Palmerston is a town in
Otago
Otago (, ; ) is a regions of New Zealand, region of New Zealand located in the southern half of the South Island and administered by the Otago Regional Council. It has an area of approximately , making it the country's second largest local go ...
in the
South Island
The South Island ( , 'the waters of Pounamu, Greenstone') is the largest of the three major islands of New Zealand by surface area, the others being the smaller but more populous North Island and Stewart Island. It is bordered to the north by ...
of New Zealand. Located 50 kilometres to the north of the city of
Dunedin
Dunedin ( ; ) is the second-most populous city in the South Island of New Zealand (after Christchurch), and the principal city of the Otago region. Its name comes from ("fort of Edin"), the Scottish Gaelic name for Edinburgh, the capital of S ...
, it is the largest town in the Waihemo Ward of the Waitaki District, with a population of 890 residents. Palmerston grew at a major road junction:
State Highway 1 links Dunedin and
Waikouaiti to the south with
Oamaru
Oamaru (; ) is the largest town in North Otago, in the South Island of New Zealand, it is the main town in the Waitaki District. It is south of Timaru and north of Dunedin on the Pacific Ocean, Pacific coast; State Highway 1 (New Zealand), Sta ...
and
Christchurch
Christchurch (; ) is the largest city in the South Island and the List of cities in New Zealand, second-largest city by urban area population in New Zealand. Christchurch has an urban population of , and a metropolitan population of over hal ...
to the north, while
State Highway 85 (known colloquially as "The Pigroot") heads inland to become the principal highway of the
Maniototo. The
Main South Line railway passes through the town and the
Seasider tourist train travels from Dunedin to Palmerston and back once or twice a week. From 1880 until 1989, the town acted as the junction between the main line and a branch line that ran inland, the
Dunback and Makareao Branches.
Palmerston stands near the banks of the
Waihemo / Shag River, five kilometres inland from the Pacific coast. Between it and the sea stands the lone hill of
Puketapu (
Māori for ''sacred hill'', known by Southerners as Holy Hill), crowned with a monument to the 19th century Otago politician Sir
John McKenzie. An annual race takes place up to the memorial and back, which is called the Kelly's canter, dedicated to Albert Kelly who ran up Puketapu as a constable in the Palmerston police force every day during World War II. This cairn is the second around Palmerston dedicated to MacKenzie – an earlier cairn was built on a hill to the north of the town, near
Shag Point, but collapsed owing to the unstable geology of the site.
Many people confuse the town of Palmerston with the much more populous
North Island
The North Island ( , 'the fish of Māui', historically New Ulster) is one of the two main islands of New Zealand, islands of New Zealand, separated from the larger but less populous South Island by Cook Strait. With an area of , it is the List ...
city of
Palmerston North
Palmerston North (; , colloquially known as Palmerston or Palmy) is a city in the North Island of New Zealand and the seat of the Manawatū-Whanganui region. Located in the eastern Manawatū Plains, the city is near the north bank of the Manaw ...
, whose residents often call their home simply "Palmerston". As a result, Palmerston is sometimes called "Palmerston South" to disambiguate the two towns.
Otago
Otago (, ; ) is a regions of New Zealand, region of New Zealand located in the southern half of the South Island and administered by the Otago Regional Council. It has an area of approximately , making it the country's second largest local go ...
's town has the earlier claim to the name, however – its surveying dates from 1862, whereas the northern city did not receive its name until 1871. Both towns take their names from
Lord Palmerston
Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston (20 October 1784 – 18 October 1865), known as Lord Palmerston, was a British statesman and politician who served as prime minister of the United Kingdom from 1855 to 1858 and from 1859 to 1865. A m ...
, the 19th-century British Prime Minister.
The nearby Shag River is named for the
cormorant, a sea bird that ventures a little inland, colloquially known as a 'shag'. The river's Māori name, 'Waihemo', has been translated as 'Dwindle River'. It is thought to arise from the river's tendency to reduce in summer to a small stream. Palmerston used to be the capital of the Waihemo County, the surrounding district, before it was amalgamated with the Waitaki District in 1989.
History and legend
The area is rich in history and legend.
Modern archaeology favours a date for the first settlement of New Zealand by
Polynesian people about 1150 AD when population was concentrated on the east coast of the South Island. There is a substantial early settlement site of the
Archaic or
moa hunter phase of Māori culture near Palmerston on the sea coast at the mouth of the Shag River. It has been known to Europeans since the 1840s and was investigated from an early time by archaeologists. In 1987 and 1989 it was very thoroughly re-excavated by a team including Professor
Atholl Anderson. It was determined it had been in permanent, year round occupation 'for a period of perhaps 20–50 years in the 14th century AD'. (Anderson and others, 1996, p. 67.)
The area is also the traditional site of the wreck of the
Arai Te Uru __NOTOC__
Arai may refer to:
Places
*Arai, Armenia, Arain, Armenia
* Arai, Niigata, Japan
* Arai, Shizuoka, Japan
People
*Arai (surname)
Companies
* Arai Helmet (アライ), a Japanese motorcycle helmet manufacturer
* ARAI (Automotive Research A ...
canoe. There are several versions of the tradition but they tell of the arrival of
Rākaihautū from the ancestral homeland Hawaiki who met the Kahui Tipua people who were already here. He showed them kumara, or sweet potatoes, and they built canoes including Arai Te Uru to go to Hawaiki and bring back this new and valuable food. However, on its return the vessel became waterlogged off the
Waitaki River mouth. It spilled food baskets on Moeraki and Katiki beaches and was wrecked at
Shag Point / Matakaea, where it turned into what is now called Danger Reef. Its steersman, Hipo, sits erect at the stern. After this the crew explored the southern South Island giving many place names.
Kahui Tipua are 'ghost or giant people' with mythic or magical attributes, although they are also the real ancestors of people living now. (Anderson, 1983, p. 7.) If the explorers did not get back before dawn they turned into hills and other natural features. One of them was a woman Puketapu who got as far south as
Owaka in South Otago. When she got back to the Waihemo Valley dawn broke and she was turned into the hill Puketapu overlooking Palmerston.
The story is seen as an allegorical explanation of the fact that
kūmara
The sweet potato or sweetpotato (''Ipomoea batatas'') is a dicotyledonous plant in the morning glory family, Convolvulaceae. Its sizeable, starchy, sweet-tasting tuberous roots are used as a root vegetable, which is a staple food in parts of the ...
does not grow south of Banks Peninsula. Arai Te Uru is an ancestral canoe of the Kāti Māmoe people who came to the south before Kāi Tahu (Ngāi Tahu in modern standard Māori) but were preceded by earlier peoples. The Arai Te Uru tradition reflects this with its reference to the preceding Kahui Tipua. It is tempting to identify the occupants of the river mouth archaeological site with the people of Arai Te Uru but that can only be speculation.

In 1814 an open boat from the ''Matilda'', Captain Fowler, under the first mate Robert Brown, with two other Europeans and five lascars, or Indian seamen, came up the east coast past Palmerston and camped for the night ashore north of Moeraki. They were seen and attacked by Māori because of a feud started four years earlier by the theft of a shirt. According to the Creed manuscript, discovered in 2003, two men 'escaped through the darkness of the night & fled as far as Goodwood Bobby's Head' a little south of Palmerston on the coast. They were two days and nights on the way and the Māori people there fed them. However '30 Natives went to the place & massacred them – eat them.' One of the Europeans put up a grim struggle and the mere or club which dispatched him was long remembered. There was a dispute about killing these men after they had been entertained but those bent on vengeance prevailed.
In May 1826
Thomas Shepherd, (1779–1835), passing this coast in the
''Rosanna'', made a sketch of it which still survives in the Mitchell Library, Sydney.
There were European visitors in the 1840s, such as Edward Shortland. Charles Suisted took up land in the area in the 1850s and Palmerston came into existence as a camp site in 1862 as the beginning of a route by the
Shag Valley to the
Central Otago gold diggings. It was surveyed and named in 1864. There is a handsome Presbyterian Church made of a local sandstone, designed by
David Ross in 1876. A marble statue of Zealandia by
Carlo Bergamini in the centre of the town is a
Boer War
The Second Boer War (, , 11 October 189931 May 1902), also known as the Boer War, Transvaal War, Anglo–Boer War, or South African War, was a conflict fought between the British Empire and the two Boer republics (the South African Republic an ...
memorial.
A few kilometres inland, at the Shag Valley Station, Frank Bell made the first New Zealand to England radio contact on 18 October 1924, an event which attracted international media attention as the first round-the-world radio broadcast.
Demographics
Palmerston is described by Statistics New Zealand as a rural settlement. It covers
and had an estimated population of as of with a population density of people per km
2.
Palmerston had a population of 948 at the
2018 New Zealand census
The 2018 New Zealand census, which took place on Tuesday 6 March 2018, was the thirty-fourth national census in New Zealand. The population of New Zealand was counted as 4,699,755 – an increase of 457,707 (10.79%) over the 2013 census.
Resu ...
, an increase of 57 people (6.4%) since the
2013 census, and an increase of 27 people (2.9%) since the
2006 census. There were 429 households, comprising 468 males and 480 females, giving a sex ratio of 0.97 males per female. The median age was 50.9 years (compared with 37.4 years nationally), with 147 people (15.5%) aged under 15 years, 114 (12.0%) aged 15 to 29, 399 (42.1%) aged 30 to 64, and 291 (30.7%) aged 65 or older.
Ethnicities were 91.8% European/
Pākehā
''Pākehā'' (or ''Pakeha''; ; ) is a Māori language, Māori-language word used in English, particularly in New Zealand. It generally means a non-Polynesians, Polynesian New Zealanders, New Zealander or more specifically a European New Zeala ...
, 14.6%
Māori, 1.3%
Pasifika, 1.9%
Asian, and 1.9% other ethnicities. People may identify with more than one ethnicity.
The percentage of people born overseas was 8.9, compared with 27.1% nationally.
Although some people chose not to answer the census's question about religious affiliation, 51.9% had no religion, 38.9% were
Christian
A Christian () is a person who follows or adheres to Christianity, a Monotheism, monotheistic Abrahamic religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus in Christianity, Jesus Christ. Christians form the largest religious community in the wo ...
, 0.3% had
Māori religious beliefs, 0.3% were
Buddhist
Buddhism, also known as Buddhadharma and Dharmavinaya, is an Indian religion and List of philosophies, philosophical tradition based on Pre-sectarian Buddhism, teachings attributed to the Buddha, a wandering teacher who lived in the 6th or ...
and 1.6% had other religions.
Of those at least 15 years old, 72 (9.0%) people had a bachelor's or higher degree, and 246 (30.7%) people had no formal qualifications. The median income was $22,800, compared with $31,800 nationally. 87 people (10.9%) earned over $70,000 compared to 17.2% nationally. The employment status of those at least 15 was that 291 (36.3%) people were employed full-time, 138 (17.2%) were part-time, and 27 (3.4%) were unemployed.
Churches
St Mary's Anglican church

St Mary's
Anglican
Anglicanism, also known as Episcopalianism in some countries, is a Western Christianity, Western Christian tradition which developed from the practices, liturgy, and identity of the Church of England following the English Reformation, in the ...
church is situated on Stromness street and was built in 1872 and designed by architect
RA Lawson. It was built in a gothic style out of local sandstone.
St James Presbyterian church

St James
Presbyterian
Presbyterianism is a historically Reformed Protestant tradition named for its form of church government by representative assemblies of elders, known as "presbyters". Though other Reformed churches are structurally similar, the word ''Pr ...
church was built in 1876 and is located on Tiverton street. The church was designed by Dunedin architect David Ross and built out of local Waihemo stone.
Education
Palmerston School is a contributing primary school catering for years 1 to 6 with a roll of students. Palmerston School was operating in 1866.
East Otago High School is a school for years 7 to 13 with a roll of students. It was preceded by Palmerston District High School in 1877, with a new building constructed in 1886. East Otago High School opened as a replacement in 1969.
Both schools are coeducational. Rolls are as of
Climate
Notable people
Notable people born in Palmerston include:
*
Ged Baldwin (1907–1991), Canadian politician
*
Thomas Beck (engineer)
Thomas George Gordon Beck (2 August 1900 – 6 January 1948) was a New Zealand civil engineer who had a leading role in public works engineering projects in New Zealand.
Early life
Beck was born in Palmerston, New Zealand, Palmerston, Otago, i ...
(1900–1948), civil engineer
*
Margaret Cruickshank (1871–1918), New Zealand's first registered female doctor
*
Arthur Gilligan (footballer) (1879–1963), Australian rules footballer
*
Jeff Matheson (1948–present), rugby player
*
Allan Parkhill (1912–1986), rugby player
*
Tahu Potiki (1966–2019), Māori leader
*
Jeff Robson (sportsman) (1926–2022), badminton and tennis player
*
Heather Roy (1964–present), politician
*
Carl Worker (1955–present), diplomat
*
Dion Workman musician
References
Sources
*Anderson, A. (1983) ''When All the Moa-Ovens Grew Cold'' Dunedin, NZ: Otago Heritage Books
*Anderson, A. (1998) ''The Welcome of Strangers'' Dunedin, NZ; University of Otago Press, with Dunedin City Council pb.
*Anderson, A (and others) (1996) ''Shag River Mouth'' Canberra, Aus; The Australian National University. .
*Dann, C. & Peat, N. (1989). ''Dunedin, North and South Otago''. Wellington, NZ: GP Books. .
*Entwisle, P. (2005) ''Taka a Vignette Life of William Tucker 1784-1817'' Dunedin, NZ: Port Daniel Press. .
*Griffiths, G. (1982) ''In the Land of Dwindle River'' Dunedin, NZ: Otago Heritage Books.
*Moore, C.W.S.(1958) ''Northern Approaches'' Dunedin, NZ: Otago Centennial Historical Committee.
{{Waitaki District, New Zealand
1862 establishments in New Zealand
Populated places established in 1862
Waitaki District
Populated places in Otago
Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston