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| Choose from: Maori in the Southern Lakes | Gold! Gold! Gold! | Chinese Miners | Everyday Life |
Gold! Gold! Gold! 'Many millions of years ago, my country was born. The plates of the earth pushed and heaved New Zealand up from the sea, a small island far from the rest of the world. The earth groaned and boiled, pushing the Southern Alps into the sky, and forcing boiling water into the cracks of the rocks. As the water cooled, it left greenstone in the mountains and golden treasures hidden in the quartz. Then came the ice. Grinding, cracking, ploughing through. Digging the lakes, shaping the valleys, carving the Wakatipu and releasing the gold. Finally nature left a special kingdom of birds to rule New Zealand, undisturbed by man. That is how my country began.' Activities
http://www.teara.govt.nz/EarthSeaAndSky/MineralResources/GoldAndGoldMining/en http://www.otago.ac.nz/geology/features/gold/otago.htm In 1862 Jack Tewa discovered gold in the Arrow River. By the end of October there was around 1500 miners camped down along the shores of the Arrow River. Lots of miners wrote letters to their friends and families to encourage them to come to the Wakatipu goldfields: Dear Jack, Miners poured into Arrowtown from all around the world. They arrived at Port Chalmers in Dunedin by boat and had to travel inland to the Otago goldfields.
Food was scarce when the miners arrived on the Wakatipu goldfields. 'A man rushed into our hut, when George was in the act of kneading the dough. He seized the lump of dough and devoured it. He had hollowed cheeks, staring eyeballs and ragged clothes - all evidence of a fast, rough and toilsome journey. Having satisfied his appetite he told us he had been without food for five days.' 'Because it is so difficult to access the district, provisions were extremely scarce and dear. I often had 200 to 400 men waiting for my whaleboat to come up from Kingston to get a few pounds of flour each. So hard set were some of them that they would then and there boil the flour in 'billies' not being able to wait for baking.' EAT LIKE A GOLDMINER FOR A DAY Do you think you could eat the food of a miner? Ask your teacher if your class is allowed to eat like a miner for a day.
Afternoon Tea - Damper. Maybe you could treat yourself by filling it with a bit of homemade butter and jam. (It's scrumptious!) |
| 49 buckingham street, arrowtown | tel. 03 442 0317 | fax. 03 442 0835 | email. handsonhistory@queenstown.co.nz |