What happened that day?

Kiwi of the Week

  • frickleton.biog.jpg

    Samuel Frickleton

    Lance Corporal Samuel Frickleton took part in the attack on Messines, Belgium, on 7 June 1917 where his acts of extreme gallantry earned him a Victoria Cross.

This WeeK's Quiz

Today in History

previous4 Julynext

rss feed
NZ Boxing Association formed at Christchurch

1902 NZ Boxing Association formed at Christchurch

The New Zealand Boxing Association (NZBA) was formed to promote and foster amateur boxing in this country. After drawing up its rules and obtaining parliamentary sanction, the association staged the first New Zealand championships at Christchurch later in 1902. The NZBA helped to inaugurate the Australian championships (in which New Zealand boxers competed) the following year; these ceased to be an inter-Dominion event in the 1920s. The first legalised professional bout was fought in Wellington in 1905 and the NZBA’s first official professional title was won in 1907.

Timaru boxer Bob Fitzsimmons had already won two of his three world professional titles when the NZBA was set up. And it was in boxing that New Zealand won its first individual Olympic gold medal, in 1928. Ted Morgan, a virtual unknown, overcame the handicap of dislocating the first knuckle of his left hand to win gold in the welterweight class at Amsterdam. The NZBA amateur lightweight champion in 1925 and 1927, Morgan had to move up a class to fight at the Olympics after putting on weight during the voyage from New Zealand.

Image: Bob Fitzsimmons (BBC) 

Te Kooti escapes from the Chathams

1868 Te Kooti escapes from the Chathams

Te Kooti and 300 of his followers captured the schooner Rifleman and sailed for New Zealand. The fugitives landed at Whareongaonga, just south of Poverty Bay, six days later.

Image ref: A-114-004-2, Alexander Turnbull Library