Harry Peters (mountaineer)
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28 April 1852
Mountaineer
Harry Peters | |
|---|---|
Harry Peters, standing far right, with a party of climbers on the summit of Mount Taranaki, 11 Feb 1892 | |
| Born | Peter Hinrik Peters 28 April 1852 Heide, Germany |
| Died | 9 May 1941 (aged 89) New Plymouth, New Zealand |
| Occupations | Farmer Mountaineer |
Harry Peters (28 April 1852 – 9 May 1941) was a German-born New Zealander, who was a mountaineer and helped to establish the main climbing route up Mount Taranaki. Born near Heide, Peters came to New Zealand in 1875. Within months of his arrival, he took up farming at Kaimiro in the Taranaki. His farm was on the slopes of Mount Taranaki and he first climbed the mountain in 1885, via a previously unused route. This became the popular route for ascending Mount Taranaki. From 1892 to 1898 he was the custodian of Tahurangi House, the permanent camp house that was established to serve as accommodation for climbers going up the mountain. He also served as a mountain guide, making nearly 90 ascents of Mount Taranaki until his retirement as custodian. For much of his later life, he was prominent in civic affairs in the region.
Harry Peters was born near Heide, in Holstein (now Schleswig-Holstein), Germany, to Johann Peters and his wife, Anna Catharina Elisabeth née Reinhold. His birth name was Peter Hinrik Peters and it was not until his arrival in July 1875 in New Zealand, as a crew member of the passenger ship Lammershagen, that he became known as Harry Peters. Few details are known of his life prior to arriving in New Zealand. Peters deserted from the Lammershagen soon after it docked at Wellington, following a dispute with one of the vessel's officers. He found employment at a farm nearby but after a few months travelled to the port of New Plymouth, in the Taranaki region, to work as a labourer in the fledgling town of Inglewood, which had recently been surveyed.[1]
After a few years Peters took up farming, establishing a homestead on a block of land at Kaimiro, on the slopes of Mount Taranaki, then known as Mount Egmont. By this time he was married with a young family. His wife, Auguste Peters née Schreck, was an immigrant to New Zealand who had also arrived in the country aboard the Lammershagen.[1]
