History of Auckland City
Introduction |
If at first you don't succeed (1840-1871) |
Building a solid city (1871-1918) |
On the trail of the modernising city (1919-1945) |
Thinking and being metropolitan (1945-1971) |
The 1971 centenary (occasion and setting) |
Progressing towards abolition (1971-1989) |
Writ large: the 'new' City Council from 1990 |
Selected Auckland City chronology (1840-1998) |
Mayors |
City and metropolitan population 1841-1998 |
Graham Bush
Chapter 5: The 1971 centenary (occasion and setting)
A century is no mean feat
The marking of the City
Council's fiftieth jubilee in 1921 (also the seventieth anniversary of the
establishment of the original, ill-fated City Council) had been very
constrained, its most permanent, though unattributed, memorial being two solid
tomes, The City of Auckland 1840-1920, and Municipal and Official Handbook of
the City of Auckland, respectively written and edited by John Barr, then
starting the second decade of his forty year tenure as Chief Librarian. Buoyed
up by the prosperous sixties, the Council determined to celebrate its centenary
in grand and sustained style. While the events focused on the `centennial
fortnight', a resplendent diversity of occasions were spread over the entire
year (1971). Furthermore, they projected out to all Aucklanders, not just the
25% for whom their local body was the Auckland City Council. The trajectory was
apt, for a snap survey showed that six out of ten Aucklanders believed the
celebrations were to commemorate the founding of the place of Auckland rather
than its premier local body.
The many faces of celebration
The masses, special
sectors, and the privileged were all remembered. There were a centennial
cavalcade (an estimated 250,000 spectators), a mardi gras in Queen Street
(30,000 revellers), a fireworks spectacular, and a `Super Auckland' festival. A
fiction contest attracted 154 entries, one in seven of which were reckoned
publishable, but the judges in a parallel poetry competition, sponsored by the
mayor, Sir Dove-Myer Robinson, reported in obvious embarrassment that not one of
the twenty poems submitted was prizeworthy. Another glitch was the belated
cancellation of the laying of the foundation stone of the controversial
Centennial Hall, although announcement of a competition for designing the Civic
(later Aotea) Square was offered in lieu.
Celebratory functions
confined to invitees included the (then) regulatory gala civic ball, civic
dinner, civic church service, civic garden party, `Centennial Queen' contest,
Women's Day reception, international sporting fixtures, and special racing
meeting. With a graceful bow to history, the Council held a special
commemorative meeting one hundred years to the day later and on the exact spot
where the foundation councillors gathered for their first formal meeting in May
1871. An indefatigable protagonist for Auckland, the mayor found time to prepare
and deliver a series of public lectures revolving around the development and
future of Auckland.
Things that last
A statue and a book were
more enduring products of the centenary. Earlier in his career, Captain William
Hobson, the colony's first governor, had been helped by George Eden, Lord
Auckland, First Lord of the Admiralty, and in 1840 gratefully bestowed the name
of Auckland on his chosen capital. Subsequently, as Governor-General of India,
Lord Auckland was the subject for various statues, one of which was eventually
donated by the Bengal Government to the City Council. It was officially unveiled
by the then Lord Auckland as a centennial centrepiece. Also `unveiled' was a
637-page commissioned history, Decently and in Order, written by Graham Bush, a
local government specialist in the University of Auckland's Political Studies
Department.
The city and the wider metropolis
Rather extravagantly,
the centennial history described the City of Auckland as a 'plastic
polychromatic mosaic'. For others, its destinies were more prosaically linked to
commerce, culture, tourism, or its strategic location as the bridge between New
Zealand its immediate world. Because its boundaries were essentially artificial,
distinguishing Auckland City from the wider metropolis of Auckland was only of
limited value. To be sure, Auckland City's population of 150,000 was essentially
static whereas the region's was bounding ahead by 3% per annum, and the City
Council faced unique challenges of urban renewal, traffic congestion and the
implications of mounting housing density and ethnic concentration, but its and
the region's economic fortunes were closely bound together. Apart from the
retail water supply, no major utilities remained under the City Council's
control and the overall management of rampant growth -- current forecasts were
for Auckland reaching 1.25 million people by 1991 -- lay with the oft-troubled
Auckland Regional Authority.
Yet the City Council
neither could have nor should have 'ring-fenced' its territory against the
forces and trends impacting on the Auckland region. To some it was particularly
vulnerable, but then it also had the greatest contribution to make in their
amelioration. It was strategically located astride the isthmus, and within its
boundaries were the country's leading port, a fading but still dominant central
business district, the principal cultural and educational facilities, and the
nexus of motorways and most public transport. And it was not stagnant
economically: much heavy industry had departed, but property valuations doubled
during the 1960s and by 1971 only isolated minor patches of the 18,500 acres
within the City Council's boundaries were still undeveloped.
Fortunes and future hitched together
The Auckland City
Council's motto - 'Advance!' - was both stark and unequivocal. For the guardians
of its interests as it confidently embarked on its second century, the paramount
question was whether the thrusting expansion and sprawl of metropolitan Auckland
would necessarily result in the City of Auckland advancing. While realising that
virtually uncontrollable social and economic forces were shaping Auckland and
that `where Auckland goes, so does Auckland City', Robinson, for one, was riven
by doubt. With more than one in four New Zealanders living in Auckland and the
relentless sharpening of social and economic stratification, it added up to
racial tension, resentment of Auckland, and an ominous storehouse of trouble. A
City Council alive to the real needs of its citizens would therefore exert
itself as much on trying to benignly influence the development of greater
Auckland as on effectively servicing its own citizens' needs.
G.W.A. Bush 5.8.98