Old South : life and times in the nineteenth-century Mainland

Wright, Matthew

Notes
Table of contents: Introduction : in a big country -- 1. Oldest South : Polynesia to Ngai Tahu -- 2. A collision of crises -- 3. Serpents in Utopia -- 4. Puritans and pilgrims -- 5. The runaway society -- 6. The ins and outs of frontier life -- 7. Colonial engine rooms -- 8. End of the golden years

Summary: A history of the South Island from the 1840s, covering: early Maori-Pakeha conflict, the Wairau Affair, colonial settlement, the Gold Rush, the growth of farming and the pastoral elite, and the development of towns and cities. Of particular focus are the rise and fall of the first privately founded Pakeha settlements with their mixture of social idealism, business enterprise and religious conviction. These settlements were doomed, overwhelmed by the developing southern frontier - the world of gold and wool, of social climbers, would-be aristocrats and ambitious ne'er-do-wells

* Bought with funds donated by WGHS Old Girls' Assn - Gore Branch
Location edition Bar Code due date
Non-fiction Shelves A38873041