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Alfred Hamish Reed

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flow of manpower to the NZEF. After a short period of training at Trentham, a further, more intensive, programme of training commenced at Featherston Military Camp in the Wairarapa. With his strong Christian background, Reed found some aspects of military life difficult, particular the language and lurid storytelling that would occur in the camp's huts at night. He urged his fellow soldiers to avoid alcohol, blasphemy and to refrain from cursing. He even distributed a short tract to his hut mates suggesting that if they felt the need to curse, to substitute 'crimson' or 'purple' for swear words. Reed later recounted hearing a non-commissioned officer referring to a soldier as a 'crimson cow'.
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a preacher. Two years later, he took over as superintendent of the Sunday School, which had a roll of 250 children, with Belle keeping the accounts. Short of teaching materials, Reed began importing books and literature from suppliers in the United States. Initially this was for his own school but soon other churches in Dunedin showed interest and Reed started supplying them with excess material from his own orders. He and Belle soon expanded this into a nationwide mail order business.
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and began retailing and repairing typewriters. Despite some hiccups, he soon began building the business and took on staff. After a year in Dunedin, and having secured a payrise, Reed returned to Auckland and married Belle at Pitt Street Methodist Church on 28 January 1899. The couple immediately travelled to Dunedin where they rented a house and settled down to life together. They lived simply and quietly, doing most things together although Reed would indulge in long solitary walks.
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providing regular income in the interim. While the financial reward of his day job was appreciated, Reed's passion was religious education and he saw his mail order business as doing God's work. By 1911, turnover for the business, which they called Sunday School Supply Stores, had reached £1,000 a year. On reaching this milestone, Reed sold his typewriter business to focus solely on the mail order business.
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bedridden, with local doctors unable to diagnose the problem for 12 months. He was later sent to hospital in Auckland where infection of the femur bone was diagnosed. He stayed in hospital for a year, away from his parents who were unable to afford to visit him, and underwent three operations. He was eventually discharged in July 1890.
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Returning to live with his parents, Reed was conscious of the burden that the expense of his medical care had caused his parents and in light of this, he decided to start working on the kauri gum fields alongside his father rather than finish his schooling. The work was hard, involving the extraction
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church that was closer to their home on the grounds that it was too conformist. Alfred Reed attended Whangarei Primary School from early 1888 but was soon withdrawn from it in favour of another school, operated on a part-time basis. Later in the year, he severely injured his leg to the point of being
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Reed reported for duty on 21 September 1916, and was sent to Trentham Military Camp near Wellington for training. His contingent, the 21st Reinforcements, was the last group where all the recruits were volunteers. The New Zealand Government was to shortly introduced conscription to help maintain the
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Reed continued to work on developing the Dunedin branch, which would prove to be the only profitable office for the New Zealand Typewriter Company. The couple were also heavily involved in church life; Reed took charge of a Sunday School class at the Methodist Trinity Church and in 1898 qualified as
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At the typewriting school, he made the acquaintance of T. G. DeRenzy, the co-owner and manager of the New Zealand Typewriter Company, who at the end of the year offered Reed a job as a shorthand writer and message boy. He soon parted ways with his employer to take up an Auckland agency for Remington
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Sunday School Supply Stores provided a range of goods, from cards, badges, clocks, hymn sheets, blackboards and the like to religious games, as well as Bibles, tracts and testaments. Reed also launched into the book trade, supplying religious works for presentation to children as prizes. These were
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were turned down so he took the opportunity to take typewriter lessons. For accommodation, he boarded with a couple who lived on Karangahape Road and made the acquaintance of their daughter, Harriet Isabel Fisher. Like Reed, she and her parents were English immigrants who had settled in Auckland in
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In October 1897, Reed moved to Dunedin to start in his new role. In doing so he left behind a fiancée, having proposed to Belle earlier that year. The couple had decided Belle would stay in Auckland since they could not afford to marry. Reed quickly found suitable premises for the company's office
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The 21st Reinforcements were scheduled to depart overseas in early 1917 but in December 1916, Reed's shorthand skills were discovered and he was asked to volunteer for the headquarters staff at Featherston Camp. He declined, preferring to go on active duty aboard, but was overruled and ordered to
196:(NZEF) for service aboard. Assessed as sufficiently fit for overseas service, he and Belle sold the Sunday School Supply Stores business. This allowed him to clear the mortgage on the couple's residence, which they had purchased in 1901. Belle stayed on at the business, working for the new owner. 192:, New Zealand's part-time military reserve. While his business took up his working days, he trained in army techniques and weaponry. By 1916, with New Zealand soldiers now serving on the Western Front and in the Sinai and Palestine theatre of operations, Reed felt it his duty to volunteer for the 175:
In the meantime, DeRenzy wound up the New Zealand Typewriter Company but before doing so allowed Reed to purchase the Dunedin office on favourable terms. He and Belle continued to work on his mail order business, working out of a room at his office, with the sale and maintenance of typewriters
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sourced from local representatives of overseas publishing houses. He took up the New Zealand agency for teaching materials for Sunday school teachers produced by an English publisher, and also was the local agent for a company that purchased religious books as publishers' remainders.
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There are several memorials in Reed's memory: The A. H. Reed Memorial Kauri Park Scenic Reserve, near Whangārei, commemorates his association with the district, while there is a memorial plaque dedicated to him in Dunedin's Octagon.
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of gum from the ground and packing it. He also worked on the family's farmlet and would take occasional jobs cutting scrub or working on road construction. Realising he needed a skill to further himself, he decided to learn
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and moved his family to the area. Alfred Reed was educated at a small private school and then, from 1883, Maynard Road School. The family were all avid readers, and for Reed, books would prove to be a lifelong passion.
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while his family remained in Auckland. Elizabeth Reed supplemented the family's income through needlework. After several months, there was enough money to buy a block of land at Parahaki, to the east of
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report to the camp's headquarters. Reed was dissatisfied with his posting, seeing it as one that could be easily fulfilled by a medically unfit man while he should be doing his duty at the frontlines.
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Living conditions were crude and the family lived simply, the parents instilling a strong work ethic in their children. Unable to find a Baptist church to attend, the family went to a
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Typewriter Company but this proved short-lived. In June 1896, he returned to the New Zealand Typewriter Company. He soon progressed from doing shorthand work to travelling around the
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Captain Cook in New Zealand: Extracts from the Journals of Captain James Cook giving a full account in his own words of his adventures and discoveries in New Zealand
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By 1886, James Reed's brick business was failing and had to close. This prompted him to migrate with his family to New Zealand. His maternal uncle lived there, in
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By late 1895 Reed had become so proficient in shorthand he was sufficiently confident to go to Auckland to look for reporting work. Approaches made to the
69:, in England on 30 December 1875, the son of James William Reed and Elizabeth Reed. He was the second oldest of four children to parents who were devout 304:(MBE) for services in connexion with publication of historical and other New Zealand works. He was promoted to Commander of the same Order (CBE) in the 216:(later known as Reed Publishing (NZ) Ltd.), a leading publisher of New Zealand-related non-fiction and reference works, in association with his nephew 453: 1412: 332:
later that year. The publishing institution that he set up was eventually sold in 1983 to the Australian company Associated Book Publishers.
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and raised their children accordingly. His father James managed a brick field but in 1882 purchased his own brick business in
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Books and Boots: The Story of New Zealand Publisher, Writer and Long Distance Walker, Alfred Hamish Reed
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for the people of New Zealand. The trust has amassed a collection of rare books and manuscripts for the
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In 1938 Reed and his wife established the Alfred and Isabel and Marian Reed Trust for the promotion of
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Card distributed by AH Reed to people he met, especially on his long-distance walks, early 1960s
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Memorial plaque dedicated to Alfred Hamish Reed in Dunedin, on the Writers' Walk on the Octagon
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1885. Known to Reed as Belle, she was nine years older and a devout Wesleyan Methodist.
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The Friendly Road: On Foot through Otago, Canterbury, Westland and the Haast
260:(aged 87) and through Otago, Canterbury, Westland, and the Haast (aged 88). 273: 269: 220:. In 1932, he branched out as a publisher and in 1935 he became an author. 152: 97:
but James Reed struggled to find employment. He eventually found work as a
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Reed also undertook walking and mountain-climbing expeditions. He climbed
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Reed died at Dunedin on 15 January 1975, and his ashes were buried at
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Signboard at the entrance to A.H. Reed Memorial Kauri Park, Whangārei
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The House of Reed: Fifty Years of New Zealand Publishing 1907-1957
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The House of Reed 1907–1982: Great Days in New Zealand Publishing
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Reed entered the bookselling trade when he founded the firm of
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John Jones of Otago: Whaler, Coloniser, Shipowner, Merchant
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in April 1887. They promptly travelled north to settle in
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New Zealand Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
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On the outbreak of the First World War, Reed joined the
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From East Cape to Cape Egmont On Foot at Eighty-six
650:Further Maoriland Adventures of J. W. and E. Stack 444:The Story of Canterbury: Last Wakefield Settlement 110:and the family moved there in late December 1887. 1374: 537:From North Cape to Bluff: On Foot at Eighty-five 1428:New Zealand military personnel of World War I 1302:. Christchurch: Canterbury University Press. 1165:(3rd supplement). 15 June 1974. p. 6829. 384:Two Maoriland Adventurers: Marsden and Selwyn 627:The Happy Wanderer: A Kiwi on Foot 1915-1961 519:Heroes of Peace and War in Early New Zealand 378:Marsden of Maoriland: Pioneer and Peacemaker 18:For the American neoclassical composer, see 1221: 316:, for services to literature and culture. 1316: 1280: 1145:(Supplement). 1 January 1962. p. 40. 1103: 1091: 1079: 1064: 1052: 1040: 1028: 1016: 992: 965: 938: 923: 911: 899: 887: 872: 860: 848: 836: 824: 812: 797: 785: 773: 761: 749: 737: 725: 638:Early Maoriland Adventures of J. W. Stack 633:He also edited several books, including: 426:Farthest North: Afoot in Maoriland Byways 367:Reed wrote a number of books, including: 302:Member of the Order of the British Empire 1155: 1135: 1125:(Supplement). 4 June 1948. p. 3398. 1115: 644:More Maoriland Adventures of J. W. Stack 420:Farthest East: Afoot in Maoriland Byways 342: 334: 32: 24: 701:Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand 621:Ben and Eleanor Ben Farjeon and Dunedin 223: 1375: 1335: 1321:. Dunedin: University of Otago Press. 1004: 950: 609:The Gumdiggers: The Story of Kauri Gum 133: 1297: 1209: 1197: 977: 438:The Gumdigger: The Story of Kauri Gum 1413:Burials at Dunedin Northern Cemetery 1222:Julie Crean, ed. (24 October 2011). 662:With Anthony Trollope in New Zealand 615:Pakeha and Maori at War 1840 to 1870 603:Family Life in New Zealand 1880–1890 432:The Story of Otago; Age of Adventure 355:In 1997, Reed was inducted into the 693: 687: 319: 13: 414:Great Barrier: Isle of Enchantment 362: 183: 162: 159:, a challenge that Reed accepted. 14: 1449: 1356: 1338:Whare Raupo: The Reed Books Story 706:Ministry for Culture and Heritage 357:New Zealand Business Hall of Fame 1423:English emigrants to New Zealand 459:Everybody's Story of New Zealand 390:The Isabel Reed Bible Story Book 1393:New Zealand publishers (people) 1367:An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand 1246: 1215: 1169: 1149: 1129: 1109: 477:The Four Corners of New Zealand 263: 194:New Zealand Expeditionary Force 61:Alfred Hamish Reed was born at 1: 1418:People from Hayes, Hillingdon 1290: 1224:"AH Reed Memorial Kauri Park" 372:First New Zealand Christmases 310:1974 Queen's Birthday Honours 207: 56: 1403:New Zealand Knights Bachelor 591:A. H. Reed: An Autobiography 585:Sydney-Melbourne Footslogger 298:1948 King's Birthday Honours 272:, education, literature and 7: 1433:Businesspeople from Dunedin 1363:Reed, Alfred Hamish, M.B.E. 668: 10: 1454: 658:(1951) with Alexander Reed 561:The New Story of The Kauri 533:(1960) with John Alexander 503:(1957) with Alexander Reed 489:The Story of Early Dunedin 398:(1943) with Alexander Reed 386:(1939) with Alexander Reed 374:(1933) with Alexander Reed 291: 256:(aged 86), walked through 17: 507:Walks in Maoriland Byways 326:Dunedin Northern Cemetery 117:church. They rejected an 1340:. Auckland: Reed Books. 680: 543:Explorers of New Zealand 513:The Story of Hawke's Bay 408:The Story of New Zealand 278:Dunedin Public Libraries 254:East Cape to Cape Egmont 89:, the family arrived in 1438:New Zealand gum-diggers 1317:Dougherty, Ian (2005). 531:Historic Bay of Islands 525:The Story of Kauri Park 402:Greatheart of Maoriland 312:, Reed was appointed a 240:(aged 85), walked from 1336:McLean, Gavin (2007). 1298:Bohan, Edmund (2005). 1179:. Dunedin City Council 495:The Story of Northland 483:The Story of Northland 471:The Story of the Kauri 348: 340: 42:Sir Alfred Hamish Reed 38: 30: 1258:Business Hall of Fame 696:"Reed, Alfred Hamish" 346: 338: 306:1962 New Year Honours 300:Reed was appointed a 230:Mount Taranaki/Egmont 218:Alexander Wyclif Reed 36: 28: 1398:Writers from Dunedin 252:)(aged 85) and from 224:Walking and climbing 214:A. H. and A. W. Reed 1283:, pp. 203–207. 1234:on 12 February 2013 1177:"Cemeteries search" 555:Marlborough Journey 286:Southern Hemisphere 134:Working in Auckland 1162:The London Gazette 1142:The London Gazette 1122:The London Gazette 597:Historic Northland 465:Coromandel Holiday 349: 341: 140:New Zealand Herald 128:Pitman's shorthand 115:Wesleyan Methodist 39: 31: 1347:978-0-7900-1123-3 1094:, pp. 52–53. 926:, pp. 36–37. 902:, pp. 31–32. 839:, pp. 28–29. 815:, pp. 20–21. 694:Treanor, Pamela. 579:The Milford Track 573:Nelson Pilgrimage 190:Territorial Force 1445: 1351: 1332: 1313: 1284: 1278: 1269: 1268: 1266: 1264: 1254:"Past laureates" 1250: 1244: 1243: 1241: 1239: 1230:. 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Index

Alfred Reed


CBE
Hayes
Middlesex
Baptists
Walthamstow
Motueka
Wellington
Auckland
kauri gum
Northland
Whangārei
Wesleyan Methodist
Anglican
Pitman's shorthand
New Zealand Herald
Auckland Star
North Island
Dunedin
Territorial Force
New Zealand Expeditionary Force
A. H. and A. W. Reed
Alexander Wyclif Reed
Mount Taranaki/Egmont
Mount Ruapehu
Ngauruhoe
North Cape
Bluff

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