Auction Threatens Loss for New Zealand
Auction of Pioneer Radio Equipment Threatens Loss for New Zealand
Plans by Otago University to auction off New
Zealand's pioneer radio
transmitter later this month
could result in an iconic heritage item
being sold to an
overseas buyer warns the Radio Heritage Foundation.
According to a report in the Otago Daily Times over the
weekend, the
original transmitter used by Prof Robert
Jack to begin radio
broadcasting in New Zealand almost 90
years ago is to be sold by the
Physics Department because
it has no space for it and 'wasn't able to
operate as a
museum' quoting the department's current head Prof
Rob
Ballagh.
Radio Heritage Foundation chairman David
Ricquish says the sale could
easily result in the
transmitter and other items being sold overseas
to the
highest bidder, resulting in the loss of a valuable
heritage
item not just from Dunedin, but also from New
Zealand.
"We don't understand why Otago University seems
to be so cash
strapped and short-sighted as to risk the
loss of this heritage
material just to apparently make a
buck or two and clear some space'
he says.
"Any
sensible university and community would make a real effort
to
make sure Prof Jack's original transmitter,
documentation and
associated equipment is not only kept
locally, but also understand
it's exactly this kind of
material that forms the basis of our
culutral
heritage."
The Radio Heritage Foundation suggests strongly
that the items
concerned should be withdrawn from public
auction and Otago
University fully explore other options
for their safe future in the
Dunedin community.
"Why
doesn't Otago University lease the transmitter on a long
term
basis to the Otago Settlers Museum for a nominal sum
in return for
its continued care and retention in the
community" asks Mr Ricquish.
"We believe it could become a
focal point for cultural tourism in
Dunedin in a similar
way to the Lord Rutherford Exhibition at the
Christchurch
Arts Centre. Christchurch has got it right, they
keep
their heritage."
'It seems to us that there are
much better ways of dealing with our
cultural heritage
than simply flogging it off to the highest bidder
as
seems to be the plan in this case' he concludes.
The Radio
Heritage Foundation is a registered non-profit
organization
connecting popular culture, nostalgia and
radio heritage across the
Pacific. Based in Wellington,
it's global website
www.radioheritage.net celebrates many
aspects of radio broadcasting.
It protects ephemera and
other items of New Zealand's
broadcasting
heritage.
ends