Taranaki Province
Area
With an area of some 2,000,000 acres (8,100 km), New Plymouth Province was the smallest of the initial six provinces, and it was also the least populous. European settlement started in New Plymouth in 1841, which was the province's capital. For the first 30 years, European settlement did not extend many miles beyond New Plymouth.
History
At the beginning of the 19th century, a coastal fringe some 2 to 4 miles (3.2 to 6.4 km) deep was densely populated with Māori. Iwi from the Waikato region threatened these Ngāti Awa, and during the 1820s, many of the inhabitants left Taranaki. In 1832, Waikato iwi launched an assault with firearms, resulting in the remaining Ngāti Awa being killed or going into slavery apart from the Otaku pā in New Plymouth. When English emigrants arrived in 1841, they found deserted land.
The settlement of the province was organised by the Plymouth Company, a subsidiary of the New Zealand Company which was later absorbed into its parent company. Taranaki was chosen for the settlement by the surveyor Frederic Carrington, and New Plymouth was the only town founded in the country founded through organised settlement that lacked a natural harbour. Carrington argued that fertile land and natural harbours don't come together in New Zealand, and that the land is more important for the settlement, and an artificial harbour will later be affordable. He was present when the breakwater was built 40 years after New Plymouth had been founded.
Anniversary Day
New Zealand law provides an anniversary day for each province. Taranaki Anniversary Day is celebrated annually on the second Monday in March.
Superintendents
The Taranaki Province had four Superintendents:
No. | from | to | Superintendent |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 18 Jul 1853 | 13 Dec 1856 | Charles Brown |
2 | 3 Feb 1857 | Jun/Jul 1861 | George Cutfield |
Jun/Jul 1861 | 8 Aug 1865 | Charles Brown (2nd time) | |
3 | 7 Sep 1865 | 8 Sep 1869 | Henry Richmond |
4 | 2 Oct 1869 | 1 Jan 1877 | Frederic Carrington |
Legislation
No surviving legislation.
References
- ^ McLintock, A. H., ed. (22 April 2009) [First published in 1966]. "Province and Provincial Districts". An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage / Te Manatū Taonga. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ^ "Provinces 1848-77". Rulers.org. Retrieved 15 June 2010.