Story: Nelson region

Asbestos: Annie and Henry Chaffey (2nd of 3)

Asbestos: Annie and Henry Chaffey

Annie and Henry Chaffey – pictured here in 1945 – lived in huts around the upper Tākaka River valley from 1913, and after some years of moving about settled into Asbestos Cottage, which had been built in the 1890s by prospectors looking for asbestos. The pair lived a reclusive life. Henry was a prospector, and wrote letters trying to get the nearby asbestos deposits mined. They were worked on a small scale in the 1940s and 1950s, but were too low-grade and the country too rugged to make the cost of mining worthwhile. In 1951 Henry died in the snow with his boots on, aged 83, humping in supplies. In her grief, Annie tried to burn the down cottage herself included. Made to live with relatives in Timaru, she became deeply unhappy and after a couple of years took an overdose of sleeping pills.

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Alexander Turnbull Library
Reference: 1/2-092158-F

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How to cite this page:

Carl Walrond, 'Nelson region - Mining, quarrying and energy', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/photograph/28957/asbestos-annie-and-henry-chaffey (accessed 25 April 2024)

Story by Carl Walrond, updated 1 Aug 2015