- The funeral for聽is being held at the Blockhouse Bay Tennis Club at midday.
- His elderly father in Australia is viewing the service from a livestream.
- 聽said it was the perfect place for the service as it is聽
The last surviving family member of the highly regarded scientist killed in Blockhouse Bay was not be able to attend his funeral service today.
Stephen Thorpe is being remembered in a service at the place he 鈥渓ived and died鈥, the Blockhouse Bay Tennis Club.
His only surviving family, his elderly father Michael in Australia, is too frail to travel and was not at the funeral but was expected to view via a live stream.
Whau River Catchment Trust鈥檚 Gary Andrew鈥檚 voice broke in tears as he addressed Thorpe鈥檚 father directly.
鈥淲e all knew Stephen in different ways. But for Michael Thorpe, watching from Australia, he was a son.鈥
About 200 people are gathered on the tennis courts, with standing room only. Detective Inspector Glenn Baldwin, the policeman leading investigations into Thorpe鈥檚 homicide, is sitting at the back of the service.
The funeral for slain scientist Stephen Thorpe, held at the Blockhouse Bay Tennis Club. The Whau River Catchment Trust鈥檚 Gary Andrew is speaking. Photo / Dean Purcell
Thorpe鈥檚 coffin, made from cardboard, is adorned in ferns, flax and other wild flowers.
Andrew explained why the tennis courts had been chosen as a venue - it was Thorpe鈥檚 home.
鈥淗e was so needlessly and violently taken from us,鈥 Andrew said.
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鈥漌e need to acknowledge the nature of Stephen鈥檚 death. A violent death is unlike any other death. We can鈥檛 say things we normally would when they die.鈥
The service sheet for Stephen Thorpe's funeral which is being held at the Blockhouse Bay Tennis Club today.
鈥淭he amazing thing about Stephen is that he built and rebuilt his life after every setback.
鈥淗e became a highly respected member of an online community and he lived a happy and fulfilling life right until the end.
鈥淚鈥檓 going to miss you mate.鈥
Andrew said Thorpe was 鈥渘ot like anyone else you鈥檇 ever met鈥.
鈥淵ou have to understand him from the perspective of neurodiversity.
The funeral for slain scientist Stephen Thorpe, held at the Blockhouse Bay Tennis Club. Photo / Dean Purcell
鈥滺e had very few possessions. When we were in his flat, everything he owned fit into a small trundler. He was wanting of nothing. He was content. All he needed was his microscope.
鈥漇tephen only wanted to be in a lab somewhere with insects and entomologists.鈥
The service started with easy-listening live music, with Angelo D鈥橲ouza playing accordion arrangements of The Beatles鈥 Penny Lane, Let it Be and Here Comes the Sun.
Professor Jacqueline Beggs, of the University of Auckland, said Thorpe was 鈥渁 teacher in the truest sense鈥.
鈥漈o say that insects were his life is no exaggeration. Without his guidance, many of us would have had our specimens in the unknown category.
鈥滺is impact on our community is profound. His legacy will live on in the knowledge he shared. Stephen, your absence leaves a void that cannot be filled.鈥
Bevan Weir, of Landcare Research, said Thorpe would be memorialised in his contributions to iNaturalist.
Weir brought several graphs and charts showcasing Thorpe鈥檚 scientific work: 鈥淭his incredible breadth of knowledge is just one of the amazing things about him.鈥
Thorpe had 鈥渁n incredible scientific legacy鈥, Weir said.
The funeral for slain scientist Stephen Thorpe, held at the Blockhouse Bay Tennis Club. Photo / Dean Purcell
University colleague Corrine Watt also spoke of Thorpe鈥檚 skills and knowledge.
鈥漈he day before his death, we were planning another trip for him to finish our project. I know he would be distraught to have left it unfinished for me.
鈥滺is untimely death is a huge loss.鈥
Thorpe鈥檚 high school best friend, Craig Anglesea, said they bonded as outsiders in college.
鈥漇tephen had a tremendous impact on my life,鈥 Anglesea said.
鈥滺e was a very intelligent person, very focused, very opinionated.
鈥漇tephen was the rock I clung to, someone who was confident in himself and loved his life wilfully, by his own choice.
鈥淔or me, Stephen will always be part of my life. He was a beer-drinker, a hell-raiser, and he was my mate,鈥 Anglesea said.
The service ended after an hour and a half, with Thorpe鈥檚 coffin carried by a hearse on a short procession along the garden path he would take to work every day.
It then stopped 10m from where Thorpe was stabbed, and teary-eyed mourners laid flower tributes inside.
Funeral held where scientist 鈥榣ived and died鈥
Earlier Andrew told the Herald he sought permission from Thorpe鈥檚 father to hold the service.
Andrew said the location was important as it was where Thorpe 鈥渓ived and died鈥.
鈥淗e was basically part of the furniture there, and he died there, it is the only appropriate place for the funeral.鈥
Andrew said he enjoyed lots of 鈥渞obust arguments鈥 with Thorpe when they lived together through the pandemic.
He said he would 鈥渆njoy鈥 getting the last laugh today during his eulogy, and might even throw in some terminology Thorpe would have described as 鈥渨oke鈥.
Thorpe had bug species named after him
Thorpe was a highly regarded entomologist with a passion for seeking out and identifying bugs and plants.
He worked seven days a week out of the Whau River Catchment Trust鈥檚 offices at the club.
The scientist had at least nine species of bugs named after him.
Stephen Thorpe was an entomologist who had nine species of bugs named after him.
Thorpe also contributed some 12,000 insect specimens to the Auckland Museum, where he worked mainly as a volunteer throughout the 2000s.
鈥淗e had a prodigious memory, particularly for all the scientific literature about New Zealand beetles,鈥 said John Early, a former entomology curator at the museum.
鈥淗is death is tragic and untimely, not just for its horrific circumstances but also that his valuable contribution to New Zealand entomology is now ended.鈥
Police investigate the scene of a fatal stabbing at the Blockhouse Bay Tennis Club on Rathlin St. Photo / Dean Purcell.
Thorpe鈥檚 attacker lived locally, neighbours anxious
Residents of a 鈥渜uiet and safe鈥 suburb in central Auckland were terrified after learning Thorpe鈥檚 26-year-old attacker lived locally.
He appeared in the Auckland District Court on Thursday afternoon. Judge Hana Ellis remanded him in custody and transferred the matter to the High Court. Ellis granted the man, who did not enter a plea, interim name suppression.
Police were at a house belonging to people known to the man on Thursday afternoon. Neighbours told the Herald they had seen investigators trawling the property for any evidence since his arrest on Wednesday.
A former flatmate of the accused told the Herald the man rarely engaged with his housemates, preferring to keep to himself in his room.
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