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LANDMARK BURNED

PERCY'S ..Mill 1

POLICE TO INVESTIGATE

Police inquiries have been instituted following the fire which on Saturday evening completely destroyed the historic Percy brothers' flour mill, a 100----year-old landmark on the Western Hutt Road at Petone.. By the time the Petone Fire Brigade had been called to the scene the building was so fiercely ablaze that they decided to concentrate on saving the adjacent native bush which is part of Percy's Reserve, a scenic area being developed by the Petone Borough Council. The Mayor of Petone (Mr. H. Green) attributed the fire to "pure vandalism." The council's ranger had visited the mill at 6 p.m.—shortly before the fire started—he said, end there was no pos-, sibility that the mill could have been burned other than maliciously. "Percy's flour mill was one of the first buildings in the Wellington district," the Mayor continued. "Tt. was , built about 100 years ago from timber —totara, I believe —from the Hutt Valley and the Percy brothers used their own • home-made nails. Originally there was an oak tree alongside the mill and it was considered to be the oldest oak, but one, in New Zealand. It was cut down a few years ago when the railway branch line was put through to Woburn. The mill stood at the entrance to Percy's gardens. The land was taken over by the Government and handed to the council as a public reserve about four years ago, but it has not yet been officially opened. "I cannot understand why some people delight in damaging public property," said Mr. Green, who said that the council was deeply grrieved about the destruction of the mill. "The ranger tells me that there have been two other attempts in the past to fire Percy's mill."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19451022.2.31

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXL, Issue 97, 22 October 1945, Page 4

Word Count
294

LANDMARK BURNED Evening Post, Volume CXL, Issue 97, 22 October 1945, Page 4

LANDMARK BURNED Evening Post, Volume CXL, Issue 97, 22 October 1945, Page 4