New Zealand Curling

 
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History of Curling in NZ PDF Print E-mail
Written by NZ Curling Association   
Tuesday, 30 November 1999 12:00

Curling in New Zealand was established in 1873, when Scottish immigrant Thomas Callender, the "father of New Zealand curling", formed the Dunedin curling club.

Curling quickly spread to Central Otago, and was a popular winter activity for the gold miners during the winter.

By 1900, there were 9 clubs, and the game was taking hold. The growth in curling was held back by the First World War, and a bonspiel was held in 1922 after an eight year lull.

With the game active again, participation was level in the 1920's, but experienced growth in the 1930s, including the first international match in 1934 as an Australian team toured New Zealand.

The Second World War put the brakes on the growth of the sport, but the end of the war and return of servicemen fuelled a growth period, the 1950s, when 10 new clubs were formed.

Steady growth continued through the 1960s and 1970s. In 1973, a party of 21 curlers and wives travelled on a tour to Scotland - the first curling tour made by New Zealanders. This marked the first time Kiwi curlers had ever seen a hack, or played on fast indoor ice.

The game continued through the 1980s in the traditional "crampit" style. In 1993, New Zealand joined the World Curling Federation, and legendary curler Keith Wendorf was dispatched by the WCF to New Zealand to teach "hack curling", the variant of the game most commonly played today for many local and all international games. The trophy played for in the Dunedin club's mid-season bonspiel is named the Wendorf Rock in his honour.

New Zealand first sent an international team to compete in an official WCF international competition (Pacific Championships) in 1991. New Zealand has competed every year since then.

In 1996, the Auckland Curling Club was formed, the first club on the North Island, and the first club to completely play from the hack.

In 1998, New Zealand won its first ever Pacific Championship, and New Zealand thus made its first ever appearance at a World Curling Championships at the 1999 Worlds in Saint John, Canada. The men repeated this feat in 2001, and recorded the first wins for a New Zealand team at World Championships level. 2000 saw not only the first National Senior Women's team compete at World Seniors, but also the first Junior Men's and Women's teams competing at the World Junior B Championships.

In a major milestone the New Zealand Men qualified for the 2006 Winter Olympic Games, although they did not manage to win a match at the Games.

While the Olympic Games looms in New Zealand's curling future, the past is both preserved and cherished, and traditions maintained, of the same outdoor game that Thomas Callender brought to New Zealand's shores over 125 years ago.

 

Clippings

 
paperspast_logo.gif Images from Papers Past courtesy
of the National Lbrary of NZ
national-library-nz-logo.gif
 

Initial meeting of the Dunedin Curling Club
The Star (Christchurch), 6 Dec 1873, page 2, column 5

Click to view original at Papers Past

First competition medal issued by the Royal Caledonian Curling Club
Otago Witness, 13 Feb 1875, page 15, column 5

Click to view original at Papers Past
 

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Newsflash

WCF newsletter - and have your say

The May 2012 newsletter from World Curling Federation President Kate Caithness is now available online to read or download.

The WCF also invites you to help shape the future of our sport, and wants to hear what you think about the rules of curling. WCF will be researching the possibility of changes to the rules which would enhance and improve the game.

WCF values all input and encourages all athletes, coaches, administrators, spectators and members of the media to get involved and have your say.

Lion Foundation provided a $32,000 grant for new stones to Auckland Curling
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