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Kōrero: Royal honours system

Posthumous honour for a good Samaritan

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Posthumous honour for a good Samaritan

‘Who does that? Who dies for someone they don’t know?’ said the woman saved by 44-year-old Austin Hemmings. Hemmings died while rescuing her from a knife attack outside an Auckland office building in 2008. (‘Woman saved by Hemmings tells her story’, Stuff, http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/659454/Woman-saved-by-Hemmings-tells-her-story (last accessed 8 December 2011).)

His killer was sentenced to a minimum of 16 years in prison. Austin Hemmings’s widow Jenny, shown here with children Meghann, Gareth and Jessica, accepted Hemmings’s New Zealand Bravery Star, posthumously awarded in April 2011. The Bravery Star is New Zealand’s second highest award for bravery, given for outstanding bravery in situations of danger. Two other posthumous bravery awards were made in the same special honours list. Some honours can be granted posthumously, while others cannot.

Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi

New Zealand Herald

Reference: 270711NZHBPBRAVERY3.JPG

by Brett Phibbs

Permission of the New Zealand Herald must be obtained before any re-use of this image.

Ngā whakaahua me ngā rauemi katoa o tēnei kōrero

Me pēnei te tohu i te whārang

Mandy Wong, Royal honours system – Queen’s service, bravery and Antarctic honours, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/mi/photograph/35655/posthumous-honour-for-a-good-samaritan (accessed 4 June 2026).

He kōrero nā Mandy Wong, i tāngia i te 15 May 2012.