National Lamb Day


National Lamb Day is an annual observance that occurs in New Zealand on the 24th of May.

Overview

The first National Lamb Day was celebrated on the 15th of February, to commemorate the day in 1882 that William Davidson and Thomas Brydone launched the first shipment of frozen sheep meat from Port Chalmers, Otago, New Zealand on the , bound for London. In 2018, National Lamb Day was changed to the 24th of May to reflect the arrival of the shipment in London. In 2018, celebrated National Lamb Day by commissioning a giant lamb chop which visited various landmarks around New Zealand.

History of New Zealand lamb exports

The Dunedin’s voyage was organized by William Soltau Davidson, the British-based general manager of the New Zealand and Australian Land Company, whose landholdings in the two countries exceeded 1 million hectares. Davidson had taken an interest in refrigerated experiments, which had proved the concept, if not yet the economic viability, of shipping frozen meat around the globe.
About 5,000 carcasses were on board the Dunedin when it sailed from New Zealand on 15 February. On arrival in London on 24 May, only one carcass had to be condemned, and the cargo’s superiority over Australian shipments was remarked upon. More than a single successful shipment was needed to create a new industry. The new technology ultimately enabled the owner-operated farm to become the standard economic unit in rural New Zealand for the next century.