
1992: NZBS
By
Sometimes you might wish there were just one wretched source for the trouble New Zealand is in. Not just the imps and monsters, jokers and liars, spinners and deceivers but the dragon’s cave they hatch out of in the first place. Blow it up. Burn it down! Smash their cathedrals, confiscate their microphones and storyboards. […]
Read more..September 1, 2023

The Best Symbols and Costumes for Stealing
By AHNZ
“Lynda Hallinan: Invest in a high-vis vest and a clipboard to get away with stealing”- Stuff (2017) Hallinan is absolutely right about this in our era. Why? New Zealanders have been socialised to over-respect institutions over their own judgement. Our healthy childhood scepticism and personal boundaries have been violated and broken, paving the way for […]
Read more..September 28, 2018

1941: Auckland Mayor John Allum
By AHNZ
Today in New Zealand history, 28 May, 1941, John Allum became the mayor of Auckland. This portrait (left) has been mothballed for decades in the city archives. They didn’t even know who it was and that it was someone else! Only turned up because the archives were being shifted to the North Shore to (I […]
Read more..May 28, 2025

1922: Girdleston Peak War Memorial
By AHNZ
World War 1 memorial destroyed by a Maori activist and a Feminist writer. New Zealanders owe a great debt to the contributions of its early surveyors as well as the ANZAC soldiers. Sergeant Hubert Girdlestone (1879-1918) was both of these in one. Hugh, a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, had the misfortune to be killed […]
Read more..May 27, 2025

1968: Inangahua Earthquake
By AHNZ
Most of New Zealand felt the earthquake (7.1) that struck the settlement of Inangahua today in history, Friday May 24, 1968, at 5.24am. Three people were killed and 14 counted as injured. Great video here from Nelson Provincial Museum showing the damage and hurt. 70% Of the dwellings in the town were made uninhabitable. Aftershocks […]
Read more..May 24, 2025

1914: St Kilda Community Library
By AHNZ
In St Kilda, Dunedin, a perfectly good Anarchist library is about to be replaced by a government one. The 1914 St Kilda Community Library didn’t tax anyone. It was run by voluntary effort for 110 years. “The library has been run and kept open by volunteers since its inception.” “The library originally opened in April […]
Read more..May 24, 2025

1988: Fencing of Swimming Pools
By AHNZ
On 20 July 1987 the Fencing of Swimming Pools Act gained assent and commencement. It came into force the following year on 1 May and applied to everyone with an existing swimming pool, 1 September for new pools. New Zealanders who wished to keep their property, their pools, would now have to fence them off. […]
Read more..May 16, 2025

1988: Richard and Judy
By AHNZ
Worship the anthropocentric hardware of the teleprompter… “Much of the attention focused on newsreaders, their jobs being about as simple as any known to mankind. A stop-go sign holder at roadworks literally has more intellectual demands placed on him or her than someone robotically reading the lines from a screen. This celebrity treatment of newsreaders […]
Read more..May 11, 2025

1980: Jones on Progeny
By AHNZ
The famous New Zealander, Bob Jones (1939- 2/May/2025) has just died. Businessman, writer, commentator, teacher, humorist, art collector. Only weeks ago he was writing articles and giving long radio interviews. He said he purchased books in triplicate for his 3 libraries in his houses around the world that he would flit between. He had a […]
Read more..May 7, 2025

1903: Canterbury Weka Wiped Out
By AHNZ
Amusing to see that a woodhen managed to hop a ride coast to coast. From an Inangahua campsite on the West Coast it jumped into the vehicle of some campers who discovered the bird when they returned to Christchurch. No weka, aka New Zealand hen, aka Maori hen have been in the wild in Canterbury […]
Read more..May 6, 2025

1866: Engelbrecht’s Ending
By AHNZ
With regret we read that the old Engelbrecht farm at Bennetts (Oxford) is being surrendered after being in the family since about 1866. This time it’s voluntary. The first farm was taken by the flooding Waimakariri. Engelbrecht was ruined and had to start over. Now his second property, Island Farm, previously known as Pine Tree […]
Read more..April 30, 2025