Kōrero: Voting rights

Polling place, 1890

Polling place, 1890

Reporting the favourable reception in a London newspaper of New Zealand's wider franchise, the Auckland Star said that one man, one vote ‘must sooner or later obtain recognition by every enlightened state ... human beings, not land or houses or bullion is the thing represented.’ (Auckland Star, 18 December, 1889, p. 4)

Newly enfranchised voters would find polling places in schools, shops, woolsheds, boarding houses, town halls, post offices, halls, courthouses, theatres, reading rooms and private homes. Oroua Downs homestead in Manawatū, photographed in 1888, was one of the private houses used in the 1890 election.

Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi

Palmerston North City Library
Reference: 2007N_Or1_RTL_0840

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Te tuhi tohutoro mō tēnei whārangi:

Neill Atkinson, 'Voting rights - Male suffrage', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/mi/photograph/36434/polling-place-1890 (accessed 26 April 2024)

He kōrero nā Neill Atkinson, i tāngia i te 20 Jun 2012, reviewed & revised 17 Feb 2015