Wairau Valley


Wairau Valley is the valley of the Wairau River in Marlborough, New Zealand and also the name of the main settlement in the upper valley. State Highway 63 runs through the valley. The valley opens onto the Wairau Plain, where Renwick and Blenheim are sited. The Alpine–Wairau Fault runs along the length of the valley.
According to the 2013 New Zealand census, Wairau Valley has a population of 1,959, an increase of 69 people since the 2006 census. There were 1,008 males and 954 females. Figures have been rounded and may not add up to totals.
Wairauite is an iron-cobalt alloy which is named after the valley.

History

J. S. Cotterell surveyed the Wairau Valley in November 1842, and reported it contained rich land. Settlers from Nelson, led by Arthur Wakefield, tried to take possession of the land but the Ngāti Toa, led by Te Rauparaha and Te Rangihaeata objected. The dispute escalated into the Wairau Affray at Tuamarina on 23 June 1843, in which 22 settlers and four Māori and were killed. An enquiry held in 1844 by Governor Robert FitzRoy decided that the settlers were in the wrong.
In November 1846, Nelson farmers Nathaniel Morse and John Cooper drove sheep into the Wairau valley and established settlements. Governor Sir George Grey purchased the land in the same year, but legal title to the land for the settlers was sorted out later.
In the 1855 Wairarapa earthquake, the eastern end of the Wairau valley subsided by over a metre.

Education

Wairau Valley School is a coeducational full primary school with a roll of students as of A school first opened in the Wairau valley in 1861.

Culture

Parerarua Marae is located in Wairau Valley. It is a marae of Ngāti Rārua and includes the Parerarua wharenui.