Kōrero: North Americans
Whārangi 5. Hononga, rauemi nō waho
Ētahi atu tūhononga, pae tukutuku hoki
The ‘American invasion’: American forces and the New Zealand people
This exhibition on the NZ History website examines the experiences of American soldiers in New Zealand during the Second World War, and their impact on New Zealand culture.
Canadian High Commission in Wellington, New Zealand
This is the site for the Canadian High Commission in New Zealand. It contains information about travel to Canada. trade and investment between Canada and New Zealand, and services for Canadians travelling or living in New Zealand.
Hocken Library bulletin
An article by George Griffiths, ‘From seals to social laboratory: 19th century American material in the Hocken Library,’ printed in the Hocken Library’s Welcome to the Hocken, bulletin 13 (September 1995).
United States Embassy in New Zealand
This is the site for the United States of America embassy in New Zealand. It contains information about the work of the embassy and news from America.
Ētahi whakaaro puaki, takenga
-
Lissington, M. P. New Zealand and the United
States, 1840–1944. Wellington: Government
Printer, 1972. -
McKinnon, Malcolm, ed. The American
connection. Wellington: Allen & Unwin,
1988. -
Phillips, Jock, ed. New Worlds? the
comparative history of New Zealand and the United
States. Wellington: Stout Research Centre,
1989. -
Phillips, Jock, and Ellen Ellis. Brief
encounter: American forces and the New Zealand
people, 1942–1945. Wellington: Historical
Branch, Dept of Internal Affairs, 1992. -
Trotter, Ann, ed. New Zealand, Canada and
the United States: the papers of the twenty-second
foreign policy school, 1987. Dunedin:
University Extension, University of Otago,
1987. -
Wood, Val. War brides. Auckland: Random
Century, 1991.
Me pēnei te tohu i te whārang
Nancy Swarbrick, North Americans, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/mi/story/22136/sources (accessed 4 June 2026).
He kōrero nā Nancy Swarbrick, i tāngia i te 4 March 2009, updated 1 August 2024.