Marlborough's Early Churches
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There was a tradition of tolerance and goodwill between Marlborough's Christian churches from the earliest days when dedicated ministers and priests covered hundreds of miles of the undeveloped and far-flung province to meet the needs of their respective flocks.
Marlborough's first Christian missionary, Samuel Ironside, quickly became fluent in Te Reo Māori,1 and was no doubt surprised and delighted with the ‘intense desire of the natives' for Christian instruction when he established the Cloudy Bay Mission at Ngakuta at the end of 1840.2
Within two years of Rev. Ironside and wife Sarah's arrival, the Methodist missionary reported 16 chapels, 30 local preachers and leaders, and more than 600 members throughout the Marlborough Sounds - they were mostly Māori or European whalers. During those golden years Ironside married 171 couples, and baptised 613 adults and 155 infants.3
But the Wairau Affray of June 1843 saw the majority of Māori flee north with Te Rauparaha. When Ironside returned to the mission station after courageously going to the site of the Affray to bury his countrymen, he found the Mission deserted. "So the pleasant, well sheltered cover of the Sounds, which had been the happy homes of hundreds of Christian natives, were left to solitude," he wrote before the Ironsides left for Wellington.4
There was little further religious activity in the region, until the Rev. Thomas Nicholson began to visit from Nelson in 1853.5 When his beloved wife, Alison, died in 1856, the bereft Presbyterian minister moved his large family to Renwick6 where the region's first Presbyterian Church was built.7 Nicholson soon began to establish services throughout his far-flung parish, and he regularly journeyed from Picton to Wairau Valley to the Awatere.8
Travel was difficult with rough terrain, poor, or non-existent, roads, frequent flooding and a widely scattered population. Nicholson had been described as a strong, boisterous man,9 but ill health overtook him and he died in 1864 aged 47.10 He was not to see the first Presbyterian church to be built in Blenheim - St Andrews was opened in May 1868.11
Rev. Dr Henry Butt came to Blenheim from Nelson soon after Nicholson12 and Blenheim's first Anglican Church of the Nativity was dedicated in December 1861.13 Butt, who became Archdeacon in 1868 when the Archdeaconry of Marlborough was established by Bishop Suter,14 was also worn out by the hard work of ministering to his parish: "neither flood nor trackless waste prevented the good Archdeacon from visiting the scattered settlers."15
Nelson's Father Antoine Garin ministered to a parish which stretched from Kaikoura to Cape Farewell and he would journey on foot over Tophouse, fording swift and treacherous rivers to visit his flocks in Cloudy Bay and Kaikoura.16 Father Augustine Sauzeau was the much loved parish priest between 1864 and 188117, when the first St Mary's church opened in November 1865. Blenheim's first Catholic schools were opened in 1872 and the Sisters of Mercy arrived to take over from the lay-teachers in 188518. Their new convent in Maxwell Road was opened in August of that year.19
While the region's first missionary, Samuel Ironside was Methodist, it was not until 1865 that the first Methodist Church was built in Grove Road, Blenheim. It was relocated to Sinclair Street in 1872 due to flooding. In 1879, the Government gave notice that the site was required for the new Blenheim Railway Station and the church moved to High Street - where the newly built church was burnt down soon after completion in March 1881.20 The Salvation Army arrived in 1883, with their first meeting held in the Wesley Hall.21
There was a tradition of tolerance and goodwill between Marlborough's Christian churches from the earliest days when services were held in private homes, and the Courthouse on the banks of the Opawa River served the needs of Presbyterian, Anglican and Catholic alike. Every pioneering family belonged to some religious body.22
By the 1870s all the main Christian denominations had churches in Blenheim and towns throughout the region.
2009 (updated 2022)
Tools
Sources used in this story
- Oldfield, C.B (1965) Methodism in Marlborough : 1840-1965, Blenheim, N.Z. : Wesley Church, p.6
- Provincial Centennial Supplement 1859-1959 (1959, November 1) The Marlborough Express, p.19
- Smith, F. W. (1952) Samuel Ironside and the Cloudy Bay Mission, Blenheim, N.Z.: Wesley Historical Society, pp.10-11
- Smith, p.15
- Buick, T.L. (1900, 1976) Old Marlborough, Palmerston North, NZ: Hart and Keeling. Reprint published by Capper Press, Christchurch, p.356
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/7342837 - Miller, R.S. (1960) Blue Banner : the life story of the Rev. Thomas Dickson Nicholson, first Presbyterian minister of Nelson and Marlborough, Christchurch, N.Z. Presbyterian Bookroom
- Kerr, L.G. (Ed)(2007) A Founding Ministry, Blenheim [N.Z.] : St Andrew's and St Ninian's Presbyterian churches, p.34
- Miller, p.151
- Miller, p.127
- Kerr, p.41
- Robb, H. & Kerr, L. (Eds) (2004) The course of St Andrew's Church the story of the Presbyterian Church at Blenheim's riverside and by Seymour Square, Blenheim, N.Z. Parish Council, St Andrew's Presbyterian Church, p.20
- Buick, p.358
- Ault, H. F. (1958) The Nelson narrative, Nelson, N.Z.: Standing Committee of the Diocese of Nelson, p.238
- Vercoe, S.I. (1961) Pioneer Church: The Centennial History of the Church of the Nativity: 1861-1961 Blenheim, NZ: Marlborough Express Newspaper Co, p.22
- Buick, p.359
- McIntosh, A. (1977) Marlborough: A Provincial History. Christchurch, N.Z.: Capper Press, p.327
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154763562 - Cahill, P. P. (1964) St. Mary's Parish, Blenheim, Marlborough: 1864-1964, Wellington, N.Z: John Milne, p.8
- Provincial Centennial Supplement 1859-1959, p.9
- Furness, J. G. (1985) Sisters of Mercy, Blenheim: 100 years of service..., Blenheim, N.Z.: St Joseph's Convent
- Oldfield, pp.12,19,22
- McIntosh, p.330
- McIntosh, p.319
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Further sources - Marlborough's Early Churches
Books
General
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Gregory, K. [1972] Stretching out continually = Whaatoro tonu atu: a history of the New Zealand Church Missionary Society, 1892-1972, Christchurch, N.Z.:K. Gregory with the authorisation of the New Zealand Church Missionary Society http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/714803
ANGLICAN CHURCH
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Ault, H. F. (1958) The Nelson narrative, Nelson, N.Z.: Standing Committee of the Diocese of Nelson
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/14062192 -
Bythell, J. M. [1959] The golden jubilee of St. Christopher's Sunday School, Redwoodtown: 1909-1959, with an account of the years 1905-1908, Blenheim, N.Z.: Parochial District of Blenheim http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/156036119
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Bythell, J. M. (2005) St. Christopher's Church, 1909-2005, Blenheim, N.Z.: Prisma Print
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/156780330 -
Kennington, A. L, (1968) The Anglican Church in the Awatere: a parish history, Blenheim, N.Z. : Printed by Express Printing Works
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/14135246 -
Loveridge, B. E. (1973) Together in faith: A history and a compilation of records of the Spring Creek Parochial District...., Spring Creek, N.Z. : B.E. Loveridge
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154110355 -
Vercoe, S. I. [1961] The Church of the Nativity, 1861-1961, Blenheim, N.Z.: Marlborough Express Newspaper Co.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1505157
CATHOLIC CHURCH
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Cahill, P. P. (1964) St. Mary's Parish, Blenheim, Marlborough: 1864-1964, Wellington, N.Z: John Milne
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154727707 -
Furness, J. G. (1985) Sisters of Mercy, Blenheim: 100 years of service..., Blenheim, N.Z.: St Joseph's Convent
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Furness, J. G. (1978) St Mary's Church Blenheim : a century of worship, 1878-1978 Blenheim, N.Z.: St Marys Parish
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/153872072 -
Wilson, J. J. (1910) The church in New Zealand: memoirs of the early days, Dunedin, N.Z.: J. J. Wilson
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/9590230
METHODIST CHURCH
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Oldfield, C.B (1965) Methodism in Marlborough : 1840-1965, Blenheim, N.Z. : Wesley Church
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/84757049 -
Smith, F. W. (1975) Trinity Methodist Church, Tua Marina: 100th anniversary 1875-1975, record and historical survey for centennial celebrations 1975, Blenheim, N.Z.: Tua Marina Methodist Church Trustees
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/232426137 -
Smith, F. W. [1952] Samuel Ironside and the Cloudy Bay mission, Blenheim, N.Z.: Wesley Historical Society
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/152672307 -
Chambers, W. A. (1982) Samuel Ironside in New Zealand, 1839-1858, Auckland, N.Z. Ray Richards Publisher: Wesley Historical Society of New Zealand
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/9593019
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
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The course of a church: centennial souvenir 1968 St Andrews Presbyterian Church Blenheim (1968) Blenheim, N.Z.: Express Printing Works
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/153697452 -
Dickson, J. (1899) History of the Presbyterian Church of New Zealand, Dunedin, N.Z, J Wilkie
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/9637390 -
Fleming, A. F. (1951?) The Awatere Presbyterian Church 1850-1950, Blenheim, N.Z. :The Marborough Express
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Hale, A. J. & Bythell, N. J. (1963) Holy Trinity Church Picton, N.Z.: 1863-1963, a centennial history, Blenheim, N.Z. : Parish of Picton
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154145929 -
Harris, A. & Harris, K. (2007) Fifty years of mission: reflections of the Wairau Presbyterian Parish, 1957-2007, Blenheim, N.Z.: Wairau Presbyterian Parish
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/190859870 -
Kerr, L.G. (Ed)(2007) A Founding Ministry, Blenheim [N.Z.] : St Andrew's and St Ninian's Presbyterian churches
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/174081669 -
Robb, H. & Kerr, L. (Eds) (2004) The course of St Andrew's Church the story of the Presbyterian Church at Blenheim's riverside and by Seymour Square, Blenheim, N.Z. Parish Council, St Andrew's Presbyterian Church
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/156324710 -
Miller, R.S. (1960) Blue Banner : the life story of the Rev. Thomas Dickson Nicholson, first Presbyterian minister of Nelson and Marlborough, Christchuch, N.Z. Presbyterian Bookroom http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154223921
SALVATION ARMY
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Doggett, R. (1984) The Salvation Army Blenheim Corps Centenary Aug 2-5th 1984, Blenheim, N.Z. : [The Salvation Army]
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/152447903
Articles
- The church in New Zealand memoirs of the early days: Marlborough (1907, November 7) New Zealand Tablet,p.13
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT19071031.2.19
Web Resources
- The cyclopedia of New Zealand volume 5: Nelson, Marlborough & Westland, Wellington, N.Z.: Cyclopedia Co., (1906) pp. 330-333
http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-Cyc05Cycl.html - Marlborough Express (1868-1900) on Papers Past (search for individual churches):
http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=CL1.MEX
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Comments
Found this interesting as family has links to Cloudy Bay in the early days
Posted by beverly williams, 27/02/2014 5:53pm (11 years ago)
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