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Frontiers : a colonial dynasty / Simon Best.

By: Material type: TextTextAnalytics: Show analyticsPublisher: Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand : Steele Roberts Aotearoa, [2013]Copyright date: ©2013Description: 431 pages : illustrations (some colour) ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1927242215
  • 9781927242216
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 929.208999442 23
Contents:
Great Southern Land -- 'A dead whale or a stove boat' -- East Coast trader -- Ashore - the first ten years -- Marriage, politics and a daughter -- War, women, alpacas and gold -- The final shore -- Epitaph for a settler -- Mary Ann steps out -- Edward Moorehouse and the Thames gold rush -- Pioneering the Patea, and a wedding -- A widow in Wellington -- Across America -- The English squire and his lady -- A silver spoon youth -- 'Ragtime Flyers' -- Like one's first solo -- 'Sweet dreams and flying machines' - between the wars -- 'In pieces on the ground' - Rhodes-Moorehouse and the Battle of Britain -- End of the line.
Summary: "Two airmen of Māori descent lie buried together on a hilltop in Dorset, England. They are the grandson and great-grandson of a whaling captain who entered New Zealand waters in 1835, and who became one of the leading pioneers of European settlement in Wellington. The story's main thread covers the four generations involved, and touches on early whaling off New Zealand and in the Pacific, European trading along the East Coast, the settlement and expansion of Wellington, the Thames gold rush and the first sheep stations in the Inland Patea. In 1883 the whaler's natural daughter, her mother a local Māori, inherited her father's wealth and moved with her husband to England, living in some of the country's grand houses. Her eldest son became one of the world's first aviators, winning a posthumous Victoria Cross over France in 1915. His son, also a noted pilot, was killed at the height of the Battle of Britain"--Back cover.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 929.208999442 BES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A528927B

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Great Southern Land -- 'A dead whale or a stove boat' -- East Coast trader -- Ashore - the first ten years -- Marriage, politics and a daughter -- War, women, alpacas and gold -- The final shore -- Epitaph for a settler -- Mary Ann steps out -- Edward Moorehouse and the Thames gold rush -- Pioneering the Patea, and a wedding -- A widow in Wellington -- Across America -- The English squire and his lady -- A silver spoon youth -- 'Ragtime Flyers' -- Like one's first solo -- 'Sweet dreams and flying machines' - between the wars -- 'In pieces on the ground' - Rhodes-Moorehouse and the Battle of Britain -- End of the line.

"Two airmen of Māori descent lie buried together on a hilltop in Dorset, England. They are the grandson and great-grandson of a whaling captain who entered New Zealand waters in 1835, and who became one of the leading pioneers of European settlement in Wellington. The story's main thread covers the four generations involved, and touches on early whaling off New Zealand and in the Pacific, European trading along the East Coast, the settlement and expansion of Wellington, the Thames gold rush and the first sheep stations in the Inland Patea. In 1883 the whaler's natural daughter, her mother a local Māori, inherited her father's wealth and moved with her husband to England, living in some of the country's grand houses. Her eldest son became one of the world's first aviators, winning a posthumous Victoria Cross over France in 1915. His son, also a noted pilot, was killed at the height of the Battle of Britain"--Back cover.

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