Trentham Military Camp | |
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Trentham, New Zealand | |
Coordinates | 41°08′37″S 175°02′09″E / 41.1435°S 175.0358°E |
Type | Military Camp |
Site information | |
Controlled by | New Zealand Defence Force |
Site history | |
In use | c.1914–present |
Trentham Military Camp is a New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) facility located in Trentham, Upper Hutt, near Wellington. Originally a New Zealand Army installation, it is now run by Defence and accommodates all three services. It also hosts Joint NZDF facilities including:
- Commander Joint Forces New Zealand
- Headquarters Joint Forces New Zealand (HQ JFNZ), Private Bag 900 or 2 Seddul Bahr Road.
- New Zealand Defence College (incorporating former Staff Colleges)
- Command Staff College
- NZDF Personnel Records, Archives & Medals
Elements of Army General Staff at Trentham Camp (including Messines Defence Centre) are:
- Logistic Executive (Log Exec)
- Human Resources Executive (HR Exec)- Military Secretary (MS) and Military Career Management (MCM)
- Capability Branch (Cap Br)
Units at Trentham Military Camp include:
- Trade Training School (TTS)
- Wellington Regional Support Centre (WRSC)
- 1st (New Zealand) Military Intelligence Company
- 1st (New Zealand) Military Police Company
- 1st (New Zealand) Explosive Ordnance Disposal Squadron
- HQ Coy, 5/7 RNZIR
- Joint Military Police Unit Headquarters
- 7th Battalion Band
- Logistics Command (Land)
Civilian police
Prior to 1981 (when the college moved to Porirua), the camp was also home to the Royal New Zealand Police College.
Defence Siding
From 1941 to 1954 there were several railway sidings in the Camp used for freight and for troop trains, with a shunting locomotive owned by the Army. Most of the tracks were removed in the 1970s. The siding was 0.53 km from Trentham Railway Station and 0.63 km from Heretaunga Railway Station. A second siding ran back to the Ministry of Works Depot, which was on the site formerly occupied by the former Central Institute of Technology campus.[1] The dates of opening and closing of the Trentham Camp station (a temporary stopping place) are given as 11/8/1942 to 9/2/1953.[2]
Barracks
The barracks are all associated with World War 1. This is appropriate because World War 1 saw the major development of Trentham Camp and thousands of soldiers trained there before they left for the battlefields of 1914–1918.
Armentières Barracks
Named after the French town of Armentières, which was utilised by the New Zealand Division as a rest area during World War 1.
Chailak Dere Barracks
Chailak Dere Barracks commemorates an action by the men of the Wellington Mounted Rifles on the night of 6/7 August 1915.
El Arish Barracks
Named after the town of el-ʻArīsh on the Sinai Peninsula which was occupied by the New Zealand Mounted Rifle Brigade in December 1916.
Helles Barracks
Named after Cape Helles on the Gallipoli Peninsula.
Jericho Barracks
Commemorates the town of Jericho in Palestine which the New Zealand Mounted Rifle Brigade passed through in 1918.
Le Quesnoy Barracks
Le Qesnoy Barracks are named after the French town of Le Quesnoy that the New Zealand Division Liberated on 5 November 1918.
Messines Barracks
Messines Barracks are named after the 7–14 June 1917 Battle.
Passechendaele Barracks
Passechendaele Barracks are Named after the 12 October - 10 November 1917 Battle which was the greatest disaster in New Zealand Military history.
Salonica Barrracks
Salonica Barracks are named after Salonica (modern Thessalonika), in North Eastern Greece which was the base of the 1st New Zealand Stationary Hospital during the Gallipoli Campaign.
Sinai Barracks
Sinai Barracks are named after the campaign in which he New Zealand Mounted Brigade fought against Turkey during the First World War.
Ypres Barracks
Ypres Barracks commemorates the series of battles fought around the Belgium town of Ypres during the First World War.
Marches
During World War I over 30,000 New Zealand soldiers marched between military camps at Trentham, Upper Hutt and Featherston via the Rimutaka Hill Road, in a three-day trek of 27 miles (43.5 km), There were 23 marches of 500 to 1800 men between September 1915 and April 1918, at the end of their training as reinforcements for the New Zealand Expeditionary Force.[3]
See also
References
- ↑ Parsons, David (2010). Wellington's Railway: Colonial Steam to Matangi. Wellington: New Zealand Railway & Locomotive Society. pp. 31, 110, 143, 194. ISBN 978-0-908573-88-2.
- ↑ Scoble, Juliet (2012). Names & Opening & Closing Dates of Railway Stations in New Zealand, 1863 to 2012. Wellington. p. 137.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ↑ Frances, Neil (2015). A Long, Long Trail. Masterton, New Zealand: Fraser Books. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-9922475-3-9.
- Weddell, Howard (2018). Trentham Camp and Upper Hutt's untold military history. Upper Hutt: Howard Weddell.
External links
- Headquarters Joint Forces New Zealand (HQ JFNZ)
- NZDF Personnel Records, Archives & Medals, with contact details
- NZDF Homepage
- New Zealand Army Homepage
- "Historic Trentham 1914-1917: booklet by Will Lawson". NZETC. 1917.
- Photo of Trentham Camp and Upper Hutt District WW I
- View of Trentham Camp 1939
- View of Trentham Camp 1939
- View of part of Trentham Camp WW II
- Soldiers marching at Trentham Camp 1939
- Inside a sleeping hut Trentham Camp WW II
- Camp Dental Hospital Surgery Trentham Camp 1943
- Entraining at Trentham 1943
- "Soldiers outside tents, Trentham Camp (photo, 1914)". National Library (NZ). 1914.
- "Rows of tents, Trentham Camp (photo, 1914)". National Library (NZ). 1943.
- "Woman's Army Auxiliary Corps at Trentham Camp (photo, 1943)". National Library (NZ). 1943.
- "Farewell Luncheon, Trentham Camp (photo, 1916)". National Library (NZ). 1916.