New Zealand - Wellington
- Johnsonville School
- Standard 3
- 1970
- Contributed By Frankie Webb
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Johnsonville
- Originally the site of a Maori track from Wellington to Porirua
- Vegetation was dense native forest, dominated by totara, mixed podocarp trees
- Rata and hinau. Johnsonville was settled in 1841 by, among others, Frank Johnson who had purchased a certificate of selection and had drawn the 100 acre 'Section 11 Kinapora (Kenepuru) District'.
- Initially called 'Johnson's clearing', Frank Johnson built a house by the Johnsonville stream and a timber mill near the center of modern Johnsonville.
- He quickly denuded the entire Johnsonville area of virgin native forest, with timber sold to help build the nearby town of Wellington.
- He soon sold his land at a substantial profit, and returned to England by 1858 leaving the environment massively changed, and on which site a farming industry to support nearby Wellington City grew.
- The Daisy Hill Farm House was built about 1860, and is still standing.
- Over the 20th century, farmland slowly gave way to Suburbia, with the first tiny township of Johnsonville steadily growing to become populated principally by a "mid-level" socio-economic strata. Johnsonville was a town by 1896.
- The opening of the railway to Wellington by the Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company in 1886 (see Johnsonville Branch and Johnsonville Station) enabled people to commute to Wellington, and the line was electrified with more frequent and faster trains in 1938.
- About 1894 stockyards were built in Broderick Road adjacent to the station sidings by Freeman R. Jackson. Stock (cattle and sheep) railed from the Manawatu and elsewhere were driven through the streets and down Fraser Avenue to the Ngauranga abbatoir.
- The suburb got the name "Cowtown", and residents complained about hygiene and noise.
- So a new siding and stockyard was opened near Raroa station in 1958.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnsonville,_New_Zealand)