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Hampden memorial grove

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Hampden memorial grove.

The Hampden memorial grove is a part of a network of North Otago memorial oak groves.

The original North Otago memorial oaks were planted in 1919, however, as subsequent development resulted in a number of these threes being lost, and many of the original and crosses purloined or broken, in the 1950s a local surveyor Jack Horner agitated for the establishment of alternative groves of memorial trees. As an aside, many of the brass plates were later found in the berms and grass and have been collected at the North Otago Museum. Since the 1990s a committee has replaced the wooden crosses, and the North Otago Memorial Oaks have again become a much more well recognised important part of the fabric of North Otago's history.
 
The other groves are those at Oamaru, Kakanui, Maheno, Glencoe Domain and Ardgowan School.

Credit

Bruce Comfort, 2010

Find out more about the people listed on this memorial on the Auckland Museum's Cenotaph website

How to cite this page

Hampden memorial grove, URL: https://nzhistory.govt.nz/memorial/hampden-memorial-grove, (Manatū Taonga — Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated


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