Macetown
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Macetown is an historic gold mining settlement in the Otago region of the South Island of New Zealand.
The town was founded in 1862 by three brothers: John, Charles and Harry Mace after whom the town came to be known. As the gold rush intensified, a group of tents soon grew into a town of 3,000 people with a school, a church and two hotels.
By 1916 the town was in decline, the school closed and the town has long since been deserted. Little remains of the original buildings but the old schoolmasters house and the bakehouse have been faithfully restored by the Department of Conservation.
Access to the town is via an unsealed road that heads up the steep sided Arrow gorge. This can be traversed on foot, or by mountain bike, horse or four wheel drive vehicles. The road crosses the Arrow river or its side creeks, 22 times and is not suitable for 2 wheel drive cars. The start of the road is found in the Arrowtown car park.
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Many Macetown residents migrated to Arrowtown in the early 1900's to work in Queenstown. The Andersons who ran the hotel and the Tallentires, the youngest son Thomas Tallentire later became the editor of the Queenstown Daily Mail in the early 1930's.