Port Underwood

Te Whanganui / Port Underwood is a sheltered harbour which forms the north-east extension of Cloudy Bay at the northeast of New Zealand's South Island, on the east coast of the Marlborough Sounds.[1] With only a relatively narrow entrance to the south-south-east it is sheltered from almost all winds. Originally considered part of Cloudy Bay the port was named after Joseph Underwood of the shipping firm Kabel and Underwood in the early 19th century.[1]

Port Underwood

There is evidence of a large Māori population at various times prior to European arrival in New Zealand. In the 1820s the local Rangitane were defeated by the Ngāti Toa chief Te Rauparaha. Sealers first visited about 1826 and were followed immediately by whalers.[2] John Guard, who had started a whaling station in Tory Channel the previous year, set up a subsidiary station at Kakapo Bay in 1828.[1] By 1840 there were approximately 150 Europeans in the area,[2] probably the largest concentration in the South Island at that time. Large numbers of southern right whales and humpback whales were hunted in the bay, resulting in destroying these populations and rarities of their sightings in the bay nowadays.[3]

On 16 June HMS Herald arrived with Major Thomas Banbury on board bringing the Treaty of Waitangi for the South Island chiefs to sign. This took place on Horahora-Kakahu Island just offshore from the eastern shoreline. The only European to sign the Treaty as one of the cedants, Joseph Thomas, son-in-law of Te Rauparaha's elder brother Nohorua,[4] signed on 16 June. Nouhora himself, initially reluctant to sign, did so the following day. A commemorative bronze plaque marking the occasion was unveiled here on 3 October 1964.[5]

The name of the harbour was officially altered to Te Whanganui / Port Underwood in August 2014.[6]

Notable people

  • Ann Boyce, pioneer and herbalist.[7]
  • John Jacky Guard (1790/92–1858), landed in Kakapo Bay and was one of the first people to have a non Maori child in the South Island
gollark: Exactly.
gollark: > The VideoCore IV GPU, in the configuration as found in the Raspberry Pi models, has a theoretical maximum performance of 24 GPFLOS and is therefore very powerful in comparison to the host CPU. The GPU (which is located on the same chip as the CPU) has 12 cores, able of running independent instructions each, supports a SIMD vector-width of 16 elements natively and can access the RAM directly via DMA.So obviously ALL should write code for the VC4.
gollark: Good ideaeae!
gollark: How come it only has CPU architectures? It should run on GPUs too.
gollark: --

References

  1. Wises New Zealand Guide, 7th Edition, 1979. p.457.
  2. Wises New Zealand Guide, 7th Edition, 1979. p.67.
  3. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2016. Retrieved 14 March 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/artwork/1124/the-chief-nohorua-with-his-wife-and-son
  5. Wises New Zealand Guide, 7th Edition, 1979. p.149.
  6. "NZGB decisions". Land Information New Zealand. August 2014. Archived from the original on 21 November 2015. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  7. Orr, Katherine W. "Ann Boyce". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 28 March 2012.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.