183 Gallipoli Street, Leeston

The story

183 Gallipoli Street Leeston, street view 2018

Reason for the name

Gallipoli Street was named by the Ellesmere County Council in the early 1920s to commemorate and honour soldiers from the county who served in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force and died during the Gallipoli campaign of 1915. The street is adjacent to the majestic Leeston War Memorial Cenotaph that dominates the centre of High Street (the main thoroughfare of the town). The naming of the streets by the memorial was seen as reinforcing the memory of sacrifice and loss suffered by the community in the Great War. 

Gallipoli Street, Leeston is located in the centre of Leeston township in the Selwyn District, 43 kms south-west of Christchurch. It is approximately 400 metres in length, running in a south-east direction from the intersection with Selwyn Street, intersects with High Street, and ends at the intersection with Station Street. Gallipoli Street runs parallel to Messines Street.

Author: Wayne Stack – Historian

The origins of Gallipoli Street lie with the erection of the Leeston war memorial in 1924 to commemorate soldiers from Ellesmere County who lost their lives during the First World War. The district had a proud history of providing civilian-soldier volunteers for the defence of New Zealand. The Ellesmere Mounted Rifles and the    

Ellesmere Guards Volunteer Rifles were militia units established in the area circa 1898, from which a number of members had volunteered for overseas service in the New Zealand Contingents that served in South Africa during the Second Anglo-Boer War. The units were then incorporated into the Canterbury Mounted Rifles and Canterbury Infantry Regiments when the New Zealand Territorial Force was established in 1910. Numerous Territorial soldiers from the Ellesmere district volunteered to serve in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force when it was established at the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914. It was these initial volunteers, and those who followed in the reinforcement contingents in 1915, who fought during the Gallipoli campaign. The NZEF suffered 2779 fatal casualties while fighting at Gallipoli. The cenotaph and the naming of Gallipoli Street have provided the people of the district with a permanent focal point to remember and commemorate the sacrifice members of their community made during the campaign.         

Commemoration

There has not been a commemoration ceremony for this place.

Council records

Wayne Stack – Historian: wayne.stack@selwyn.govt.nz

Selwyn District Council

Rolleston (03) 347-2800 or

Darfield (03) 318-8338

(Council lines operate 24 hours, 7 days)

Fax: (03) 347-2799

2 Norman Kirk Drive, Rolleston 7614 
PO Box 90, Rolleston 7643 

www.selwyn.govt.nz | www.selwynlibraries.co.nz 
www.selwyn.getsready.net | m.selwyn.govt.nz

 


 

References

Wayne Stack, The New Zealand Expeditionary Force in World War 1 (Osprey, 2011)

Ellesmere Camera Club, Selwyn from the Hills to the Sea  (1997)