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Vera Donoghue describes holidaying in UK vs NZ
New Zealand is a country of immigrants. Wave after wave of peoples have settled here: Polynesian, British, European, Asian.
Who were the ancestors of Pakeha New Zealand? Where did they come from and what sort of people were they? These are some of the questions which this feature sets out to answer.
The Labour Department was responsible for setting up and administering the assisted immigration scheme
This graph charts the immigrants from all countries who came to New Zealand from 1840 to 1914. This includes those who migrated from places such as Germany, Italy, Scandinavia, and most significantly Australia.
The Immigration Branch needed to advertise the assisted immigration scheme as widely as possible and mostly used the classified sections of British newspapers.
The composition of the inflow from Britain and Ireland was quite different from the composition of the United Kingdom as a whole.
The Captain Cook, along with the Captain Hobson, brought assisted immigrants to New Zealand via the Panama Canal from 1952.
After they arrived, each assisted immigrant was given a letter of welcome from Bert Bockett, the Secretary for Labour, which outlined the assistance which the Department would give them and provided details of the jobs in New Zealand to which they had been appointed, along with their transport and accommodation arrangements.
Who were the Irish immigrants who came to New Zealand between 1840 and 1915? Whereabouts in Ireland did they come from and where did they settle when they got here?
Graph of figures taken from the death certificates of British and Irish immigrants to New Zealand (which include information on the father's occupation).
These statistics suggest some larger conclusions about the character and values of New Zealand's founding Pakeha population
As a result of the Suez crisis, queues outside the Canadian immigration office in London were commonplace at all Commonwealth immigration offices in 1956.
Families seated on their luggage awaiting embarkation (either to Australia or New Zealand) at the wharfside. 'Embarking for the land of gold in hope. Taking leave of old England'.