Motupipi is a settlement in the Tasman District of New Zealand's upper South Island, located at the mouth of the Motupipi River east of TÃÂkaka. It was the first place in Golden Bay / Mohua where Europeans settled.
The name Motupipi translates as the island or bush (motu) with pipi shellfish, referring to the pipi which are found on the beach.
James Lovell and his wife Ann were the first Europeans to come to what was then known as Massacre Bay (now Golden Bay / Mohua). They landed at the beach in Motupipi after a two-day journey by whaleboat from Nelson in late 1842. At the time, there was a pÃÂ at the mouth of the Motupipi River, where between 200 and 300 people lived. The Lovells had their second daughter at Motupipi, the first pÃÂkeha child born in Golden Bay. Benjamin Lovell and family (he was a brother of James) lived in Motupipi in the early years. Joseph Packard and family had been talked into moving to Motupipi by James Lovell; the Lovells and Packards were the first pÃÂkeha in Golden Bay. More European settlement began in 1850. The settlement began as about 1500 acres of small dairy, fruit, and hop farms.
There are records of several notable early settlers:
The Golden Bay Coal Company began mining for coal at Motupipi in the early 20th century.
Motupipi School is a co-educational state primary school for Year 1 to 6 students, with a roll of as of .
The school was established during the 1850s, making it one of the oldest schools in the Tasman District. By 1905, the school was a one-roomed building with a roll of 60 students and capacity for 10 more.