1870 in New Zealand
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following lists events that happened during 1870 in New Zealand.
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Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
Government and law
The 4th New Zealand Parliament continues.
- Speaker of the House â Sir David Monro stands down at the end of the year. He will be replaced after the 1871 election by Sir Francis Dillon Bell
- Premier â William Fox
- Minister of Finance â Julius Vogel
- Chief Justice â Hon Sir George Arney
Voting in New Zealand elections is changed to a secret ballot.[1]
Main centre leaders
- Mayor of Christchurch â John Anderson followed by Andrew Duncan
- Mayor of Dunedin â Thomas Birch followed by Henry Fish
- Mayor of Wellington â Joseph Dransfield
Events
- 27 August â 3 September: Second visit by Prince Alfred, returning briefly to Wellington before departing for Sydney.[citation needed]
- Torrens system of registered land titles adopted.[citation needed]
Sport
Archery
- The first club meets at One Tree Hill, Auckland.[2]
Golf
- New Zealand's first golf course was opened in Dunedin.[3]
Horse racing
There are 2 races for both the New Zealand Cup and New Zealand Derby (presumably at the beginning and end of the calendar year).(Confirmation required)
Major race winners
- New Zealand Cup: Knottingley
- New Zealand Cup: Knottingley
- New Zealand Derby: Malabar
- New Zealand Derby: Envy
Rugby union
Charles Monro, son of the Speaker of the House, Sir David Monro, introduces rugby to the Nelson Football club.[2]
- 14 May â First rugby club match, Nelson College versus Nelson Football Club "The Town" at the Botanical reserve. This was the first interclub game of rugby union played in New Zealand.[4]
- 12 September â A Nelson team, the "Lunatics", defeats Wellington at Petone.[2]
- â The first "international" between Wellington and a team from HMS Rosario.[2]
Shooting
Ballinger Belt: Lieutenant Goldie (Otago)[citation needed]
Births
- February (no date): Arthur Withy, journalist and politician.
- 14 April: James Cowan, writer.
- 20 October: C. F. Goldie, painter.
Deaths
- 5 July: Henry Powning Stark, politician and sharebroker.[citation needed]
- 16 July: Betty Guard, of pioneering whaling family.[5]
- 27 November (in England): James Stuart-Wortley, politician[citation needed]
- 30 November: Francis Jollie, politician[citation needed]
