New Zealand - Hawera
- Hawera is the principal town of South Taranaki and on the Wellington - New Plymouth railway and highway.
#603233
Hawere
- The Māori-language name Hāwera means "burnt place"; it arose as a result of fighting between two local sub-tribes, which culminated in the setting ablaze of the sleeping whare (house) of the tribe under attack.
- The town's name meaning "burnt place" became apt when the town suffered extensive blazes in 1884, 1888, and 1912.
- For this reason a large water tower was built in the centre of town to increase water pressure; and this became one of Taranaki's best-known landmarks (appearing, for example, on the cover of the 1974 telephone directory). After falling into disrepair the tower was closed to the public in 2001, but after an extensive restoration program it opened again in 2004.
(source - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawera)
- Whites Pictorial Reference of New Zealand: Representative Airviews of New Zealand Cities and Boroughs
- Whites Pictorial Reference has been produced to tell a new story - a modern story. Aerial photography has been utilised to show where New Zealanders live and the countryside from which comes their wealth. Most important, it also illustrates most vividly the Dominion's growing cities and towns, but perhaps more to the point it shows that there is still plenty of room for further development...
Author: White Leo (compiled)
Click the link provided at the top to purchase the book through the MAD on New Zealand Shop - Supporting New Zealand Authors and Artists