Selwyn County, New Zealand
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Selwyn County was one of the counties of New Zealand on the South Island.
| Selwyn County | |
|---|---|
| County of New Zealand | |
| 1876–1910 | |
| Area | |
| • Coordinates | 43.6°S 171.8°E |
| History | |
• Established | 1876 |
• Disestablished | 1910 |
| Today part of | Canterbury region |
The 1876 boundaries of Selwyn County were Ashley County to the north, from Arthur's Pass, near the source of the Poulter to the mouth of the Waimakariri; along the coast to Lyttelton; then the summit of the Port Hills; then along the summit to Ōmawete / Coopers Knob; then along the stream, Halswell River and Lake Ellesmere / Te Waihora to the coast at Taumutu, near Kaitorete Spit; to the Rakaia and up to its source near Whitcombe Pass and along the summits of the Southern Alps to the starting point.[1]
In 1910-11 Selwyn County was divided into 9 areas, formed from former road boards:
- Tawera (Malvern & Upper Waimakariri Road Boards);
- Malvern (Courtenay, South Malvern and East Malvern Road Boards);
- Selwyn (Rakaia and Lake Coleridge Road Boards);
- Ellesmere (Ellesmere Road Board);
- Springs (Springs Road Board);
- Waimairi (Avon and Riccarton Road Boards);
- Paparua (Lincoln and Templeton Road Boards and, after 2 months, it added Malvern's West Melton Riding);
- Halswell (Halswell and Tai Tapu Road Boards and later Paparua's Ladbrooks Riding)
- Spreydon, which became a borough and merged with Christchurch City.[2]