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Northcote, Auckland

Northcote
Northcote Point Ferry Terminal, The Wharf events centre, and Little Shoal Bay
Coordinates: 36°48′18″S 174°44′38″E / 36.805°S 174.744°E / -36.805; 174.744
CountryNew Zealand
CityAuckland
Local authorityAuckland Council
Electoral wardNorth Shore ward
Local boardKaipātiki Local Board
Area
 • Land528 ha (1,305 acres)
Population
 (June 2023)[2]
 • Total11,980
Postcode(s)
0627
Ferry terminalsNorthcote Point Ferry Terminal

Northcote (/ˈnɔːrθkt/ NORTH-koat or /ˈnɔːrθkət/ NORTH-kət) (Māori: Te Onewa)[3] is a suburb of Auckland in northern New Zealand. It is situated on the North Shore, on the northern shores of Waitematā Harbour, 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) northwest of the Auckland City Centre. The suburb includes the peninsula of Northcote Point where the northern approaches to the Auckland Harbour Bridge are located, and Northcote Central, the commercial centre of Northcote. Northcote features two volcanic maars.

Northcote was settled by Tāmaki Māori in the 13th and 14th centuries, and Te Onewa Pā was constructed as a headland to protect the wider communities. Europeans settled Northcote in the 1840s, and a community developed around the ferry terminal. Early industries included the brickworks, sulfur works and orchards, and by the 1880s Northcote beaches had become local attractions. By 1908, the area had grown enough that Northcote became a borough. After the Auckland Harbour Bridge opened in 1959, Northcote Central rapidly developed, while Northcote Point became isolated.

Northcote Borough was merged into the North Shore City in 1989, which in turn merged into the Auckland "super city" in 2010. In the late 2010s and 2020s, Northcote began an urban regeneration and housing intensification project.

Etymology edit

Northcote is named after British Conservative politician Stafford Northcote, 1st Earl of Iddesleigh, an idea put forward by resident Major Benton.[4][5] The name that dates from 1880 when the post office and school committee decided to use the name.[6][7] The first name used for the peninsula on European maps was Rough Point, named after Captain David Rough, first harbourmaster of Auckland, in 1841.[8][4][9] In 1848 it was renamed Stokes Point, after Captain John Lort Stokes of the survey vessel HMS Acheron,[8] who named the peninsula after himself due to another location named Rough Rock near Rangitoto Island.[4] Stokes Point was the common name for the suburb until it was renamed in 1880. The name Stokes Point remains in use for the southern headland of the peninsula.[5]

Geology and natural history edit

 
Smith's Bush is a remnant kahikatea and taraire forest located in Northcote
 
Tank Farm and Onepoto (pictured in 1957) are two volcanic maars in Northcote, estimated to have erupted between 190,000 and 180,000 years ago

The North Shore is primarily uplifted Waitemata Group sandstone, that was deposited on the sea floor during the Early Miocene, between 22 and 16 million years ago.[10] There are two volcanic craters found on the eastern coastline of the suburb: Tank Farm, also known as Tuff Crater or Te Kōpua ō Matakamokamo,[11] joined to the south by Onepoto (also known as Te Kōpua ō Matakerepo).[12][13] Onepoto and Tank Farm erupted an estimated 187,600 and 181,000 years ago respectively.[14]

Prior to human settlement, the inland North Shore was a mixed podocarp-broadleaf forest dominated by kauri. Pōhutukawa trees dominated the coastal margins of Birkenhead.[10] Smiths Bush in the Onewa Domain is a remnant native forest, dominated by kahikatea and taraire trees.[15]

Geography edit

Northcote is composed of two suburban areas: Northcote (aka Northcote Central) to the north,[5][16] and Northcote Point, the peninsula south of Onewa Road.[17][18] The suburb is bound by Ocean View Road and Northcote Road in the northwest, the Auckland Northern Motorway in the northeast, and Shoal Bay in the east.[5][17]

The highest point in the suburb is an 88 metres (289 ft) hill to the west on Pupuke Road,[5] referred informally by residents in the early 20th century as Clay Hill.[19] The hill is the location of the Pupuke Road Reservoir and Pump Station.[20] The southern headland of the Northcote Point peninsula is called Stokes Point.[21]

Onepoto Stream flows east through the suburb from Birkenhead, entering Shoal Bay south of Onewa Road.[22][23] Hillcrest Creek flows east through the north of Northcote, entering the Waitematā Harbour at Shoal Bay, east of the Auckland Northern Motorway.[24] Until the 1970s, the upper reaches of the creek were primarily swampland.[25] A traditional recorded name for Hillcrest Creek is Wakatatere "The Drifting Canoe", a name which recalls an incident where a tapu waka drifted into the stream at high tide.[26][27] A tributary of Hillcrest Stream, Awataha Stream, flowed through Northcote Central until the 1950s, when the stream was undergrounded. In 2019, work began to daylight the stream.[28]

Two beaches were formerly located in Northcote along the western shores of Shoal Bay: the City of Cork Beach and Sulphur Beach.[29][30] These locations were reclaimed in the 1950s, and are now located beneath the Auckland Northern Motorway.[9]

Little Shoal Bay is found to the west of Northcote Point,[31] which is the location of Halls Beach.[32]

History edit

Māori history edit

 
View of Tōtaratahi (i.e. Stokes Point) in the 1910s, before the construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge. The headland was the location of Te Onewa Pā

Māori settlement of the Auckland Region began around the 13th or 14th centuries.[33][34] The Tainui migratory canoe visited Northcote, stopping at Ngā Huru-a-Taiki, a sacred tree on the cliffs south-east of Tank Farm.[35][27][26] The North Shore was settled by Tāmaki Māori, including people descended from the Tainui migratory canoe and ancestors of figures such as Taikehu and Peretū,[36] and many of the early Tāmaki Māori people of the North Shore identified as Ngā Oho.[37] The Shoal Bay area was used to harvest shellfish, and the volcanic soil at Northcote allowed for kūmara cultivation.[38]

The warrior Maki migrated from the Kāwhia Harbour to his ancestral home in the Auckland Region, likely sometime in the 17th century. Maki conquered and unified many the Tāmaki Māori tribes as Te Kawerau ā Maki, including those of the North Shore.[39][40] After Maki's death, his sons settled different areas of his lands, creating new hapū. His younger son Maraeariki settled the North Shore and Hibiscus Coast, who based himself at the head of the Ōrewa River. Maraeariki's daughter Kahu succeeded him, and she is the namesake of the North Shore, Te Whenua Roa o Kahu ("The Greater Lands of Kahu").[41][42] Many of the iwi of the North Shore, including Ngāti Manuhiri, Ngāti Maraeariki, Ngāti Kahu, Ngāti Poataniwha, Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki and Ngāti Whātua, can trace their lineage to Kahu.[42][43]

Te Riri a Mataaho edit

Northcote is part of the setting of Te Riri a Mataaho ("The Wrath of Mataaho"), a Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki traditional story (pūrākau) that describes the creation of the two volcanic craters of Northcote, Te Kōpua ō Matakamokamo and Te Kōpua ō Matakerepo, collectively called Ngā Kōpua Rua ("The Two Deep Pools").[44][13] Two tupua (children of the Fire God Mataaho), Matakamokamo and his wife Matakerepo, lived on Te Rua Maunga, a mountain located at Lake Pupuke.[45][13] The couple argued over some flax clothing that Matakerepo had made for her husband, and the argument became so heated that the fire outside their dwelling died out. Matakamokamo cursed Mahuika, Goddess of the Fire, for allowing this to happen. Mahuika was furious at the couple, and asked Mataaho to punish them. Mataaho destroyed their mountain home, and in its place left Pupuke Moana (Lake Pupuke), while at the same time he formed the mountain Rangitoto. The couple fled to the newly formed island, where Mataaho formed three peaks on the mountain, so that the couple can view the ruins of their former home.[45] Matakamokamo and Matakerepo later returned to the mainland, which led to Mataaho further punishing them. He turned the couple into stone and caused them to link beneath the earth, forming the two volcanic craters.[44][13]

Te Onewa Pā edit

Te Onewa Pā, also known as Whareroa,[37] is a defensive that was located at the Stokes Point headland. The name Onewa refers to the ditch that separated the pā from the mainland, and is also the name of a dark grey stone tool (patu ōnewa) used for digging trenches.[43] The site has traditional importance to Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki, Te Kawerau ā Maki and Ngāti Paoa,[43][37][46] and was located on the opposite shore to Point Erin, where a pā called Okā or Te Koraenga was located. Both pā sites were used as bases for summer fishing, especially shark fishing.[47]

Te Onewa Pā site was originally occupied by Tāmaki Māori who descended from the Tainui migratory waka and developed the tribal identity Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki.[43] It was prized for its strategic location and view over the Waitematā Harbour, and protected fisheries and kūmara gardens of the nearby volcanic soil.[43][46] The pā was repeatedly attacked in the 17th and 18th centuries.[43] Ngāti Paoa attacked and took ownership of Onewa, who in turn were attacked by Ngāti Whātua.[46] After Ngāti Whātua's conflict with the Waiohua paramount chief Kiwi Tāmaki in the mid-18th century, Te Onewa Pā was occupied by the Ngāti Whātua chief Tarahawaiki.[27]

During the early 1820s, most Māori of the North Shore fled for the Waikato or Northland due to the threat of war parties during the Musket Wars,[48][49] and Te Onewa Pā was left unoccupied.[43] Some members of Ngāi Tai returned to the Northcote area in the 1830s, led by Hetaraka Takapuna.[43] The pā was occupied until the mid-1850s,[50] and Hetaraka Takapuna's descendants lived on the shores of Tank Farm into the 1890s.[51]

Early European settlement edit

 
The farm of Thomas Bartley at Northcote (1860)
 
The Sulphur Works at Northcote in 1884

The Northcote area was a part of the Mahurangi Block, an area purchased by the Crown on 13 April 1841.[52][53] Land at Northcote Point was subdivided into eight lots in 1843.[9][54] The Callan family settled in the same year,[50] and Phillip Callan established a brickyard at Sulphur Beach.[55] In the next few years, other settlers including James Kelly, William Nicholson, Patrick Heath moved to Northcote. While some settlers relocated from other parts of Auckland, many of the new settlers moved from Hokianga.[56] The greater Northcote area was purchased by the New Zealand Company in 1844, intending to develop a colonial settlement. As there was little interest in the settlement, the individual land blocks were sold.[50] From 1848, a soap and candle factory was established on Sulphur Beach,[55] and other early industries included timber milling and kauri gum digging.[57]

In 1848, the Catholic Church purchased 40 acres (16 ha) of land near Northcote, building St Mary's School and the Awataha Catholic Mission. Opening in 1851, the school taught Māori and Pākehā students from across the country.[50][58]

In 1852, the Crown granted land at Barry's Point / Awataha to Ngāpuhi chief Eruera Maihi Patuone, in order to create a shield for the City of Auckland against potential invasion from Ngāpuhi and other northern tribes. Patuone's people lived in the area until the 1880s.[53][59]

The Northcote ferry service began in 1854, run by James Reed. The regular ferry service led to the development of Northcote.[50][10] In 1859, Philip Callan constructed the Northcote Tavern, likely using bricks from his Sulphur Beach brickworks.[9] The hotel became an early focal point of the community, and led to Northcote becoming a gateway to the north. Many people would leave their horses at the tavern while visiting Auckland city.[60] The first ferry service from Northcote Wharf began operating from May 1860.[50] Three months later, St John's Anglican Church was established as the earliest church in Northcote, serving both the Northcote and Birkenhead areas.[61][62] The church is the oldest currently existing building on the North Shore.[63]

In 1878, Auckland Chemical Works was established at Northcote, on the beach next to the brickworks. The factory processed sulfur from Moutohora Island in the Bay of Plenty, but was unprofitable, as the amount of sulfur estimated to be on the island was overestimated.[64][10]

Suburban development and Awataha Catholic Mission edit

Northcote developed suburban housing between 1880 and 1910, with many of the 1880s villas still standing today.[9] Takapuna and Northcote grew significantly during this period, despite the effects of the Long Depression.[65] Northcote Point grew to become a commuter suburb for people working in Auckland, due to the ferry service.[10] Many wealthy Aucklanders built homes in the Northcote area, including Mr. Caughey of Smith & Caughey's department store.[66] Hall's Beach and Sulphur Beach became popular spots for tourists and picnickers.[66]

From 1880 to 1910, Northcote was known for fruit production,[67] and in 1886 the Birkenhead and Northcote Fruitgrowing Association was formed.[68] In addition to orchards, major crops in Northcote included strawberries, peas and cucumbers.[69] In 1885, a slaughterhouse was constructed in Northcote, serving Takapuna and the surrounding rural areas,[70] and farms in the Northcote area specialised in providing milk supplies for Auckland.[71]

In 1891, St Mary's School and the Awataha Catholic Mission gave permission for Māori led by Te Hemera Tauhia to resettle church lands at Awataha,[72] some of whom were Te Kawerau ā Maki.[73] This community established on the northern shores of Tank Farm over the next twenty years.[74] The Catholic church, needing to raise funds to establish Hato Petera College, leased out these lands to engineer and land developer Harry Hopper Adams. Adams saw opportunity for developing the area, and tresspassed the Māori of Awataha in 1916.[74][75] In 1920, the whare was torn down, and residents of Awataha made petitions to parliament to stop the evictions, arguing that Awataha was not included in the Mahurangi Purchase. Some members of the Awataha community were given lifetime leases of Catholic land at Awataha, while others were arrested.[74]

Borough status and growth edit

 
Dignitaries at the flagstaff and tōtara unveiling ceremony celebrating the establishment of the Borough of Northcote in 1908 (from left): Northcote military veterans J. Hawes, Sergeant-Major Hilditch, Hapi te Pataka (centre), Whatarangi Ngati, and her daughter Takurangi, who married ethnographer George Graham
 
A photograph of Queen Street in Northcote, taken by William Archer Price circa 1910

In 1908, Northcote had grown enough to be proclaimed a borough, which allowed Northcote to have its own council and mayor.[4] To celebrate this, the Stoke Point headland was proclaimed to be a public reserve.[76][77] A 75 foot (23 m) flagstaff was erected at Stoke Point, a memorial tōtara tree was planted at the site, named Tainui by Māori local to the North Shore,[78][79] and the Stokes Point headland gained the name Tōtara-tahi ("The Single Tōtara Tree").[35] The tree was later damaged in a storm.[9]

In 1903, the Northcote Athenaeum Society was established, which organised pleasurable literary and musical evenings for residents, including recitals poetry readings and plays.[80] In 1912, the Northcote Masonic Lodge was constructed.[9] From the 1920s, Chinese market gardeners had begun operating in the Northcote area.[81]

Northcote grew significantly as a suburb in the 1920s, with development focused around the Queen Street area at Northcote Point, close to the ferry terminal.[82][9] A new concrete road and bus barns were constructed in 1927, joined in the same year by a cinema called the Onewa Picture Drome.[9] Renamed the King's Theatre in the 1930s, it was renamed Bridgeway after the construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge.[9] By the 1920s, the gas works at Little Shoal Bay, first established in 1902, had become the biggest single employer in the Northcote Borough.[83]

In 1942, during World War II, the United States Army established bulk fuel storage tanks at the northern of the two volcanic craters, which led to its common name Tank Farm. As a part of this construction, the Awataha urupā (cemetery ground) was removed.[15][74]

In the 1950s, a small state housing development was constructed in central Northcote.[10] The Northcote War Memorial Library, designed by Thorpe, Cutter, Pickmere and Douglas, was formally opened on 10 March 1956. The library was funded through local carnivals and grants from the New Zealand Government.[84][9]

Auckland Harbour Bridge edit

 
Construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge (1956)

A bridge across the Waitematā Harbour between Auckland and the North Shore had been discussed since the 1860s.[85] Plans for a bridge crossing were formalised in the 1940s, with construction in Northcote beginning in the mid-1950s.[86]

Construction of the harbour bridge and the Auckland Northern Motorway led to major changes in the environment. Much of Te Onewa Pā on Stokes Point was destroyed to make way for the harbour bridge landing,[50] as well as parts of the Onewa Domain including the pine trees and ensign.[82] The eastern coastline beaches were reclaimed to make way for the motorway.[9] During the 1960s, the Onepoto Basin, formerly open to the harbour, was drained and redeveloped into recreational facilities.[82][87]

The harbour bridge was officially opened on 30 May 1959.[86] Northcote Shopping Centre was opened by the Borough council on 19 June 1959, which led to northern Northcote becoming the commercial centre of the suburb and a growth hub.[88][9] Former farmland was suburbanised, and an industrial area developed at Barry's Point.[10] While Northcote Central grew, the Northcote Point community suffered after the opening of the bridge. The ferry service was stopped, shops at Northcote Point closed, and Queen Street, once a major road, became a side street.[82][9]

Later developments and urban regeneration edit

 
Shops in Northcote Town Centre in 2016

In 1966, the North Shore Teachers College moved to a new campus at Northcote.[4] In 1971, a feature seafood restaurant called Fisherman's Wharf was built by restaurateur Bob Sell, adjacent to Northcote wharf. While the restaurant closed two years later,[9] the building is currently known as The Wharf, an events centre.[89]

In 1989, Northcote Borough was merged into the North Shore City.[90] By the 1990s, Asian communities had begun to develop at Northcote.[10] In the 2000s, the Chinese New Zealander community of Northcote started holding annual Chinese New Year parades in the suburb.[91]

In the late 1990s, the former Smale family farm was redeveloped into Smales Farm, a commercial complex adjacent to the motorway.[92] This was joined by the Akoranga Business Park, developed adjacent to the headquarters for The Warehouse Group.[93]

Under the Auckland Unitary Plan, Northcote was identified as a key area for planned intensification.[35] Gentrification became a more prominent issue in Northcote during this period.[94] 1,700 new homes are planned to be constructed in Northcote in the 2020s, while at the same time a new greenway reneration project was established in Northcote. Te Ara Awataha is an urban renewal project which includes a series of urban parks, native plant regeneration, and daylighting the Awataha Stream, which had been undergrounded in stormwater pipes in the 1950s.[28]

Demographics edit

Northcote covers 5.28 km2 (2.04 sq mi)[1] and had an estimated population of 11,980 as of June 2023,[2] with a population density of 2,269 people per km2.

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
200610,779—    
201311,043+0.35%
201811,481+0.78%
Source: [95]

Northcote had a population of 11,481 at the 2018 New Zealand census, an increase of 438 people (4.0%) since the 2013 census, and an increase of 702 people (6.5%) since the 2006 census. There were 3,864 households, comprising 5,496 males and 5,982 females, giving a sex ratio of 0.92 males per female, with 1,887 people (16.4%) aged under 15 years, 2,733 (23.8%) aged 15 to 29, 4,968 (43.3%) aged 30 to 64, and 1,878 (16.4%) aged 65 or older.

Ethnicities were 62.8% European/Pākehā, 9.0% Māori, 8.1% Pasifika, 26.1% Asian, and 3.7% other ethnicities. People may identify with more than one ethnicity.

The percentage of people born overseas was 40.1, compared with 27.1% nationally.

Although some people chose not to answer the census's question about religious affiliation, 48.8% had no religion, 37.5% were Christian, 0.5% had Māori religious beliefs, 2.2% were Hindu, 1.6% were Muslim, 1.6% were Buddhist and 2.5% had other religions.

Of those at least 15 years old, 3,357 (35.0%) people had a bachelor's or higher degree, and 939 (9.8%) people had no formal qualifications. 2,190 people (22.8%) earned over $70,000 compared to 17.2% nationally. The employment status of those at least 15 was that 4,710 (49.1%) people were employed full-time, 1,362 (14.2%) were part-time, and 372 (3.9%) were unemployed.[95]

Individual statistical areas
Name Area
(km2)
Population Density
(per km2)
Households Median age Median
income
Northcote Central (Auckland) 0.69 2,358 3,417 744 33.1 years $21,600[96]
Akoranga 1.16 1,167 1,006 405 43.9 years $22,100[97]
Northcote South (Auckland) 1.14 2,496 2,189 843 35.3 years $39,600[98]
Northcote Tuff Crater 1.11 2,214 1,995 756 35.6 years $38,900[99]
Northcote Point (Auckland) 1.17 3,246 2,774 1,116 38.3 years $50,500[100]
New Zealand 37.4 years $31,800

Local government edit

The first local government in the area was the North Shore Highway District, which began operating in 1868 and administered roading and similar projects across the North Shore.[10] From 1876, Northcote was also a part of the Takapuna Riding of Waitemata County; a large rural county north and west of the city of Auckland.[101] In 1908 after the population reached 1,000, Northcote separated from Waitemata County and formed the Borough of Northcote.[60]

In 1989, Northcote was merged into the North Shore City.[90] North Shore City was amalgamated into Auckland Council in November 2010.[102]

Within the Auckland Council, Northcote is a part of the Kaipātiki local government area governed by the Kaipātiki Local Board. It is a part of the North Shore ward, which elects two councillors to the Auckland Council.

Mayors of Northcote Borough edit

During its existence, from 1908 to 1989, Northcote Borough had 15 mayors. The following is a complete list:[103]

Name Portrait Term of office
1 Alexander Bruce   1908
2 Herbert Cadness   1908–1912
3 George Fraser   1912–1917
4 John Byrne Tonar   1917–1919
5 Arthur Edwin Greenslade   1919–1921
6 William Ernest Richardson   1921–1925
7 Charles Archibald Deuxberry   1925–1927
(5) Arthur Edwin Greenslade   1927–1931
8 Robert Martin   1931–1941
9 Ernest Clyde Fowler   1941–1944
10 Frank Montague Pearn   1944–1956ǫ
11 John Forsyth Potter   1956–1962
12 Jim Holdaway   1962–1968
13 Alfred James Evans   1968–1974
14 Trevor Edwin La Roche   1974–1979
15 Jean Sampson   1979–1989

Amenities edit

 
Northcote Tavern
  • The Northcote Shopping Centre, the commercial centre of the suburb, which features aWoolworths supermarket as an anchor store.[104]
  • Smiths Bush in the Onewa Domain is a remnant native forest, dominated by kahikatea and taraire trees. Originally purchased by Alexander Mackay, his son-in-law Thomas Drummond preserved the forest from milling. The park became a public reserve in 1942, and received its name from James and Catherine Smith, the owners of the land who preserved it in the early 20th century. A large section of the forest was felled in 1959, during the construction of the Auckland Northern Motorway.[15]
  • Northart is a gallery and community centre located in Northcote, which focuses on exhibiting artists from the North Shore.[91]
  • Kauri Glen is a steep area of remnant native bush that was reserved in 1907.[10]
  • Northcote Tavern was first built in the late 1850s by Irish immigrant Philip Callan, the building was destroyed by fire and rebuilt in 1888. Originally a hotel, the building became a tavern after the opening of the Auckland Harbour Bridge in 1959 meant that fewer people needed overnight stays on the North Shore.[91]
  • St John the Baptist (Anglican Church)[105]
  • Stokes Point Reserve, the location of Te Onewa Pā. Established as a reserve in 1908, the area became less inviting after the construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge in the 1950s.[50] In 2015, the reserve was redeveloped as an area celebrating heritage, including designs by Lucy Tukua of Ngāti Pāoa.[50]

Notable people edit

  • George Graham, New Zealand ethnographer, lived at Northcote Point in the early 1900s.[9]

Education edit

 
Hato Petera College in 2018

The first school in Northcote was Stokes Point School (later Northcote School), established in 1873.[106] Located at the site of Northcote College,[107] the schoolhouse was built in 1878.[107] By the 1920s, the school had developed a reputation for strict teaching methods and harsh discipline, leading many families to send their children to Wellesley Street School in central Auckland.[108] In 1924, the school became a junior high school.[109]

Northcote College is a coeducational secondary (years 9–13) school with a roll of 1,405.[110] It was established in 1877.[111] Northcote Intermediate is an intermediate (years 7–8) school with a roll of 231.[112] It celebrated its 50th jubilee in 2008.[113] Onepoto School is a contributing primary (years 1–6) school with a roll of 79.[114] It shares a site with Northcote Intermediate.

During its early years, the College incorporated Standards five and six (Forms one and two) which were transferred to Northcote Intermediate School when that was established as a separate entity on its present site in Lake Road in Northcote Central in 1958.

Northcote Primary School is a coeducational contributing primary (years 1–6) school with a roll of 389.[115] It was established on its present site in 1918.[116] The Northcote area war memorial stands at the front of the school, on the corner of Lake and Onewa Roads.

St Mary's School is a primary school with a roll of 269.[117] It is a state integrated Catholic school, which provides education for both boys and girls in years 1–6, and for girls only in years 7–8.[118] It celebrated its 75th Jubilee in 2008.[119]

Rolls are as of February 2024.[120]

Auckland University of Technology has its North Campus on Akoranga Drive.[121]

Hato Petera College was a secondary (years 9–13) school. It opened as Saint Peter's Catechist School in 1928 and changed its name in 1972.[122] It was a state integrated Catholic Māori school, and offered full-time boarding for enrolled students[123] until the end of 2016, when it became a day school. It closed in 2018.[124]

Sport and recreation edit

The suburb is also home to the Northcote Tigers rugby league club, which was founded in 1910.[125] The Northcote and Birkenhead Rugby Union Club was founded 1929.[126]

Transport edit

Northcote is adjacent to the Auckland Northern Motorway, which runs along the east of the suburb. Auckland ferry services run by Fullers Group stop at Northcote Point, near the northern end of the Auckland Harbour Bridge.

In the year 2000, a Northern Busway station was proposed for Northcote, located on Stafford Road. This proposed station was cancelled in December 2000, after lobbying by residents, who were concerned about increased traffic and public transport in the area.[127]

References edit

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Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Northcote Borough Council (1982), Northcote's Past: As Related by Elderly Residents Who Lived Their Lives in Northcote Covering the 1800's Up to the Present Time, Auckland: Northcote Borough Council, OCLC 154418192, Wikidata Q123906114

External links edit

northcote, auckland, this, article, about, auckland, suburb, electorate, northcote, zealand, electorate, christchurch, suburb, northcote, christchurch, northcotesuburbnorthcote, point, ferry, terminal, wharf, events, centre, little, shoal, baycoordinates, 744c. This article is about the Auckland suburb For the electorate see Northcote New Zealand electorate For the Christchurch suburb see Northcote Christchurch NorthcoteSuburbNorthcote Point Ferry Terminal The Wharf events centre and Little Shoal BayCoordinates 36 48 18 S 174 44 38 E 36 805 S 174 744 E 36 805 174 744CountryNew ZealandCityAucklandLocal authorityAuckland CouncilElectoral wardNorth Shore wardLocal boardKaipatiki Local BoardArea 1 Land528 ha 1 305 acres Population June 2023 2 Total11 980Postcode s 0627Ferry terminalsNorthcote Point Ferry Terminal Birkenhead Hillcrest TakapunaBirkenhead Northcote Shoal Bay Little Shoal Bay Waitemata Harbour Waitemata Harbour Northcote ˈ n ɔːr 8 k oʊ t NORTH koat or ˈ n ɔːr 8 k e t NORTH ket Maori Te Onewa 3 is a suburb of Auckland in northern New Zealand It is situated on the North Shore on the northern shores of Waitemata Harbour 4 kilometres 2 5 mi northwest of the Auckland City Centre The suburb includes the peninsula of Northcote Point where the northern approaches to the Auckland Harbour Bridge are located and Northcote Central the commercial centre of Northcote Northcote features two volcanic maars Northcote was settled by Tamaki Maori in the 13th and 14th centuries and Te Onewa Pa was constructed as a headland pa to protect the wider communities Europeans settled Northcote in the 1840s and a community developed around the ferry terminal Early industries included the brickworks sulfur works and orchards and by the 1880s Northcote beaches had become local attractions By 1908 the area had grown enough that Northcote became a borough After the Auckland Harbour Bridge opened in 1959 Northcote Central rapidly developed while Northcote Point became isolated Northcote Borough was merged into the North Shore City in 1989 which in turn merged into the Auckland super city in 2010 In the late 2010s and 2020s Northcote began an urban regeneration and housing intensification project Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geology and natural history 3 Geography 4 History 4 1 Maori history 4 1 1 Te Riri a Mataaho 4 1 2 Te Onewa Pa 4 2 Early European settlement 4 3 Suburban development and Awataha Catholic Mission 4 4 Borough status and growth 4 5 Auckland Harbour Bridge 4 6 Later developments and urban regeneration 5 Demographics 6 Local government 6 1 Mayors of Northcote Borough 7 Amenities 8 Notable people 9 Education 10 Sport and recreation 11 Transport 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology editNorthcote is named after British Conservative politician Stafford Northcote 1st Earl of Iddesleigh an idea put forward by resident Major Benton 4 5 The name that dates from 1880 when the post office and school committee decided to use the name 6 7 The first name used for the peninsula on European maps was Rough Point named after Captain David Rough first harbourmaster of Auckland in 1841 8 4 9 In 1848 it was renamed Stokes Point after Captain John Lort Stokes of the survey vessel HMS Acheron 8 who named the peninsula after himself due to another location named Rough Rock near Rangitoto Island 4 Stokes Point was the common name for the suburb until it was renamed in 1880 The name Stokes Point remains in use for the southern headland of the peninsula 5 Geology and natural history edit nbsp Smith s Bush is a remnant kahikatea and taraire forest located in Northcote nbsp Tank Farm and Onepoto pictured in 1957 are two volcanic maars in Northcote estimated to have erupted between 190 000 and 180 000 years agoThe North Shore is primarily uplifted Waitemata Group sandstone that was deposited on the sea floor during the Early Miocene between 22 and 16 million years ago 10 There are two volcanic craters found on the eastern coastline of the suburb Tank Farm also known as Tuff Crater or Te Kōpua ō Matakamokamo 11 joined to the south by Onepoto also known as Te Kōpua ō Matakerepo 12 13 Onepoto and Tank Farm erupted an estimated 187 600 and 181 000 years ago respectively 14 Prior to human settlement the inland North Shore was a mixed podocarp broadleaf forest dominated by kauri Pōhutukawa trees dominated the coastal margins of Birkenhead 10 Smiths Bush in the Onewa Domain is a remnant native forest dominated by kahikatea and taraire trees 15 Geography editNorthcote is composed of two suburban areas Northcote aka Northcote Central to the north 5 16 and Northcote Point the peninsula south of Onewa Road 17 18 The suburb is bound by Ocean View Road and Northcote Road in the northwest the Auckland Northern Motorway in the northeast and Shoal Bay in the east 5 17 The highest point in the suburb is an 88 metres 289 ft hill to the west on Pupuke Road 5 referred informally by residents in the early 20th century as Clay Hill 19 The hill is the location of the Pupuke Road Reservoir and Pump Station 20 The southern headland of the Northcote Point peninsula is called Stokes Point 21 Onepoto Stream flows east through the suburb from Birkenhead entering Shoal Bay south of Onewa Road 22 23 Hillcrest Creek flows east through the north of Northcote entering the Waitemata Harbour at Shoal Bay east of the Auckland Northern Motorway 24 Until the 1970s the upper reaches of the creek were primarily swampland 25 A traditional recorded name for Hillcrest Creek is Wakatatere The Drifting Canoe a name which recalls an incident where a tapu waka drifted into the stream at high tide 26 27 A tributary of Hillcrest Stream Awataha Stream flowed through Northcote Central until the 1950s when the stream was undergrounded In 2019 work began to daylight the stream 28 Two beaches were formerly located in Northcote along the western shores of Shoal Bay the City of Cork Beach and Sulphur Beach 29 30 These locations were reclaimed in the 1950s and are now located beneath the Auckland Northern Motorway 9 Little Shoal Bay is found to the west of Northcote Point 31 which is the location of Halls Beach 32 History editMaori history edit nbsp View of Tōtaratahi i e Stokes Point in the 1910s before the construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge The headland was the location of Te Onewa PaMaori settlement of the Auckland Region began around the 13th or 14th centuries 33 34 The Tainui migratory canoe visited Northcote stopping at Nga Huru a Taiki a sacred tree on the cliffs south east of Tank Farm 35 27 26 The North Shore was settled by Tamaki Maori including people descended from the Tainui migratory canoe and ancestors of figures such as Taikehu and Peretu 36 and many of the early Tamaki Maori people of the North Shore identified as Nga Oho 37 The Shoal Bay area was used to harvest shellfish and the volcanic soil at Northcote allowed for kumara cultivation 38 The warrior Maki migrated from the Kawhia Harbour to his ancestral home in the Auckland Region likely sometime in the 17th century Maki conquered and unified many the Tamaki Maori tribes as Te Kawerau a Maki including those of the North Shore 39 40 After Maki s death his sons settled different areas of his lands creating new hapu His younger son Maraeariki settled the North Shore and Hibiscus Coast who based himself at the head of the Ōrewa River Maraeariki s daughter Kahu succeeded him and she is the namesake of the North Shore Te Whenua Roa o Kahu The Greater Lands of Kahu 41 42 Many of the iwi of the North Shore including Ngati Manuhiri Ngati Maraeariki Ngati Kahu Ngati Poataniwha Ngai Tai ki Tamaki and Ngati Whatua can trace their lineage to Kahu 42 43 Te Riri a Mataaho edit Northcote is part of the setting of Te Riri a Mataaho The Wrath of Mataaho a Ngai Tai ki Tamaki traditional story purakau that describes the creation of the two volcanic craters of Northcote Te Kōpua ō Matakamokamo and Te Kōpua ō Matakerepo collectively called Nga Kōpua Rua The Two Deep Pools 44 13 Two tupua children of the Fire God Mataaho Matakamokamo and his wife Matakerepo lived on Te Rua Maunga a mountain located at Lake Pupuke 45 13 The couple argued over some flax clothing that Matakerepo had made for her husband and the argument became so heated that the fire outside their dwelling died out Matakamokamo cursed Mahuika Goddess of the Fire for allowing this to happen Mahuika was furious at the couple and asked Mataaho to punish them Mataaho destroyed their mountain home and in its place left Pupuke Moana Lake Pupuke while at the same time he formed the mountain Rangitoto The couple fled to the newly formed island where Mataaho formed three peaks on the mountain so that the couple can view the ruins of their former home 45 Matakamokamo and Matakerepo later returned to the mainland which led to Mataaho further punishing them He turned the couple into stone and caused them to link beneath the earth forming the two volcanic craters 44 13 Te Onewa Pa edit Te Onewa Pa also known as Whareroa 37 is a defensive pa that was located at the Stokes Point headland The name Onewa refers to the ditch that separated the pa from the mainland and is also the name of a dark grey stone tool patu ōnewa used for digging trenches 43 The site has traditional importance to Ngai Tai ki Tamaki Te Kawerau a Maki and Ngati Paoa 43 37 46 and was located on the opposite shore to Point Erin where a pa called Oka or Te Koraenga was located Both pa sites were used as bases for summer fishing especially shark fishing 47 Te Onewa Pa site was originally occupied by Tamaki Maori who descended from the Tainui migratory waka and developed the tribal identity Ngai Tai ki Tamaki 43 It was prized for its strategic location and view over the Waitemata Harbour and protected fisheries and kumara gardens of the nearby volcanic soil 43 46 The pa was repeatedly attacked in the 17th and 18th centuries 43 Ngati Paoa attacked and took ownership of Onewa who in turn were attacked by Ngati Whatua 46 After Ngati Whatua s conflict with the Waiohua paramount chief Kiwi Tamaki in the mid 18th century Te Onewa Pa was occupied by the Ngati Whatua chief Tarahawaiki 27 During the early 1820s most Maori of the North Shore fled for the Waikato or Northland due to the threat of war parties during the Musket Wars 48 49 and Te Onewa Pa was left unoccupied 43 Some members of Ngai Tai returned to the Northcote area in the 1830s led by Hetaraka Takapuna 43 The pa was occupied until the mid 1850s 50 and Hetaraka Takapuna s descendants lived on the shores of Tank Farm into the 1890s 51 Early European settlement edit nbsp The farm of Thomas Bartley at Northcote 1860 nbsp The Sulphur Works at Northcote in 1884The Northcote area was a part of the Mahurangi Block an area purchased by the Crown on 13 April 1841 52 53 Land at Northcote Point was subdivided into eight lots in 1843 9 54 The Callan family settled in the same year 50 and Phillip Callan established a brickyard at Sulphur Beach 55 In the next few years other settlers including James Kelly William Nicholson Patrick Heath moved to Northcote While some settlers relocated from other parts of Auckland many of the new settlers moved from Hokianga 56 The greater Northcote area was purchased by the New Zealand Company in 1844 intending to develop a colonial settlement As there was little interest in the settlement the individual land blocks were sold 50 From 1848 a soap and candle factory was established on Sulphur Beach 55 and other early industries included timber milling and kauri gum digging 57 In 1848 the Catholic Church purchased 40 acres 16 ha of land near Northcote building St Mary s School and the Awataha Catholic Mission Opening in 1851 the school taught Maori and Pakeha students from across the country 50 58 In 1852 the Crown granted land at Barry s Point Awataha to Ngapuhi chief Eruera Maihi Patuone in order to create a shield for the City of Auckland against potential invasion from Ngapuhi and other northern tribes Patuone s people lived in the area until the 1880s 53 59 The Northcote ferry service began in 1854 run by James Reed The regular ferry service led to the development of Northcote 50 10 In 1859 Philip Callan constructed the Northcote Tavern likely using bricks from his Sulphur Beach brickworks 9 The hotel became an early focal point of the community and led to Northcote becoming a gateway to the north Many people would leave their horses at the tavern while visiting Auckland city 60 The first ferry service from Northcote Wharf began operating from May 1860 50 Three months later St John s Anglican Church was established as the earliest church in Northcote serving both the Northcote and Birkenhead areas 61 62 The church is the oldest currently existing building on the North Shore 63 In 1878 Auckland Chemical Works was established at Northcote on the beach next to the brickworks The factory processed sulfur from Moutohora Island in the Bay of Plenty but was unprofitable as the amount of sulfur estimated to be on the island was overestimated 64 10 Suburban development and Awataha Catholic Mission edit Northcote developed suburban housing between 1880 and 1910 with many of the 1880s villas still standing today 9 Takapuna and Northcote grew significantly during this period despite the effects of the Long Depression 65 Northcote Point grew to become a commuter suburb for people working in Auckland due to the ferry service 10 Many wealthy Aucklanders built homes in the Northcote area including Mr Caughey of Smith amp Caughey s department store 66 Hall s Beach and Sulphur Beach became popular spots for tourists and picnickers 66 From 1880 to 1910 Northcote was known for fruit production 67 and in 1886 the Birkenhead and Northcote Fruitgrowing Association was formed 68 In addition to orchards major crops in Northcote included strawberries peas and cucumbers 69 In 1885 a slaughterhouse was constructed in Northcote serving Takapuna and the surrounding rural areas 70 and farms in the Northcote area specialised in providing milk supplies for Auckland 71 In 1891 St Mary s School and the Awataha Catholic Mission gave permission for Maori led by Te Hemera Tauhia to resettle church lands at Awataha 72 some of whom were Te Kawerau a Maki 73 This community established on the northern shores of Tank Farm over the next twenty years 74 The Catholic church needing to raise funds to establish Hato Petera College leased out these lands to engineer and land developer Harry Hopper Adams Adams saw opportunity for developing the area and tresspassed the Maori of Awataha in 1916 74 75 In 1920 the whare was torn down and residents of Awataha made petitions to parliament to stop the evictions arguing that Awataha was not included in the Mahurangi Purchase Some members of the Awataha community were given lifetime leases of Catholic land at Awataha while others were arrested 74 Borough status and growth edit nbsp Dignitaries at the flagstaff and tōtara unveiling ceremony celebrating the establishment of the Borough of Northcote in 1908 from left Northcote military veterans J Hawes Sergeant Major Hilditch Hapi te Pataka centre Whatarangi Ngati and her daughter Takurangi who married ethnographer George Graham nbsp A photograph of Queen Street in Northcote taken by William Archer Price circa 1910In 1908 Northcote had grown enough to be proclaimed a borough which allowed Northcote to have its own council and mayor 4 To celebrate this the Stoke Point headland was proclaimed to be a public reserve 76 77 A 75 foot 23 m flagstaff was erected at Stoke Point a memorial tōtara tree was planted at the site named Tainui by Maori local to the North Shore 78 79 and the Stokes Point headland gained the name Tōtara tahi The Single Tōtara Tree 35 The tree was later damaged in a storm 9 In 1903 the Northcote Athenaeum Society was established which organised pleasurable literary and musical evenings for residents including recitals poetry readings and plays 80 In 1912 the Northcote Masonic Lodge was constructed 9 From the 1920s Chinese market gardeners had begun operating in the Northcote area 81 Northcote grew significantly as a suburb in the 1920s with development focused around the Queen Street area at Northcote Point close to the ferry terminal 82 9 A new concrete road and bus barns were constructed in 1927 joined in the same year by a cinema called the Onewa Picture Drome 9 Renamed the King s Theatre in the 1930s it was renamed Bridgeway after the construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge 9 By the 1920s the gas works at Little Shoal Bay first established in 1902 had become the biggest single employer in the Northcote Borough 83 In 1942 during World War II the United States Army established bulk fuel storage tanks at the northern of the two volcanic craters which led to its common name Tank Farm As a part of this construction the Awataha urupa cemetery ground was removed 15 74 In the 1950s a small state housing development was constructed in central Northcote 10 The Northcote War Memorial Library designed by Thorpe Cutter Pickmere and Douglas was formally opened on 10 March 1956 The library was funded through local carnivals and grants from the New Zealand Government 84 9 Auckland Harbour Bridge edit Main article Auckland Harbour Bridge nbsp Construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge 1956 A bridge across the Waitemata Harbour between Auckland and the North Shore had been discussed since the 1860s 85 Plans for a bridge crossing were formalised in the 1940s with construction in Northcote beginning in the mid 1950s 86 Construction of the harbour bridge and the Auckland Northern Motorway led to major changes in the environment Much of Te Onewa Pa on Stokes Point was destroyed to make way for the harbour bridge landing 50 as well as parts of the Onewa Domain including the pine trees and ensign 82 The eastern coastline beaches were reclaimed to make way for the motorway 9 During the 1960s the Onepoto Basin formerly open to the harbour was drained and redeveloped into recreational facilities 82 87 The harbour bridge was officially opened on 30 May 1959 86 Northcote Shopping Centre was opened by the Borough council on 19 June 1959 which led to northern Northcote becoming the commercial centre of the suburb and a growth hub 88 9 Former farmland was suburbanised and an industrial area developed at Barry s Point 10 While Northcote Central grew the Northcote Point community suffered after the opening of the bridge The ferry service was stopped shops at Northcote Point closed and Queen Street once a major road became a side street 82 9 Later developments and urban regeneration edit nbsp Shops in Northcote Town Centre in 2016In 1966 the North Shore Teachers College moved to a new campus at Northcote 4 In 1971 a feature seafood restaurant called Fisherman s Wharf was built by restaurateur Bob Sell adjacent to Northcote wharf While the restaurant closed two years later 9 the building is currently known as The Wharf an events centre 89 In 1989 Northcote Borough was merged into the North Shore City 90 By the 1990s Asian communities had begun to develop at Northcote 10 In the 2000s the Chinese New Zealander community of Northcote started holding annual Chinese New Year parades in the suburb 91 In the late 1990s the former Smale family farm was redeveloped into Smales Farm a commercial complex adjacent to the motorway 92 This was joined by the Akoranga Business Park developed adjacent to the headquarters for The Warehouse Group 93 Under the Auckland Unitary Plan Northcote was identified as a key area for planned intensification 35 Gentrification became a more prominent issue in Northcote during this period 94 1 700 new homes are planned to be constructed in Northcote in the 2020s while at the same time a new greenway reneration project was established in Northcote Te Ara Awataha is an urban renewal project which includes a series of urban parks native plant regeneration and daylighting the Awataha Stream which had been undergrounded in stormwater pipes in the 1950s 28 Demographics editNorthcote covers 5 28 km2 2 04 sq mi 1 and had an estimated population of 11 980 as of June 2023 2 with a population density of 2 269 people per km2 Historical populationYearPop p a 200610 779 201311 043 0 35 201811 481 0 78 Source 95 Northcote had a population of 11 481 at the 2018 New Zealand census an increase of 438 people 4 0 since the 2013 census and an increase of 702 people 6 5 since the 2006 census There were 3 864 households comprising 5 496 males and 5 982 females giving a sex ratio of 0 92 males per female with 1 887 people 16 4 aged under 15 years 2 733 23 8 aged 15 to 29 4 968 43 3 aged 30 to 64 and 1 878 16 4 aged 65 or older Ethnicities were 62 8 European Pakeha 9 0 Maori 8 1 Pasifika 26 1 Asian and 3 7 other ethnicities People may identify with more than one ethnicity The percentage of people born overseas was 40 1 compared with 27 1 nationally Although some people chose not to answer the census s question about religious affiliation 48 8 had no religion 37 5 were Christian 0 5 had Maori religious beliefs 2 2 were Hindu 1 6 were Muslim 1 6 were Buddhist and 2 5 had other religions Of those at least 15 years old 3 357 35 0 people had a bachelor s or higher degree and 939 9 8 people had no formal qualifications 2 190 people 22 8 earned over 70 000 compared to 17 2 nationally The employment status of those at least 15 was that 4 710 49 1 people were employed full time 1 362 14 2 were part time and 372 3 9 were unemployed 95 Individual statistical areas Name Area km2 Population Density per km2 Households Median age MedianincomeNorthcote Central Auckland 0 69 2 358 3 417 744 33 1 years 21 600 96 Akoranga 1 16 1 167 1 006 405 43 9 years 22 100 97 Northcote South Auckland 1 14 2 496 2 189 843 35 3 years 39 600 98 Northcote Tuff Crater 1 11 2 214 1 995 756 35 6 years 38 900 99 Northcote Point Auckland 1 17 3 246 2 774 1 116 38 3 years 50 500 100 New Zealand 37 4 years 31 800Local government editThe first local government in the area was the North Shore Highway District which began operating in 1868 and administered roading and similar projects across the North Shore 10 From 1876 Northcote was also a part of the Takapuna Riding of Waitemata County a large rural county north and west of the city of Auckland 101 In 1908 after the population reached 1 000 Northcote separated from Waitemata County and formed the Borough of Northcote 60 In 1989 Northcote was merged into the North Shore City 90 North Shore City was amalgamated into Auckland Council in November 2010 102 Within the Auckland Council Northcote is a part of the Kaipatiki local government area governed by the Kaipatiki Local Board It is a part of the North Shore ward which elects two councillors to the Auckland Council Mayors of Northcote Borough edit During its existence from 1908 to 1989 Northcote Borough had 15 mayors The following is a complete list 103 Name Portrait Term of office1 Alexander Bruce nbsp 19082 Herbert Cadness nbsp 1908 19123 George Fraser nbsp 1912 19174 John Byrne Tonar nbsp 1917 19195 Arthur Edwin Greenslade nbsp 1919 19216 William Ernest Richardson nbsp 1921 19257 Charles Archibald Deuxberry nbsp 1925 1927 5 Arthur Edwin Greenslade nbsp 1927 19318 Robert Martin nbsp 1931 19419 Ernest Clyde Fowler nbsp 1941 194410 Frank Montague Pearn nbsp 1944 1956ǫ11 John Forsyth Potter nbsp 1956 196212 Jim Holdaway nbsp 1962 196813 Alfred James Evans nbsp 1968 197414 Trevor Edwin La Roche nbsp 1974 197915 Jean Sampson nbsp 1979 1989Amenities edit nbsp Northcote TavernThe Northcote Shopping Centre the commercial centre of the suburb which features aWoolworths supermarket as an anchor store 104 Smiths Bush in the Onewa Domain is a remnant native forest dominated by kahikatea and taraire trees Originally purchased by Alexander Mackay his son in law Thomas Drummond preserved the forest from milling The park became a public reserve in 1942 and received its name from James and Catherine Smith the owners of the land who preserved it in the early 20th century A large section of the forest was felled in 1959 during the construction of the Auckland Northern Motorway 15 Northart is a gallery and community centre located in Northcote which focuses on exhibiting artists from the North Shore 91 Kauri Glen is a steep area of remnant native bush that was reserved in 1907 10 Northcote Tavern was first built in the late 1850s by Irish immigrant Philip Callan the building was destroyed by fire and rebuilt in 1888 Originally a hotel the building became a tavern after the opening of the Auckland Harbour Bridge in 1959 meant that fewer people needed overnight stays on the North Shore 91 St John the Baptist Anglican Church 105 Stokes Point Reserve the location of Te Onewa Pa Established as a reserve in 1908 the area became less inviting after the construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge in the 1950s 50 In 2015 the reserve was redeveloped as an area celebrating heritage including designs by Lucy Tukua of Ngati Paoa 50 Notable people editGeorge Graham New Zealand ethnographer lived at Northcote Point in the early 1900s 9 Education edit nbsp Hato Petera College in 2018The first school in Northcote was Stokes Point School later Northcote School established in 1873 106 Located at the site of Northcote College 107 the schoolhouse was built in 1878 107 By the 1920s the school had developed a reputation for strict teaching methods and harsh discipline leading many families to send their children to Wellesley Street School in central Auckland 108 In 1924 the school became a junior high school 109 Northcote College is a coeducational secondary years 9 13 school with a roll of 1 405 110 It was established in 1877 111 Northcote Intermediate is an intermediate years 7 8 school with a roll of 231 112 It celebrated its 50th jubilee in 2008 113 Onepoto School is a contributing primary years 1 6 school with a roll of 79 114 It shares a site with Northcote Intermediate During its early years the College incorporated Standards five and six Forms one and two which were transferred to Northcote Intermediate School when that was established as a separate entity on its present site in Lake Road in Northcote Central in 1958 Northcote Primary School is a coeducational contributing primary years 1 6 school with a roll of 389 115 It was established on its present site in 1918 116 The Northcote area war memorial stands at the front of the school on the corner of Lake and Onewa Roads St Mary s School is a primary school with a roll of 269 117 It is a state integrated Catholic school which provides education for both boys and girls in years 1 6 and for girls only in years 7 8 118 It celebrated its 75th Jubilee in 2008 119 Rolls are as of February 2024 120 Auckland University of Technology has its North Campus on Akoranga Drive 121 Hato Petera College was a secondary years 9 13 school It opened as Saint Peter s Catechist School in 1928 and changed its name in 1972 122 It was a state integrated Catholic Maori school and offered full time boarding for enrolled students 123 until the end of 2016 when it became a day school It closed in 2018 124 Sport and recreation editThe suburb is also home to the Northcote Tigers rugby league club which was founded in 1910 125 The Northcote and Birkenhead Rugby Union Club was founded 1929 126 Transport editNorthcote is adjacent to the Auckland Northern Motorway which runs along the east of the suburb Auckland ferry services run by Fullers Group stop at Northcote Point near the northern end of the Auckland Harbour Bridge In the year 2000 a Northern Busway station was proposed for Northcote located on Stafford Road This proposed station was cancelled in December 2000 after lobbying by residents who were concerned about increased traffic and public transport in the area 127 References edit a b ArcGIS Web Application statsnz maps arcgis com Retrieved 15 December 2023 a b Population estimate tables NZ Stat Statistics New Zealand Retrieved 25 October 2023 Ka taea e te Rōpu Reipa te huri nga kaipōti o Te Onewa ki a ratou Te Ao Maori News in Maori 7 June 2018 Retrieved 5 December 2023 a b c d e Christmas Judith 1983 pp 5 a b c d e Northcote New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 By Telegraph The New Zealand Herald Vol XVI no 5639 12 December 1879 p 4 Retrieved 5 December 2023 via Papers Past Board of Education Auckland Star Vol X no 3018 19 December 1879 p 2 Retrieved 5 December 2023 via Papers Past a b Jones Les 2011 Development of Auckland Ports In La Roche John ed Evolving Auckland The City s Engineering Heritage Wily Publications pp 87 104 ISBN 9781927167038 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Holman Dinah January 2002 Northcote Point Walk PDF North Shore City Retrieved 5 December 2023 a b c d e f g h i j Heritage Consultancy Services 1 July 2011 North Shore Heritage Thematic Review Report Volume 1 PDF Report Auckland Council ISBN 978 1 927169 21 6 Archived from the original PDF on 1 February 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2023 Tuff Crater Path Auckland Council Retrieved 28 June 2022 Onepoto Basin New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 a b c d Hayward Bruce December 2009 Tank Farm Volcano Geology PDF Report Forest amp Bird Archived from the original PDF on 22 April 2017 Hopkins Jenni L Smid Elaine R Eccles Jennifer D Hayes Josh L Hayward Bruce W McGee Lucy E van Wijk Kasper Wilson Thomas M Cronin Shane J Leonard Graham S Lindsay Jan M Nemeth Karoly Smith Ian E M 3 July 2021 Auckland Volcanic Field magmatism volcanism and hazard a review New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics 64 2 3 213 234 doi 10 1080 00288306 2020 1736102 hdl 2292 51323 S2CID 216443777 a b c Cameron Ewen Hayward Bruce Murdoch Graeme 2008 A Field Guide to Auckland Exploring the Region s Natural and Historical Heritage rev ed Random House New Zealand p 143 144 ISBN 978 1 86962 1513 Northcote Central New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 a b Northcote Point New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 North Shore City Suburbs PDF North Shore City Council March 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 10 July 2012 A History of Northcote Baptist Church 1963 1993 PDF Northcote Baptist Church August 1993 Retrieved 1 December 2023 Watercare Services Limited June 2016 Report to Auckland Council Hearing topic 074 Designations PDF Auckland Council Retrieved 1 December 2023 Stokes Point New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 Onepoto Stream New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 Shoal Bay New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 Hillcrest Creek New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 27 November 2023 Hillcrest New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 27 November 2023 a b Christmas Judith 1983 pp 6 7 a b c Simmons D R 1979 George Graham s Maori Place Names of Auckland Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum 16 11 39 ISSN 0067 0464 JSTOR 42906272 Wikidata Q58677091 a b Clark Dow Emma 24 September 2022 The Awataha Project How unearthing a stream is bringing a community to life Retrieved 6 December 2023 City of Cork Beach New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 Sulphur Beach New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 Little Shoal Bay New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 Halls Beach New Zealand Gazetteer Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 4 December 2023 Pishief Elizabeth Shirley Brendan August 2015 Waikōwhai Coast Heritage Study PDF Auckland Council Retrieved 14 February 2023 Boffa Miskell Penlink Cultural amp Environmental Design Framework Penlink Cultural and Environmental Context PDF Report Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency Retrieved 4 July 2023 a b c Northcote Framework Plan PDF Report Eke Panuku November 2016 Retrieved 5 December 2023 Ngai Tai ki Tamaki April 2016 Cultural Values Assessment Report to New Zealand Transport Agency for Northern Corridor Improvements Project NCI PDF Report NZ Transport Agency Retrieved 30 June 2023 a b c Mossman Sarah August 2018 Cultural Values Assessment for America s Cup 36 Wynyard and Hobson Planning Application PDF Te Kawerau Iwi Tribunal Authority Report Retrieved 30 June 2023 Verran David 2010 pp 17 Waitakere Ranges Heritage Area PDF Auckland Council December 2018 Retrieved 28 June 2021 Murdoch Graeme 1990 Nga Tohu o Waitakere the Maori Place Names of the Waitakere River Valley and its Environs their Background History and an Explanation of their Meaning In Northcote Bade James ed West Auckland Remembers Volume 1 West Auckland Historical Society p 13 14 ISBN 0 473 00983 8 Ngati Manuhiri The Crown 21 May 2011 Deed of Settlement of Historical Claims PDF New Zealand Government Retrieved 18 May 2022 a b Whaanga Mel March 2022 He taonga o te rohe Restore Hibiscus amp Bays Retrieved 30 June 2023 a b c d e f g h Ngai Tai Ki Tamaki and the Trustees of the Ngai Tai Ki Tamaki Trust and the Crown 7 November 2015 Deed of settlement schedule documents PDF NZ Government Archived PDF from the original on 13 February 2020 Retrieved 31 October 2021 a b Tipua Turehu and Patupaiarehe Ngai Tai ki Tamaki Retrieved 5 December 2023 a b Pegman David M August 2007 The Volcanoes of Auckland PDF Manukau City Council Mangere Mountain Education Centre Archived from the original PDF on 24 March 2012 Retrieved 6 October 2021 a b c Rawiri Mahuika 24 August 2018 Cultural Values Assessment AC36 Consent Application Te Waitemata PDF Report Waitangi Tribunal Retrieved 4 December 2023 Campbell Dr Nerida Truttman Lisa Auckland City Council Ngati Paoa Ngati Whatua Ōrakei Auckland s Original Shoreline PDF Auckland Council Retrieved 24 September 2021 Trilford Danielle Campbell Matthew 30 July 2018 Long Bay Regional Park Northern Entrance archaeological investigations HNZPTA authority 2016 575 PDF Report CFG Heritage Ltd Retrieved 12 July 2023 Ngati Manuhiri The Crown 21 May 2011 Deed of Settlement of Historical Claims PDF New Zealand Government Retrieved 18 May 2022 a b c d e f g h i Cruickshank Arden 20 November 2018 Te Onewa Pa Upgrade a Methodological Case Study in Minimising Effects on Archaeological Sites PDF Report CFG Heritage Archived from the original PDF on 22 October 2021 Retrieved 4 December 2023 Clough Rod Prince Don 8 March 2001 Tuff Crater Reserve Walkway Upgrade Exmouth Road Northcote Archaeological Assessment PDF Report North Shore City Council Retrieved 5 December 2023 McClure Margaret 1987 pp 14 a b Christmas Judith 1983 pp 8 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 9 a b Christmas Judith 1983 pp 13 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 9 10 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 11 Verran David 2010 pp 19 21 Verran David Waiwharariki Part One The Lakelands Estate Channel Mag Retrieved 5 December 2023 a b Christmas Judith 1983 pp 15 Verran David 10 December 2022 Birkenhead 1790 1906 Timeline Birkenhead Heritage Society Retrieved 4 December 2023 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 23 Robinson Michelle 11 March 2010 Shore s oldest church nears 150 Stuff Archived from the original on 5 February 2021 Retrieved 26 January 2021 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 14 Verran David 2010 pp 37 38 a b Christmas Judith 1983 pp 19 McClure Margaret 1987 pp 69 McClure Margaret 1987 pp 77 Verran David 2010 pp 45 Verran David 2010 pp 37 Verran David 2010 pp 39 Verran David 2010 pp 22 Te Kawerau a Maki Deed of Settlement Schedule PDF New Zealand Government 22 February 2014 Retrieved 29 January 2021 a b c d Verran David 2010 pp 24 25 Verran David April 2019 Henry Harry Hopper Adams 1851 1928 and Takapuna Channel Magazine Retrieved 6 December 2023 Verran David 2010 pp 18 Flag Presentation The New Zealand Herald Vol XLV no 13824 10 August 1908 p 7 Retrieved 6 December 2023 via Papers Past Christmas Judith 1983 pp 21 Lutz Heike Chan Theresa 2011 North Shore heritage North Shore area studies and scheduled items list volume 2 parts 6 PDF Heritage Consultancy Services Report Auckland Council Archived from the original PDF on 1 February 2023 Retrieved 7 July 2023 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 31 Verran David 2010 pp 33 a b c d Christmas Judith 1983 pp 41 Verran David 2010 pp 70 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 34 35 The history of the Auckland Harbour Bridge The New Zealand Herald 25 May 2009 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 31 May 2009 a b Lancaster Mike 2011 Auckland Harbour Bridge In La Roche John ed Evolving Auckland The City s Engineering Heritage Wily Publications pp 127 148 ISBN 9781927167038 Onepoto Basin drainage Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections N0113164 Retrieved 6 December 2023 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 42 43 Doyle Trent 17 March 2023 Auckland landmark building The Wharf at Northcote Point up for sale Newshub Retrieved 6 December 2023 a b McClure Margaret 6 December 2007 Auckland places The North Shore Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 13 November 2023 a b c Community Facilities Trust Birkenhead Northcote 2006 Harbourside Explorer A Guide to Exploring What s In and Around Birkenhead and Northcote 2nd ed North Shore City pp 16 19 Verran David June 2019 Jim and Geoff Smale the next generation Channel Magazine Retrieved 6 December 2023 Two go courting in park North Shore Times Advertiser 6 November 1998 p 26 via National Library Te Onewa Pa NZPlaces Archived from the original on 24 September 2021 Retrieved 24 September 2021 a b Statistical area 1 dataset for 2018 Census Statistics New Zealand March 2020 Northcote Central Auckland 127100 Akoranga 127200 Northcote South Auckland 127300 Northcote Tuff Crater 128100 and Northcote Point Auckland 128200 2018 Census place summary Northcote Central Auckland 2018 Census place summary Akoranga 2018 Census place summary Northcote South Auckland 2018 Census place summary Northcote Tuff Crater 2018 Census place summary Northcote Point Auckland Reidy Jade 2009 How the West Was Run In Macdonald Finlay Kerr Ruth eds West The History of Waitakere Random House pp 238 239 ISBN 9781869790080 Blakeley Roger 2015 The planning framework for Auckland super city an insider s view Policy Quarterly 11 4 doi 10 26686 pq v11i4 4572 ISSN 2324 1101 Timeline of Auckland Mayors An Online Exhibition Auckland Council Archives Archived from the original on 10 January 2022 Retrieved 6 December 2023 About Us Northcote Northcote Shopping Centre Retrieved 28 January 2009 Robinson Michelle 11 March 2010 Shore s oldest church nears 150 Stuff Retrieved 26 January 2021 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 25 a b McClure Margaret 1987 pp 56 McClure Margaret 1987 pp 131 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 27 Education Counts Northcote College Celebrating 131 Years of Excellence Northcote College Archived from the original on 10 May 2007 Retrieved 27 January 2009 Education Counts Northcote Intermediate Northcote Intermediate School 50th Jubilee 1958 2008 Education Gazette New Zealand 87 13 October 2008 Education Counts Onepoto School Education Counts Northcote School Our School Northcote School Archived from the original on 22 February 2009 Retrieved 27 January 2009 Education Counts St Mary s School About Us St Mary s School Archived from the original on 8 February 2007 Retrieved 27 January 2009 75th Jubilee 2008 St Mary s School Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 27 January 2009 New Zealand Schools Directory New Zealand Ministry of Education Retrieved 14 March 2024 North Campus AUT Retrieved 3 July 2020 History of Hato Petera College Hato Petera College Retrieved 28 January 2009 Nau mai whakatau mai ki Hato Petera Hato Petera College Retrieved 15 March 2016 John Boynton Maori Catholic school Hato Petera College closes RNZ News 31 August 2018 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Haynes John 1996 From All Blacks to All Golds Rugby League s Pioneers Christchurch Ryan and Haynes ISBN 0 473 03864 1 Christmas Judith 1983 pp 30 Thompson Wayne 5 December 2000 Locals halt busway station The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 20 February 2024 Bibliography editChristmas Judith 1983 A History of Northcote Northcote Borough Council OCLC 154573998 Wikidata Q123591383 McClure Margaret 1987 The Story of Birkenhead Birkenhead City Council ISBN 0 908704 04 6 Wikidata Q120679112 Verran David 2010 The North Shore An Illustrated History North Shore Random House ISBN 978 1 86979 312 8 OCLC 650320207 Wikidata Q120520385 Further reading editNorthcote Borough Council 1982 Northcote s Past As Related by Elderly Residents Who Lived Their Lives in Northcote Covering the 1800 s Up to the Present Time Auckland Northcote Borough Council OCLC 154418192 Wikidata Q123906114External links editPhotographs of Northcote held in Auckland Libraries heritage collections Northcote Auckland at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northcote Auckland amp 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