Both correspondents offered to send me
samples, and Al
did so at the time, however Royal Fail/Parcel Farce managed to lose the parcel,
and with real life intervening, as it does, both ends of the Earth - time
rather slid! From time to time Glenn would get in touch and let me know he
hadn't forgotten me, until a week or so before this Christmas just gone - when
he was emailing me for an address to send to!
We've had Pink, we've had not-Airfix, but also in 'The Parcel' from
Glenn, for the Blog, for you - loyal readers - to enjoy . . . were these chaps;
"Mint
on sprue!"; actually mint-on-runner, but some myths persist! This is
how the figures looked, in NZ Woolworths
in 1978, when you rushed in after seeing the TV slots and handed over your
NZ$2.00, six figures in an old, hollow-cast 'toy soldier' style, representing
NZ forces over the previous 100-years or so.
Set-out on the runner in chronological
order and we find a militiaman from the 1840-70 period, a dismounted
Mounted-rifleman from the Boer War, A WWI Anzac, and WWII Anzac, a Vietnam era (SLR
with 'Bren-pouches' and bum-roll) New Zealander and an NZ No.2-dress equivalent
on 'Staff-Parade' from the 1970's.
Following the original comments and a
return to PW's article (which is
deep in the garage somewhere) I had/have (?) spent the years thinking they were
sold from the/a/museum's gift shop, but with them is a flyer encouraging both
individuals and school classes to get behind the fundraising, and while the
groundbreaking and laying of 'foundation stone' had already occurred, it's
clear that these were a sort of citizens subscription to 'their' museum -
something probably very necessary in a country with a small population, and a
good idea as it gives 'the people' a sense of shared-ownership in the enterprise.
Text Reads;
'OPERATION HERITAGE'
LET'S KEEP OUR HERITAGE
l. MILITIA 1845 - 1872
Formed
into battalions as a result of the general
alarm in Auckland and elsewhere at Hone Heke’s
rebellion, the
first Militia Ordinance operated, as garrison
troops in their
home districts, frontier outposts and took part in
a number of
skirmishes with the Maoris.
2. BOER WAR 1899 - 1902
New
Zealand supplied ten mounted rifle contingents
comprising 6,500 officers and men, mostly
volunteers.
All ten
contingents saw action and earned a
fine reputation- in battle.
3. WORLD WAR ONE 1914 - 1918
New
Zealand troops were despatched to Egypt and
fought in the desparate campaign at Gallipoli.
Following
the return of the NZ Expeditionary Force to
Egypt it was reorganised as an infantry division
and a
mounted brigade.
The division
went to Francei while the mounted
brigade continued to operate in Palestine.
4. WORLD WAR TWO 1939 - 1945
In
September 1939 a special force was mobilised
which was to become the nucleus of the 2nd New
Zealand
Expeditionary Force.
A
Division was raised and served in Egypt, Libya,
Greece, Crete and participated in all the major
campaigns in
North Africa, moving to ltaly in 1943.
New
Zealand soldiers also served with distinction in
the Pacific theatre.
5. POST WORLD WAR 1946 - 1977
From
1951 the New Zealand Army has served in
Japan, Korea, Malaysia, South Vietnam and Thailand.
A New
Zealand Contingent (Jayforce) formed part of
the British Commonwealth Forces in Japan from 1946
- 1948.
6. TODAY'S SOLDIER.
Since
1845, the New Zealand soldier has earned a
distinguished reputation demonstrating skill,
ingenuity and
adaptability in action.
Today’s
soldier carries on this proud tradition and can
look forward to unlimited opportunities in a
professional Army.
I'm not going to bother with the entry-form
stuff to the right of the page, but the dates are worthy of note!
I will however transcribe the competition
details, as they hold some fascinating clues to some of the background, and
raise questions like where the TV slots (video clips?) are now, what were the
questions in the end and what happened to the winning dioramas, to wit; were
they ever publicised or displayed?
Text reads;
WOOLWORTHS
SOUTH PACIFIC TELEVISION
YOU
CAN WIN THESE FANTASTIC PRIZES!
1ST PRIZE:
Return
trip for family of four to Singapore, London and Copenhagen,
including accommodation.
A great way to fly
SINGAPORE AIRLINES
2ND PRIZE:
Asian
Affair Holiday for two - 15 days, including accommodation.
3RD PRIZE:
Holiday
for four at either Queenstown or Rotorua staying at b Vacation Hotels
SCHOOL PRIZE:
Hanimex
synch recorder and slide projector - value $425.
Plus 100 consolation prizes from Lincoln Industries
Games.
THE
COMPETITION
South
Pacific Television will screen six 60 second short sketches during the
weeks of March 20 to April 8, 1978 at times to be
announced later.
These
short programmes will relate to the six model soldiers enclosed with this
entry form, and contain clues that will help you to
complete your entry.
In each
sketch, a question will be asked which you must answer on this
entry form.
Remember,
it is important that you see all the sketches as they will provide
clues that will help you answer the questions.
Competition
closes April 14, 1978.
CLASS
PROJECT
1.
Construct a diorama of a battle involving the N.Z. Army using models from
the Operation Heritage soldier kit.
Details
on how to construct a diorama will be shown on the
“Hey, Hey, It's Andy” show.
2. Send
a photograph of the diorama together with a short story about the
battle to the address on the reverse side of this
entry form.
3.
Competition closes May 12, 1978, but entries postmarked on that day will be
accepted up to May 19, 1978.
CONDITIONS
OF ENTRY
1.All
entries will be judged by an independent body, decisions will be final and
no correspondence will be entered into.
2.
Entries must be on the official entry form, and will be judged on correctness,
neatness, and originality.
3. Proceeds
to the Army Memorial Museum Trust.
4. Prize
winners will be announced on South Pacific Television on Anzac Day,
April 25, 1978.
5.
Employees of South Pacific Television, their advertising agencies and their
immediate families are not eligible to enter this
contest.
The museum of-course; has a website here but seems remarkably lacking in details of/for these figures or the part
they played in its funding/construction, it may well be that they didn't raise
the cash hoped for (the prizes alone would have needed a lot of sales to pay
for - unless they were donated by the airlines/hotels/travel agents involved,
and while you only need to sell fifty sets to find NZ$100, equally (as we shall
see in a subsequent post) two dollars was a lot of money for six rather
inactive toy figures in 1978!
The eight figures off the runners and ready
for their participation in the diorama building, it's a hard one actually (the
competition parameters), given the breadth of the time period between the six
figures and their neutral posing.
The best thing to do probably, would be to
model an actual museum display, with the figures painted as mannequins and
placed in glass (clear plastic cut from blister-packs?) cases, or painted as
statues on plinths (from Lego?), or something like that.
The figures were issued in three colours'
the red rarer than the other two, we shall look at the olive-drab/deep-bronze
green ones next. Many thanks to Glenn Sibbald of New Zealand who sent not just
the set on the runner, but also a lose set to photograph.
He's still not worthy! He's still not
worthy! Under my tutelage the 'Berserker' has adopted a less-aggressive stance
in dealing with his sizing role, where these Kiwi figures are concerned!
Glenn has a few sets on the runners and
lose sets for anyone who needs them or would like them, eMail me
(maverickatlarge[at]hotmail[dot]com) in the first instance and I'll pass-on
your details.
1 comment:
Cheers Jan - tomorrow's is probably the more interesting of the three?
H
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