Tokanui, Southland

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Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use New Zealand English

Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. Tokanui is a community in the eastern portion of Southland District Council, located on the Southern Scenic Route about Script error: No such module "convert". east of Invercargill and Script error: No such module "convert". southwest of Balclutha, New Zealand.[1] The Tokanui River runs just to the north of the village[2] and occasionally floods the lower parts,[3] as it did when the railway yard flooded in 1935.[4]

Tokanui has a fire station,[5] public halls, school, store, garage, pub, recycling area[6] and a Rugby Club.[3] A mobile library visits once a month.[7]

History

There have been several archaeological finds on the coast south of Tokanui and a couple further up the valley,[8] including an adze (Māori: toki) at Quarry Hills.[9] The area was part of the 1853 Murihiku purchases (Script error: No such module "convert". bought by the government for £2,600),[10][11] the injustices of which have since been partly redressed by the 1998 Ngāi Tahu Settlement.[12] Peter Dalrymple (1813-1901)[13] started a sheep station in 1857,[14] which he sold in 1878.[15] Around 1880 work started on draining what had been a wetland area and, in 1883, a road was built linking Fortrose and Waikawa, thus facilitating government sales of land to settlers.[16] However, the road was still very muddy in 1885.[17] A post office opened in 1887[18] and a dairy factory on 29 November 1897,[19] which closed in 1945.[20] A cemetery, opened in about 1891,[21] where 22 graves are listed.[22] There were flaxmills in the area from at least 1899[23] to 1930.[24] A police station opened in 1918.[25] In 1926 the first petrol pump was put in by Tokanui Motor Company.[26] Tokanui Medical Centre was formerly Golden Memorial Maternity Hospital, named after Thomas Golden, a Southland Hospital Board member,[27] and opened about 1956.[28]

File:Relics of the logging world Tokanui (50193789383).jpg
Relics of the logging industry at Tokanui in 2020

Sawmills[29]

There were several sawmills, milling trees such as rimu.[30] Bauchop's mill burnt down in 1912[31] and narrowly escaped another fire in 1917.[32] There were 3 timber mills in 1921.[33] Some of the sawmills were linked to their bush by tramways, between at least 1902[34] and 1925.[35] One extended Script error: No such module "convert". from the railway station towards Waikawa.[36]

A woodchip mill started in the 1980s,[37] using kāmahi and beech[38] and, from 1985, replaced the native trees as its feedstock, with locally grown eucalyptus.[39]

Halls

Tokanui was allocated £41 13s 4d[40] towards the building of a Script error: No such module "convert". x Script error: No such module "convert". Coronation Hall,[41] which opened on 13 October 1911.[42] It was burnt down in 1949.[43] The first replacement Memorial Hall was built in 1954,[44] however, it was also burnt down by an arsonist in 1965. The replacement was rather larger Script error: No such module "convert". x Script error: No such module "convert"., built on a different site. and opened in 1967.[45] There is also a Lions Club, which was started in 1979.[46]

Railway station

File:Tokanui railway station in 1956.jpg
Tokanui railway station in 1956

Tokanui was a flag station at the eastern terminus of the Tokanui Branch railway line, operating from Invercargill, Script error: No such module "convert". away.[47] The line was extended Script error: No such module "convert". and with gradients as steep as 1 in 50,[48] from Waimahaka to Tokanui, the official opening being on Wednesday 20 September 1911, initially with trains on Saturdays and Tuesdays.[49] From time to time trains ran daily,[50] but mainly ran only a few days a week.[51][52] Trains were speeded up in 1924, cutting the journey time to Invercargill to 2h 25m.[53] A request for a stationmaster was rejected in 1920,[54] so that Waimahaka remained the only station on the line with a stationmaster and all records of traffic on the line show only that station.[55]

A 1910 contract for the station buildings at Te Peka and Tokonui was won by P A Lyders of Dunedin for £1827. They were finished by August 1911, when Tokanui had a station building, platform, Script error: No such module "convert". x Script error: No such module "convert". goods shed, loading bank, cattle yards, coal shed, 5 sidings, an engine shed and, in 1912, also a turntable. The engine shed closed on 1 January 1960. There was a Post Office at the station from 6 February 1953 to 31 March 1966.[53] Although electric power reached Tokanui in 1926,[56] it wasn't until 1932 that it lit the stockyards, 1936 when it was noted a railway house had electricity and 1946 for station lighting. There were 3 railway houses in 1912 and another was added in 1919. On Sunday, 31 July 1966 the station closed to all traffic.[47] Apart from a large flat area, nothing remains of the station,[57] except part of the platform.[58]

  Former adjoining stations  <templatestyles src="S-note/styles.css" />
Pukewao
Line closed, station closed
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style="background:#Template:BR(E) colour; color:inherit; border-left: 0px none; border-right: 0px none; border-top:1px #aaa solid; border-bottom:0px none;" |   Tokanui Branch style="background:#Template:BR(E) colour; color:inherit; border-left: 0px none; border-right: 0px none; border-top:1px #aaa solid; border-bottom:0px none;" |   Terminus

Geology

Most of the rocks in the area are of the early Middle Jurassic Ferndale Group, a part of the Murihiku Terrane, mainly sandstone deposited in shallow water, with mudstone and conglomerate. The river valleys are formed of recent alluvium.[60]

Etymology

Tokanui is a name made up of the Māori words for rock (toka) and large, or many (nui). It is used for 6 locations in North Island (Te Ika-a-Māui),[61] including Tokanui, Waikato, though there the name is thought to be a corruption of tāiko nui, a large petrel.[62] On 3 February 1912 a proposal was made to change the name of the railway station from Tokonui to Tokanui.[47] However, for over 30 years the names were often used interchangeably.[63]

Demographics

By 1911 Tokanui had a population of 119,[64] but in 2013 the population of meshblock 3096200 was 66 and 3096900 was 45.[65] The 1944 map[66] and 1956 aerial photos show settlement around the railway station and dairy factory.[67][68] Since then buildings have been enlarged and altered and driveways added, but the pattern of development remains similar.[69]

Sewage

A sewage treatment plant, built in 1972, to the west of Tokanui, beside the river puts up to Script error: No such module "convert"./day of treated waste into the river. The effect on river quality is claimed to be minimal.[70]

Education

Tokanui School opened about 1885, a temporary teacher was appointed in 1886 and Tokanui School was built in 1887.[71] When it opened it had with a roll of 14 students.[72] The school was enlarged in 1993,[73] when Fortrose, Ōtara and Quarry Hills schools closed.[74] It is now a co-educational contributing primary school for years 1 to 8[75] with a roll of Template:NZ school roll data students as of Template:NZ school roll data The 2018 Education Review Office report said there were then 110 pupils.[76] Children are brought to the school on 4 bus routes, serving the south coast from Fortrose to Waikawa and north to Fortification.[77] A 2009 proposal to move Fortrose students to Waimahaka School was opposed by parents and Tokanui School.[78] Waimahaka School closed in 2012.[79]

File:Quarry Hills school.jpg
Quarry Hills school, probably in 1891

Quarry Hills

Quarry Hills is a scattered settlement, Script error: No such module "convert". east of Tokanui.[80] In 2013 meshblock 309671, which covers a large area, to the edge of Tokanui, had a population of 69 and meshhblock 3096800, to the south of the main road, had 18.

In 1891 a post office opened.[81] Waikawa Valley school opened in 1891[82] and was renamed Quarry Hills in 1893.[83] A cemetery opened in about 1895[84] and a public hall in 1928.[85] The hall closed between 1968 and 1976[86] and the school closed in 1993 and is now a house.[87] A war memorial was erected in 1920.[88] Quarrying ended about 1920[89] and had restarted by 1970,[90] but the quarry is now closed.[91]

References

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External links