Fernlea farmyard, Port Levy

1900

Fernlea farmyard, Port Levy

1900

Richard Fleming (1819-1894) and family arrived on the Randolph in 1850 and took up land, calling their property Fernlea. Part of the original homestead can be seen in the centre of the photograph. Cheese was produced here and the chimney of the cheese factory can be seen. However, grass seed was found to be more profitable than cheese and Fleming was one of the farmers who pioneered the commercial cultivation of cocksfoot in Canterbury. His first harvest was in 1853-1854

Area: Banks Peninsula / Port Levy

Reference ID: CCL-Coll22-I00930

Uploaded by: Christchurch City Libraries

Copyright status: Out of copyright

This material has been provided for private study purposes (such as school projects, family and local history research) and any published reproduction (print or electronic) may infringe copyright law. Please contact Christchurch City Libraries if you have any questions relating to the use of this material or wish to order a hi resolution copy for commercial purposes. It is the responsibility of the user to obtain clearance from the copyright holder.

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you. Your comment has been saved and queued for moderation.

Report this entry

Please enter your details and we'll contact you for more information.

Thank you for your report

More from the same area

Steamer at Port Levy

Circa 1921

Passengers embarking or disembarking the steamer at Port Levy.

Boats out by Port Levy

6 February 2012

Colourful boats stand up to attention along the jetty.

Tūtehuarewa Hall

2000s

The establishment of the marae at Koukourarata and the building ...

The Maori pa at Port Levy, Banks Peninsula

1903

Tūtehuarewa marae at Koukourarata.

Splash!

September 2016

Child throwing rocks into the sea at Port Levy.

Search/Browse the collection