Marlboroughs earliest pastoral history was one of initial squatter land occupation, battling the twin scourges of rabbits and sheep scab, and eventually, compulsory division of the huge sheep runs by the Crown
Marlborough's earliest pastoral history was one of initial squatter land occupation, battling the twin scourges of rabbits and sheep scab, and eventually, compulsory division of the huge sheep runs by the Crown.
Nathaniel Morse and Dr John Cooper were the first Europeans to bring sheep into the Wairau Valley in 1846. In the same year, Frederick Weld with cousins Charles Clifford , William Vavasour and friend Henry Petrie, leased what was to become the Flaxbourne Estate. Clifford wrote: "I went to him (Te Puaha, a Māori chief), was very kindly received, and soon agreed upon a lease of all the land from the Vernon Bluffs down the East Coast to Kekerengu for £24/annum."1
In August 1847 they drove 3000 sheep purchased from Australia, from Port Underwood to Flaxbourne: "Crossed the Bluff River with sheep. Had to throw them all into the water, a day and a half's hard work," wrote Weld in his diary.2
Soon flocks of sheep were being driven over Tophouse from Nelson. Initially, the majority of Marlborough's first pastoralists were squatters, as the New Zealand Company had no legal titles to grant land ownership.3 Eventually the land was bought by Sir George Grey4 and the Company surveyed and allotted 34,219 acres for 14 year leases, with the Crown able to take over the leases at any time.5
A feud broke out between two groups, known as the Original Resident Land Purchasers and the ‘stock owners'. Led by Dr David Monro, the land purchasers argued they had a ‘prior moral right' to exclusive rights to additional pasturage licences, which would have given them use of an additional 196,000 acres of Wairau and Awatere land.6
By 1853, there were more than 57 large sheep stations covering more than one million acres.7
Marlborough's historic large sheep stations included:
The Vernon Run : south-east of Blenheim. One of Marlborough's oldest sheep runs (5240 acres running 2500 sheep) taken up by Henry Redwood.8
Ugbrooke Station: 13,000 acres in the Awatere Valley running 11,000 sheep and growing crops, originally acquired by Henry Redwood, then William Clifford, then bought by H.D. Vavasour in 1897.9
Meadowbank Estate : 19,000 acres grazing 7000 merino sheep and up to 200 acres of turnips, owned by G.T. Seymour.10
Molesworth: consisted of Molesworth, Tarndale, St Helen's and The Dillon and was taken over by the Crown in 1938 after rabbits, heavy snows and the decreasing value of wool took its toll.11
Rabbits and sheep scab drove some farmers off the land. By 1864, hillsides were alive with rabbits which devastated pastures. Rabbits were public enemy number one, with nine million rabbit skins exported in 1882. Sheep scab, a highly infectious disease caused by a parasitic insect, causes wool to fall off sheep and lowers stock condition. Farmers battled the disease for nearly 60 years, with Marlborough being the last region to be declared ‘clean' in 1892.12
By the turn of the 20th Century, all of the best, most accessible land was held in large estates which became a problem for the Government as population rose - the problem was acute in Marlborough.13 [In 1903, the total number of sheep in the district was about 826,500, of which 760,000 run in the Sounds country, and 174,000 in the southern district around Kaikoura. The total export of wool for 1903 was12,700 bales].14
In 1894, a Lands for Settlement Act was passed by Parliament which allowed the Crown to compulsorily take estates and award compensation. One of the Dominion's most important land law cases at the time concerned Weld and Clifford's historic 46,600 acre Flaxbourne Estate. Within four years, about 300 people lived there.15
Between 1899 and 1915, 22 Marlborough estates covering a total of 224,090 acres were acquired by the Government and divided into 550 properties.16
2009 (updated 2022)
Story by: Joy Stephens