condensed discuss document expanded export feedback print share remove reset document_white enquire_white export_white report_white
discuss document export feedback print share gallery-landscape xml

Stock in trade : Hellaby's first hundred years, 1873-1973

documentary heritage
  • Place
  • Other Id

    HD9428.N45 SCO (Library of Congress Call Number)

    21016 (Cat ID)

    15334 (DBTextworks system ID)

    12239 (Presto content ID)

  • Department

Images and documents

Catalogue

  • Object Type
  • Name/Title
    Stock in trade : Hellaby's first hundred years, 1873-1973
  • Primary Maker

     Dick Scott (Author)

  • Contributor/Publisher
    Southern Cross Books
  • Place
  • Date
    1973
  • Physical Description

    176 pages : illustrations (some colour), col. front., map ; 25cm.

  • Language
    English
  • Level of Current Record
    Bib record
  • Member Object

    3 items in this collection. View all items.

  • Subject Category
  • Public Access Text

    [Keywords: R. & W. Hellaby Ltd.]

    References: p.172-173.

  • Associated Notes
  • Subject Notes
    Richard George Scott ONZM (17 November 1923 - 1 January 2020) was a New Zealand historian and journalist. Raised on a farm at Whakarongo near Palmerston North, Scott attended Palmerston North Boys' High before completing a Diploma of Agriculture at Massey University. Working as a sharemilker, he studied socialism and joined the Communist Party. He became a journalist, and during the 1951 waterfront dispute edited the watersiders' newspaper Transport Worker and wrote illegal bulletins.
    His concern for social justice led him to tell the story of Parihaka. Although, as historian Jock Phillips pointed out, "he had not met a MΓori person until the age of 20 and did not know Te Reo, he recognised injustice immediately when he came across it and became convinced the story should be told."
    Scott had five children, four with his first wife Elsie du Fresne (d. 1991), and lived with his second wife in the suburb of Mount Eden, in Auckland, New Zealand. One of his children was the novelist Rosie Scott.
    In 2011, Scott made headlines when he auctioned a Don Binney painting that he had owned for almost 50 years, and donated the NZD $300,000 proceeds to the Christchurch earthquake appeal. Scott died on 1 January 2020.--Wikipedia, retrieved January 2020.
  • Collection Type
    Reading Room
    General Collection
  • Copyright
    All rights reserved
  • Last Update
    19 Dec 2023

Related items

Similar items

Related objects

    The development of the Auckland War Memorial Museum online collection is an ongoing process; updates, new images and records are added weekly. In some cases, records have yet to be confirmed by Museum staff, and there could be mistakes or omissions in the information provided.

    The gift of curiosity

    With unlimited free entry to all paid exhibitions, discounted event tickets and exclusive Member-only events, a Museum Membership is the gift that keeps on giving year-round.

    SEE OPTIONS FROM $60

    The gift of curiosity