Greytown, New Zealand

Greytown, New Zealand

:"For other places with the same name, see Greytown."

Infobox Settlement
name= Greytown
subdivision_type= Country
subdivision_name= flag|New Zealand
subdivision_type1= Region
subdivision_name1= Wellington
subdivision_type2= Territorial authority
subdivision_name2= South Wairarapa District
subdivision_type3= Ward
subdivision_name3= Greytown


mapsize= 180px
population_total= 2001
established_title= Founded
established_date= 1854
named_for= Sir George Grey
timezone= NZST
utc_offset= +12
timezone_DST= NZDT
utc_offset_DST= +13
postal_code_type= Postcode
postal_code= 5712
area_code= 06

Greytown, population 2,001 (as at the 2006 Census), is a town in the Wellington region of New Zealand. It lies in the Wairarapa, in the lower North Island. It is 80 km north-west of Wellington and 25 kilometres southwest of Masterton, on State Highway 2.

History

Greytown was first settled on 27 March, 1854 under the Small Farms Association Settlement Scheme and was named after Governor Sir George Grey, who arranged for the land to be bought from local Māori. It became a Borough in 1878 and a ward of the South Wairarapa District Council in 1989.

The first Arbor Day celebration in New Zealand was held in Greytown on 3 July 1890. Greytown Beautification Society has done a lot to keep the spirit alive for many years, especially Stella Bull and the park bench in the park dedicated to her, which states, "Only God can make a Tree". Today the town has many beautiful trees and a register is kept to help protect them. Recently some trees were felled in the Old Hospital grounds.

In the 1870s, when the Public Works Department announced plans that the Wairarapa Line railway between Featherston and Masterton was not going to pass through Greytown, local protests were successful in attaining approval for a branch line to the town. It ran to Greytown Railway Station from a junction with the Wairarapa Line in Woodside and opened on 14 May 1880. For a few months, it acted as the terminus of the Wairarapa Line itself before the extension to Masterton opened, but once it was relegated to branch line status, it was one of the quietest railway lines in the country. It was closed on 24 December 1953, and at the time of closure, its revenues were only a tenth of its operating costs. Greytown travellers are now serviced by Woodside Railway Station on the Wairarapa Line.

Image and Architecture

The town is proud of its history, claiming to have the most complete main street of Victorian architecture in the country, and of being New Zealand's first planned inland town. It certainly has played these assets up, today creating a revival largely based on its architecture. Retailers like the butcher have reversed their 1970s street frontage and reverted to a more Victorian one.

Heritage buildings are protected by the Greytown Community Heritage Trust, headed by former Kuranui College principal Peter Werry.

Greytown had previously been marketed as "The fruit bowl of the Wairarapa" when fruit was grown on the west of the town with orchards like Westhaven and Pinehaven. More recently, Greytown orchardist John van Vliet attracted controversy on a national level by using an explosive device to kill starlings in an orchard, resulting in the deaths and maimings of numerous birds [http://www.times-age.co.nz/localnews/storydisplay.cfm?storyid=3745328&thesection=localnews&thesubsection=&thesecondsubsection=] [http://www.times-age.co.nz/localnews/storydisplay.cfm?storyid=3745816&thesection=localnews&thesubsection=&thesecondsubsection=] .

Tourism - the new fruit

Greytown is a popular weekend and holiday destination. [ [http://www.jasons.com/New-Zealand/Greytown/ Greytown Travel Guide] ] The main street is packed with antique stores and cafes. [ [http://www.teara.govt.nz/Places/Wairarapa/WairarapaPlaces/6/en Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand - Greytown] ] The soldier’s memorial park is often full of campers during a long weekend or a holiday.

Education and Sport

Greytown also has the only college in the South Wairarapa. Kuranui College, (Translated to "Big school of Learning" in Maori), has a 2008 roll of around 490 students and had as many as 1000 in the 1970s (when ruled by its founding principal, the cane carrying Sam Meads). The College was established in 1960. It has claimed to be the biggest Bus School in the country, as most of its students travelled by School Bus to get there. It has recently completed a $1 million auditorium which is used by the college and the Greytown public. All Black Grant Batty, the winger of the 1970s, learnt his rugby there. The college has had four principals as of 2007: Sam Meads; Peter Werry; Joye Halford and R. Grey Tuck. The current principal is Geoff Shepherd

Greytown Rugby club, established in 1877, is one of the oldest in the country.

Greytown Cricket Club [http://www.greytowncricket.co.nz] is the 2nd oldest cricket club in New Zealand, it was established in 1867, 10 years before test cricket began! In recent years, Greytown Cricket has been the powerhouse of the Wairarapa competition, with all 3 Senior teams winning their respective competitions in the 2005-2006 season, and almost repeating the feat (2 out of 3) in 2006-2007.

Greytown also has a primary school hosting around 320 pupils as of 2008. The school celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2007.

Site of Māori Parliament

Pāpāwai marae is located just to the east of Greytown. Its meeting house, named Hikurangi, dates from 1888 and is unique in that the magnificent carved ancestors which surround the pā face inward. In the late 19th century Pāpāwai was an important site of the Kotahitanga, the Māori parliament movement. In the 1890s, sessions of the Kotahitanga parliament were held at Pāpāwai, and were reported meetings in "Huia Tangata Kotahi", a Māori-language newspaper published by Īhāia Hūtana from 1893 to 1895. [Angela Ballara & Don Hutana. [http://www.dnzb.govt.nz/dnzb/default.asp?Find_Quick.asp?PersonEssay=2H58 'Hutana, Ihaia 1843/1844? - 1938'] . "Dictionary of New Zealand Biography", updated 22 June 2007.] A large building was constructed at Pāpāwai to house the parliament, and were used for sessions in 1897 and 1898. The parliament passed a resolution to end the sale of Māori land and was visited by Governor General Lord Ranfurly, and by Premier Richard Seddon. From the 1910s Pāpāwai fell into disrepair, and little was done until the 1960s when conservation work was carried out on the carved figures. In the late 1980s the Pāpāwai marae was fully restored, and is once again in full use by the community. [Ben Schrader, [http://www.teara.govt.nz/Places/Wairarapa/WairarapaPlaces/7/en 'Wairarapa places'] , "Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand", updated 25-Sep-2007.]

The Māori name for Greytown is Te Hupenui, the literal translation of which is "the big snot", better translated as "the fluid that comes out of your nose at a tangi or funeral. [cite news|url=http://wairarapa.co.nz/times-age/news98/980906.html|title=It's not all in the name|date=5 September 1998|publisher=Wairarapa Times-Age|accessdate=2007-10-05]

Notes

External links

* [http://wairarapa.wikispot.org/Greytown_Music_Group Greytown Music Group]
* [http://greytown.school.nz/ Greytown Primary School]
* [http://kuranui-college.school.nz/ Kuranui College]
* [http://www.greytown.co.nz/ A portal site about Greytown, for tourists]
* [http://wairarapa.co.nz/tourism/greytown.html Another tourist information site]
* [http://www.historicalgreytown.co.nz/ Greytown Community Heritage Trust]


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