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Centenary of WW1 Troops' Departure

Centenary of the Departure of the Main Body of Troops and 1st Reinforcements to the First World War, 16 October 2014


No noise, anchor got up quietly and each ship seemed to slip away and take up its place in line…A most impressive sight, grim but harmonious. All was grey bar men.

- Lieutenant Colonel George Malone, describes the dawn departure of the fleet of ships from Wellington on 16 October 1914.


To mark the largest single departure of people to ever occur in New Zealand, the centenary of the departure of the first fleet of troop ships to the northern hemisphere, Wellington Harbour receives the Ngā Tapuwae New Zealand First World War Trailsinterpretative sign. The poignant story of departing soldiers: their optimism, the atmosphere around volunteering, their Wellington experience and life on the ships, the mementos linking them to home; is presented in short videos by cultural commentators for this occasion. Available progressively, the first item, by Ministry for Culture and Heritage Senior Historian Imelda Bargas is now availablehttp://ww100.govt.nz/ww100-perspectives or on YouTubewww.youtube.com/WW100nz .

Minister for Arts, Culture and Heritage, Hon Maggie Barry will unveil the interpretative sign on 16 October at 6.30pm on the waterfront promenade in front of Te Papa. In attendance is Australian Minister for Veterans Affairs, Senator Michael Ronaldson, who is responsible for the Australian 100 Years of Anzac centenary.

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The Wellington interpretative sign is an element of the Ngā Tapuwae New Zealand First World War Trails. Using new technologies, this legacy project puts accurate and lively commentary into your hand using immersive app and web resources, on site information and other material, directly onto your device. It makes rich historical narratives from soldiers’ diaries, powerful images of men in war situations and accurate site guides easily accessible. It is a service principally for visitors to First World War battlefields in Turkey and Western Europe. The Gallipoli trail will launch early in 2015.

“The departure of so many of New Zealand’s young men and women to the northern hemisphere changed the country. The Nga Tapawae New Zealand First World War Trails project means people can follow in the footsteps of this missing, wounded, changed generation of New Zealanders. Most of them, including my grandfather, left from this shoreline. The First World War had a lasting impact on our nation and this project gets the story right” says Minister for Arts Culture and Heritage, Hon Maggie Barry.

Approximately 8,500 men and almost 4,000 horses departed in the early morning of 16 October 1914. In anticipation, Wellingtonians lined the beaches, coastal roads and ridgelines before dawn, waiting quietly for the procession of ships to appear in the channel leading out of the harbour. Records state that as the bow of the first ship came around the point, cheers rippled across the bays. Each of the ten troopships and four escorts slipped out into Cook Strait single file and set course initially for Australia.

An historical outline of the departure is here http://ww100.govt.nz/the-new-zealand-expeditionary-force-sets-forth . Interested in individual soldiers who departed on 16 October 1914? A ticker tape of these soldiers is on http://ww100.govt.nz Click on individual names for additional information.

HMNZS Te Kaha is currently docked in Wellington and will depart at 1pm, 16 October, bound for the Australian commemoration for the departure of First World War troops, at Albany, Western Australia.

Wellington City Council is marking the unique role of the city with a free outdoor multimedia event that will take place over three nights from 8pm, Thursday 16–Saturday 18 October. Lest We Forget, uses early film footage, still photographs and other images of Wellington and its war effort, projected onto the facades of three significant buildings.

ENDS


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