Sep 10, 2013

Henry Elleray Fell 1834-1905 – Page 35

page-35

My grandmother’s sister, Elizabeth Wilson, married Henry Elleray Fell on 22 Apr 1862 at Christ Church in Claughton, Cheshire. Henry was a Scripture Reader training as a Missioner, a career path he followed throughout his working life. He was working at the Mersey Mission to Seamen on the docks of Liverpool when he was invited to take up a position as ‘Missioner’ at the newly established ‘Sailor’s Rest’ at Auckland wharf. On the 28 Aug 1882 Henry & Elizabeth, along with their 7 sons & 1 daughter, sailed from London on board the vessel ‘Wanganui’, arriving in Wellington on 9 Nov 1882. The ‘Sailor’s Rest’ (later to be named the ‘Sailor’s Home’) was first implemented in 1882 by renting two rooms in a shop near the waterfront, the main objective was to “help the sailors morally & spiritually but we did not undervalue the importance of providing a home in which bedrooms could be obtained by seamen not resident in Auckland.” Henry conducted religious services 3 or 4 times a week & on Friday evenings, members of a Ladies Committee carried out a pre-arranged programme of entertainment. Two months after it opened ’Mr Fell reported that one thousand sailors had visited the rooms’. By 1883 their funds were nearly exhausted when a generous bequest of £25,000 was received from wealthy citizen Edward Costley. The above 27 bedroom 3 storey purpose-designed building was built on the waterfront, the foundation stone was laid on 9 Apr 1887. The Sailor’s Home was a prominent building on the Auckland waterfront for many years but was demolished in recent times despite protests from the Heritage Officer of the Auckland City Council. The very next year Henry resigned due to ill-health & the family moved up north where they purchased a farm & built ‘Waihutu’ located at Pakanae, on the south-bank of the Hokianga harbour, about 2km upstream from the township of Opononi. The name Waihutu or ‘musical sound made by falling water’ originates from a small waterfall at the base of a Maori Pa. In 1888 the main access to ‘Waihutu’ was by small boat up a stream across an area shown as ‘salty area’. After exiting the stream into the Hokianga river the route was by water, either downstream to Opononi or upstream to Koutu or Rawene or Kohukohu. A secondary access was by a muddy track across tidal flat & along a track cut through the ti-tree to Opononi. The track was suitable for horse & buggy but only when the weather was dry & favourable, it was 1926 before there was a reliable, surfaced road. Elizabeth, known to family & friends as ‘Granny Fell’, was unwavering in her strict code of Bible reading & prayer every morning & evening, with visitors encouraged to join in. This rule was never broken. Henry (known as ‘Old Fell’) continued his mission daily on horseback around Northland until the day he died, 21 Jun 1905, he is buried in the family plot at the Pakanae cemetery.

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