The Great Depression in New Zealand

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
  • The impact of The Great Depression in New Zealand. From Episode 9 of the Frontier of Dreams documentary series.

Комментарии • 97

  • @roseadams8003
    @roseadams8003 3 года назад +13

    Thank you. I’d like to see more stories like this. There really isn’t anything on the early settlers and their lives

  • @jdrei5080
    @jdrei5080 Год назад +6

    What this tells me is the Horticultural knowledge I'm accumulating now shall be a saving grace if things go down hill.
    This is my second year growing food and benefits have been obvious. Silverbeet (swiss chard) went up to $6 for a bunch that would only feed 2 people. Here in New Zealand we can grow almost anything and you can't say that in many places around the world today.
    Grow food, save seeds, grow some more and share😊

  • @BroskiBallics
    @BroskiBallics 4 месяца назад

    Thank you so much, even 8 years later this greatly helped my Social Studies Exam.
    Much thanks :)

  • @richardchatfield5984
    @richardchatfield5984 4 года назад +14

    Still happening today in new zealand like right now.

  • @ValHemi265
    @ValHemi265 Год назад +2

    Ive got this book called New Zealand yesteryears... and some of the photos in this video are in the same book. And the history is unreal.
    Its an awesome read and ill never let it go because i want my son to know how things were. It starts from 1901 right through. Guy's if you ever find a copy, hold on to it. Because theres nothing like tangible reading and proof. Stuff you won't find on google.

  • @thebigmoa
    @thebigmoa 7 лет назад +8

    Hi There, You don't happen to have some of the other episodes would you. Been trying everywhere to view this series, no such luck. Thought I would see if you had them. Cheers Dan.

    • @flyingkiwi6242
      @flyingkiwi6242 7 лет назад

      Hi Daniel, have you checked out nzonscreen? www.nzonscreen.com

    • @thebigmoa
      @thebigmoa 7 лет назад +1

      Hi Flyingkiwi, thanks for the web link. It's an amazing collection of NZ history, however they do not have the frontier of dreams available. Do you have any other recommendations? Cheers Dan.

    • @linuxgeek87
      @linuxgeek87 7 лет назад +1

      Flyingkiwi, you use FSE? Your suer name seems familiar..

    • @flyingkiwi6242
      @flyingkiwi6242 7 лет назад +1

      Yea I do! I play a bit of flight simulator

    • @linuxgeek87
      @linuxgeek87 7 лет назад +1

      I use X-plane 11 myself.

  • @OliverMoore1973
    @OliverMoore1973 Год назад

    Bahahaha!😂 Public service cats! 🐱 I love it... we should bring that back, for a laugh...

  • @petersmith7577
    @petersmith7577 3 месяца назад +1

    Why isn't this series available on DVD?

  • @devriestown
    @devriestown 7 месяцев назад

    My grandfather was sent to Queen's town to help build the roads in the middle of winter they had to live in tents ⛺️ on roads they were building.
    He was so hungry in Dunedin, New Zealand, he didn't eat for 6 days and was hunting up leith Valley dunedin and had to steal some bread .

  • @mattyallen3396
    @mattyallen3396 2 года назад +3

    Look what Cindy has done to the party now

  • @adamzabielski3685
    @adamzabielski3685 4 года назад +2

    Does anyone know where we can watch all of Frontier of Dreams?

  • @kotieboatz6042
    @kotieboatz6042 2 года назад +3

    Its about to happen again

  • @hannahbarnett4564
    @hannahbarnett4564 4 года назад +5

    hello to all of sires' class

  • @ianhorsburgh9867
    @ianhorsburgh9867 7 лет назад +16

    Britain joining the E.U, abandoned New Zealand and Australia, for a second time.

    • @sutherlandA1
      @sutherlandA1 2 года назад

      With brexit done now England is coming crawling back

  • @ngahuiatwomey-waitai4692
    @ngahuiatwomey-waitai4692 7 лет назад +37

    so did anyone else notice how all the pakeha in this doco talking about how much they strugled and how hard it was for them and there familys and pakeha land owners losing there farms and killing them selfs then you get Koro Ranginui Walker talking about how all the maori familys come together and supported eachother and grew kai gardens and hunted wild food from the bush and they didnt servive they LIVED and they didnt have big farms they made do with what they had. gummon new zealanders take a leaf from our peoples book and learn the leason.

    • @bruceburns1672
      @bruceburns1672 6 лет назад +10

      OH you are so superior , go to the head of the class , you come from such an advanced culture , do you still cut of heads and shrink them ,?????? are you still cannibals ?????

    • @frederickhansenthegr
      @frederickhansenthegr 6 лет назад +4

      Manuka..I appreciate what you say...l am pakeha..and my father and grandfather told me terrible tales of the depression..with all the land,water and some seeds,chickens,seafood,hunting rabbits..milk,mutton...and my family managed through ..no toilet paper...but you Maori never had toilet paper....l remember taking to Blackie Pohatu and Morris Wilson about poverty and they said as long as they had their land and whanau..poor was not a thought....they all shared one pair of shoes to go to town in...no matter the foot size!!!!...It's all perception..whatever you have been mind controlled to believe...l loved the footage of the hangi. The exuberance! ..yes there are lessons to learn if we break down the walls of our boxes

    • @JeffM---
      @JeffM--- 6 лет назад +6

      And now they sit on welfare, having babies on the tax-payer. The predominantly white tax-payer, I might add.

    • @ghelhead
      @ghelhead 6 лет назад +8

      LOL so many butt hurt white people. The truth hurts sometimes clearly.

    • @sp769
      @sp769 6 лет назад +2

      I heard him (the only maori to be interviewed) say that several families came to be supported by one man who had a job milking cows. Didn't say who owned the cows. The pigs and deer were introduced and the leaf you want us to take (or should I say 'toke') is also imported unless you mean Puha. I think maori had given up eating each other and us 'bal 'eads', the 'longpork' by then though officially. The best thing that some of us of both cultures share is our sense of humour. RIP Billy T, also buried on Mt Taupiri.

  • @tracyarmstrong8266
    @tracyarmstrong8266 4 года назад +5

    whos ready for corona

  • @Stevie-steel
    @Stevie-steel 4 года назад +9

    Wait maori didnt get govt assistance? Wtf? Was it that they didnt ask/apply/have representation. or were they not actually eligable. If the latter shame! How can certain citizens just not qualify. The treaty granted them all the benefits of british subjects (now commonwealth)

    • @igot1subs901
      @igot1subs901 4 года назад

      👏👏👏👏

    • @himalayan8315
      @himalayan8315 4 года назад +4

      You're scratching the surface Steph, dig a bit deeper into the history of this country and you might be, or not, overwhelmed with sadness, unfortunately 🤦‍♂️

    • @Stevie-steel
      @Stevie-steel 4 года назад

      @@himalayan8315 yes! I often am. As i also am for my home country and ancesters

    • @tainuibabe1812
      @tainuibabe1812 4 года назад +9

      My maori ancestors knew how to survive off the land before they had a British government take control. They did better than most europeans at that time. Today it is a different story. I often think about our social welfare system as being a disabler to survival, rather than an enabler to be self-reliant. That is what socialism always does in the end. It starts off well intentioned and then becomes a huge social problem on it's own.

    • @Stevie-steel
      @Stevie-steel 4 года назад +1

      @@tainuibabe1812 i see your point.

  • @donnrutherford7059
    @donnrutherford7059 Месяц назад

    Talking of growing food
    Thats where the danger is
    If we don't save our agricultural land for growing vegetables and fruit at a reasonable price for the consumer
    Then we will be worse of than the great depression
    And also if our export food prices become the victims of an already high priced liability for us to compete with then will have nothing to bargin at all
    That was the bottom line then
    And it could easily happen again

  • @livvankerckhof2076
    @livvankerckhof2076 7 лет назад +8

    pukeko soup

    • @angelacatherinecrozier8945
      @angelacatherinecrozier8945 6 лет назад +5

      I wonder what that tastes like.

    • @Stevie-steel
      @Stevie-steel 4 года назад +1

      @@angelacatherinecrozier8945 its good! Leg meat is tastier than the breast which needs bleeding as its very gamey. Slow cook it with salt n herbs. Very yum

    • @igot1subs901
      @igot1subs901 4 года назад +1

      What about Pakeha soup

    • @Stevie-steel
      @Stevie-steel 4 года назад +1

      @@igot1subs901 hey. thats my whanau! 🤣🤣

    • @igot1subs901
      @igot1subs901 4 года назад

      @@Stevie-steel aye what are you on about

  • @MsHburnett
    @MsHburnett Год назад

    15 % isn't a great number of people.

  • @RoskoArano
    @RoskoArano 2 месяца назад

    Depression coming 2024-25+ XRP🙏

  • @ThomasTheWankEngine1
    @ThomasTheWankEngine1 5 лет назад +1

    Indeed Geoff. "geoff beyer
    11 months ago
    I am not surprised at some of the reactions here, and it's a shame.
    What Ngahuia is saying, is correct,and I think most of you took it way out of context.. although, i'm not so sure she's right these days, as our whole society has become a bunch of screen watchers.
    At times like these, you have to work in groups to survive, and be in a position to help others. You are f@#ked if you think that a government is going to help you in any big way, and that's where the Maori had the advantage at this time, with the Marae as the base, having land for gardens and small numbers of stock, and room to house people if needed. I'm not saying the white folk couldn't do it, but most townies would've been relying on the govt more than the country folk I would bet, and i'm sure most of the Maori population was rural at that point in time."

  • @lennoxbronko1870
    @lennoxbronko1870 6 лет назад +1

    THIS IS NOT COOL

  • @ngahuiatwomey-waitai4692
    @ngahuiatwomey-waitai4692 7 лет назад +4

    so did anyone else notice how all the pakeha in this doco talking about how much they strugled and how hard it was for them and there familys and pakeha land owners losing there farms and killing them selfs then you get Koro Ranginui Walker talking about how all the maori familys come together and supported eachother and grew kai gardens and hunted wild food from the bush and they didnt servive they LIVED and they didnt have big farms they made do with what they had.

  • @ngahuiatwomey-waitai4692
    @ngahuiatwomey-waitai4692 7 лет назад +11

    so did anyone else notice how all the pakeha in this doco talking about how much they strugled and how hard it was for them and there familys and pakeha land owners losing there farms and killing them selfs then you get Koro Ranginui Walker talking about how all the maori familys come together and supported eachother and grew kai gardens and hunted wild food from the bush and they didnt servive they LIVED and they didnt have big farms they made do with what they had. gummon new zealanders take a leaf from our peoples book and learn the leason.

    • @albionjq
      @albionjq 7 лет назад +8

      why post three times

    • @albionjq
      @albionjq 7 лет назад +6

      why post four times

    • @albionjq
      @albionjq 7 лет назад +7

      why post four times

    • @albionjq
      @albionjq 7 лет назад +8

      why post four times

    • @Redeemalives
      @Redeemalives 5 лет назад +4

      They act like there life was so hard yet they ate three times a day!? But the maoris lived like nothing was happening, cause they lived off the land. But if we had a great depression now I think pakiha and Maori would suffer. I ant Maori or pakiha but we live in a time where we should all live as equal and help one another, no matter what color of your skin.

  • @ngahuiatwomey-waitai4692
    @ngahuiatwomey-waitai4692 7 лет назад +4

    so did anyone else notice how all the pakeha in this doco talking about how much they strugled and how hard it was for them and there familys and pakeha land owners losing there farms and killing them selfs then you get Koro Ranginui Walker talking about how all the maori familys come together and supported eachother and grew kai gardens and hunted wild food from the bush and they didnt servive they LIVED and they didnt have big farms they made do with what they had.

    • @mattyallen3396
      @mattyallen3396 2 года назад +1

      That's because the big Maori properties were leased out. The leases expired in the 90's and Maori got working farms out of it. The Dept of Maori affairs also developed and returned huge stations in the 90's.

    • @mattyallen3396
      @mattyallen3396 2 года назад +1

      So while they didn't get to farm to leased out blocks, they got yearly payments and most likely wages too