
I previously wrote about Charlie Hanson, the hermit of Moturekareka Island in the Hauraki Gulf. While researching him, I found reference to another recluse who lived there after Hanson…he was known as "Snow".
Clifford Crago Harris was born in Auckland 14th.Sept.1904, to Kate Isabel (née Noton) from England and Frank Harris of Ponsonby, who'd wed in 1896 (the NZ official records name him as Clifford George Harris).
NZ Electoral Rolls place him in the Auckland district of Mt.Roskill (1 Watling St.) in 1928, and in 1935 at 18 Oaklands Rd., Mt.Eden - still living in the family home with brothers Neville Crago, Ronald Crago and Stanley Crago plus a sister Valerie. I also found him in the NZ Army's WWII Nominal Rolls but, as the Cenotaph Database didn't have anything on him, I applied to the NZ Defence Force Archives for his Service Records. Meanwhile I found out more…




North Shore Times Advertiser (May 1979, a year after Harris' death) wrote that, "when recovered from his ordeal, he returned to Auckland and then chose to live the life of a hermit on Hanson's Island". The inference was that one was as a direct result of the other, but in fact he didn't move to the island until the mid-1950s, over two decades later. Between the shipwreck and the lonely existence of a hermit, there was a marriage and a world war...
The 1938 NZ Electoral Rolls find Clifford in Wellington North - ship's carpenter on the Union Steamship Co.'s vessel SS "Wairuna", serving with the Territorials, and courting.
In his WWII service records, when attested in 1940, #73333 Private Harris, Clifford Crago (36) was 5ft.5" tall, with fair hair and blue eyes. He was listed as a boat builder with his own business on Kawau Island. Initially the typed records said he was single, but there's a later hand-written amendment to 'married' – next-of-kin changed from his brother Stanley Crago Harris to his new wife Betty Harris of Main Road, Johnsonville near Wellington (he married sometime after July 1941: he's listed as single then).
Snow saw war service in the Pacific: in Fiji and the Solomon Islands Campaign with the 2nd.NZ Expeditionary Force 3rd.Div., Ammunition Repair Company. He received the 1939-45 Star, Pacific Star, Defence Medal, War Medal 1939-45, and NZ War Service Medal.
After the war, he moved back to Auckland, and bought a property there. In 1946, the Auckland High Court recorded an 'Application For Consent To Sale' from Alfred Amos Gray to Clifford Grago (sic) Harris. But soon after, he registered on the Electoral Rolls in Rodney District, north of Auckland (1946, 1949, 1954, 1957, 1963, 1969 and 1972) and Kaipara, Northland in 1978. There was probably more boatbuilding work in that area: he was again listed in 1949 as 'boatbuilder, Kawau Island'. But an intriguing question: what happened to his wife? I've found no further reference to Betty Harris at all.
In the mid 1950s Snow moved out to Motuora Island, working as a general hand for Roger and Betty Chamberlain who ran a 12-bed guesthouse there. They built him a cottage, and said he was a good worker - as long as they kept the booze away from him!

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Snow and the Rewa, 1957 |
Trish, whose comment on this blog's Hanson post first alerted me to Harris, said "as a kid, Snow taught me to scull a dinghy. We used to have races around the wreck (of the Rewa). We were even allowed up in his shack, and also his tree hut on top of the island. He used to row a bathtub to Kawau to get his pension - we often picked him up on his way, and towed his bathtub." A bathtub?! I trust this is merely an odd description of his old dinghy! Otherwise, as it's 5km over open waters, Snow was lucky to have survived as long as he did!
Being a legend to the yachties and people of the Gulf, it was easy for stories to spring up about Snow and, as time passed, these stories became fact. Take, for example, claims in the Sunday News after his death - that he won a Military Medal for bravery in WWII. Well, as you saw earlier, he DID win some military medals for service...but none were THE Military Medal (MM). It wrote that "he fled to the island after being jilted at the altar". As I said earlier, he definitely WAS married. It may not have lasted long - who knows? But his island settlement didn't happen for 10-15yrs after that.
NZ Herald called Harris "a right character with a heart of gold"..."a loner with a difference - he loved people", and would often engage visitors in animated chats. When alone, he had his transistor radio so he'd never miss a test match.
He kept good health, described in his later years as "tough, wiry, and fit as a fiddle...with the body of a younger man." He passed away in his sleep in his "well-ventilated shack" aged 73: NZ Herald says it was today in history, 25th.June 1978 (but Auckland Council Cemetery Database says 19 June with cremation 03 July). As no surviving relatives were found, his colleagues later sprinkled Snow's ashes across Moturekareka Bay...
So although Clifford Crago Harris chose to live on his own, he was not lonely…many still remember Snow with a smile, and call him their friend.
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"Snow" Harris: 1904-1978 |
14 comments:
What an adventure he had.
Had never heard of him, but you've kept him alive with your really interesting story!
Thank you so much for this, I've been searching for more info on Snow. I saw "up at Kawau Yacht Club" something about Snow having written a short book on his surviving the wreck in 33? Do you know anything about this or if it is true?
Thanks
No, I don't know anything about a book, but it wouldn't surprise me, given the adventure he had! I can't guarantee finding anything this many years later, but will start hunting and let you know if I uncover any details!
Glad you enjoyed the post.
:-)
The "bathtub" was actually a bathtub with 44 gallons drums attached. This would have been bet 1970-1973 I think.
Trish Costin
WOW!!! Thanks for that classic gem of information, Trish! What a sight to have seen!!!
i have a picture of snows hut, how do i send it to you?
Snow was a good friend of my grand parents, who bought the island off Charlie Hanson. My mother has a super 8 movie of Snow paddling around in his bathtub, many a fond memories from my early childhood
We used to visit snow in the early 70s on our way to mansion house
What an interesting character had to keep him away from the grog though he used to drink meths if I remember correctly
Always up for a chat and had his hut well set up
I don't see how you could row a bathtub supported by 2 x 44 gallon drums. The drag would be too much. How were the drums arranged Trish, and how do you know zis?
Hi. I have a photo of Snow and myself on our yacht Sheerwater (correct spelling), I must be about 3, so 1965.Will try to find it and send to you if interested. He sailed often with my grandfather Wally Elliott, I believe, and we always dropped in on the way to Kawau and took him with us for a sail and a drink at the Mansion House pub or to pick up his pension. I remember the top and bottom shacks and photos and newspapers on the walls.I remember dad telling me off for accepting a dollar note from Snow, the fantail one.Dad reckoned he drank a lot of meths which made him almost blind but he could still row to Kawau. I just stumbled across this sight looking for the Mizpah and Snow. RIP Snow.Mike Elliott
I wonder if it was Snow who we met once in Matiatia Bay, Waiheke. We called him Sinbad as he sailed into the bay on a raft of bits and pieces with a mast and sail..My Dad invited him aboard our boat Seamist and we made him a roast meal. Approx 1964
No, he wasn't lonely I don't think or only as much as he wanted to be. I have vague memories as a very young child of stopping at the island on our way to Kawau. The norm seemed to be to come bearing some food and a bottle of 'grog' for him. Being young I found this all very fascinating, and just a little scary, to be calling on 'The hermit that lived on the island', but everyone in my parents circle of yachting friends seemed to be very accepting of him and his choice to live the life he'd decided on. Thanks for the closure on his story and a part of my childhood memories of good times sailing those waters.
Hi there my name is Ken Sharp I first met Snow when cruising with Wally's Elliott he was our neighbour at Beach Avenue I would have been about 9 years old im now 76
A friend of mine, Nick Bravewolf lived on Motuora and Moturekareka as a child in the 1950s. He remembered Snow well.
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