Open/Close Toolbox
Copyright is retained by the photographer and/or contributor. Please do not reuse without permission.
Format: Location
Linked To
Photograph
Map
Copyright

Menu
Stafford
About this location
DescriptionSTAFFORD is a mining hamlet situated on the Waimea creek, and on the main West Coast road, eight miles from Hokitika. It is in the Arahura riding of the county of Westland, and in the electorate and provincial district of Westland.
The first “rush” to the district took place in 1865, and it is stated that in 1870 the township contained thirty-seven hotels and seventeen stores. It is estimated that at that time the population exceeded 5000 people, amongst whom were a large proportion of Scandinavians.
Stafford, in its palmiest days (which ended about 1875) was a payable field. It has contributed a fair quota of gold, but the diggings are now nearly worked out, although a few good sluicing claims still remain; amongst them the “Wheel of Fortune”.
Stafford's nearest railway station is three miles and a-half distant, on the Greymouth-Hokitika line of railway. There are four churches in the settlement; namely, Anglican, Presbyterian, Methodist, and Roman Catholic, and the clergymen in connection with all come from Kumara, ten miles distant.
The Government buildings are represented by the local Magistrate's Court and Police Station, and the business of the Post Office is conducted at one of the local stores. There are also two hotels, a blacksmith's smithy, and a bootmaker's shop. Stafford has a public library, a reading room, an Oddfellows' Lodge, and a local public school.
At the census of 1901 the population numbered 116.
Map[1] 
The first “rush” to the district took place in 1865, and it is stated that in 1870 the township contained thirty-seven hotels and seventeen stores. It is estimated that at that time the population exceeded 5000 people, amongst whom were a large proportion of Scandinavians.
Stafford, in its palmiest days (which ended about 1875) was a payable field. It has contributed a fair quota of gold, but the diggings are now nearly worked out, although a few good sluicing claims still remain; amongst them the “Wheel of Fortune”.
Stafford's nearest railway station is three miles and a-half distant, on the Greymouth-Hokitika line of railway. There are four churches in the settlement; namely, Anglican, Presbyterian, Methodist, and Roman Catholic, and the clergymen in connection with all come from Kumara, ten miles distant.
The Government buildings are represented by the local Magistrate's Court and Police Station, and the business of the Post Office is conducted at one of the local stores. There are also two hotels, a blacksmith's smithy, and a bootmaker's shop. Stafford has a public library, a reading room, an Oddfellows' Lodge, and a local public school.
At the census of 1901 the population numbered 116.


Category Information
Category TagGoldmining
West Coast New Zealand History (7th Apr 2018). Stafford. In Website West Coast New Zealand History. Retrieved 24th Feb 2019 18:33, from https://westcoast.recollect.co.nz/nodes/view/1074