The King’s throne in the Maori Parliament house at Maungakawa.
Read MoreThis one is the Maungakawa Survey District form 1933 and it says it is the Maori Land Blocks.
Read MoreWe can trace it back for hundreds of years.
Read More27 December 1911
Read MoreTawhiao’s lament for the Waikato
Read MoreWhen we were categorising our research we had to say why we wanted each bit to go in a certain category.
Read MoreThe bank note from Te Peeke o Aotearoa, the Bank of King Tawhiao.
Read MoreWiremu Tamihana Tarapipipi Te Waharoa
Read MoreNgati Haua’s great nineteenth century leader Wiremu Tamihana was nicknamed ‘the Kingmaker’ because of the way he helped convince the many peoples of Tainui to support the establishment of the Waikato Kingdom in the middle of the nineteenth century. Tamihana was born on Maungakawa pa, which stood in the north of the range, on its highest peak.
Read MoreWe are thinking that maybe possums ate all the leaves?
Read MoreWe wondered - when was the land bought or turned into a farm? Who built this fence?
Read MoreGeorge said - “that is a seriously big tree - it has to be really old”
Read MoreA letter that King Tawhaio wrote to George Grey in 1984.
Read MoreKing Tāwhiao, the second Māori king, in an 1882 portrait
Read MoreThe Year 10 students of Morrinsville College, sharing with them our Ngati Haua stories and experiences and hopefully inspiring them to be warriors of their environment and look after our rivers.
Read MoreMaungakawa looking towards the Hauraki Plains.
Read MoreAfter The Great War, soldiers were sent to Maungakawa Reserve to recuperate.
Read MoreMt Kakepuku & Mt Pirongia in the distance - extinct volcanoes part of the "Alexandra Volcanic Group" active during Pliocene & Pleistocene times 2.5 Million Years Ago
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