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Migration to New Zealand: A Guide for Family History Researchers - 2nd edn

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$11.08
SKU:
UTP0441
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Media: BOOK - paperback, 68 pages
Author: C. Clement
Year: 2016
ISBN: 9781925323412
Other: 2nd ed., b&w & colour photos, maps, bibliog, index
Publisher: Unlock the Past

Author, Christine Clement has often been asked how to find when an ancestor came to New Zealand. This set her off on an exploratory path a number of years ago putting together the different schemes, periods and times to find out just who the people were coming at the different time periods and why.

This booklet is designed to make readers think beyond the square to see what else was happening in the world that may have led people to New Zealand.

Australia and New Zealand's history is linked as far back at 1788 and trans-Tasman migration began a little later with whalers and sealers, often with convict crew, from Sydney.

A shipping and migration bibliography and a list of basic New Zealand genealogical sources have been included for further reading, and this second edition has been updated to include all the latest resources.

Contents:
Introduction
Maori whakapapa or genealogy
Pre 1840 European settlement
The 1840s
- The New Zealand Company
- Akaroa
- Auckland
- New Plymouth
- Dunedin
- Christchurch
- Imperial troops
- Cornish
The 1850s to 1860s
- Female Emigration Fund
- Waipu
- Gisborne
- Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick settlers
- Invercargill
- Mongonui
- Gold: Collingwood-Takaka, Otago, Marlborough, West Coast
- Welsh
- Chinese
- Waikato and Taranaki military settlers
- Albertland
- Puhoi
- Marton
- Female immigration schemes
- Lancashire cotton famine
- New Zealand Settlements Act 1863 (Waikato Immigration Scheme)
- Whangae
- Kerrytown
- Central Hawkes Bay
The 1870s
- Vogel Immigration Scheme
- Assisted immigrats 1871-1888
- Colonial nominated passengers 1871-1891
- Unassisted passengers
- Brogden's Navvies
- Finlay Murchison
- Manchester Block
- Katikati and Te Puke
- Karamea
- Europeans: Scandinavians, Germans, Poles, Swiss and Italians
- Moravian settlement
- Batley and Captain Colbeck
- Stewart Island/Rakiura
The 1880s and 1890s
- Women's Emigration Society
- Dalmations
- Indians
- Greeks
- Lebanese
- Small Farmers with Capital
- Village Settlement Scheme
- Australians
1900 to 1934
- Clarionettes
- Sedgwick Boys
1935 to 1970
- British Child Evacuees
- Polish refugee children
- Ten Pound Poms
- International Refugee Organisation
- Child Migrants (Home Children)
- Netherlands
- Other Europeans
Important note
Shipping and migration bibliography
- Passenger lists, ships and diaries
- Immigration
- Newspapers
- Appendix to the Journal of the House of Representatives (AJHRs)
- Biographical
- New Zealand genealogical sources
- Libraries and museums
Index

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1 Review
  • Migration to New Zealand is very informative
    5

    Posted by John Soppet on 2nd Oct 2018

    Christine Clement has put in a significant amount of research into this booklet. She says it is designed to make readers ‘think beyond the square’ . This it does very well and provides insights into why immigrants to New Zealand came and where they went. Her prolific references are a good source of how they got here.

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Migration to New Zealand: A Guide for Family History Researchers - 2nd edn

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