Te Aute College (Māori: Te Kura o Te Aute) is a school in the Hawke's Bay region of New Zealand. It opened in 1854 with twelve pupils under Samuel Williams...
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Peter Buck (anthropologist) (redirect from Te Rangi Hiroa)
his younger years, Buck was highly accomplished as an athlete. At Te Aute College he captained the high school's athletics and rugby teams and while...
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Manu Bennett (category People educated at Te Aute College)
Merewether High School. In 1986, Bennett returned to New Zealand to attend Te Aute College, where he played for the 1st XV. Upon returning to Australia, Bennett...
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name of Te Aute. On 8 December 1912 the name of the next station, Pukehou, was changed to Te Aute (Te Aute College is near Pukehou) and Te Aute was changed...
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Āpirana Ngata (category People educated at Te Aute College)
he established the Young Māori Party alongside numerous alumni of Te Aute College, including future fellow cabinet minister Māui Pōmare. Here he challenged...
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Howard Morrison (category People educated at Te Aute College)
Waikaremoana. He attended a "native school" in the Urewera before going to Te Aute College and Rotorua Boys' High School. After leaving school he had a variety...
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Samuel Williams to establish the girls’ school as a related school to Te Aute College, which they had established in 1854. The school was first established...
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However, Te Aute College and St Joseph's Māori Girls' College, both in Hawke's Bay, were not impacted by the wars. The Anglican Hukarere Girls' College was...
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Paraire Tomoana (category People educated at Te Aute College)
electorate. He was educated at Te Aute College and was a member of the Young Māori Party, an association of alumni from the college that dominated the Māori...
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Numerous schools use Kia kaha as, or as part of, their mottoes, including Te Aute College, Hawke's Bay (Whakatangata kia kaha); Tikipunga High School, Whangārei...
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position of Māori. It grew out of the Te Aute Students Association, established by former students of Te Aute College in 1897. It was established as the...
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Solomon Mamaloni (category People educated at Te Aute College)
Pawa School and King George VI Secondary School, before attending Te Aute College in New Zealand. He joined the civil service in 1966, initially working...
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Ngāti Kahungunu (redirect from Ngāi Te Kikiri o Te Rangi)
landscape. Te Aute College had opened in 1854 near Hastings, and in the 1880s and 1890s it was attended by Āpirana Ngata, Maui Pomare, Te Rangi Hīroa...
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Pita Sharples (category People educated at Te Aute College)
education at Waipukurau District High School, but then became a boarder at Te Aute College. His four years there culminated in his becoming head boy, and he credits...
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Moana-Nui-a-Kiwa Ngarimu (redirect from Te Moananui-a-Kiwa Ngarimu)
he attended Hiruhārama Native School. From 1933 to 1934, he went Te Aute College at Poukawa in Hawkes Bay, becoming well regarded at rugby. After completing...
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Hemi Pititi Huata (category People educated at Te Aute College)
Hemi Pititi Huata (c.1867–13 October 1954) was a New Zealand tribal leader and Anglican clergyman. Of Māori descent, he identified with the Ngāti Kahungunu...
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Joey Matenga Ashton (category People educated at Te Aute College)
born in Greytown, Wairarapa, New Zealand on 3 June 1907. He was the son of Te Ao Ahitana Matenga (Joseph Ashton) and Kiti Karaka Rīwai. Ashton, Carole....
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George Bertrand (category People educated at Te Aute College)
mother was Māori (Ngāti Mutunga). Betrand attended Te Aute College and Wellington Teachers' Training College With the outbreak of the First World War in 1914...
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Piri Weepu (category People educated at Te Aute College)
also of Niuean descent. Weepu hails from Wainuiomata. He attended Te Aute College where he was head boy in 2001. After leaving school he played senior...
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George Skudder (category People educated at Te Aute College)
79 m (5 ft 10 in) Weight 82 kg (181 lb) School Te Aute College University Hamilton Teachers' College Notable relative(s) Nehe Milner-Skudder (nephew)...
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Elizabeth Ellis (artist) (category People from Te Puke)
Retrieved 29 May 2024. "Te Aute College commissioner appointed". RNZ. 28 Jan 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2024. "New leader for Te Aute". Waatea News. 21 July...
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Piri Sciascia (category People educated at Te Aute College)
maniapoto, Ngāti Raukawa, and Rangitāne. Sciascia was educated at Te Aute College, and then studied at the University of Otago, completing a BSc in 1968...
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continuing his work at Te Aute College. Williams died in Te Aute on 14 March 1907. Sybil M. Woods, Samuel Williams of Te Aute, Christchurch: The Pegasus...
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farmer, and his wife Para Te Aho. His father was of the Ngāti Kahungunu and Ngāti Pāhauwera iwi (tribe). Educated at Te Aute College, he initially favoured...
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Hoeroa Tiopira (category People educated at Te Aute College)
at Meeanee School and Te Aute College. A forward, Tiopira made his debut for Hawke's Bay in 1889, while still a student at Te Aute. His provincial career...
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Tama Potaka (category People educated at Te Aute College)
educated at Huntley School and Te Aute College, where he was classmates with Julian Wilcox, Aidan Warren, Billy Weepu, Karl Te Nana and Alistair Toto and...
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Shelford upon his appointment as captain in 1987 brought the team to Te Aute College, a Māori school, to see the students perform a traditional haka. Up...
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he was connected to Te Whakatohea iwi. In 1895 Balneavis attended Te Aute College. After he left, Balneavis was employed by William Lee Rees at his office...
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Māui Pōmare (category People educated at Te Aute College)
guardianship of his aunt, Hēni Te Rau Nicoll. Pōmare attended Christchurch Boys' High School and then Te Aute College. Although his family wanted him...
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Orcades Crawford (category People educated at Te Aute College)
under-16s and NZ Secondary Schools representative while a pupil at Te Aute College. A prop, Crawford gained a NZ Colts call up in 1986 and two years later...
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