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Battle of Featherston Street, Wellington, 1913

Image

The ‘Battle of Featherston Street’, Wellington, 5 November 1913.

Strike supporters clashed with more than 800 mounted special constables who were riding from their base at Buckle St to the wharves. The specials’ mission was to escort racehorses from Lambton station (near today’s Wellington railway station) to the wharves, from where they were to be shipped to Christchurch to compete in the New Zealand Cup meeting.

On Willis, Ghuznee and Dixon streets, stones were thrown at the specials, who in turn charged the crowds. The battle began in earnest on Featherston Street, where specials charged strikers. Pro-strike tram drivers tried to ram specials on horseback, and metal spikes and detonators were thrown at their horses’ feet. Eventually the specials broke through the strikers and regained control of the wharves. This was a decisive moment in the strike. From now on ‘scabs’ or ‘free labourers’ belonging to a new arbitrationist union could be brought on to the wharves to load and unload ships.

See more images of the 1913 strike in Wellington here (Flickr)

Credit

Main image:

Alexander Turnbull Library
Reference no: 1/2-160127-F
Photographer: Sydney Charles Smith
Permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand, Te Puna Matauranga o Aotearoa, must be obtained before any re-use of this image

Second image:

Auckland Libraries
Ref: 7-A10659
Sir George Grey Special Collections

How to cite this page

Battle of Featherston Street, Wellington, 1913, URL: https://nzhistory.govt.nz/media/photo/battle-featherston-street, (Manatū Taonga — Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated