In 1873 the
Canterbury Provincial Government endowed what was then known as
Canterbury College with land in the
Cass region to create a source of income. By the early 20th century, botanist
Leonard Cockayne felt the need for a high-country research station and approached
Charles Chilton, Professor of Biology at Canterbury College, and Geology lecturer
Robert Speight. The original site selected in 1908 was
Broken River, the terminus of the railway line from
Christchurch, after which passengers switched to coaches to cross
Arthur's Pass and reach the
West Coast. By 1910 the railroad had extended to the railway camp of Cass, so the Canterbury College Board selected 10 acres of land there adjacent to Lake Sarah as the site for a research station. In April 1910 £200 was allocated for a building, which was constructed by the
Public Works Department in 1912. It was March 1914 before the field station was used for its intended purpose, by Charles Chilton. The facility and surrounding areas were officially opened on 29 July 1914 as the Canterbury College Mountain Biological Station, and Chilton led the first field trip there with six students in November. In 1915
Charles E. Foweraker undertook the first Honours research project to be based at the field station. His photographs of the area are valuable sources of information for vegetation change over the succeeding century. Later that year, Chilton led two field excursions of women students to Cass, and published the first of seven "Notes from the Canterbury College Mountain Biological Station, Cass". He argued for the need for a completely fenced-off botanical reserve and setting up a station to observe the effects of
tussock burning, a common farming practice. (back) and students at the Biological Station circa 1920. Chilton's wife Elizabeth is possible second from right. In 1917 agricultural scientist
Frederick Hilgendorf installed a
rain gauge and set up small. fenced-off exclusion plots to observe the effects of sheep grazing on native vegetation. He also began an insect collection from Cass. Entomologist
Robert Tillyard visited Cass in 1920 to collect insects and described a new species of bush dragonfly
Uropetala chiltoni from the area, named after Chilton. By 1927 the field station had hosted 18 student field trips – typically four students, a leader and an assistant – and four visits by other scientific groups. A bridge across Grasmere Stream suitable for motor cars was built in 1934. By the 1930s Foweraker was leading longer and more extensive botanical collecting expeditions to Mount Horrible and the
Cass and
Hawdon riverbeds, and
Edward Percival was running 10-day advanced zoology field courses, which continued until 1945. In the 1950s
William Philipson began regular week-long trips for 2nd and 3rd year botany students, which focused on plant systematics and ecology. A modern automatic weather station was installed next to the new building in 1997, along with a freshwater ecology building next to Grasmere Stream and a set of artificial ponds. In 2001 management of the field station shifted from the Department of Plant and Microbial Sciences to Facilities Management. A track was built across the Sugarloaf Saddle in 2012 thanks to the help of the University Tramping Club and BioSoc, and a high elevation weather station, Sugarbaby, was installed on top of Mount Sugar Loaf the following year. On December 2–6, 2014, the University of Canterbury celebrated 100 years of teaching and research at Cass Field Station. File:Cass Field Station environs MRD 04.jpg|Weather station File:Grasmere Stream MRD 01.jpg|Grasmere Stream File:Cass Field Station 03.jpg|Artificial ponds File:Cass Field Trip MRD 03.jpg|Botany students on a field trip == Facilities ==