St Peter's Church
Church Street, Queenstown
The foundations of the Anglican or Episcopalian Church in the
Wakatipu were laid by the first settler William Gilbert Rees, who
established a sheep station with its buildings located on the
shores of Queenstown Bay in 1861. Rees was a devout Anglican and
held regular services which were attended by the handful of men and
one woman who worked for him.
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Gold
Gold in large quantities was discovered near Lawrence, Central
Otago, in the same year Rees settled in Queenstown, and subsequent
discoveries were made in 1862, first in the Clyde and Cromwell area
and then in the Arrow River near the present day Arrowtown. Late in
1862 two of Rees' own workmen found extremely rich gold in the
Shotover River at Arthur's Point five kilometers from the station
homestead.
Almost overnight thousands of miners flocked into the area and a
large bustling town soon surrounded Rees' station buildings. It put
an end to the peace and tranquility of the area and eventually led
to Rees leaving the district in 1867. From the time gold was
discovered until he left the area Rees took a prominent part in the
affairs of the new town and besides providing the essential food
supplies for the early miners, was involved in many public and
private enterprises.
Establishment of the Church
Among the early arrivals in the town was Richmond Beetham who was
Resident Magistrate. He was a Lay Reader and very soon a small
party of Anglicans with
Rees and Beetham as their leaders had established an Anglican
community and
were holding Church services.
The visit of Bishop Harper in March 1863 no doubt quickened the
interest of the Anglicans and soon plans were in hand to build a
Church on the present site for
which arrangements had been made to purchase from the Provincial
Government.
Timber from the head of the Lake was used in the construction and
the cost was largely financed by advances from some of the
parishioners. There was a major setback in June when a storm badly
damaged the partly built Church, but the determination of the
congregation saw the building completed in July 1863.
First Vicar
Services and Sunday School continued on a regular basis taken by
lay people and it, was not until early 1869, a Vicar, the Rev'd
Richard Coffee, was appointed. Besides the pastoral care of
Queenstown and Arrowtown Communities, the Vicar had to travel by
foot and horseback over dangerous mountain tracks to minister to
the scattered flock in remote mining settlements. It involved many
weary miles, in conditions ranging from the extreme heat of summer
to the ice and snow of winter. To accommodate the Vicar and his
family, a home was built and part of this building is still in use
today as the Parish Centre. Over the years as the congregation
increased, several additions were made to the Church building, the
final one in 1906. At the same time as this extension was made, the
present pipe organ was purchased second hand from All Saints,
Dunedin. Its origin is not known but it is probably of English
manufacture and was first installed in All Saints Church in 1874.
In the previous year the hall in Earl Street was built. Two
donations, one of the land, and the other of £250 to erect the
building, both from parishioners, made this possible.
The New Church
The present Church was built in 1932 and being free from debt was
consecrated by Bishop Richards, Bishop of Dunedin. The Church was
designed by J. McDowall Smith of Dunedin, modelled on a the
traditional lines of the English parish church using Gothic
details. The exterior walls were faced with greywacke stone
obtained from the lake edge on the park peninsula. Funds to build
the Church came largely from three main sources, all legacies. The
largest of £1500 was made in 1911 by Thomas Hicks to erect a Church
in stone or concrete. Thomas Hicks, an early settler found wealth
first, as a gold miner and then in business. In 1927 £300 came
front Mr A.D. Lubeckie who had owned a business in the town in its
early days and had been an office-bearer in the early church. In
the same year £100 came from the estate of the first Vicar, the
Rev'd Richard Coffee. As the large legacy by Thomas Hicks had made
the new Church possible, the Lych-gate was erected by the
parishioners in memory of this generous benefactor.
The old wooden Church was given to the neighboring parish of
Dunstan. It was dismantled, taken to Omakau and re-erected. The
delightful old building is still in use serving the people of
Omakau. It is named after St. Mary the Virgin.
St. Peter's Church contains some beautiful items of furniture, the
most noteworthy being, the carved Eagle Lectern, the work of a
Chinese man named Ah Tong, given in 1874. The two stained glass
windows complement a beautiful building. The one over the altar
dedicated to the memory of those parishioners who lost their lives
in the second World War, depicts 'the Call of St Peter. The
memorial to those parishioners who lost their lives in the first
World War, takes the form of a plaque situated in the nave near the
Vestry door, The window over the Font is a memorial to the Warren
family and depicts the story of the Good Shepherd.

The Wakatipu Parish serves the Wakatipu Basin, including
Arrowtown and Queenstown, the Lake Stations and Glenorchy, 50
kilometers away at the head of the lake. It is part of the Diocese
of Dunedin with its Bishop and Cathedral located in that city.