Life, Love, and War 100 Years Ago Today
Life, Love, and War 100 Years Ago Today
Excerpts from
New Zealand diaries written a century ago are now appearing
on the most modern of communication media, Twitter.
Coordinated by the First World War Centenary Programme
Office, the Life 100 Years Ago (www.twitter.com/life100yearsago While there will be many official
and international commemorations during the centenary period
(2014-2018), some of the most meaningful are anticipated to
be those organised at a local level. "We're here to
help communities develop their own special First World War
centenary commemorations that tell New Zealand's stories of
the war", says Andrew Matheson, Director of the First World
War Centenary Programme Office. "Life 100 Years Ago is
one way of bringing local voices together to tell a national
story. We hope many other sources will be added to the
project, and generate a greater understanding of our
history." Life 100 Years Ago currently features
diaries of George Leslie Adkin and his uncle, Herbert
Denton. Both were educated in Wellington then settled in
Horowhenua. Adkin's diary tells of life and love in New
Zealand during the war, while Denton went to war with the
New Zealand Expeditionary Force. Denton's diary is unusual
because when he was in the army his diary was kept by a
William Stewart in New Zealand.
Another diarist
featured, Frederick Welch, was born in Taita in Lower Hutt,
and established a labour, land and estate agency in the
Wairarapa. As well as being a keen sportsman, he was an avid
gardener and the diaries record his horticultural forays.
The newspaper headline feed provides a wider context of life
in New Zealand and abroad. The diaries and newspaper
headlines are sourced from Te Papa, Kete Horowhenua, the
Wairarapa Archive and the National Library of New
Zealand. The Life 100 Years Ago Twitter feed will also
be featured in 'The Bulldog and the Battlecruiser' online
exhibition created by Auckland War Memorial Museum and the
National Museum of the Royal New Zealand Navy. This website
follows the battlecruiser HMS New Zealand (a gift by New
Zealand to Britain) around the world in 1913. The arrival of
HMS New Zealand in Wellington on 12 April is featured in all
the diaries - an estimated 500,000 New Zealanders, nearly
half of the population at the time, inspected the vessel
during its 10-week tour. If you would like to
contribute to the Life 100 Years Ago project with a diary,
letters, or photos, visit http://ww100.govt.nz/life-100-years-ago/join-in
ENDS