Massey Memorial, Wellington, New Zealand
The burial location of William Ferguson Massey in Wellington New Zealand who died in 1925. Massey was a former Prime Minister to New Zealand.
Massey Memorial - Wellington - New Zealand
In Wellington is the Massey Memorial, the burial ground of William Ferguson Massey, New Zealand Prime Minister from 1912 to 1925 his wife Christina is also buried here
Massey memorial
A drive up to Massey memorial while exploring Wellington in the North Island of New Zealand
A Virtual Tour of New Zealand Archaeological Sites: Part 3 - Wellington
This video is a tour of a selection of archaeological and historic sites in and around Wellington. A preference has been made towards sites you can actually go visit.
All credit for aerial photography in this video goes to Google Earth and their data providers.
Images:
Pencarrow Lighthouse – Aidan Wojtas -
Pencarrow Head – Phillip Capper -
Lighthouse keepers cottage – Archive NZ -
Pencarrow Drone image – WellingtonNZ -
Fort Balance -Tony Wills -
8” Armstrong Gun at Fort Gordon – Wairarapa Archive -
Massey Memorial – Alana’s -
8” Armstrong gun – Happy Little Nomad -
Fort Balance 1887 – Alexander Turnbull Library - Fort Ballance, Scorching Bay, Wellington. Wright, Henry Charles Clarke, 1844-1936 :Negatives. Ref: 1/1-020667-G. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/23212316
NZ Company map – Archives New Zealand -
1848 Earthquake Damage - Alexander Turnbull Library - Park, Robert, 1812-1870. [Park, Robert] 1812-1870. Attributed works :[Sketches showing the damage to buildings sustained in the 1848 Wellington earthquake] 1848. An account of the earthquakes in New Zealand. Extracted from the New South Wales sporting and literary magazine and racing calendar. (Sydney, Printed by D. Wall, 1848). Ref: PUBL-0050-01. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/23036366
Gold painting - Alexander Turnbull Library - Gold, Charles Emilius, 1809-1871. [Gold, Charles Emilius] 1809-1871 :Landslip caused by earthquake near Wellington N. Zealand Jan 1855. Ref: B-103-016. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/22330780
Old Government Building – Ballofstring -
Massey University Dnner and Dance
Massey University Dinner and Dance
Fundraiser for Foundations Refectory Campaign held at the Oval Massey University Palmerston North on Friday 10 March 2017
Hi there welcome to my channel
My name is Sue Wilson and I live in Palmerston North, New Zealand.
I love meeting and talking with people and my passion is attending functions and events to take photos of the people at these functions together with the presenters and guest speakers plus I also take videos at these events (introducing the event and interviewing the organisers) – my events amount to about four or more functions per week – these are the sort of functions I go to:- networking meetings, Woman in Business, Business After Five, Chamber of Commerce, 3 Keys Business Meetings, Reunions, Openings, Gallery Openings, Birthdays, Celebrations, Book Launches, Sporting Events, Council Functions plus much more . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . as long as there is about 30 people at the event and I am available I will attend.
All the photos are put up on my facebook page (facebook.com/outandaboutsuewilson) when they are published in the local newspaper (The Guardian) every Thursday and the videos go up live on my facebook page as they happen.
Out and About Sue Wilson Pages are published on Thursdays in the Guardian Newspaper, Palmerston North.
Facebook Page - facebook.com/outandaboutsuewilson
Follow me on Instagram - @outandaboutsuewilson
Linked In - outandaboutsuewilson
Email – outandaboutsuewilson@gmail.com
Please contact me if you would like photos and videos at your function
A bit of history about me . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . .
I have been in the media industry for over 20 years in a sales and communication capacity –with a Direct Marketing Diploma and experience with a communication agency, newspapers, social media and television. My out and about photography has keep me busy for the last 8 years and am experienced with lighting, posing of people, editing and photoshopping. My husband Greg is a very talented people and commercial photographer and he has taught me so much – we have three gorgeous daughters and a rag doll cat called Louie
Another passion of mine is jewellery and I also have a jewellery business and hand make and import fashion necklaces and bracelets
Like my Jewellery Facebook Page facebook.com/suewilsonpearls
And . . . . . . . . . . . . . I live in CAFES (so to speak!!!!) as that is where I do my work during the day lol and have an Instagram Account called CAFESILOVE – please follow me - I normally put up about 3 photos per day of cafes I have been to – follow me on Instagram @cafesilove
Thank you so much for watching! Please make sure to LIKE and SHARE the video and Subscribe to the channel for where I am out and about
Sue Wilson
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Wandering Wellington
One Day l 17 Locations.
Featured locations:
- City to Sea Bridge
- Massey Memorial
- Wellington Station
- Boat Sheds, Clyde Quay Boat Harbour
- Mt Victoria Lookout
- Bucket Fountain, Cuba Mall
- Te Papa
- Te Aho a Maui Sculpture, Civic Square
- Artwork, Opera House Lane
- Beehive
- Oriental Bay Beach
- Plank, Wellington Waterfront
- Westpac Stadium
- Pukeahu National War Memorial
- Rose Garden, Botanic Gardens
- Solace of the Wind Sculpture, Wellington Waterfront
- Gun emplacements, George Denton Park/Polhill Reserve
Instagram: aukimx
Track by Sachi ft. Zoe & SYSYI - No More
Michael Joseph Savage Memorial, Auckland, New Zealand
Located at Auckland's Bastion Point, the memorial to Michael Joseph Savage, New Zealand's first Labour prime minister (1935-1940) overlooks the Waitemata Harbour. Like the Massey Memorial in Wellington, it is built on the site of a former gun emplacement dating from the 'Russian Scare' of the 1880s.
Mission Bay is a waterfront haven for all Aucklanders. Built around the idyllic, pohutukawa-lined beach and separated from the central city by a brief and beautiful drive, it’s no wonder that Mission Bay is celebrated destination for locals and visitors alike. No matter what the weather, Mission Bay welcomes everyone with open arms and a variety of experiences. Enjoy the parks, get active (by land and by sea) or simply relax and explore the surrounds. From the iconic fountain to dining with views of Rangitoto and the Waitemata Harbour, it truly is the bustling, vibrant heart of Auckland’s Eastern Bays.
Exploring the Remains of the Wellington Avalanche of 1910 PART 1 in HD
71di17
Kemeriahan perayaan HUT RI ke 71 di Auckland yang diselenggarakan oleh PPI Auckland, didukung oleh Komunitas Indonesia Auckland, dan di sponsori oleh Kedutaan Besar Republik Indonesia untuk New Zealand.
Acara yang diselenggarakan pada 20 Agustus 2016 di Mt. Albert War Memorial Hall dimeriahkan oleh penampilan kesenian, bazaar makanan, perlombaan permainan tradisional dan upacara bendera.
Merdeka!
Ben Makisi - Wellington memorial service ( King Siaosi Tupo
Ben Makisi singing 'time to say goodbye' at the memorial service for his majesty the late King Siaosi Tupou V at the Michael Fowler Centre, Wellington.
Pacific News 28 May 2016
NZ Budget 2016, Darryl Evan Mangere (Budget Services Trust), Hurimoana Dennis (Chair Te Puea Memorial Marae), 248 Pacific students graduate from MIT, Seuili Terri Leo-Mauu (MIT Manager of Pacific Development), Festival of Pacific Arts in Guam, Lisa Taouma phone interview and I Love Fiji Fundraiser Concert in Wellington. News presented by Seinafolava Sanele Chadwick
Proses Belajar Doktoral di New Zealand
Wawancara dengan kandidiat PhD, Yayi tentang proses belajar di New Zealand. Mulai dari mencari supervisor sampai ujian konfirmasi, plus tantangen menjalani program doktoral di New Zealand.
Kontak kita di Website PPIPalmy
atau email : ppipalmy@gmail.com
Website beasiswa untuk dosen:
Flying in Wellington
Flying from the old gun emplacements above Massey memorial in Wellington.
The Scenic Outdoors | Wellington
First edited Vlog by my new editor, Ash.
Join me as I check out the Island Bay Marine Education Centre, meet some really cool fish, check out some of the bunkers around the area and visit the Massey Memorial.
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Ashleigh (Ash) is an energetic, bubbly gal from a little country called Australia. You can check her out on her Instagram:
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WELLINGTON YOUTUBERS
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Wellington YouTubers is a FB group that I set up in hopes to get together as a community and build each other up, share ideas with each other and organize collaborations. If you are based in Wellington, New Zealand and would like to join our group then please head to
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1. Dreams – HookSounds
2. Upbeat Party Scott Holmes Music
3. Inspiration Corporate Business – HookSounds
4. Dirt Road Traveler – Audio Nautix
5. Angel Share – Incompetech
6. Feel Good Rock – Audio Nautix
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Get in touch if you have:
-An idea for a video
-A product you'd like me to try
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You can get in contact via email - theringbearer1987@gmail.com, or by heading to my FB page, which you will find near the top.
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I do not get paid/sponsored to promote/use these products.
#SummerExploring #lexadixon
During These Days
The Glamaphones perform 'During These Days', composed by Gareth Farr, texts by Philip Patston and Brent Coutts.
Recorded at the final rehearsal before the world premiere on 18 June 2016 at St Andrews on the Terrace, Wellington, New Zealand.
Programme Note:
A message from Gareth Farr:
'During These Days' is a setting of two powerful poems of Philip Patston and Brent Coutts - two gay poets who write so powerfully about the time. I was so happy to be asked to write this piece from the Glamaphones in celebration of 30 years of homosexual law reform in New Zealand. I remember it clearly as a teenager, and at the time I was so horrified at the realisation that there was so much hatred towards something I was only just discovering in myself.
My music has a sombre feel to it, which may be a surprise in a concert of celebration, but what I needed to offer was a reminder of the hurt that was done; that helpless and desperate times are an integral part of any political struggle - then, for the gay community - and of course, now, for so many other communities. However - it's not all doom and gloom - the bottom line in this piece is that love conquers all.
A message from Philip Patston:
In light of the recent tragic events in Orlando, Florida, marking the 30th anniversary of the Homosexual Law Reform Bill takes on even more significant meaningfulness. It serves to remind us that the course of civil rights and social change is not a direct one. Rather we may more usefully thing of our progress as a society - be it local or global - as a path of loops, rather like a telephone cord. Loops that lift us up and pull us down; loops that see us traveling forwards and then backwards. In these cycles we feel the triumph of progression when we are in times of change, innovation and evolution, but then the despair when, on a backslide, we find ourselves in a place that reminds us of where we started or, sometimes (like Orlando), it may even feel things are worse. At these times, I find it comforting to remember that towards the end of every loop, as we come out of backward motion, we must always move forward beyond the last loop, in order to create the next. The HLR Bill represents one of those progressions that led us into another series of loops - a small step forward in the larger scale of things, but one we shall never lose.
About Brent Coutts and Naming Ourselves:
Brent Coutts was in his last year at high school in Balclutha during the homosexual law reform campaign. 'Naming Ourselves', published in the book 'I Know' (1994) was a political identity poem, a declaration; his version of I am here! I claim these words! This is me! In a way a 'chant' he would recite; a rhythm building on the words. Coutts was frustrated that he couldn't find any gay New Zealand poetry, so he decided to publish his own. The book was the first ever book of gay poems published in New Zealand. A few months later David Herkt put out his book of poems 'The Body of Man'. A recent publication by Coutts, 'The End of History' (2012), picks up on the autobiographical vein of the earlier poems in I Know.
Miramar Heights, Miramar, Worser Bay, Breaker Bay, Moa Point and Lyall Bay
Another local ride on the motorbike
Hordur Torfason Interview (Song) with Scoop's Alastair Thompson - Massey Memorial 22 March 2013
On Wednesday night Iceland's Cutlery Revolutionary Hordur Torfason presented to a mostly walk in audience of 230 at the Paramount Cinema in Wellington.
Last night he spoke to an audience of around 120 in St Francis's Hall, Clive (in the Hawke's Bay region of New Zealand).
This morning he spoke to Scoop Editor Alastair Thompson at the Massey Memorial in Wellington.
In this interview (Raw Footage in 6 Parts) Hordur talks about his recently departed father, his philosophical position - secular humanism - and growing up with loving and supportive parents.
At the end I ask him to sing a song for New Zealand, he tunes my guitar (which is a little too small for comfort) and sings a love song about the day and the night .
Below is a link to a story on Scoop which contains the complete raw footage of his story and discussion with the meeting.
Hordur Torfason | 500 Words
Thursday, 21 March 2013, 5:46 pm
Column: Alastair Thompson
Hordur Torfason speaks in testament. His personal story. And what a story. A story with purpose, and great weight.
Hordur was the leader of the 2008-09 Cutlery (or Kitchen) Revolution in Iceland, an event which signaled the beginning of the democratic response to the worst side of the global financial crisis.
Short version: After Iceland was bankrupted almost over-night - Hordur said it felt like WW3 had begun - thousands of Icelanders refused to accept the international financial medicine which their Government was taking: they banged pots and pans for four days in their thousands and the Government and the Bank of Iceland Board resigned.
Since then we have seen multiple governments fall around Europe as a result of Bank bailouts and austerity plans. Iceland has served as an example to us all of the insanity - and what happened there was particularly insane.
WWI Remembered: A Light & Sound Show - Wellington Remembers
For those that are unable to make it there themselves, here's a timelapse of the WWI remembrance light show at Pukeahu National War Memorial Park (Massey University), Wellington. It opened tonight.
Sandcastle World Record attempt Adventure Wellington supported by Weta Workshop & Richard Taylor
Sir Richard Taylor (Weta Workshop) announces Sandcastle World Record attempt by Adventure Wellington on the 25th of Nov 2012
Go to PledgeMe.co.nz and make a pledge! When you pledge $10 to the Neonatal Trust New Zealand, you'll get an entry to participate in the world record event plus the chance to win awesome prizes including two of the Grand Prize: a Golden Bucket.
adventurewellington.co.nz
Hordur Torfason Interview (1) with Scoop's Alastair Thompson - Massey Memorial 22 March 2013
On Wednesday night Iceland's Cutlery Revolutionary Hordur Torfason presented to a mostly walk in audience of 230 at the Paramount Cinema in Wellington.
Last night he spoke to an audience of around 120 in St Francis's Hall, Clive (in the Hawke's Bay region of New Zealand).
This morning he spoke to Scoop Editor Alastair Thompson at the Massey Memorial in Wellington.
In this interview (Raw Footage in 6 Parts) Hordur talks about his recently departed father, his philosophical position - secular humanism - and growing up with loving and supportive parents.
At the end I ask him to sing a song for New Zealand, he tunes my guitar (which is a little too small for comfort) and sings a love song about the day and the night .
Below is a link to a story on Scoop which contains the complete raw footage of his story and discussion with the meeting.
Hordur Torfason | 500 Words
Thursday, 21 March 2013, 5:46 pm
Column: Alastair Thompson
Hordur Torfason speaks in testament. His personal story. And what a story. A story with purpose, and great weight.
Hordur was the leader of the 2008-09 Cutlery (or Kitchen) Revolution in Iceland, an event which signaled the beginning of the democratic response to the worst side of the global financial crisis.
Short version: After Iceland was bankrupted almost over-night - Hordur said it felt like WW3 had begun - thousands of Icelanders refused to accept the international financial medicine which their Government was taking: they banged pots and pans for four days in their thousands and the Government and the Bank of Iceland Board resigned.
Since then we have seen multiple governments fall around Europe as a result of Bank bailouts and austerity plans. Iceland has served as an example to us all of the insanity - and what happened there was particularly insane.