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Description

Local historians weekly "Back Issues" article in the Manawatū Standard. The significance of the Kowhai tree and the history of Feilding. Before World War 1, Feilding botanist and plant man Lewis Thomas Brown was passionate about adopting kōwhai as the national flower of New Zealand. The Feilding Beautifying Society instigated 'Kōwhai Day" in 1910, ecouraging everyone to celebrate the day and wear a kōwhai bouquet. The society raised funds to enable a planted area in South Street to be officially opened as a park and suggested that it was named Kōwhai Park. In recent times, several Feilding sporting clubs include the kōwhai flower in club colours and insignia.

Identification

Object type
Image
Content type
Born digital
Relation
Manawatū Standard
Date
October 25, 2025
Digitisation id
2025Pa_IMCA-DigitalArchive_044033
Format
Born Digital
Held In
"IMCA Digital Archive"

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The Manawatū Journal of History: Issue 13
Back Issues:  Cast in bronze but lost from memory
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Kowhai Park, Whanganui
Emma Belk, signatory to 1893 suffrage petition
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Taxonomy

Tags
back issues,
feilding,
feilding beautifying society,
kowhai,
kowhai park,
manawa standard,
Community Tags

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Related items

The Manawatū Journal of History: Issue 13
Back Issues:  Cast in bronze but lost from memory
Back Issues: A pioneering town planner
Back Issues: Fall and rise of Feilding's town clock
Back Issues: Revisiting Cobbe's Magic Cave
Back Issues: Remembering a Friday night
Back Issues:  When Arbor Day was a festive occasion
Kowhai Park, Whanganui
Emma Belk, signatory to 1893 suffrage petition
Emma and James Duncan Belk, early settlers in Feilding
Henry Adsett's Sawmill, Taonui Road, near Feilding
A traction engine hauling three wagon loads of grain