New Zealand - Three men and three children in a Darracq, the first car in Kohukohu
- Three men and three children in a Darracq, the first car in Kohukohu, the owner of the car, Arthur Cleave (wearing a flat cap) standing behind, and people standing outside the Kohukohu Hotel, Arthur Cleave junior at the right of the group of three men immediately under the hotel lamp. Jack Nicholson (propritor of the Kohukohu Hotel) in the driver's seat?
- 1907-03-02
- Photographer: Dawes, Charles Peet
Kohukohu
- Kohukohu is a historic village on the Hokianga Harbour in the Northland Region of North Island. It was one of the first European settlements in New Zealand.
- According to Te Tai Tokerau tradition, the legendary Polynesian explorer Kupe visited the area in 925 AD prior to his return voyage to Hawaiiki. Angry at the food from the hangi (earth oven) being insufficiently cooked, he cursed those responsible using the word kohu. This is the origin of the name Kohukohu.
- The first recorded European to enter the Hokianga Harbour arrived in 1819 and by the 1830s, Kohukohu was the heart of New Zealand's timber industry. The country's first Catholic mass was celebrated 8 kilometres north of Kohukohu at Totara Point in 1838.
- For nearly one hundred years Kohukohu was an important timber milling town and the largest commercial centre on the north of the harbour. In 1900, the township had a population of almost 2,000 people.
(source - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kohukohu,_New_Zealand)
Image source: Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections 1142-D460
https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/id/55604/rec/3