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[Archival audio: Gordon Amner] There was this terrific roar and the ground
shaking. You couldn't stand up. The cattle were rolling down the hills. The boulders
were all coming down, and all the fence lines were creaking, and the staples and the whinging
and the rumbling noise. And then the two cliffs alongside the beach, they were falling down
-- there was dust all over, and I thought it was the end of the world. And I thought
'Well gosh, I don't know, there's nobody for me to talk to,' so I thought 'Gee, there could
be a tidal wave.' What made me think of that, I wouldn't know. But I mean, it's amazing
which different thoughts go through your mind. At any rate, I got up in the hill, and instead
of there being a tidal wave I saw the sea go right out, leaving all the rocks uncovered.
But when I got to the beaches I could see the whole of that inner harbour there, our
sailing, used to be our sailing area, dry. And millions of fish! Of every different type
lying on the ground. And I thought 'Gosh,' couldn't believe it, because to think that
we used to go sailing there, and there it was dry. That is the land where the aerodrome
is now.
[Narrator] New Zealand sits on the edge of two giant tectonic plates, which means we
have many earthquakes. The country's most devastating earthquake occurred in the Hawke's
Bay in February 1931. A quake measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale destroyed the cities
of Napier and Hastings, and killed over 250 people.
As buildings began to disintegrate, many people fled outdoors as chunks from ornate facades
and parapets rained down upon them. Roofs caved in on buildings that had large open
internal areas, such as churches, libraries and theatres. Most deaths occurred when brick
and stone buildings simply caved in.
[Lauris Edmond (actor's voice)] On the day of the earthquake Dad was up a ladder, painting
tanks for a farmer on the hills towards Puketitiri. As he held up his brush to dip it in the paint
pot that hung on his ladder, the tank leaped off its stand into the air and rolled down
the hill. He was a phlegmatic man my father, his main thought was that if he'd been in
front instead of at the side it would have taken him too.
[Narrator] In Napier, the recently built Nurses' Home collapsed, killing clerical staff and
off-duty nurses who were sleeping. In nearby Hastings, 17 people died when Roach's department
store collapsed. Fifteen people died at the Park Island Old Men's Home near Taradale,
though a 91-year-old man was pulled alive from the rubble three days later.
The earthquake struck on the first day back at school after the summer holidays. Most
pupils managed to escape to the outdoors in time, but nine students died in the wreckage
of the brick Napier Technical College.
Jock Stevens was at Napier Boys' High School when the earthquake struck:
[Jock Stevens (actor's voice)] The shakes sent me flying onto the floor of the doorway
and I can still feel the feet of the class trampling over me. I got to my feet and from
there I saw the Assembly Hall collapse like a pack of cards -- each wall fell in then
the tiled roof came down. Then dust clouds blotted it out.
[Narrator] Within minutes of the earthquake, fire began in central Napier. Firefighters
were helpless as water pressure faded to a trickle. By mid-afternoon the entire business
district was ablaze. The fire was finally extinguished 36 hours later. Almost 11 blocks
of the central city were gutted.
The navy sloop HMS Veronica had berthed in Napier's harbour on the morning of the earthquake.
When the earthquake struck the bottom of the harbour rose, leaving the ship aground. The
Veronica radioed Auckland, and within hours, two cruisers were on their way. Each carried
450 men, as well as doctors, nurses, and medical equipment.
Napier's hospitals were badly damaged, so patients were moved to the lawns of the Botanical
Gardens, where a surgical station was set up. Emergency hospitals were set up at the
local racecourses, where doctors operated beneath the grandstand.
Though the earthquake was a terrible tragedy, it did give a unique opportunity to almost
completely replace a town centre using the most modern styles available. The distinctive
character of Napier which resulted from the use of styles such as Art Deco now makes the
city's architecture a major tourist attraction.
The massive upheaval of the land caused by the earthquake dramatically changed Napier's
landscape. In some places the land was lifted nearly three metres. Before the quake, Napier
had extensive wetlands, including Ahuriri Lagoon. As the land rose, sea water drained
from the lagoon, giving Napier more than 2,000 hectares of new land. The lagoon became productive
land, and the site of the present Hawke's Bay airport.