Today in New Zealand History
By (Author) Neill Atkinson
By (author) David Green
By (author) Gareth Phipps
By (author) Steve Watters
Exisle Publishing
Exisle Publishing
1st February 2020
3rd Revised edition
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Popular culture
Places and peoples: general and pictorial works
993
Paperback
304
Width 210mm, Height 280mm
Dates matter, and they are often a starting point for our engagement with history. For most New Zealanders, days like 6 February or 25 April are laden with significance. They are recognised as markers of important moments in our past; they inspire pride, connection, reflection, or perhaps controversy. Some dates hold a sombre or sinister place in the nations collective memory: 15 March (the Christchurch mosque attacks), 12 October (Passchendaele) or 24 December (Tangiwai). Others highlight more uplifting moments, like Rutherfords Nobel Prize (10 December 1908), Hillarys ascent of Everest (29 May 1953) or New Zealands golden hour at the Rome Olympics (2 September 1960). This book presents a series of snapshots of New Zealand historical events organised by date, from 1 January to 31 December. They range from dramatic headline moments to the hopefully less familiar and sometimes downright quirky from Jockey Y-fronts (16 March 1940) and a Nazi sabotage hoax (29 March 1942) to the Greymouth beer boycott (29 September 1947) and a parachuting Santa (20 November 1937). A timeline lists some of the key moments and events that have helped shape the course of New Zealands political and constitutional development, while Born on this Day boxes scattered throughout the text provide brief biographical details on almost 100 figures of significance to New Zealand history, fully updated.
Neill Atkinson is Chief Historian at the Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Historian David Green is particularly interested in NZ race relations and sporting history. Gareth Phipps works on the NZHistory, Te Ara and Vietnam War websites. Steve Watters leads numerous educational initiatives in schools.