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… Owen Stanley at the flag-raising of 1840, and was the first Pakeha to travel up the river Avon in 1843. Abner's mother …
Type: Biography
… male-dominated craft, a departure from the early 1900s when Pākehā wood-based crafts were popular amongst women. …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Crafts and applied arts
… Te Arawa leaders, politically savvy in both the Māori and Pākehā worlds, bringing new wealth to the tribe. After the …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Te Arawa
… for a time. However, the close links between Māori and Pākehā, forged by the marriage of John and Ruawahine, …
Type: Biography
… pigments for tattooing. Pāua ashtrays, used by Māori and Pakeha alike, came into their own after the 1950s. …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Shellfish
… spiritual and temporal, was accepted by both Māori and Pākehā. Even his strong autocratic tendencies were largely …
Type: Biography
… to family information, her first, to Arthur Black, a Pākehā, ended after a few months. Her second, on 30 May 1931 …
Type: Biography
… total population. In a 2010 quality-of-life survey, 11% of Pākehā, 18% of Māori and 28% of Pacific people said that …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Ngā mātua – Māori parenting
… The effect was catastrophic: relations between Māori and Pākehā were never to be the same again. Loss of land In 1853 …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Te Tau Ihu tribes
… city the pubs were more numerous. Within the first year of Pākehā settlers arriving in Wellington there were seven pubs …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Culture and recreation in the city
… generally only applied when Māori were in areas of major Pākehā settlement. Elsewhere, Māori traditional systems of …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Prisons
… C. Maling in the early 1860s. The pass was used by early Pakēhā travellers, but was regarded as too far north to give …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: West Coast places
… the government-assisted immigration scheme of the 1870s. Pākehā had replaced Māori as the largest ethnic group by …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Population change
… at present-day Linton military camp across the river. The Pākehā settlements of Kairanga, Kārere and Tiakitahuna …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Manawatū and Horowhenua places
… Dunedin (1910), which holds important early missionary and Pākehā settlement records, business archives and literary …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Archives
… were England and Europe (places of origin for most Pākehā New Zealanders), the Pacific Islands and Australia. …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Holidays
… in 1855 for a meeting of tribes to discuss land sales to Pākehā. Lake Rotorangi Artificial lake, 46 km long, formed …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Taranaki places
… (93,591) lived in the region. The Māori population before Pākehā settlement was probably only ever in the thousands. …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Nelson region
… This promised immunity from bullets, aiming to drive Pākehā from Māori land, and seeking support for the …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Ngāti Porou
… Māori, the song reached cult status amongst both Māori and Pākehā. Both ‘E ipo’ and ‘Poi e’ were composed by Ngoi …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Waiata hōu – contemporary Māori songs