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− | Private artefact collections are a feature of New Zealand archaeology right up until the present. Many of these were aquired by presentation or purchase and these are still ways of their accumulation today. In the past, when found Maori artefacts were personal property fossicking was a way of accumulation.
| + | The omnibus page that was formerly here has now been broken up into individual pages. |
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− | Samson (2003) gives an insight into the motivations and behaviours of collectors who operated in Otago.
| + | See the Private Collections category. [[:Category:Private Collections|'''See here''']] |
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− | Many of these collections have found their way to museums in whole, or in part after dispersal.
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− | Some European artefact collections - particularly of bottles - have grown the same way. The advent of the protection of archaeological sites dating from before 1800 AD under the Historic Places Act has limited some sources, but many found European objects are still finding their way to private collections.
| + | [[Category:Private Collections]] |
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− | This page is to highlight some of the important collections which are part of our historic heritage.
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− | '''Reference'''
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− | Samson, J. O. 2003. ''Cultures of collecting: Maori curio collecting in Murihiku, 1865-1975'' A dissertation submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
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− | Listing here does not preclude a future page dedicated to a collection.
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− | '''Oldman Collection''' - In 1948, the New Zealand government purchased the Māori and Pacific collection of the London dealer W O Oldman. The collection was divided on indefinite loan among the four large New Zealand metropolitan museums (Auckland, the Dominion, Canterbury and Otago), with small amounts also going to smaller public museums. The Dominion Museum (now [[Te Papa]]) received the bulk of the Māori, Marquesan, New Caledonian, and Admiralty Island components of the collection together with small numbers of items from other island groups. Because these items had passed through various sale rooms in Britain, they often lack detailed information on their origins or historical context, but their quality is outstanding.
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− | It is mainly ethnographic material but of considerable archaeological interest.
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− | The collection was published as supplements in the Journal of the Polynesian Society (1936-44)([http://www.jps.auckland.ac.nz/index.php JPS online]), then as two memoirs (1943, 1946) that have since been republished with new interpretive material by Neich and Davidson.
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− | Oldman, W.O. 2004 ''The Oldman Collection of Maori Artifacts''. New Edition with introductory essay by Roger Neich and Janet Davidson, and finder list. Journal of the Polynesian Society Memoir Series.
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− | Oldman, W.O. 2004 ''The Oldman Collection of Polynesian Artifacts''. New Edition with introductory essay by Roger Neich and Janet Davidson, and finder list. Journal of the Polynesian Society Memoir Series.
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− | '''Knapp Collection''' A Nelson based collection by [[Knapp F|Frederick Knapp]]. It was for many years at Te Papa but is now in its more rightful place in [[Nelson Provincial Museum]].
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− | '''George Grey Collection''' [http://www.dnzb.govt.nz/dnzb/|Sir George Grey], twice governor of New Zealand and later premier donated significant founding collections to the Auckland City Library and Auckland Art Gallery. A less well known contribution was his ethnographic artefact collection donated to [[Auckland Museum]].
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− | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Edward_Grey|Wikipedia]
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− | '''Bollons Collection''' John Peter Bollons, 1862 - 1929, was the master of government steamers in the early years of the 20th Century. While the ships were servicing lighthouses he used some spare time to make artefact collections. The collection is noteable fro material from Portland Iland and the far north. It is rich in fishhook material. His wife donated the collection to Te Papa. [[http://www.dnzb.govt.nz/dnzb/|See DNZB]]
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− | '''Murdoch Collection''' - Collected by Pat Murdoch from sites on the Hauraki Plains and on the Coromandel. The collection had a particular emphasis on the Hauraki Plains pa.
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− | Green and Green (1963) published a brief summary of the Hauraki Plains material in the collection. [[Law Garry|Law]] (1994) utilised part of the collection for a study of 2B adzes.
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− | The collection is in family posession.
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− | Green, R and Kaye Green 1963 Classic and Early European Maori Sites on the Hauraki Plains. ''New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter'' 6(1):27-34.
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− | Law G, 1994 Adzes from Kopuarahi: the Potential for Subdivision of Type 2B Adzes. ''Archaeology in New Zealand'' 37:97-103.
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− | '''Okains Bay Museum / Thacker Collection''' - Partly an archaeological collection from Banks Peninsula but with ethographic material from a wider area. In the private [[Okains Bay Museum]].
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− | '''Willets Collection''' - a fabulous collection of Archaic material mostly from Waitaki River mouth which was for a period at Otago Museum but is now the pride of the [[North Otago Museum]].
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− | '''Mair Collection''' - Gilbert Mair along with his father and brother was an important figure in colonial New Zealand and in the New Zealand wars. He accumulated many artefacts in the course of his contact with Maori, many from in the Bay of Plenty and particularly Rotorua. The collection is now largely in the [[Auckland Musuem]]. It is mainly ethnographic material but of archaeological interest.
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− | Tapsell, P. 2006 Ko Tawa, ''Maori treasures of New Zealand.'' Bateman, Auckland.
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− | '''Kelly Tarlton Collection''' - Tarlton was an adventurer / entrepeneur focused on the marine world. His diving activities concentrated on shipwrecks. One outcome was the display of the material recovered in a private museum built within Tui, a beached former sugar lighter at Paihia. It operated as a museum from 1970-2002. A key part of the collection was the Rothchild treasure recovered by Tarlton from the SS Tasmania wreck at Mahia in 1975. Rothchild was a jeweler.
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− | The Museum was robbed in 2000 by a notorious career criminal. The $300,000 of material taken including the Rothchild material has never been recovered. The museum was sold in 2002 by Tarlton's widow and the collections dispersed by sale.
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− | '''Bramley Collection ''' - A collection from the south head of the Manukau Harbour collected by the Bramley family while resident at Wattle Bay. The collection's strengths are archaic material and fishing sinkers. The collection was bequeathed to [[Auckland Museum]].
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− | Brambley, Mavis 1966. ''Sea Cockies of the Manukau''. Reed.
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− | Prickett, N. 1987. The Bramley collection of Maori artefacts. Auckland Museum. ''Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum'' 24: 1 -66.
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− | '''Collier Collection''' A collection made by the Collier family largely around Dunedin in the 1920s. The collection is in family ownership.
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− | Harsant, W. 1986 The Collier collection: stone and bone artefacts from Otago. ''Archaeology in New Zealand'' 29(3):146-159.
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− | '''Wagener Collection''' - The collection resulted from the activities of Wlfred Wagener spanning colonial, farming technology and Maori material. Some of the material came to the collection via a collection of Northy Saunders. Important archaic Maori material was from the Houhora Archaic site. The collection was housed in a private museum at Houhora but an arson attack and tour coaches ceasing to visit left it unviable. The greater part of the museum was dipersed by sale held by Webbs in Auckland in 2003. Some material was aquired by [[Auckland Museum]]. The local archaic material has been retained by the family who have hopes of reopening a small focused museum.
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− | Anon, 2003. ''The Wagener Museum Sale'' (Catalogue), Peter Webb Galleries, Auckland.
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− | [[Category:Artefacts]]
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− | [[Category:Museum]] | |