition that required children to interview an older relative or neighbour about "what it was like" for them growing up in rural Southland. There were some outstanding entries and winning stories were featured at Rural Heritage Day.

More than 5000 thousand visitors, volunteers and participants alike declared the event to be a great success. Here are some of their comments:

"It's been a great day. Good atmosphere, great activities, good food, good music."

"The blacksmith was my favourite. I helped to make this (a leaf) and he gave it to me." (Young girl)

"The children loved finding out how they used to live, like making butter and washing."

"We have lots of new contacts and some wonderful stories."(Have-a-Yarn tent organiser)

"Well worth $5 to get in"

It was thanks to generous support from Venture Southland, the Community Trust of Southland, Invercargill Licensing Trust, Creative Communities, Southern Trust, Pub Charity and a raft of local business sponsors that Rural Heritage Day was able to keep admission prices accessible to all. The fact that there was no charge for children under 15 years made it particularly appealing for family groups a key target.

Given the events success, there is every reason why it should become a biennial icon on Southland's event calendar.

Rural Heritage Day was organised by the Southland Rural Heritage Trust. For further information contact Chairwoman Cathy Macfie, ph 03 2131267 or visit the website www.ruralheritagesouthland.co.nz

Photographs and a DVD of the event are available from R.T. Digital Video and Photographic Productions, Dunedin. Ph. 027 488 5345. E-mail: rteast@xtra.co.nz

Rural Heritage Day is a biennial event. The next Rural Heritage Day will be held on Saturday 21 November 2009 at Donovan Park, Invercargill.

·     On the Home Front

 

 
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