It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)
Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat
With respect mate, but how old are you?
I'm sure there's nothing accessible (readily, anyway) now. But 50 years ago , things were different.
I doubt any recollections later than the early 60s are worth anything, after that everything was sealed off.
NZ in the early stages of WW2 was very scared, North Head would quite certainly have been fortified against an invasion. And with more thna antique guns.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Not much really. A bunch of kids in the fifties (I was born and brought up on the shore, and had rellies at Narrow Neck).
Like all kids, getting into places we should not have.
Climbed down the cliff face (it was over the sea , wouldn't have been much of a dare if it wasn't). Came down to this small shelf bit , and found it had a tunnel mouth into the hillside. "Go on, dare y'. I'm not scared. Just uh, Mum will be cross if I get dirty. Yah yah yah". So of course we had to go on in.
The entrance was semi fallen in (I think earth had fallen from above), but we climbed over it. Narrow, only ever had been narrow, about wide enough for a grown man to go through .
Inside, was a tunnel.
We came back later with candles and a torch, and went further in. Tunnels, rooms (not huge, about the size of a large room in a house, or smaller)
Found some stairs, up and down, but not beside each other (ie if you went down one flight the flight down to the next lower level was in a different place).
Probably concrete floors and walls, but very dirty. Piles of rubbish (old crates and stuff, but all empty as far as we could see), broken timber here and there, mostly in corners, as if they'd been dumped there when the room was cleared out.
We thought we heard voices and noises once or twice but that might be boyish imaginations working overtime.
None of the places we found seemed to have an exit to the outside.
There were steel doors in there, some closed (we couldn't open them , but we were small kids in the dark); some ajar (we could push a few of those more open); and some open.
We went back a few more times, furthest we went was about a half hours walk, in a vaguely straight line .
Some of the rooms had had shelves along the walls.
It was pretty smelly.
Looked for the entrance some years later as a teenager. Though I saw where it was, but I was not so keen then on scrambling around on cliff faces, and there was no way to get a girl down there, so there didn't seem much point.
Couldn't tell you what direction it all ran in, it's pretty hard to keep oriented underground.
I do know that the Navy (or Army?) were still 'in residence' on the Head, you couldn't go there then. We climbed along the cliffs from Cheltenham.
Once the Navy left (maybe 1960 something), I remmeber going up there to look around, but there was no sign of any tunnels or anything, even less than nowdays.
There was a big flat area with steel mushrooms across it (ventilators for an underground room), can't remmeber if that was Mt Victoria or North head. Quite a large area.
EDIT You quite definately cannot access what we found as kids from any of the publically accesible areas nowdays.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Cheers Ixion. Trying to find information on North Head is not easy, and unfortunately those in the know are getting long in the tooth or dead.
Mushrooms are on Mt Vic...
I remember seeing a lookout point on the seaward cliff of North Head.
North head has the better public tunnels, but I am certainly interested to venture deeper if it is possible. Would be good to try and map the tunnels, and use some decent powered torches/search lights to illuminate things.
KiwiBitcher
where opinion holds more weight than fact.
It's better to not pass and know that you could have than to pass and find out that you can't. Wait for the straight.
Actually, it appears that the DoC investigation picked up from an abandoned joint project between the government and the army in 1990 that had to be abandoned when the army pulled out after 4 weeks. The government (and DoC) refused to proceed with deep tunnelling without the Army, claiming fears of ancient ordnance. The DoC investigation was confined to archeological studies (ie, surface stuff).
That there are, or once were, tunnel complexes there is , IMHO, quite certain. I have the knowledge of what I saw, and reports of numerous other people. Moreover, it is simple common sense that there would have been a support complex for the batteries. You don't just put in gun batteries and then leave them to it.
In the event of an invasion the gun crews would have been sealed up, under bombardment, perhaps for days.(there would have been more gun emplacements than you see nowdays - with modern guns).
They would need to be supplied with orders, stores, ammo, food. Wounded would need to be evacuated, and reliefs supplied. Only an utter idiot would not make covered provison for that.
And there would have been radio rooms, map rooms, store rooms.
There's nothing unusual about this, it's just standard fortification stuff. Sydney's own North Head had a similar complex (though theirs is admitted).
In the event, we never had to fight. After the battles of the Coral Sea and Midway , it was obvious that the Japs were unlikely to make it this far, and interest in fortification waned. But , until then, the NZ military assumed that they would have to fight for King and Country. And, hopefully do a less yellow bellied effort of it than that consummate coward General Percival in Singapore, and his equally gutless mate Admiral Sommerville (one of the very few RN commanders to run away from the enemy !). They would have been guilty of gross negligence if they had NOT prepared extensive fortifications to support the Dominion's largest city and chief naval base.
How much of it remains now is another matter. And I doubt that there would be anything in there of interest, other than to archeologists , who can become orgasmic over an old button. And any records are probably still classified.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Funny you should mention that.........I have just had a long chat with my father who is one of New Zealand's leading Philatelic historians. He has letters and communications from troops stationed at north head during the second world war. His recollection includes a book that was scripted about ten years ago with information pertinent to the tunnels. In a nut shell the theory [supported by various sources] has ascertained that indeed tunnels did exist-big tunnels-lots of tunnels......and the main reason the government are keen to keep the whole thing on the QT is undoubtedly unstable armaments and/or the tunnels.
I shall be seeing Dad next Saturday and will question him further, checking out his philatelic evidence will also be illuminating.
The hunt is now on for this 'book' if anyone can help finding/sourcing historical documents I would be most appreciative
I think (IMHO) that the chance of there being any ammunition down there is so close to zero that we would be better off worrying about that meteor.
The Army and navy are most anal about ammunition. It's very important to them, and they keep very close tabs on it. Things like motorbikes, general stores, aeroplanes, pouufff, who cares: but ammo, that they always deal with.
Any ordnance that was under there will have been taken out and moved, destroyed, or dumped at sea (the latter far the most likely).
There might be a few buttons down there thoug, if that's what turns you on
The government reluctance to admit anything is just the usual "don't let's rock the boat" syndrome.
Suppose someone DID prove there were tunnels and such like down there. Can you imagine the fuss? OMG - What if the mountain falls down. OMG what about property values. OMG how can you be SURE there aren't atom bombs down there WE'RE ALL GOING TO BE BLOWN UP. OMG think of the children.
Just think of the H&S implications? And the Resource managemnt Act problems.
Much better to deny everything.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
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