Coordinates: 44°52′S 168°50′E / 44.867°S 168.833°E / -44.867; 168.833

Macetown: Difference between revisions

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William Jenkins frequently rode wildly through the streets of Macetown. By 1921 he was the only remaining resident and promptly declared himself Mayor. His mother had run the Alpine Hotel.
William Jenkins frequently rode wildly through the streets of Macetown. By 1921 he was the only remaining resident and promptly declared himself Mayor. His mother had run the Alpine Hotel.

Joseph Needham was the schoolmaster from 1879 to 1889. He was also a gold miner. He married a widow, Mrs Heads, who had one daughter, Mary, and a son Thomas. Mr and Mrs Needham had a daughter, Nellie, and their son was named Locksley. Mary heads married Mr Thomas McSoriley and they were for many years the proprietors of Beach House (later O'Connell's Hotel) in Queenstown. On of their sons, Pat, became the captain of the '' ss Earnslaw'' on [[Lake Wakatipu"]].


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 05:54, 20 November 2012

Needham's House (or the Schoolmaster's House), Macetown

Macetown is an historic gold mining settlement in the Otago region of the South Island of New Zealand.

In 1862 the sailor William Fox discovered gold in the Arrow River. By the end of that year over 1,500 miners were camped along the river and a small canvas town had grown up at the junction of 12 Mile Creek and the Arrow River. Amongst those that flocked to the area were three brothers: John, Charles and Harry Mace, after whom the town came to be known. In 1863 the population was around 300. At its height the town boasted a school, a church and two hotels.

By 1865 most of the alluvial gold had been extracted and many miners left for the gold fields of the West Coast. Quartz mining attracted more people in the 1870s and the population climbed to a peak of 206 in 1896.

By the start of the 20th Century, the town was in decline and has long since been deserted. Little remains of the original buildings but the old schoolmaster's house and the bakehouse have been faithfully restored by the Department of Conservation.

The bakehouse, Macetown

Access to the town is via an unsealed road that heads up the steep-sided Arrow gorge. This can be traversed on foot or by mountain bike, horse or four-wheel-drive vehicles. The road crosses the Arrow River or its side creeks 22 times and is not suitable for two-wheel-drive cars. The start of the road is found in the Arrowtown car park.

Residents

William Tily Smith ran a store in Macetown for over fifty years. He also did the twice-weekly mail run to Arrowtown and built the bakehouse.

Oliver Palmer was a member of a the 'Twelve Apostles', a group of miners who spent all their money on gambling and alcohol. They would gather at the Montezuma Hut and referred to each other by a variety of lofty titles such as 'The King', 'The Doctor' or 'The Saint'.

Many Macetown residents migrated to Arrowtown in the early 1900s to work in Queenstown. These included the Anderson family, who ran the hotel, and the Tallentire family. The youngest son, Thomas Tallentire, later became the editor of the Queenstown Daily Mail in the early 1930s.

William Jenkins frequently rode wildly through the streets of Macetown. By 1921 he was the only remaining resident and promptly declared himself Mayor. His mother had run the Alpine Hotel.

Joseph Needham was the schoolmaster from 1879 to 1889. He was also a gold miner. He married a widow, Mrs Heads, who had one daughter, Mary, and a son Thomas. Mr and Mrs Needham had a daughter, Nellie, and their son was named Locksley. Mary heads married Mr Thomas McSoriley and they were for many years the proprietors of Beach House (later O'Connell's Hotel) in Queenstown. On of their sons, Pat, became the captain of the ss Earnslaw on Lake Wakatipu".

44°52′S 168°50′E / 44.867°S 168.833°E / -44.867; 168.833