MARTON

Here's a collection of postcards on one district (that took my eye) I assembled for researchers and for educational purposes from my extensive library of postcard thumbnail images. It took me less than half an hour to assemble them into a folder - collect the data and process (generate web pages) and another half an hour to write this blog and create a webpage to tie all the information together for you. This illustrates the usefulness of the Internet and items to do just this. From here you can track down the actual items to obtain them for your collections - add additional information - do further research - add more items to create a display for exhibition/ to a catalogue base - to using it for eductional purpose right through to the classroom. You can introduce it into a word process/ publisher etc and take it into your own scrapbooks or print off into a hardcopy issue.

If you have a topic/ subject/ location etc of New Zealand - that you would like me to create through my early New Zealand Postcard library - all you have to do is contact me - suggest what you are looking for and see if I can assemble something to get you started. All I ask for is a donation at the end. The album or article will /may be added to my blog for everybodies access and useage for further research etc. Cheers Jeff.

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QUOTE: click on title to view

EARLY DAYS IN MARTON

Marton - montage postcard

by Paul Melody

The town of Marton, biggest in the Rangitikei district, began life as a private township in 1866, when shop and housing sections were sold at auction by local land owners.

For three years the small village was known as Tutaenui, named after the stream running through its centre. In 1869 local citizens changed the name to Marton. to honour the home village of Captain James Cook in Yorkshire, marking his landing in New Zealand exactly 100 years earlier.

From the very start Marton was an ideal supply centre for district farmers, who first began arriving in the early 1850’s. From butter and wool they moved on to growing wheat in 1863, and big crops led to three flourmills being launched in the area in 1864.

After the town itself opened up in 1866, general stores, two hotels and several blacksmiths were soon on the job. Marton became a home base for the horse industry, with saddlers, wheelwrights, livery stables and coachbuilders competing for business, while Clydesdale and Suffolk Punch sires toured the district to build up the population of plough horses needed as new farms sprang into being.

The railway line joining Wanganui to Palmerston North in 1878 turned Marton into a thriving railway junction, which held that pedestal for the next 100 years.

Timber from Rangitikei forests served the town’s two timbermills, the first from 1889 onwards.

Schools were everywhere, to serve the many farming families, and from 1900 onwards Marton developed as the site of three boarding schools Huntley, Nga Tawa and Turakina Maori Girls’ College.

Industry developed quietly at first in Marton, starting with flourmilling, brickmaking and wool presses. By the late 1950’s there was an incredible array of industries and factories in action. They turned out products as diverse as men’s shirts, tractor safety cabs, soft drinks, vegetable salads, readymix concrete, field tiles, dog biscuits, knitwear, dried peas, electronic petrol pumps, vegetable digging machinery.

Not far from Marton the large Lake Alice Hospital for mental patients opened in 1950 and expanded to contain more than 300 inmates.

Employees for the new industries, the hospital and for bigger railway and Post Office establishments meant a steady rise in population, and the shopping centre broadened to match this growth.

In recent years the pace has quietened, reflecting the experience of many other communities around New Zealand. Very recently, however, long term residents of the big cities have been finding out the pleasures and benefits of living the slower paced life of Marton as an attractive small town with all the required facilities in the way of local schools, boarding schools and shopping amenities, so there has been a steady inquiry for housing from city based buyers.

The newcomers are also bringing new types of business with them, so there is benefits all round.

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Heres the link to the MARTON Album - Index page to view the 28 postcard images from my library - MARTON Album
Click on the selected thumbnails in the left hand panel to view the enlarged image and details

Below I have each thumbnail shown in the album - click on the thumbnail to view the enlarged image and details

1905 card The Park Marton - Muir & Moodie Borough Council Chambers Marton Postcard Broadway, MARTON - pre 1905 postcard Broadway, MARTON - pre 1905 postcard

Coach & Horses, Town Hall, MARTON - postcard Huntly School Marton Postcard Marton 4 views Postcard Marton - Main Street - Marble Opalette Series

MARTON (montage) - postcard Marton Band Rotunda real photo postcard Marton Bowling Green, postcard Marton Broadway, Muir & Moodie

Marton Cricket match 1906 Postcard Marton Fire disaster real photo postcard Marton Huntley school kids playing Marton Huntly School Postcard

MARTON MAIN STREET RP E.T SERIES 729 POSTED Marton Park Entrance M & M postcard Marton post and telegraph office super postcard Marton Postcard

MARTON RAILWAY STATION 1910 POSTING M MOODIE 3787 Marton Railway Station Muir & Moodie Park Marton Postcard Main Street, Marton - Real Photo

Romance Marton Greeting Postcard St. Stephens, MARTON - postcard Waterworks Marton Postcard Wesleyan Church Marton Postcard

I think this is a delightful series on early MARTON history through postcards that still exist today.