One Tree Hill, New Zealand
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| One Tree Hill Maungakiekie |
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|---|---|
One Tree Hill after the removal of the "One Tree". Vista does not show dense suburban surroundings. |
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| Elevation | 182m |
| Location | North Island, New Zealand |
| Coordinates | |
One Tree Hill (or Maungakiekie in Māori) is a 182 metre volcanic peak located in Auckland, New Zealand. It is an important memorial place for both Māori and other New Zealanders. The suburb around the base of the hill is also called One Tree Hill.
The hill's scoria cones erupted 20,000 - 30,000 years ago, creating lava flows that covered an area of 20 square kilometres, mostly towards Onehunga, making it the largest (in terms of area covered) of the Auckland volcanic field. The summit provides views across the Auckland area, and allows visitors to see both of Auckland's Harbours.[1]
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[edit] History
[edit] Māori pā (fort)
The Māori name Maungakiekie translates to 'mountain of the kiekie vine'. The mountain and its surrounds were home to the Wai o Hua tribe, since the early 1700s and probably before that time. Other Māori tribes in the Auckland area can also trace their ancestry to the mountain. It is surrounded by the suburbs of Royal Oak to the west, and clockwise, Epsom, Greenlane, Oranga, and Onehunga.
Maungakiekie was the largest and most important Māori Pā in pre-European times. The cone and its surroundings are estimated to have been home to a population of up to 5,000.[2] At this time, the Nga Marama chief Kiwi Tamaki held the pa and used its strategic placement to exact tribute from travellers passing from Northland to the rest of the North Island through the rich isthmus. Its position between the Waitemata Harbour to the East (opening upon the Pacific Ocean) and the Manukau Harbour to the West (opening onto the Tasman Sea) afforded a wide variety of seafood from the two harbours. The volcanic soil of the slopes of the mountain proved highly fertile and easy to defend from raiding parties from other tribes due to its steep sides and imposing palisades. The inhabitants terraced the hill extensively, and it is considered to be the largest prehistoric earthwork fortifications world-wide.[3] It is also the largest and most complex volcanic cone / earth fortress known in the Southern Hemisphere.[2]
[edit] European parks
Cornwall Park is the legacy of Sir John Logan Campbell. Originally the land was a farm owned by him on the outskirts of Auckland. Upon his return from Italy in the 1880s he intended to build a great family residence on the slopes of the hill (where the current tearooms are) and planted many trees including olives on the slopes. Eventually he constructed a house closer to town (the land is now part of the Parnell Rose gardens). By about 1900 he realised that Auckland's suburbs were spreading at an alarming rate and he decided to leave the Greenlane property to the city as a park. Parts of the park, about 120 hectares, are still run as a farm today, providing Aucklanders with access to an example of rural life in the heart of the city.[4] The park was designed by the landscape architect Austin Strong and is based on Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.[citation needed]
Campbell initially intended the name to be Corinth Park after the noted region of Greece. It received the name Cornwall Park because of the Royal visit to Australia and New Zealand in 1901 by the Duke & Duchess of Cornwall (later King George V & Queen Mary). John Logan Campbell was asked to be honorary Mayor of Auckland during the visits, and he took the opportunity to gift the park to the people of New Zealand and asked that it be called Cornwall Park. In return he was knighted.
One Tree Hill Domain or Maunagakiekie (118 acres / 48 hectares) is an Auckland City Council-administered park adjoining Cornwall Park (425 acres / 172 hectares) creating a total of 220 hectares (540 acres) of public green space.[5]
On the summit of the hill is the grave of Sir John Logan Campbell surmounted by an obelisk. The obelisk was constructed in accordance with the wishes and provisions in John Campbell's will to commemorate his admiration for the Māori people. Before it stands a bronze statue of a Māori warrior. The stone Obelisk was completed by 1940 – the centennial year of the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi but the unveiling of the Obelisk was delayed until 24 April 1948, after World War II was over, in keeping with Māori custom of not holding such ceremonies during a time of bloodshed.
[edit] Trees on the hill
When Auckland was founded as a colonial town a tree stood near the summit which gave the hill its English name. Two accounts identify it as a pohutukawa (metrosideros excelsa). This tree was cut down by a white settler in 1852, in an act of vandalism in one account, or for firewood in another. It seems likely this was a different tree from the totara (podocarpus totara) which, as a sacred tree, had given the hill one of its Maori names. A radiata pine was planted in the 1870s to replace the previous totara.[6]
Until 2000, a lone pine tree stood next to the obelisk. This tree was the survivor of a group of pines planted to replace the tree which had given Maungakiekie its English name. However, in the early 1960s during a jamboree, a group of overseas Boy Scouts cut down one of the two newer pines.[citation needed]
The remaining tree was later attacked twice with chainsaws by Māori protesters (partly because it was not a native New Zealand species and thus considered an insult). The first attack happened on 28 October 1994, the anniversary of the 1835 Declaration of Independence.[7] A second attack on 5 October 2000[8] left the tree unable to recover and so it was removed due to the risk of it dying and falling down. The chainsaw used in the first attack was placed on sale on popular New Zealand auction site, TradeMe in 2007[9] but later withdrawn by the website after complaints and a poll of users. It was later listed on eBay.[10]
Partly due to uncertainty as to what species of tree should be replanted (a new pine or a tree native to New Zealand), the summit stands empty at the moment, except for the obelisk. A new nickname, "No(ne) Tree Hill", soon became popular. Plans are ongoing to plant a grove of pohutukawa and totara trees at the summit, but concerns by local iwis over Treaty of Waitangi claims have so far prevented any actual planting.[11] The Council also had to remove repeated illegal plantings, usually of pohutukawa, over the last years.[12]
[edit] Cornwall Park
[edit] Acacia Cottage
Cornwall Park is home to Acacia Cottage, one of the earliest surviving timber buildings in New Zealand, and also the oldest extant in Auckland. Built in 1841, it was originally the home of William Brown and John Logan Campbell and located behind their store. It was relocated in 1920 from its original location off Shortland Street, in what is now the heart of the CBD of Auckland City. In 1956 moved again within the park to a more prominent location. It is listed as a 'Category I' site by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust.[13]
[edit] Stardome Observatory
The Stardome Observatory is in One Tree Hill Domain/Maunagakiekie an Auckland City Council Park, it contains two telescopes and a planetarium, which recently received funding for a major overhaul. The observatory has, amongst other research, discovered and named the asteroid 19620 Auckland.
[edit] In popular culture
- Irish rock band U2 wrote a song about the hill, "One Tree Hill", which appeared on their album The Joshua Tree. It was written to honour New Zealander Greg Carroll, an employee of the band who died in a motorcycle accident in Dublin on July 3, 1986.
- The naming of the teen television drama, One Tree Hill, was inspired in turn by the U2 song, and in the series Andy Hargrove hails from New Zealand; his mother moved the family to Tree Hill, North Carolina because of the common name
- Asteroid 23988 Maungakiekie was named after the hill by Ian P. Griffin, a British astronomer. The Asteroid was discovered at the Auckland Observatory which is located in the One Tree Hill Domain, a kilometre southwest of the peak.
- Mozilla Firefox 0.9 was named One Tree Hill by Auckland resident and (at that time) Firefox lead engineer Ben Goodger.
[edit] Gallery
[edit] References
- ^ One Tree Hill - Formation (from the Auckland volcanic field website of the Auckland Regional Council)
- ^ a b One Tree Hill Domain (Maungakiekie) (from the Auckland City Council website.Retrieved 2007-12-10.)
- ^ One Tree Hill - Use and value (from the Auckland volcanic field website of the Auckland Regional Council)
- ^ Cornwall Park (official website of the park)
- ^ Coast to Coast walkway. Auckland City Council.
- ^ One Tree Hill loses its tree - BBC News, Thursday 26 October 2000
- ^ The Evolution of Contemporary Maori Protest (from a Tino Rangatiratanga website)
- ^ Attempt to attack One Tree Hill - Television New Zealand, Thursday 5 October 2000
- ^ One Tree Hill chainsaw goes on sale at $5000 plus - New Zealand Herald, Friday 19 January 2007
- ^ Chips flying as chainsaw seller tries to rev up interest on US auction site - New Zealand Herald, Monday 22 January 2007
- ^ Fresh hope sprouts for One Tree Hill - New Zealand Herald, Saturday 10 June 2006
- ^ One Tree Hill being regularly patrolled - New Zealand Herald, Thursday 10 February 2005
- ^ Acacia Cottage (database entry on the New Zealand Historic Places Trust website)
- McLauchlan, Gordon (Ed) (1989). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of New Zealand. David Bateman Ltd. ISBN 1-86953-007-1.
[edit] External links
- One Tree Hill (from the Auckland volcanic field website of the Auckland Regional Council)
- Cornwall Park (official website of the park surrounding One Tree Hill)

