• Source: Hokitika Cemetery
  • Hokitika Cemetery, also known as Seaview Cemetery, is the cemetery for Hokitika in New Zealand.
    The cemetery is located on Hospital Hill Road in the suburb of Seaview on an elevated site north-east of the town, giving a good outlook over the settlement and the Tasman Sea. State Highway 6 is located at the bottom of the hill. Hokitika Airport is located just east of the cemetery. Previously, the jail, mental institution (Seaview Asylum) and hospital were located between the cemetery and the airport, and there is a memorial in the cemetery to the inmates of the asylum and gaol who were buried in unmarked graves.


    Explorers' Monument


    The Westland Explorers' Monument was erected in 1868 in the centre of the intersection of Weld and Sewell Streets. It was moved to the entrance of Hokitika Cemetery in 1880; the Hokitika Clock Tower was later erected in the same place in 1902. The monument memorialises four explorers, surveyors Henry Whitcombe (1830–1863), Charlton Howitt (1838–1863), and George Dobson (1840–1866), and government agent Charles Townsend (1826–1863). Whitcombe, Howitt and Townsend all drowned in separate accidents in 1863, while Dobson was mistaken for a gold buyer, E.B. Fox, and murdered by the Burgess Gang.


    The SS Lady Darling


    Drowning, either while crossing the Hokitika bar or attempting to cross a river, was such a common death that it became known as the West Coast Disease, and between 1865 and 1870 more than 40 deaths by drowning were recorded. Amongst the earliest burials in the cemetery are those who drowned after a boat ferrying passengers from the steamer SS Lady Darling to shore, on 29 July 1865, was overwhelmed in the surf: Allen Thomas, Robert Turner, Edward Samson, unknown Thompson, John McIntosh, George Hawkins and Henry Heron or Hearn.


    Jewish section


    There are a small number of Jewish graves in the cemetery, although the Jewish community was of considerable importance in the early settlement of Hokitika. The synagogue on Tancred Street was dedicated on 23 September, 1867 by the Reverend Isaac Zachariah. The first Jewish burial in the cemetery was in 1872. John Lazar, who had been Mayor of Adelaide, Provincial Treasurer and a prominent Freemason, was buried in Hokitika in 1879.


    Chinese interments


    In 1898 the local paper records complaints about Chinese residents' celebrations of the Feast of the Dead, causing "litter and ugly confusion" in the cemetery, the effects of which could be minimised by "setting apart a portion of the cemetery for Chinese interments". In 1902, the remains of fifteen Chinese people were disinterred from Hokitika Cemetery for return to China. Unfortunately these remains were on board the SS Ventnor, which sank after hitting a reef.


    Returned Services


    According to the New Zealand War Graves Project, Hokitika Cemetery holds four war graves. Three of the soldiers served in World War I and one served in the Vietnam War.


    Hungerford Mausoleum


    The Hungerford Mausoleum is the largest monument in Hokitika Cemetery and is listed by Heritage New Zealand as a Category II structure. It is the only mausoleum on the West Coast. The mausoleum was built to house the infant sons of Thomas Walter Hungerford and Eliza (née Delany). Both the sons were also named Thomas Walter, and died in Feb 1873 (aged 18 months) and Feb 1874 (aged 10 months). A local court bailiff Thomas Christian (d. 2 April 1878 aged 52) is also buried in the mausoleum.


    Gallery

























    Notable people buried in Hokitika Cemetery


    see also Category:Burials at Hokitika Cemetery
    Agnes Addison (née Broomfield; c. 1842–1903), draper
    John Bevan (1837–1911), politician
    Maida Bryant (née Ferguson; 1926–2016), nurse, local politician, and community leader
    Frederick Buglass (1926–2006), telephone technician
    Henry Butland (1872–1956), rugby union player
    Fitzherbert Dermott (1833–1879), physician
    Charlie Douglas (1840–1916), surveyor and explorer
    Stanley Graham (1900–1941), mass murderer, and three of his seven victims
    James Holmes (1831–1910), politician
    Bess Hudson (1875–1961), nurse
    John Lazar (1801–1879), actor and theatre manager in Australia, and mayor of Adelaide from 1855 to 1858
    Herbert Macandrew (1859–1917), physician
    Charles McLean (1892–1965), rugby union player
    Bert Mercer (1886–1944), pioneer aviator
    Henry Michel (1855–1930), politician
    Samuel James Preston (1866–1964), businessman
    Edward St John Daniel (1837–1868), recipient of the Victoria Cross
    Butler Te Koeti (1883–1964), mountaineer, guide, bushman, axeman
    Ebenezer Teichelmann (1859–1938), surgeon, mountaineer, explorer, conservationist and photographer
    Mary Teichelmann (née Bettney; c. 1863–1909)


    References

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