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… Hutt. At first softball drew players from working-class Pākehā communities, developing strong support bases in west …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Softball and baseball
… academic, technical and agricultural education to Maori and Pakeha children throughout Northland was watched closely by …
Type: Biography
… such names; many major traditional geographic features had Pākehā names imposed on them. However, their work laid the …
Type: Biography
… Tirikātene and Tūiti Makitānara. The returning officer, a Pākehā, gave his casting vote to Makitānara. However, …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Ngā māngai – Māori representation
… Mīria Pōmare was held in great affection by both Māori and Pākehā. She was very proud of the accomplishments of the …
Type: Biography
… Pratt believed that the treaty had been subverted by Pakeha, and considered the wars of the 1860s a tragedy. In …
Type: Biography
… the news in private if they wished. Trust in God Early Pākehā women settlers with religious faith often placed …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Pregnancy, birth and baby care
… conference agreed to allocate land in the King Country for Pākehā settlement, and to provide reserves, land for Māori …
Type: Biography
… of his wealth was gained at the expense of those, Maori and Pakeha, who were less commercially experienced. He was a …
Type: Biography
… Her mother, Mary Owen, was the daughter of John Owen, a Pākehā, and Mary Tamairaki, who was also of Moriori and …
Type: Biography
… participant in the Māori Sexuality Project said that ‘when Pakeha [Europeans] came we were made to believe that the way …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Sexualities
… a race believed to be dying out, and provided a vehicle for Pakeha scholars to indulge in ethnographic speculation on …
Type: Biography
… of western Southland. Māori and mining culture The Māori–Pākehā world of coastal Southland and Stewart Island has …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Southland region
… 20th century, and the considerable gap between Māori and Pākehā life expectancy narrowed rapidly after the Second …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Health and society
… In the late 19th century tuberculosis was a major killer of Pākeha New Zealanders, accounting for 10% of all deaths. …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Hospitals
… Eltham was named after a village in Greenwich, England. Pākehā settlers began occupying nearby rural land in the …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Taranaki places
… to protect his community from European influence, and Pākehā visitors were not welcomed. The prophet himself was …
Type: Biography
… the 1860s, and by the 20th century were common among both Pākehā and Māori. In the 1910s dresses, which had been worn …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Marriage and partnering
… traditionally had separate roles in unpaid domestic work in Pākehā New Zealand culture. Men stayed out of the kitchen …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Unpaid domestic work
… themselves to their heart’s content.’ 2 In the 19th century Pākehā girls came under social pressure to play quieter, …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Children’s play