New Zealand Memorial ANZAC Bridge

Similar documents
ANZAC Centenary and ANZAC Day

2 Atatürk Service. Wairarapa Archive, 11-72/4-2-19

The word ANZAC stands for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps.

The Battle of Gallipoli was fought from April to December, 1915.

ANZAC Centenary and ANZAC Day

2009 runner-up Northern Territory. Samuel van den Nieuwenhof Darwin High School

ANZAC Memorial Hyde Park June 2013

SYDNEY ANZAC DAY MARCH UPDATE No. 3/2017

The Price of Freedom is Eternal Vigilance. ANZAC Day What is ANZAC Day? ANZAC Day 25 April is

Australians on the Western Front: A special display commemorating Australians in France and Belgium in the First World War

A Country Study of... australia. Sample file. by:

The Commonwealth Coat of Arms

VENDETTA VETERANS ASSOCIATION (QLD) ABN

ANZAC DAY ON THE WESTERN FRONT

Australia Day 2017 Messaging Guide

MARKING THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE NATIONAL COMMEMORATION PUKEAHU NATIONAL WAR MEMORIAL PARK, WELLINGTON, 8 AUGUST 2015

FEDERATION TIMELINE DATES

The Battle of Quebec: 1759

SSANSE Pop-Up Think Tank presents: Kia mau, ki ika Te Whaitua: Hui on Small states and the changing global order: NZ faces the future

Community Vision for the Future of Tomaree Headland, Shoal Bay, Port Stephens

Right beside our school. The National War Memorial Park and the tunnel below

International and domestic travel expenses

Legacy and the Gallipoli Lone Pine

Robertson. park. heritage walk. Whitney Fountain

New Zealands Great War: New Zealand, The Allies And The First World War

RUN SHEET Australia-Korea Symposium. 19 April Kerry Packer Gallery

ANZAC DAY. Friday, 25 April 2014 Orders of Service Museum Programme

Briefing to the Incoming Minister 2017 MUSEUM OF NEW ZEALAND TE PAPA TONGAREWA BRIEFING TO THE INCOMING MINISTER OCTOBER 2017

Down Under. Leggi e ascolta.

AUSTRALIA S FORGOTTEN ANZACS Lost images from Australia s first conflict: the fall of German New Guinea

RSL Hellenic Sub-Branch Memorial Hall, 14A Ferrars Pl, South, Melbourne Vic 3205 RETURNED SOLDIER APOSTRATOS English Newsletter Supplement - July 2013

Visit to New Zealand by Professor Norbert Lammert, President of the German Bundestag, Federal Republic of Germany

Stakeholder Briefing The Bays Precint Urban Transformation Program

TURKISH AUSTRALIAN RAPPROCHEMENT IN LIGHT OF THE GALLIPOLI CAMPAIGN

Daniel Morgan, Count Pulaski and General Lafayette were familiar figures

Background. The Allies were stuck in a stalemate in WW1 with the Central powers and were looking for different strategies

RECOMMENDED LEVEL OF SIGNIFICANCE:

Dawn s Letter. Regards Dawn. 18 Wicks Street, New Auckland, Gladstone, Qld T: F: I N S I D E T H I S I S S U E :

Serbia. The capital of Serbia is Belgrade. It is an administrative, economic and cultural center

2010 Cruise Down Under

THE HISTORIC CROOKED BILLET MONUMENT

TOMB OF THE UNKNOWN WARRIOR

Meets National Standards

NEW ZEALAND IN THE 19TH CENTURY PART TWO. ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL CHANGE

A journey through the history of the Sapphire Coast Part 1 Introduction

Unveiling of The Lemnos Gallipoli Statue - 8 th August 2015

THE NEW ZEALAND MEMORIAL

Gallipoli 2015 Premium Bus Tour

AIR & WATER HOSE REELS RECOILA HOSE, CORD & CABLE MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS

Celebrating. the 50th Anniversary of Australia Japan Joint Business Conference & the 55th Anniversary of Australia Japan Agreement of Commerce

JOINT PARLIAMENT. Welcoming Remarks By Hon. Prof. Peter H. Katjavivi, MP Speaker of the National Assembly of the Republic of Namibia

Navy League of Australia Vic-Tas Division September 2018 NEWSLETTER

introduction Men were about to embark on the greatest and most terrifying journey of their lives. This is the story I am about to tell. This is D-Day.

Distinguished guests, parliamentary colleagues, ladies and gentlemen.

Why did this building inspire Victorians to pay for and build it in ?

WAHO 2019 AUSTRALIA CONFERENCE. Invitation to attend the WAHO Australia Conference 2019.

25 th March Greek Independence Day

THE CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES OF ASIA-PACIFIC TRADE

Oceania. Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands. Physical Geography. Where is Australia located?

State Funeral for Alec Campbell

WILLIAM RANDOLPH EPPES SABINE

Part 5 War between France and Great Britain

The Federation Trail. A self-guided walk through Toowong Cemetery

DOUGLAS DUNMORE CAMPBELL

Australian Settlement Timeline. Year 7 History Term 4 2 nd Half Unit Australian History

Petition 2014/101 of Thomas Peter Alan Ward

150 th Commemorative Ceremony

I. The Danube Area: an important potential for a strong Europe

STAMP NEWS AUSTRALASIA JANUARY 2009 EDITION VOL.56 Number 1

Coffs Harbour s Evolving Cultural Identity

CORPORATE SPONSORSHIP PROPOSAL

PAPUA NEW GUINEA HIGH COMMISSION

The Shoalhaven Chronograph with Berry Newsletter

Queensferry Cemetery, Edinburgh, Scotland, War Graves

area sq. km capital - Camberra situated on the southern hemisphere, surrounded by the Indian and Pacific ocean

All inclusive: the best of both worlds for Scottish tourism

HIGHLIGHTS AND INCLUSIONS

the life and times of

Government Response to the Report of the Anzac Centenary Advisory Board on a Program of Initiatives to Commemorate the Anzac Centenary

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII

AMANDA KELLER VISITS PARLIAMENT HOUSE

8 still missing - Can you help put a face to a name?

Bayside History Museum presents

JAMES SHAW ROSE MACDONALD

Part 5 War between France and Great Britain

Polling brief: Australia Day

SOUTH PACIFIC FORUM Apia, Western Samoa April, 1973 COMMUNIQUÉ

Monuments of Washington, D.C.

The Club Honour Board

PROVOST S REPORT. 28 June for the period covering: 20 June 10 September 2018

JAMES WATT

Timeline of Australian History

FIELD OF LIGHT: Avenue of Honour BY BRUCE MUNRO

ADELAIDE ORDER OF MARCH ANZAC DAY 2018

3762 PRIVATE S. CLARKE 49TH BN. AUSTRALIAN INF. 21ST JUNE,

January 6, Chapter 7 & 8 Vocab. due Wednesday, 1/11

Anzac Day at Villers Bretonneux

Australia Day on. Sydney Harbour

An opportunity for New Zealanders to take a Journey of Remembrance to honour their ancestors who bravely fought on the World War I Western Front.

Inside this Issue - Walking the Kokoda track

Transcription:

New Zealand Memorial ANZAC Bridge Sydney Dedication 27 April 2008

New Zealand Consulate-General GPO Box 365 Sydney NSW 2001 E nzcgsydney@bigpond.com W www.nzembassy.com New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade Private Bag 18 901 Wellington New Zealand E enquiries@mfat.govt.nz W www.mfat.govt.nz ANZAC website hosted by New Zealand Government: www.anzac.govt.nz Cover photograph: New Zealand and Australian truck drivers lean on their over-turned vehicle during the Korean war. Australian War Memorial ISBN: 0-477-10208-5 Crown Copyright Reserved 2008

Foreword from the Prime Minister of New Zealand The dedication of a statue of a New Zealand World War One soldier on Sydney s ANZAC Bridge, forming a pair with the existing Australian soldier, is a deeply signifi cant event which symbolises the enduring strength of and mutual respect embodied in the ANZAC spirit. The bond between New Zealand and Australia is as close a relationship as can be found between countries anywhere in the world. It is underpinned by common values and extensive trans-tasman family links. New Zealand and Australia have a shared military history dating back to when both countries sent troops to the South African War. The ANZACs have since served side-by-side with bravery, distinction, courage, and mutual respect on many occasions, from Gallipoli and the Western Front to peacekeeping operations today. 1 The statues of the two soldiers offer a tribute to the sacrifi ce made by ANZAC servicemen and women. They provide a fi tting reminder to us all of the wider ANZAC tradition and the very close bond which exists to this day between New Zealand and Australia. Rt Hon Helen Clark Prime Minister

ANZAC soldiers occupying a trench on Table Top, Gallipoli, during the night of August 6, 1915, in preparation for the attack on Chunuk Bair. J C Read Collection, Alexander Turnbull Library miners prospecting for gold in the 1860s, unionists seeking improved conditions in the first decades of the 20th century, all moved east; shearers and recent British migrants seeking larger opportunities moved west. Ideas too moved both ways women s suffrage, the welfare state, the eight hour day, how to manage burgeoning immigration. New Zealanders read the Bulletin, Australians laughed at New Zealand cartoonists. For much of the 19th century there was one Australasia made up of seven colonies. For a few months in 1899 New Zealanders debated vigorously whether to join the new Australian Federation which was eventually established in 1901. In the end a sense that there would be no trading advantages, and an emerging New Zealand nationalism, swung the decision firmly against participation. The sheer fact of distance was also important the most commonly quoted observation was Sir John Hall s that the 1200 1915 miles separating the countries were 1200 arguments against federation. But this decision could not hide the fact that at the turn of the century Australia and New Zealand largely shared one trans-tasman culture and an Australasian set of values. Both European populations thought of themselves as colonists and 2 pioneers who were energetic, physically strong and healthy, 3 innovative, and practical, by comparison with the citizens of the mother country. Mates The special relationship between New Zealand and Australia goes back to their early decades of European settlement. New Zealand was the seaward frontier of New South Wales. Sydney provided many of the whalers, sealers and missionaries who were the first Europeans to set up homes in New Zealand, while Māori selling flax or grains in turn looked across the Tasman for their markets. New Zealand s first resident British official derived his authority from the Governor of New South Wales. When British rule was established with the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, people continued to move both ways across the Tasman farmers looking for new pastures for their flocks in the 1850s, Although the two societies had already participated together in war Australians had fought in the New Zealand Wars, New Zealanders joined the Australian states in sending contingents to the South African War it was the First World War which brought to consciousness the two societies common qualities and gave birth to the ANZAC spirit. On the steep slopes of Gallipoli and then in the muddy fields of the Western Front, New Zealanders and Australians came to hold each other in the highest respect and to recognise shared qualities toughness, bravery, initiative, and mateship. Each chose to commemorate ANZAC Day as a sacred moment. In the Second World War, New Zealanders and Australians served together once more in Greece, Crete and North Africa and in the air war over Europe. In over 60 years since then, the two countries have stood shoulder to shoulder in numerous conflicts, and post-conflict situations in Korea, Malaya, Borneo, Vietnam, East Timor, and Solomon Islands.

...Australians and New Zealanders are best mates. Few can doubt the special nature of the relationship, born of strong historical bonds and a shared struggle. In other ways, too, the brother and sisterhood of Kiwis and Aussies showed itself in the first half of the 20th century. New Zealanders enjoyed poems by Banjo Paterson, the comic strips of Bluey and Curly and the radio serial, Dad and Dave. Australians adopted New Zealand-bred horses such as Phar Lap as their own heroes. As each society became more independent of Britain in the post-war years, there was a new exchange of goods and customs. In trade the NAFTA (New Zealand-Australia Free Trade Agreement) of 1965 1941 become CER (Closer Economic Relationship) in 1983, and in 2004 both governments committed themselves to a Single Economic Market. As a result, New Zealanders now buy Queensland pineapples, and Australians buy wine from Marlborough, and 4 there is a highly prosperous economic relationship between 5 the two countries. In music and the entertainment industry there is a highly cooperative market. Greater contact between sports teams from both countries and the participation of Australian Above: Crete 1941. A happy ANZAC Bridge meeting of troops of Australian and New Zealand teams in each other s competitions has enriched Imperial Forces and the New The ANZAC Bridge was originally called the Glebe Island Bridge sporting codes in both countries. Free movement across the Zealand Expeditionary Forces on the island. Australian War Memorial when it was officially opened in 1995. It took five years to build Tasman underpins these sporting, business and family endeavours, at a cost of $A170m and is now an important and much admired and is itself an expression of the special nature of the relationship. Sydney landmark, as well as being a vital artery for traffic. This is not to say that New Zealand and Australia have become The eight-lane bridge carries the freeway across Johnstons Bay linking the central business district, the inner west suburbs and north Sydney. one community with identical values. The indigenous peoples of the two countries have very different traditions. The two landscapes, climates and ecologies are quite different Australia s dry red continent shares little with the wet and windy islands of New Zealand. The sheer contrast in the scale of the two countries makes for a large psychological difference; and each country has developed its own distinctive political systems and cultural emphases. Yet as history shows, when the chips are down, Australians and New Zealanders are best mates. Few can doubt the special nature of the relationship, born of strong historical bonds and a shared struggle. It is an elegant addition to a city already famous for one bridge spanning its harbour. Two diamond-shaped pylons, 120m tall and topped by the Australian and New Zealand flags, rise up from the bay to anchor the 126 steel cables that fan out to support the concrete deck. At 805 metres in length, it is one of the longest concrete cable-stayed bridges in the world. The ANZAC Bridge was renamed on 11 November 1998, the 80th anniversary of the end of the First World War, in honour of

1951 1971 6 7 Above: Australian and New Zealand Personnel at ANZAC Park, near forward defensive positions in Korea, October 1951. War History Collection, Alexander Turnbull Library the soldiers of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps who served so bravely together. At the time, New South Wales Premier Bob Carr said: ANZAC belongs to New Zealand as much as to Australia. It has done so ever since that Gallipoli dawn on 25 April 1915, and the landing of the Australian New Zealand Army Corps at ANZAC Cove, more than 12,000 miles from home. New Zealanders and Australians were together in Belgium, France, Palestine, North Africa, the Battle of Britain, Greece and Crete, El Alamein and in the Pacific, Korea, Malaya and Vietnam. So truly, this ANZAC Bridge crosses the Tasman. The partnership is marked by a New Zealand flag flying on top of one pylon, and an Australian flag on top of the other. A fourmetre tall bronze statue of an Australian ANZAC soldier was dedicated at the western end of the bridge on ANZAC Day in 2000. This Australian digger has his head bowed, his eyes following the Above: Nui Dat, South Vietnam. November 1971. Flags lowered for the last time marking more than fi ve years occupancy of the base by Australians and New Zealanders. Australian War Memorial barrel of his gun down to the ground where he stands on a handful of sand from Gallipoli. Two ANZAC Soldiers Now Standing Tall Together The Australian soldier at the western end of Sydney s ANZAC Bridge has had a lonely vigil for the past eight years, but now he has a comrade in arms a New Zealand soldier to stand sentry on the bridge with him. The new sculpture was unveiled on 27 April 2008, by New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark and New South Wales Premier Morris Iemma, with veterans from both countries present. It shows a proud Kiwi turning towards his ANZAC partner on the other side of the bridge. Both soldiers were sculpted by acclaimed artist Alan Somerville and each took about nine months to create.

Sculpting the soldier. New South Wales Road and Transport Authority These twin soldiers s in the heart of Australia s s largest city remind us of our close relationship and of the proud traditions we share. It s a fi tting tribute to the sacrifi ces made by ANZAC servicemen and women over more than 100 years. 8 9 The bronze statues are the same height about 4.2 metres although Somerville likes to joke that the New Zealand soldier is two inches taller because of his lemon squeezer hat. Creating the statues was no easy task. Each soldier is made up of about 20 different sections, which have to be welded together. The hands are separate, the head is separate and we have to put 50cm stainless steel pins into the thighs to give the sculpture extra strength, says Somerville. The plinth for each soldier is also the same although the plaque is a little different for the Kiwi ANZAC. It reads We Will Remember Them in both English and Māori. The New Zealand soldier was commissioned in 2007, as a joint initiative between the New Zealand and New South Wales governments. and acknowledge the sacrifices of our people alongside others, Helen Clark says. These twin soldiers in the heart of Australia s largest city remind us of our close relationship and of the proud traditions we share. They are fitting tribute to the sacrifices made by ANZAC servicemen and women over more than 100 years. Having created the digger statue in 2000, Alan Somerville was the obvious choice to also sculpt the second. Not only that, he is a true trans-tasman citizen. He was born in Dunedin, now lives in Sydney, and is a dual citizen of New Zealand and Australia. He has created many public statues in both New Zealand and Australia, and internationally, and has won many awards for his work. Through commemorative projects like this sculpture of the Kiwi soldier, New Zealand can project its unique national identity

Order of Service Opposite: Australian digger and ANZAC Bridge. New South Wales Department of Premier and Cabinet Master of Ceremonies Mr John Gatfi eld The ANZAC Guard march on Premier of New South Wales arrives General Salute for the Premier of New South Wales The Honourable Morris Iemma Prime Minister of New Zealand arrives General Salute for the Prime Minister of New Zealand The Right Honourable Helen Clark Welcome to Country and Māori Response Display of the New Zealand and Australian flags Two Australian Naval helicopters rise above the site displaying the New Zealand and Australian fl ags Address by the Premier of New South Wales The Honourable Morris Iemma Address by the Prime Minister of New Zealand The Right Honourable Helen Clark Dedication by New Zealand and Australian Chaplains 10 The Catafalque Party takes position 11 Wreath Laying The Premier of New South Wales The Prime Minister of New Zealand Ode President of the RNZRSA President of the New South Wales branch of the RSL Last Post Silence One minute s silence will be observed Flypast Flypast and handling display of aircraft (FA18 Hornet) of the Tactical Fighter Group, Royal Australian Air Force National Anthems of New Zealand and Australia The Catafalque Party dismounts General Salute to the Premier of New South Wales and the Prime Minister of New Zealand by the ANZAC Guard Ceremony concludes

12 Today Above: Australian Defence Force and New Zealand Defence Force personnel on duty in Timor Leste, July 2006. Australian Defence Force New Zealand National Anthem E Ihowā Atua, O ngā iwi mātou rā ta whakarangona; Me aroha noa Kia hua ko te pai; Kia tau tō atawhai; Manaakitia mai Aotearoa God of nations at Thy feet, In the bonds of love we meet, Hear our voices, we entreat, God defend our free land. Guard Pacifi c s triple star From the shafts of strife and war, Make her praises heard afar, God defend New Zealand. Australia National Anthem Australians all let us rejoice, For we are young and free; We ve golden soil and wealth for toil; Our home is girt by sea; Our land abounds in nature s gifts Of beauty rich and rare; In history s page, let every stage Advance Australia Fair. In joyful strains then let us sing, Advance Australia Fair.

Acknowledgements State Government of New South Wales Department of Premier and Cabinet Road and Transport Authority Department of Defence and Australian Defence Force Australian War Memorial Ministry for Culture and Heritage (Cultural Diplomacy International Programme) Veterans Affairs New Zealand Ministry of Defence and New Zealand Defence Force Alexander Turnbull Library