Alsatia – Where the law cannot reach – #155

Alsatia – Where the law cannot reach – #155

“The country north of Auckland may be most conveniently reached by taking passage in one of the Northern Steamship Company’s fine vessels which, leaving Auckland in the late afternoon, reaches early the following morning the expansive estuary of the Bay of...
Names and Faces – #156

Names and Faces – #156

No, they are not photos of the same people thirty years apart. On the left Kathleen Williams and an unnamed friend show their style on the Russell beach c.1924 and on the right seven King siblings gather at the Russell School reunion in 1956. Many generations of both...
Once there was a mill here – #157

Once there was a mill here – #157

1858 was a year notable not only for the erection of the Maiki Hill flagstaff, Whakakotahitanga, but also for the building of a more prosaic structure. This was the year Motu Kaiaraara became known as Mill Island – probably too, the only time that the citizens...

Four Fossils – #158

A fish, two coconuts and a rock with embedded fossilized shells. What do they have in common? Two things – they’re all fossils and they’ve all ended up in Russell Museum’s collection. Only one was found here, the fish, at Long Beach. The...
Bigger, Brighter & Bolder? – #159

Bigger, Brighter & Bolder? – #159

Most of us are familiar with our iconically historic buildings – Pompallier, Christ Church, and the old Custom House – but we still have many other less historic buildings and sites that contribute significantly to our sense of history. Some of them are...
Thanks, Lusi – #160

Thanks, Lusi – #160

The swells and waves generated by Cyclone Lusi moved the shingle on our Russell beach around and reshaped the sand banks at Long Beach. They also tossed up some surprises. This curiously shaped rock is one of them, found at the south end of Paihia beach and handed in...