A world class museum on Canterbury's picturesque Banks Peninsula will mark 50 years of hosting the South Island's biggest and longest-running Waitangi Day commemorations on 6 February.
The Okains Bay MΔori and Colonial Museum has one of the most significant historical collections in the country.
The museum and annual event were the brainchild of the museum's founder Murray Thacker, whose passion for preservation formed the foundation of the vast 20,000-object collection of MΔori and colonial artefacts, from waka to wagons, taonga puoro (traditional MΔori instruments), kitchenalia, a blacksmiths forge and hei tiki.
Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon
The first Waitangi Day commemoration was held at the museum site in 1976 when an open day raised funds to finish the buildings, with the museum officially opened a year later on Waitangi Day 1977.
Manager Nigel Intemann said it was difficult to explain the significance of the Okains Bay collection to first-time visitors.
"You can imagine going to a metropolitan museum, you're going to expect a really amazing collection, but to visit a small town
Continue Reading on RNZ
This preview shows approximately 15% of the article. Read the full story on the publisher's website to support quality journalism.