Pegasus Post: July 08, 2021
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4 Thursday <strong>July</strong> 8 <strong>2021</strong><br />
Latest Canterbury news at starnews.co.nz<br />
PEGASUS POST<br />
Keeping the old post office lines<br />
• By Bea Gooding<br />
“SOME PEOPLE preserve family<br />
heirlooms, some people preserve<br />
cakes, but why? If we stop doing<br />
these things then I think we’ve<br />
lost the plot.”<br />
Those are the words of George<br />
Wealleans, who has mastered the<br />
art of preservation as founder<br />
and inaugural president of the<br />
Ferrymead <strong>Post</strong> and Telegraph<br />
Historical Society.<br />
It is why the Avondale<br />
75-year-old is in charge of the<br />
group responsible for conserving<br />
the country’s communications’<br />
history in a 1920s post office<br />
building, nestled within<br />
Ferrymead Heritage Park.<br />
“If I don’t, then who’s going<br />
to?” said Wealleans.<br />
“It’s partly ego, partly a desire<br />
to preserve our history. You<br />
might as well preserve something<br />
you’re keen on.”<br />
The society collects and<br />
restores vintage telegraphy,<br />
telephone and switching systems<br />
mainly from the New Zealand<br />
<strong>Post</strong> Office and formerly Telecom<br />
New Zealand.<br />
The items, sourced from all<br />
over the country, are in working<br />
order, allowing visitors to get a<br />
feel for what life was like before<br />
the digital age.<br />
The exhibition may look like a<br />
CALLING: George Wealleans with one of the old telephones in the Ferrymead <strong>Post</strong> and<br />
Telegraph Historical Society building.<br />
PHOTO: GEOFF SLOAN<br />
museum, but it has not<br />
strayed too far from its original<br />
purpose – the building still<br />
provides postal agency services<br />
and philatelic (postage stamp)<br />
sales.<br />
Wealleans and a few others<br />
established the society in 1977<br />
during a time when the country’s<br />
morse system and telegraph<br />
service were closing down in<br />
1963 and 1988, respectively.<br />
One of the members already<br />
worked at the Ferrymead<br />
tramways, so the heritage park<br />
was seen as the perfect location<br />
to keep the practice alive.<br />
Otherwise, it would have<br />
“ended up on shelves in a shed.”<br />
“When some of the equipment<br />
out there was ready to be<br />
taken out, we wanted to see it<br />
preserved. So I called a meeting<br />
with post officers in town and<br />
established a group,” he said.<br />
“[Now] we have been tasked, or<br />
dumped, with the idea of looking<br />
after this stuff on behalf of the<br />
people of New Zealand.<br />
“But there’s no benefit of<br />
looking after this stuff other than<br />
our hobby.”<br />
Born in Oamaru, Wealleans<br />
was raised in Timaru by his<br />
uncle and aunt when his father<br />
left the picture.<br />
In the 23 years that followed,<br />
he completed school certificate<br />
and locked in his first job at the<br />
Timaru <strong>Post</strong> Office at 16-yearsold<br />
as a trainee telephone<br />
mechanician.<br />
In search of love, he<br />
relocated to Christchurch in<br />
1971 to get hitched, eventually<br />
building a house, raising three<br />
children of his own, and starting<br />
a new role at the telephone<br />
exchange.