Rawene

Rawene
Rawene
Coordinates: 35°23′46″S 173°30′18″E / 35.39611°S 173.50500°E / -35.39611; 173.50500Coordinates: 35°23′46″S 173°30′18″E / 35.39611°S 173.50500°E / -35.39611; 173.50500
Country New Zealand
Region Northland Region
District Far North District
Population (2006)
  Total 438

Rawene is a town on the south side of the Hokianga harbour, in Northland, New Zealand. State Highway 12 passes to the south.[1] The town lies at the apex of a peninsula. A car ferry links it to Kohukohu and the northern Hokianga.[2]

The population was 471 in the 2013 Census, an increase of 33 from 2006.[3]

History

Rawene viewed from the water
This strange shaped building was originally a joinery factory making doors, windows and coffins.

Rawene started as a timber centre, with a mill and shipyards[4] established in the early 19th century. An attempted settlement by the first New Zealand Company in 1826 failed.[2] Captain James Herd in 1822 had taken out the first shipment of kauri from the Hokianga in his ship Providence. In 1825 he returned as an agent for the company sailing the Rosanne in company with the Lampton, and 60 settlers between the two vessels. They began at Stewart Island/Rakiura and sailed up the east coast, leaving Lampton as a place name in Wellington, eventually rounding North Cape to enter Hokianga - his old stamping ground. Herd negotiated to buy a vast tract of land.[5] The deal was contested but for decades Europeans referred to the town as "Herd's Point".[6] Later it was called "Hokianga Township", and in 1884 it became "Rawene", possibly to identify the post office and telegraph.[7]

The post office was operating by 1845 - one of eight in the country.[8]

Aperahama Taonui, chief of Te Popoto hapū, allegedly operated a school at Rawene in the mid-19th century.[9]

James Reddy Clendon, previously the United States Consul to New Zealand, settled in Rawene in 1862 and served as the local magistrate under the Native Circuit Courts Act until 1867.[10] His house still stands and is open to the public.[11]

By 1872 Rawene had two hotels and two stores. There was a Wesleyan church, and the Roman Catholics owned a section. Von Sturmer was the Postmaster, Customs Officer and Magistrate.[12]

During the Dog Tax War of 1898, Rawene was evacuated after the tax rebels threatened to march on the town.[13] On 5 May 1898 120 men marched from Rawene to Waima to deal with the revolters, but the dispute was settled without them.[14]

A small cottage hospital was built on a hill overlooking the town in 1910.[15] A new hospital was completed in 1928.[16] Dr George McCall Smith headed the hospital from 1914 to 1948 and developed a unique health system for the Hokianga.[17]

Dr Smith became a practitioner of "painless childbirth" in the early 1930s, using premedication with the barbiturate Nembutal combined with hyosine. This proved very popular and attracted women to Rawene from far afield. The annual average of thirty births per year now peaked at two hundred. in 1937 a "Commission of Inquiry into Rural Maternity Services" was established with Smith's practice as its primary concern. Smith fronted up with case notes on his last two hundred patients, and his results could not be bettered anywhere.[18]

The area was declared a special health area in the 1940s.[19] This meant that all medical officers in the Hokianga were salaried, and all consultations, pharmaceuticals, investigations and hospital admissions were free. The whole scheme was funded through a per capita grant.[2][20][21]

Education

Rawene School is a coeducational full primary (years 1-8) school with a decile rating of 2 and a roll of 80.[22]

A room for secondary students was added to Rawene Primary School in 1922. In 1947 a stand-alone Rawene District High School was built. It was extended in 1952, but was destroyed by fire in 1972.[7][23]

The Rawene Learning Centre is a campus of NorthTec polytechnic.[24][25]

Notable people

Notes

  1. Roger Smith, GeographX (2005). The Geographic Atlas of New Zealand. Robbie Burton. map 22. ISBN 1-877333-20-4.
  2. 1 2 3 "Hokianga district". Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand.
  3. 2013 Census Usually Resident Population Counts
  4. Most shipbuilding in the Hokianga occurred at Kohukohu, New Zealand and Horeke
  5. The deed lies in National Archives in Wellington, with a photocopy held by the Hokianga Historical Society.
  6. McDonnell, Hilda (2002). "Northern New Zealand". The Rosanna Settlers.
  7. 1 2 Irvine, Jean (1976). Township of Rawene.
  8. "POST OFFICE - HISTORY". Encyclopedia of New Zealand (1966).
  9. "TAONUI, Aperahama". Encyclopedia of New Zealand (1966).
  10. "Clendon, James Reddy". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography.
  11. "Northland Heritage Sites". New Zealand Historic Places Trust.
  12. Olive Harris and Chris Lancaster, ed. (2006). "The Pioneers Reminisce - Memoirs of Alfred Cooke Yarborough". Remember the Hokianga. p. 162. ISBN 978-0-473-11859-4.
  13. Alfred Cooke Yarborough in Remember the Hokianga p 164
  14. "HOKIANGA AND HARBOUR". Encyclopedia of New Zealand (1966).
  15. "Northland - Hospital services". Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand.
  16. "History: The Hospital in 1928". Hokianga Health Enterprise Trust.
  17. Parkes, W. F. (August 2004). A Northland Legend: Dr G.M. Smith of Rawene 1883 1958. The Auckland Medical History Society. ISBN 0-476-00851-4.
  18. Parkes, pp 18-19
  19. The scheme was gazetted by Parliament on 1 September 1941, but it lay in limbo to September 1945 before a "trial period" could begin. By 1947 the hospital boards in Northland were amalgamated but Hokianga retained its special area - it was finally official.
  20. Parkes, pp 22-23
  21. "History: Dr G M Smith". Hokianga Health Enterprise Trust.
  22. "Te Kete Ipurangi - Rawene School". Ministry of Education.
  23. "Arson suspected in two fires". The New Zealand Herald. 20 April 2006.
  24. "CAMPUSES : RAWENE". NorthTec.
  25. "Rawene". NorthTec. Retrieved 4 March 2010.

External links

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