The following lists events that happened during 1864 in New Zealand.
Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
Government and law
The 3rd Parliament continues.
Events
- 11 February: Major Charles Heaphy is recommended for the Victoria Cross. It was not awarded until 1867.
- 31 March â 2 April: Battle of Ã
ÂrÃÂkau
- 11 June: The Timaru Herald publishes its first issue. The paper was initially weekly, but increased its frequency of publication to bi-weekly and then tri-weekly, and became a daily on 1 January 1878. It continues .
- Australian magpie introduced to New Zealand
- Up to 6000 miners come to the Wakamarina Valley in Marlborough after gold is discovered. Canvastown is founded at the river mouth. About of gold is recovered in 1864, but the surface gold is quickly exhausted.
- The Wairau Record starts publishing in Blenheim. The newspaper changed its name to The Marlborough News and General Advertiser in 1865 and then to just The Marlborough News. It folded in 1874.
- The Marlborough Times starts publishing in Blenheim. It folds after about six months.
- West Coast gold rush (1864)
Arts and literature
Music
- The Dunedin Choral Society is formed.
- The Lyster Opera Company makes its first tour to New Zealand (possibly the first by a full opera company).
Sport
Cricket
Gearge Parr's All England Eleven plays at a cricket carnival in Dunedin against teams from Otago and Canterbury. They later play at Christchurch's Hagley Park. None of the matches qualified as first-class and the home sides were allowed to field up to 22 batsmen. Itinerary
Horse racing
Major race winner
- New Zealand Derby winner: Opera
Shooting
Ballinger Belt: Lieutenant Morse (Nelson)
Births
Deaths
JanuaryâÂÂJune
*Octavius Mathias, pioneering Anglican priest (born 1805)
*George Rhodes, pastoralist (born 1816)
*Rawiri Puhirake, tribal leader
*Henare Wiremu Taratoa, tribal missionary, teacher and war leader
JulyâÂÂDecember
- 8 July: Charles de Thierry, adventurer who attempted to establish his own sovereign state in New Zealand in the years before British annexation (born 1793)
- 13 September: Thomas McDonnell, Snr., Additional British Resident in New Zealand (born 1788)
- 20 September: Aaron Buzacott, missionary on Rarotonga
- 23 September (at South Yarra, Victoria): Robert Clark Morgan, missionary in the South Seas (born 1798)
- 2 November: John McGlashan, lawyer, politician, public servant and educationalist (born 1802)
- 6 December: John Cuff, politician (born 1805)
- 29 December: John Ryan, recipient of the Victoria Cross (born 1839)
Unknown date
See also
References
General
- Romanos, J. (2001) New Zealand Sporting Records and Lists. Auckland: Hodder Moa Beckett.
Specific
External links