Inventory for John Logan Campbell Papers MS-51 Auckland Museum

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Inventory for John Logan Campbell Papers MS-51 Auckland Museum Inventory for John Logan Campbell Papers MS‐51 Auckland Museum Library Prepared by: Christina Troup, 1966/7; reconfigured by Mary Donald, 2005‐2013; amended and edited by Bruce Ralston, 2014‐ Date prepared: 26 May 2018. The collection currently known as the John Logan Campbell Papers (MS‐51) consists of five separate collections: 1. John Logan Campbell’s personal papers and his business enterprises ‐ these reflect both business and social history from the 1840s to 1910. There is also a section containing papers of wife Emma and daughter Winifred. 2. Cornwall Park Trust Board. Records. Cornwall Park management covering the period 1902 ‐ 1930s. 3. Winifred Humphreys (nee Campbell). Papers, 1910 ‐ 1930s. 4. Russell Stone. Photocopies of documents, a single original letter and donated from other sources. 5. Sir Colin Campbell. Includes JLC’s bible. Size 6.5 linear metres Date range 1806‐1975, primarily 1840s‐1930s Physical description Holograph Printed Plans Architectural drawings Photographs Provenance The Cornwall Park Trust Board deposited the first two collections in 1957. Winifred Humphrey’s papers were gifted from the Alexander Turnbull Library in the early 1960s. May 26, 2018 Professor Russell Stone and Sir Colin Campbell gifted the remainder in 1975. Earlier archival practice clumped like material; hence the collections are catalogued under the one manuscript number – MS‐51. One of the advantages of this ‘clumping’ was to facilitate use; it was easy to add to existing inventories. However, it is current archival practice to maintain the integrity of individual collections through provenance. Today collections are held in their own right and linked through catalogues, indices and finding aids. General description of each collection Title: John Logan Campbell and family (folder 1‐274, 319‐332) Contents: This should be considered a family archive. It contains Sir John Logan Campbell’s (JLC) personal papers (approximately 40%); his business papers (approximately 40%) and also an extensive collection of letters belonging to his wife Emma Campbell, daughter Winifred and other family members (approximately 20%). Acquisition: Placed on deposit, by the Cornwall Park Trustees in 1957. The collection remains the property of the Trust. Size: 5.55 linear metres Research Value: A rich source of business and entrepreneurial history of the greater Auckland area, genealogy and family history, and JLC as an Auckland benefactor. There is also a strong collection of women’s papers, exceedingly rich in social history – a rare resource. These present a unique collection of particular interest to women’s studies and social historians. Title: Cornwall Park Trust (folders 275‐318) Contents: Papers relating to the administration and development of Cornwall Park 1910 – 1952. Includes maps and plans and papers relating to lease of land, development of the park and the building on the obelisk. Acquisition: Deposited in 1967 by the Trust Board. Size: 45cm linear Research Value: Reflecting Sir John’s ongoing contribution to Auckland and the people of New Zealand, this collection is of particular interest to researchers of Cornwall Park, One Tree Hill and JLC. Title: Winifred Humphreys (folders 333‐346) Contents: Letters, personal and family papers belonging to Winifred Humphries, daughter of Emma and John Logan Campbell. It contains a number of letters from her parents and correspondence with her financial adviser after her parent’s death and family information, May 26, 2018 Acquisition: Gift by Alexander Turnbull Library. Date and details not yet determined (pre 1967). Size: 40cm Research Value: A strong collection of women’s papers, rich in social history, especially when coupled with the John Logan Campbell and Family collection. Title: Russell Cyril James Stone (folders 347, 349) Contents: A collection of papers (mainly photocopies) of documents either held by Sir Colin Campbell or located by Russell Stone, in the course of his research/study. Also Campbell’s bible gifted by Colin Campbell and associated letter. Acquisition: Gifted by Prof Russell Stone, 1975 Size: 4cm Title: Sir Colin Campbell, 8th Bt of Aberuchill and Kilbryde (folders 348, 350) Contents: Campbell’s Bible and associated letter, plus photocopy of holograph written by JLC in his last years. Acquisition: Gifted by Sir Colin Campbell, 1975 Size: 5cm Finding aids This inventory is descriptive primarily to a folder or volume level. Work continues on item level description that will be added in time. A collection level record is available in the Museum Library’s catalogue, along with a pdf copy of this inventory. Definitions ‘Board’ means the Cornwall Park Trust Board as trustees for the Sir John Logan Campbell Residuary Estate ‘Museum Library’ means the library of Auckland War Memorial Museum ‘Museum Librarian’ means the manager of the Museum Library ‘Open’ means the item’s condition has been assessed as suitable for handling by researchers in the normal manner ‘Restricted’ means the item’s condition has been assessed as not suitable for general handling, and may be accessed after review by the Museum Librarian who will consider the purpose of and importance to the research. ‘Closed’ means the item’s condition has been assessed as not robust enough for any handling other than what is involved to digitise it. No access by staff or researchers. Access May 26, 2018 Each folder / item of the collection has been assessed for condition. Condition essentially determines what can be used. Each folder / item has been classified as ‘Open’, ‘Restricted’ or ‘Closed’. The Cornwall Park Trust Board places the responsibility for access to the collection with the Museum Librarian. The Board continues its role to make the collection more accessible, especially by providing alternative formats for public access to items in poor condition. The Museum Librarian uses his/her professional knowledge and experience to assess applications for access. In general, access will be approved to ‘Open’ material. This inventory indicates on an item‐by‐item case what is available for public access and how it can be accessed. Many restricted and closed items have been digitised and can be viewed on a computer in the Museum Library Reading Room, or by contacting Library staff. Open Access to ‘Open’ material, or items accessible in a digital format, will be provided according to Museum Library practice and Rules. Restricted Researchers make application to the Museum Librarian for access to items in the collection that are ‘Restricted’. Library staff will assess the physical condition of individual items for handling. Items may then be provided for use by researchers under direction of staff. Closed In some instances there is already a digital alternative available. Requested items may be proposed to the Board for digital imaging. A record is maintained of items accessed by researchers. This forms the basis of an annual report to the Board from Library staff. May 26, 2018 Biographical R. C. J. Stone. 'Campbell, John Logan', from the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 6-Jun-2013 John Logan Campbell is said to have been born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on 3 November 1817, the only son of John Campbell and his wife, Catherine Logan, of Ayrshire. His father, as a younger son of Sir James Campbell, fourth baronet of Aberuchill and Kilbryde, had been obliged to make his own way. So did John Logan, or Logan as he was more generally known, and he like his father studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh. Just before graduating MD he decided not to practise in his homeland, but to go to the antipodes backed by £1,000 (which his father had provided) and try his hand at sheepfarming. He left Greenock for Australia on 3 July 1839 as surgeon on an emigrant ship, the Palmyra. After that voyage he never again formally practised medicine. But neither did he take up sheepfarming. Of that ambition he was soon cured when he made an inland tour of New South Wales during a drought stricken summer. Instead, in March 1840, he left on the Lady Lilford for New Zealand. On 13 April 1840 Campbell joined forces at Herekino on the Coromandel Peninsula with William Brown, a Scottish lawyer whom he had befriended on the Palmyra. After some three months together as guests of Ngati Tama-Te- Ra on the Coromandel coast, they sailed to Motukorea, an island at the mouth of the Waitemata Harbour. On this island, which they bought from Maori owners for a few goods, they waited, confident that the capital of the colony would be established on the nearby Tamaki isthmus. In Poenamo Campbell recalled that the partners had 'one fixed determination, and that was to become purchasers of town lots in the new capital and settle down there, acting as very small landsharks.' While on the island their ambitions widened. They decided to abandon 'quill-driving and pill-making' and become traders in the new capital, Auckland. On 21 December 1840 they began operations as Auckland's first merchant firm, Brown and Campbell, when Campbell pitched his tent on the edge of the small bay, at the foot of present day Queen Street. At the first Crown land auction held in the capital, on 19 April 1841, the partners bought an allotment beside Shortland Crescent, then the main thoroughfare. To the rear of this allotment they built for Brown and his wife a cottage of pit sawn kauri. (This dwelling, Acacia Cottage, survives as Auckland's oldest house, in Cornwall Park to which it was shifted in 1920.) On their street frontage the partners put up a two-storeyed warehouse, from which they conducted their business as general merchants (with Maori trade particularly profitable), auctioneers, shipping and commission agents, and land speculators. During the 1840s Auckland grew from a handful of tents and huts to a township of over 8,000 people.
Recommended publications
  • Pioneering History
    New Zealand Journal of History, 36, 1 (2002) Chris Hilliard Pioneering History NEGOTIATING PAKEHA COLLECTIVE MEMORY IN THE LATE NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURIES* IN APRIL 1884 Thomas Hocken stood before a group of nearly 40 men who had gathered to establish the Early History Society of Otago. Hocken was known by his contemporaries as a 'gentleman who had always taken a great interest' in New Zealand's history.1 On this occasion he gave a speech designed to rouse interest in the foundation of Pakeha New Zealand: 'Whatever his nationality, the pioneer delights to record, and his successors to hand down, the minutest incidents of early history'. He hoped that the story of Pakeha origins, symbolized by the arrival of the immigrant ships Tory, Cuba, Wild Watcli, John Wicklijfe, Randolph and Cressy, would become 'as complete and full of interest' as the accounts of Maori or white American origins (with their well-known immigrant vessels the Arawa and Tainui or the Mayflower). He urged his audience to emulate the Historic Society of New York in 'raising from oblivion a thousand interesting details connected with the settlement... which but for such timely efforts must have been irrevocably lost.'2 Another founding member, the Rev. Dr D.M. Stuart, also spoke with a sense of urgency: 'For years he had advocated the formation of such a society'. His friend — old settler Mr Cutten — had recently died, taking much information on early Otago with him. However, J. Hyde Harris outdid both Hocken and Stuart with a remarkably long-standing intention to gather Otago's foundational history.
    [Show full text]
  • REFERENCE LIST: 10 (4) Legat, Nicola
    REFERENCE LIST: 10 (4) Legat, Nicola. "South - the Endurance of the Old, the Shock of the New." Auckland Metro 5, no. 52 (1985): 60-75. Roger, W. "Six Months in Another Town." Auckland Metro 40 (1984): 155-70. ———. "West - in Struggle Country, Battlers Still Triumph." Auckland Metro 5, no. 52 (1985): 88-99. Young, C. "Newmarket." Auckland Metro 38 (1984): 118-27. 1 General works (21) "Auckland in the 80s." Metro 100 (1989): 106-211. "City of the Commonwealth: Auckland." New Commonwealth 46 (1968): 117-19. "In Suburbia: Objectively Speaking - and Subjectively - the Best Suburbs in Auckland - the Verdict." Metro 81 (1988): 60-75. "Joshua Thorp's Impressions of the Town of Auckland in 1857." Journal of the Auckland Historical Society 35 (1979): 1-8. "Photogeography: The Growth of a City: Auckland 1840-1950." New Zealand Geographer 6, no. 2 (1950): 190-97. "What’s Really Going On." Metro 79 (1988): 61-95. Armstrong, Richard Warwick. "Auckland in 1896: An Urban Geography." M.A. thesis (Geography), Auckland University College, 1958. Elphick, J. "Culture in a Colonial Setting: Auckland in the Early 1870s." New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies 10 (1974): 1-14. Elphick, Judith Mary. "Auckland, 1870-74: A Social Portrait." M.A. thesis (History), University of Auckland, 1974. Fowlds, George M. "Historical Oddments." Journal of the Auckland Historical Society 4 (1964): 35. Halstead, E.H. "Greater Auckland." M.A. thesis (Geography), Auckland University College, 1934. Le Roy, A.E. "A Little Boy's Memory of Auckland, 1895 to Early 1900." Auckland-Waikato Historical Journal 51 (1987): 1-6. Morton, Harry.
    [Show full text]
  • For the Children – History of AKA 1908-2016
    FOR THE CHILDREN A HISTORY OF THE AUCKLAND KINDERGARTEN ASSOCIATION 1908 – 2016 BY TANIA MACE TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements ...................................................................................................... 1 Introduction ................................................................................................................. 3 A History of the AKA ..................................................................................................... 3 The Pre-Kindergarten Era in New Zealand ............................................................................. 3 Froebel’s Kindergarten ......................................................................................................... 3 Early Kindergartens in New Zealand ...................................................................................... 5 The Establishment and Early Years of the AKA ....................................................................... 6 Further Progress .................................................................................................................13 Tough Times ......................................................................................................................19 A Time of Growth ...............................................................................................................21 Suburban Expansion and the Spread of the AKA ...................................................................26 Meeting the Needs of Changing Suburbs ..............................................................................27
    [Show full text]
  • James Macandrew of Otago Slippery Jim Or a Leader Staunch and True?
    JAMES MACANDREW OF OTAGO SLIPPERY JIM OR A LEADER STAUNCH AND TRUE? BY RODERICK JOHN BUNCE A thesis submitted to Victoria University of Wellington in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Victoria University of Wellington 2013 iii ABSTRACT James Macandrew, a Scotsman who migrated to Dunedin in 1851, was variously a businessman, twice Superintendent of Otago Province, an imprisoned bankrupt and a Minister of the Crown. He was an active participant in provincial and colonial politics for 36 years and was associated with most of the major political events in New Zealand during that time. Macandrew was a passionate and persuasive advocate for the speedy development of New Zealand’s infrastructure to stimulate the expansion of settlement. He initiated a steamer service between New Zealand and Australia in 1858 but was bankrupt by 1860. While Superintendent of Otago in 1860 and 1867–76 he was able to advance major harbour, transport and educational projects. As Minister of Public Works in George Grey’s Ministry from 1878–79 he promoted an extensive expansion of the country’s railway system. In Parliament, he was a staunch advocate of easier access to land for all settlers, and a promoter of liberal social legislation which was enacted a decade later by the Seddon Government. His life was interwoven with three influential settlers, Edward Gibbon Wakefield, Julius Vogel and George Grey, who variously dominated the political landscape. Macandrew has been portrayed as an opportunist who exploited these relationships, but this study will demonstrate that while he often served these men as a subordinate, as a mentor he influenced their political beliefs and behaviour.
    [Show full text]
  • 116 New Zealand Journal of History, 35, 1 (2001) It Is to Be Hoped That
    116 New Zealand Journal of History, 35, 1 (2001) It is to be hoped that essay collections on other topics may take a similarly broad perspective. BRONWYN DALLEY History Group, Ministry of Culture and Heritage Wellington The Rich List: Wealth and Enterprise in New Zealand 1820-2000. By Graeme Hunt. Reed Books, Auckland, 322 pp. NZ price: $34.99. ISBN 0-7900-0740-1. NAMING NEW ZEALAND'S wealthy always causes a stir. National Business Review editor-at-large and The Rich List author, Graeme Hunt, claims no Rich List has been published without protests from Methodist ministers, objections from those listed at their supposed wealth, or even complaints from a more immodest bunch who felt they should have been listed. But The Rich List in book form goes further than a biographical sketch of names and business interests. Beginning with some of New Zealand's early colonists, Hunt traces the development of enterprise in New Zealand and those who created the wealth of business. Hunt divides 1820-2000 into six periods and from his research creates his own Rich Lists, listing the top ten individuals/families and their main sources of wealth for 1840, 1855, 1876, 1906, 1936, 1966, 1987, 1997 and 2000. The influences in each period are not new — the early shippers and whalers prior to 1840, followed by traders, merchants and runholders until the establishment of an infrastructure to support manufacturing and development towards the end of the nineteenth century. This in turn followed in the twentieth century with the creation of the welfare state and deregulated economy of the mid-1980s.
    [Show full text]
  • Future Auckland
    FUTURE AUCKLAND EDUCATION KIT AUCKLAND MUSEUM AUCKLAND CITY Auckland Museum Te Papa Whakahiku C ontents Contents page Introduction to the Resource 02 Why Study the City's Future? 02 Exhibit Your Work at the Auckland Museum 03 Teacher Background 04 The First People of Auckland 04 The Early Days of Auckland 04 Auckland War Memorial Museum 07 Auckland City Council 09 Population of Auckland City 10 Future Trends and Options 11 Curriculum Links 12 Level 2 Pre and Post-Visit Activities 12 Level 3 Pre and Post-Visit Activities 14 Level 4 Pre and Post-Visit Activities 15 Level 5 Pre and Post-Visit Activities 17 Activity Sheets 20 Museum Trails 39 MUSEUM ACTIVITIES March 30 - May 28 'Future Auckland' an inter- active display of possible futures. Venue: Treasures & Tales Discovery Centre. June 1 - July 31 'Future Auckland - Student Vision' a display of student's work. Venue: Treasures & Tales Discovery Centre. Museum Trail of Auckland’s Past. Venue: Auckland 1866 and Natural History Galleries. HOW DO YOU MAKE A BOOKING? Booking before your visit is essential and ensures you have the centre to yourself (depending on the size of your group), or are sharing it with another group of similar age. Book early. Phone: (09) 306 7040 Auckland Museum 1 Introduction to the Resource Intro It is difficult to consider the future with- Why Study the duction out first contemplating how the past has City's Future? shaped our present, be it attitudes, sys- In order to make decisions affecting our tems or environment. future, it is vital to consider the alterna- tives and choices that are available.
    [Show full text]
  • Quarterly of the Auckland City Art Gallery Number 49/March 1971 Auckland City Art Gallery Quarterly Number 49 / March 1971
    Quarterly of the Auckland City Art Gallery Number 49/March 1971 Auckland City Art Gallery Quarterly Number 49 / March 1971 GEORGE RICHMOND Sir George Grey 1854 conte Introduction The Gallery's First Eighty Years Gil Docking Ross Fraser The celebrations marking the centenary of the Declaration WHEN IN THE EARLY EIGHTIES Sir George Grey offered of Auckland as a City provide us with an opportunity to to present his collection of books, pictures and curios to the survey the history of the City's own art gallery, opened only City, the Council determined to erect a suitable building to seventeen years after Auckland was raised to city status. serve both as the Auckland Public Library and an Art In this special issue of the Quarterly we declare our indebt- Gallery for the housing of the Grey and other collections. edness to the founders of the City Art Gallery and to the Founded in 1880, the Library had begun its days in the host of people who have dedicated their gifts, skills and old Mechanics' Institute premises in Chancery Street (now energy to the gallery. Courthouse Lane). The Mechanics' Institute, established in The seventeenth of April 1971 marks the virtual comple- 1842, filled an important function in Auckland during the tion of the first stage of redevelopment. It has been a thirty-eight years of its existence, supplying a circulating complex task of nearly three years: made possible by the library for its members, lectures and classes for the general decision of the Edmiston Trust Board in 1967 to finance the community, and a venue for meetings.
    [Show full text]
  • Mapping the Networks of Ownership and Distribution of Rare Books in Special Collections at the University of Auckland General Library
    Mapping the networks of ownership and distribution of rare books in Special Collections at the University of Auckland General Library. by Jo Birks Submitted to the School of Information Management, Victoria University of Wellington in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Information Studies June 2014 Abstract The extent and research potential of provenance evidence in rare books in Special Collections at the University of Auckland General Library is largely uncharted territory. This project helps fill that gap by examining the provenance evidence, such as inscriptions, bookplates and stamps, in some of those rare books to identify any networks or patterns in their ownership history and distribution. A purposive sample of 291 pre-1851 volumes on New Zealand and Pacific-related travel and exploration was examined for provenance evidence within a qualitative framework and an historical case study design. Taking a subset of those books, which were bequeathed to the Library by Alfred Kidd (1851-1917), the project then examined other works from his bequest to further explore the scope of provenance evidence. The project demonstrated the value of treating books as artefacts, exposing a wealth of provenance evidence and providing snapshots of the ownership and distribution histories of some volumes. Overall, 71 percent of the sample contained evidence for identifiable agents: 88 former owners, 14 booksellers, one auction house and nine book binders. The project also discussed lesser-known New Zealand book collectors who merit further study, including Alfred Kidd, Sir George Fowlds, Arthur Chappell and Allan North. Further provenance research into this collection and the provenance- related cataloguing practices in New Zealand libraries would generate additional useful insights.
    [Show full text]
  • Exotic Careers
    THE UNIVERSIT Y OF AUCKL AND ALUMNI MAGAZINE | Spring 2007 Exotic careers: Young alumnae on the global stage Working with DHBs to deliver better health care Team New Zealand’s fitness trainer Transforming theology In this issue . Letters to the Editor 4 Ingenio – The University of Auckland alumni magazine University news Spring 2007 ISSN 1176-211X New Business School 5 Editor: Tess Redgrave Centre launched in Beijing 6 Photography: Godfrey Boehnke Advertising manager: Don Wilson Celebrating 125 years 7 Design/production: Ingrid Atvars 5 Proof reading: Jocelyn Prasad, Helen Borne Features Editorial contact details Ingenio Global careers 8 Communications and Marketing The University of Auckland Delivering better health 10 Private Bag 92 019 Auckland 1142, New Zealand Top young scientists 14 Level 10, Fisher Building 18 Waterloo Quadrant, Auckland From the uni gym 16 Telephone: 64 9 373 7599 ext 84149 Facsimile: 64 9 373 7047 Benefactor from Nazi Germany 18 email: [email protected] www.auckland.ac.nz/ingenio Mobilising for change 20 10 How alumni keep in touch Opinion: An unsettled coastline? 23 To ensure that you continue to receive Ingenio, and to subscribe to @auckland, Dem chicken bones 24 the University’s email newsletter for alumni and friends, please update your details at: Animal specialist 25 www.alumni.auckland.ac.nz/update Alumni Relations Office Tale of two ski huts 26 The University of Auckland 19A Princes Street, Private Bag 92019 Theologian of “transformation” 28 Auckland 1142, New Zealand Telephone: 64 9 373 7599 ext 88723 University history 30 email: [email protected] www.alumni.auckland.ac.nz Cover image courtesy of Rosena Sammi.
    [Show full text]
  • Dames in New Zealand: Gender, Representation And
    Dames in New Zealand: Gender, Representation and the Royal Honours System, 1917-2000 A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in History in the University of Canterbury by Karen Fox University of Canterbury 2005 Contents Abstract List of Figures ii Abbreviations iii Acknowledgements v Introduction 1 Chapter One: 28 An elite male institution: reproducing British honours in New Zealand Chapter Two: 58 In her own right: feminism, ideas of femininity and titles for women Chapter Three: 89 The work of dames and knights: exceptional women and traditional images of the feminine Chapter Four: 119 The work of dames and knights: traditional patterns in honours and non­ traditional work for women Conclusion 148 Appendix One: 166 Honours awarded in New Zealand, 1917-2000 Appendix Two: 174 Database of titular honours, 1917-2000 Bibliography 210 19 MAY Z005 Abstract The New Zealand royal honours system, as a colonial reproduction of an elite British system with a white male norm, has been largely overlooked in all fields of scholarship. Yet, as a state expression of what is valued in society, honours provide a window into shifts in society. This study of dames and knights is undertaken in the context of the changes in the lives of New Zealand women in the twentieth century. Situated in a changing and shifting environment, the honours system has itself changed, influenced by the ebb and flow of the feminist movement, the decline of imperial and aristocratic forces, and New Zealand's evolving independence and identity. At the same time, the system has been in some respects static, slow to respond to charges of being an imperial anachronism, and, despite some change in what areas of service titles were granted for, remaining a gendered space focused on the traditionally male-dominated fields of politics, law and commerce.
    [Show full text]
  • Olesen's Building (Former)
    Olesen’s Building (former) 237-241 Manukau Road, Epsom Heritage Assessment PREPARED FOR Auckland Council Job # 2016-124 | March 2017 1.0 Purpose The purpose of this document is to consider the place located at 237-241 Manukau Road, Epsom, Auckland against the criteria for evaluation of historic heritage in the Auckland Unitary Plan, Operative in Part version. The document has been prepared by Salmond Reed Architects Ltd on the specific instructions of their client, Auckland Council. It is solely for the use of Auckland Council for the purpose it is intended, in accordance with the agreed scope of work. 2.0 Identification 237-241 Manukau Road, Epsom Site address Auckland Legal description and Certificate of Lot 2 DP 53250 Title identifier CT 37A / 255 Easting 1758217.46, Northing NZTM grid 5916420.31, Longitude 174.775450, reference Latitude -36.884936 Ownership Ching Hsiang Liu and Fu-Mei Yeh Auckland Unitary Plan Business Mixed Zone Existing Epsom War Memorial Arch [corner scheduled Manukau and Ranfurly Road] ID # 02732, item(s) Category B Additional controls Not applicable NZHPT listing Not listed with Heritage New Zealand details Pouhere Taonga Pre-1900 site No, the building does not predate 1900 (HPA Section and has no identified archaeological 2a(i) and 2b) values CHI reference/s No recorded CHI number at present NZAA site record number/s No recorded NZAA number at present Olesen’s Building, 237-241 Manukau Road Epsom | Heritage Assessment 2 3.0 Constraints This evaluation does not include consideration of: • the archaeological values of the site; and • the importance of the place to mana whenua • condition or structural integrity • the building interiors The evaluation is based on a research summary by historian, Lisa J Truttman, additional information provided by Council and on a visual inspection of the place from Manukau Road, undertaken on 18 January 2017.
    [Show full text]
  • W Aika to Law Review Taumauri
    W AIKA TO LAW REVIEW TAUMAURI VOLUME9 2001 CONTENTS Some Human Rights Issues Ron Dame Silvia Cartwright Conditional Gifts and Freedom of Testation: Time for a Review? Noel Cox 24 Great Elucidations: The Interpretation of Revenue Statutes in New Zealand Thomas Gibbons 63 No Rights Without Responsibilities? Third Way and Global Human Rights Perspectives on Citizenship Paul Havemann 75 The Extensive Powers of the Commissioner of Inland Revenue in Assessing and Collecting Tax Debts Joel Manyam 91 Henry Greathead Rex Mason QC CMG: An Outstanding Law Reformer Derek Round 131 Close Corporations in South Africa: A Viable Option for New Zealand Small Business Corporate Law? Michael Spisto and Helen Samujh 153 EEO for MiioriWomen in Maori Organisations Linda TeAho 187 Reading Hate Speech from the Bottom in Aotearoa: Subjectivity, Empathy, Cultural Difference Catherine Lane West-Newman 231 Waikato Law School's Bicultural Vision- Anei Te Huarahi Hei Wero I A Tatou Katoa Leah Whiu 265 Book Reviews Joel Manyam, Brenda Midson, Stephanie Milroy, Sue Tappenden 293 The McCaw Lewis Chapman Advocacy Contest Anton Usher 315 Editor: Professor Peter Spiller Editorial Committee: Peter Spiller, Wendy Ball, Radha D'Souza, David Gendall, AI Gillespie, Paul Havemann, Anna Kingsbury, Brenda Midson, Stephanie Milroy, and Gay Morgan. The Waikato Law Review is published annually by the Waikato University School of Law. Subscription to the Review costs $20 per year (plus postage for overseas subscribers); and advertising space is available at a cost of $200 for a full page or $100 for a half page. Back numbers are available. Communications should be addressed to: The Editor Waikato Law Review School of Law Waikato University Private Bag 3105 Hamilton New Zealand North American readers should obtain subscriptions direct from the North American agents: Wm W Gaunt & Sons Inc 3011 Gulf Drive Holmes Beach Florida 34217-2199 USA This issue may be cited as (2001) 9 Waikato Law Review.
    [Show full text]