New Zealand: History of Immigration
Last and loneliest
For over 150 years after 1800, most people who migrated to New Zealand were from Britain (England, Scotland, Wales) and Ireland. Yet for them, New Zealand was the most distant place on earth. The journey by sea took 100 days, and voyagers endured rough seas, cramped conditions and illness. Unless they were offered free travel or other rewards, many people were reluctant to emigrate.
Via Australia
Some came because they had already reached Australia as convicts or settlers. Those who went the extra distance across the Tasman Sea included:
whalers and sealers, New Zealand’s earliest non-Māori settlers
gold miners, who often came from the goldfields of Victoria to Otago and the West Coast in the 1860s
labourers, who arrived in the early 20th century, when New Zealand was prospering and Australia was in depression.
Assisted migrants
Others came because they received assisted or free travel on ships from Britain and Ireland. These included:
settlers (brought out by the New Zealand Company or its off-shoots) mainly from England and Scotland in the 1840s to settle in Wellington, Nelson, Wanganui, Taranaki, Canterbury and Otago
people given cheap tickets or offered free land by New Zealand provinces in the 1850s and 1860s
people recruited and given cheap fares by the New Zealand government in the 1870s, early 1880s, and before and after the First World War.
Some also came as a result of war – soldiers brought out to fight in the New Zealand wars of the 1860s, or war brides who came with New Zealand soldiers who had fought overseas.
Non-British
Until the Second World War most came from Britain. Some other groups were:
A few French people at Akaroa in 1840
Germans, who came to Nelson in the 1840s
Scandinavians, who settled in Manawatū and Hawke’s Bay in the 1870s
Chinese, attracted by the gold rushes
Dalmatians, working the northern gumfields.
After the Second World War
In the 1950s and 1960s more people were helped to migrate. They included many Dutch and a larger number of English and Scots.
From the mid-1960s on, people began to come to New Zealand from Samoa, Tonga, the Cook Islands and other Pacific islands, attracted by work opportunities.
In 1975 and again in 1987, New Zealand changed its immigration policies to admit people on the basis of their qualifications and not their race. Since then there has been a large flow of immigrants from Asia, and some from Africa.
New Zealand has become much more multicultural. In 2006 about 67 out of 100 New Zealanders had an exclusively European background. The others had Māori, Pacific Island or Asian ancestors.