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> HISTORY OF KAWAU ISLAND
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Kawau Island - one of the largest islands in the Hauraki Gulf. Kawau was named after the Kawau Paka; the white throated or little shag-cormorant which breeds on the Island. Kawau is one of the most beautiful islands of the Hauraki Gulf and one of the richest in history.
- Evidence of the early occupation of Kawau Island showed that the sea-faring
tribes of the Ngatitai and Ngatiwai had occupied the island from probably
the first migration to New Zealand.
- Due to the Island's location and good strategic position for viewing any
passing vessels it was a perfect place for any tribes to have control of the
surrounding area. Unfortunately the tribes that occupied Kawau were notorious
for their piracy and cannibalism. It was so bad that tribes from the mainland
combined forces and attacked the Kawau tribes, ending their control of the
island. It is said that the result of this attack ended in a cannibalistic
feast in Bostaquet Bay (then known as Bosanquet) on Kawau Island, the discovery
of human bones in this area confirming the stories told of this time.
- 1832 was the last known battle on Kawau when a Ngapuhi war party was tracked
down and slaughtered.
- In the latter part of 1831 a vessel named 'Sucidan', sailing from Sydney
to New Zealand, visited Kawau Island on its travels hoping to trade with the
local natives, but found no inhabitants. While on his continued travels one
of the owners of the 'Sucidan', Mr Wheelan, came across a group of Maoris
claiming to have the power to dispose of the island. Eventually Mr Wheelan
became the owner of Kawau in exchange for two or three muskets and gunpowder,
although from this time there was no known deed of ownership.
- 1841 James Forbes Beattie, acting for the British Loan and Investment Company,
hired a Mr Henry Taylor to help purchase Maori land as an investment in New
Zealand. Kawau Island was acquired with the intention of developing the potential
it had for agriculture and grazing. So it was first developed as a farming
settlement, with the company bringing over cattle, sheep, donkeys and farming
implements. Interesting to note that the donkeys were the first ever to arrive
in New Zealand.
 1844
the discovery of copper was made by Alexander Kinghorn and his miners, who
at the time were mining for manganese ore on Great Barrier Island. The British
company that owned Kawau decided to form a subsidiary company called the Kawau
Company, especially formed to run the mining operations on Kawau Island.
- 1855 the Company sold the Island to Hugh Mackay and Edward Spence after
all mining operations on Kawau stopped.
- 1858 on Mackays death the island was sold to James W. Buckland
- 1862 Sir George Grey bought Kawau island
- 1867 Governer Grey was relieved of his governorship and in 1868 he returned
to England for a visit, so leased the island to James Hott for a period of
five years. Grey returned to Kawau at the end of 1870.
- 888 Eliza and James Thomson of Australia bought Kawau Island from Sir George
Grey for 12,000 pounds.
- Other owners up to 1904 were Mrs Fanny Buxton, Colonel Holgate, Messrs Ross,
Moore and Snowball.
- 1906 Andrew Farmer, a former Mayor of Te Aroha, was the last to own the
island as a whole. He commenced with the subdivision of Kawau in 1912. Of
Canadian parents who brought him to New Zealand as a small child, he was a
speculator and businessman. Prominent in public life, Andrew was a well known
figure. Reputedly he paid 9,500 pounds for Kawau and planned to develop the
island as a resort, turning the 'big house' and grounds into a holiday complex.
- Looking from the water to the left of the jetty, Andrew built a large two-storey,
thirty bedroom guest house. Electricity was generated for the complex and
a 111' steamer, the 'Daphne' (named after his daughter) was built for Andrew,
to be used to service the Mansion House from Auckland. He didn't stint on
advertising and Kawau continued to be a mecca for boaties and all walks of
the public alike.
- Although Andrew Farmer sold 3000 acres to a Mr McDonald and did sell off
other pieces of land, the whole venture was not financially successful for
him, and by 1922 he had declared himself bankrupt. The 'Daphne' was sold to
the Northern Steamship Co and after selling his remaining interests in Kawau
he moved to Sydney.
- 1923 Lawford Godfrey Reeves bought Mansion House and 106 acres. Unfortunately
by this time Mansion house was in such a state of disrepair that Reeves decided
to spend more money to restore and improve it. It wasn't until May 1924 that
Reeves and his family moved in and ran it as a guesthouse. In May 1945 Mansion
House was sold to a syndicate, but Reeves continued to live there until his
illness and subsequent death in Feb 1947.
- 1959 Alan Horsfall bought Mansion House.
- 1967 Mansion House was bought by the crown and run by Hauraki Maritime Park
Board.
- Crown Ownership - Many changes were made - the Elephant House (outside bar)
a swimming pool and upgraded dining room were all part of what became a licensed
hotel leased firstly by a syndicate and then by Dominion Breweries. Behind
the House was a small store and post office, groups of flats, staff accommodation
and further in was a camping ground.
 When
the Breweries prematurely relinquished their lease in 1977, the Hauraki Maritime
Park Board released its plans for future development of Mansion House and
the park. The work needed proved to be extensive and expensive. The Elephant
House, swimming pool, dining room extension, flats, cottages and camping ground
were all removed. The bay was dredged, removing copious quantities of compacted
cans and bottles. Towards the end of 1979 the Mansion House, almost completed,
emerged after two years, to be opened by the then Governor General Sir Keith
Holyoake to the visiting public. The year of 1999 was a year of "facelift"
for the House and an upgrading of the jetty. It is now administered, along
with sundry small areas in other parts of the island, by the Department of
Conservation.
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