Russell Heritage
Explore our archives of fascinating stories
Heritage Corners
Russell Museum enjoys telling some of the fascinating stories from the town’s history. Over the years, our local paper Russell Lights carries regular feature articles called Heritage Corner which feature these early gems about the town and our people. Some of our earlier articles are reproduced here for information.
A selection of them have been reproduced here. When you visit Russell, look out as you may well recognise some of the places and names from our past. Scroll back to view archived stories from our past.
More Russell Rugby Players – #126
Here’s another old one for you. This photo was recently added to our archives, courtesy of Aunty Win Williams, whose husband Trevor was a member of this Russell senior rugby team when he was still a student at Kawakawa District High school. On this day in 1946 they...
Avalon & Russell’s Regatta – #128
The Avalon, built in 1927, is seen here taking time out from her usual pursuit of chasing big game fish in the Bay of Islands - officiating in another Russell tradition, the Regatta. The Regatta began in 1912; it was held each summer until the 1950s and included races...
A Scout Camp in the Fifties – #129
Scouting in Russell has been through many incarnations. "The Northland Gazette", a supplement of Kawakawa’s Bay of Islands Luminary reported on Tues Sep 23 1947, that a Sea Scouts investiture had been held the previous week. Only three months after the establishment...
Slipping & Slapping – Croquet in the 1920s – #131
Who needs sunblock when you're wearing these outfits? Ankle length, long sleeved frocks, wide brimmed hats, white stockings and closed shoes left only faces and hands exposed to spring sunshine. These ladies were photographed on the opening day of Russell's Croquet...
Whalers’ Shenanigans – #132
It was a tough life, chasing whales, so it's not surprising that visiting whalemen sought a little R&R in the grogshops of Kororāreka. Rest & relaxation quickly turned to revelry and one January day in 1851 the revelry became a riot. Then 19 year old...
Gibby : A Decent Old Bugger – #133
Community policing had its own flavour in the forties, liquor control especially. Russell Museum recently received a memoir written by a police constable's daughter - Joy Gibbs. Her father, Eric Joseph Gibbs, also known as "Gibby" was the policeman here from 1941 to...
Te Marakihau – #134
Te mahi a tēnā ika, a te marakihau, he hurihuri i ngā waka māori. What that sea creature, the marakihau, did was overturn ordinary canoes. Such is the legend of the marakihau, mythical sea denizens said to possess colossal ngongo, long tube like tongues with which...
Hananui’s Harpoon- Close to Home Again – #135
It lay on the seabed in Whangamumu harbour for who knows how long, was discovered by a snorkeller, retrieved and taken to Auckland by launch in 1995, conservation treated , then put on display in the finder's house, for many more years. Last month, this harpoon was...
After the Brush – Pohutukawa, Seaweed & Oysters – #136
If you've been watching Maori Television's series Behind the Brush recently, you might have wondered if the Lindauers of Russell were connected with the famous artist, Gottfried Lindauer (1839 - 1926). They are. Gottfried and his wife had two sons, one of whom ended...