A nearby town to Greymouth is this one, Kumara (not the vegetable we have here and it's pronounced differently) was once a booming gold town, part of the mining era of the 1800s. These days it's a shadow of it's former self. I think from memory it has a pub, a petrol station and some streets with houses. The town got it's name from a surveyor in that area named Arthur Dobson (Dobson is also a suburb in Greymouth) after a change of Kohimara which is the Maori word for the white flowers of the bush that grow along the river.
Once upon a time, in this photo from between 1870-1879 there were once 27 hotels in the main street. In 1876 gold was found in glacial gravel so hydraulic sluicing was the only feasible way to recover it. Over a 20 year period large water races and sludge tunnels were created and most of the land behind the town was sluiced into the nearby Taramakau River. The mining eventually eased off in the late 1890s but dredging carried on until the 1960s.
Some information taken from West Coast History.
Linking up with Blue Monday and Mosaic Monday.
8 comments:
...how times have changed.
History always has something of interest to remind of the past.
I like the old and new in one post. Time goes on.
My grandmother used to talk about Kumara though I don't think they actually lived there.
Love the photos and history anyway
The town has some interesting historical stories from its past. Nice old photo.
What a history.
Great, old photo. Sad story, though.
How things do change.
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