✨ Defence and Shipping Regulations
674
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 26
Declaring a Place to be a Prohibited Place under the Defence Emergency Regulations, 1941.
PURSUANT to the Defence Emergency Regulations 1941, the Minister of Defence doth hereby declare the place situated in the Schedule hereto to be a prohibited place for the purpose of the Defence Emergency Regulations 1941.
SCHEDULE.
MILITARY AREA.—GREAT BARRIER ISLAND.
ALL that area of land, containing by admeasurement approximately 70,000 acres, situated in Barrier, Tryphena, and Fitzroy Survey Districts, Great Barrier Island County, and known as Great Barrier Island. All in the North Auckland Land District. As the same is more particularly delineated on a plan marked Army P.P. 54, 205/3/1, and deposited at Army Headquarters at Wellington.
Dated at Wellington, this 6th day of March, 1942.
F. JONES, Minister of Defence.
The Shipping Safety (Hauraki Gulf) Order 1942.
PURSUANT to the Shipping Safety Emergency Regulations 1940 the Minister of Defence doth hereby make the following Order:—
-
This Order may be cited as the Shipping Safety (Hauraki Gulf) Order 1942.
-
The restrictions imposed by this Order shall apply with respect to all small craft as defined in the Shipping Safety Emergency Regulations 1940 to which the Shipping Control Emergency Regulations 1939 do not apply.
-
This Order shall take effect on the day following the date of publication hereof in the Gazette.
-
So long as this Order remains in force no master or person in charge of any small craft to which this Order applies shall anchor his craft or cause or permit his craft to be anchored in any part of the waters described in the First Schedule to this Order.
-
So long as this Order remains in force no master or person in charge of any small craft to which this Order applies shall permit his craft to be in the waters described in the Second Schedule to this Order.
-
The waters described in the said First Schedule being part of the waters described in the said First Schedule each of the restrictions set out in clauses 4 and 5 hereof is without prejudice to the generality of the prohibition set out in the other of those clauses.
FIRST SCHEDULE.
PROHIBITED ANCHORAGE.
ALL those waters of the Hauraki Gulf lying within and bounded by a line commencing at Rakauananga Point on the southern side of Whangaparaoa Peninsula, and running thence on a bearing of 120° for a distance of approximately five miles to a right line between Bollon’s Rock on the western side of Tiritiri Island and Gardiner’s Gap between Rangitoto Island and Motutapu; thence along the said right line (bearing approximately 175°) to Gardiner’s Gap aforesaid; thence along the northern shore of Motutapu to Home Bay Point on the eastern side of Motutapu; thence along the limit of the Auckland Harbour to Waiheke Island; thence along the northern shore of Waiheke Island to Thumb Point on Waiheke Island; thence on a right line (bearing approximately 326°) to Flat Rock; thence on a bearing of 300° to Kawau Island; thence along the southern shore of Kawau Island to Momona Point on Kawau Island; thence on a right line to Fish Point at the southern end of Kawau Bay; thence in a southerly direction along the coast of the mainland to the commencing point, excluding, however, the waters of Mahurangi Harbour, Waiwera Creek, and all other rivers, creeks, and streams entering the Gulf between Fish Point and Whangaparaoa Peninsula aforesaid.
SECOND SCHEDULE.
PROHIBITED PASSAGE.
ALL those waters of the Hauraki Gulf lying within and bounded by a line commencing at Bollon’s Rock on the western side of Tiritiri Island, and running thence along a right line (bearing approximately 175°) to Gardiner’s Gap between Rangitoto Island and Motutapu; thence along the northern shore of Motutapu to Home Bay Point on the eastern side of Motutapu; thence along the limit of the Auckland Harbour to Waiheke Island; thence along the northern shore of Waiheke Island to Thumb Point on Waiheke Island; thence on a right line (bearing approximately 326°) towards Flat Rock (for a distance of approximately fourteen miles) to the point 36° 33' south and 175° 01' east; thence on a bearing of 270° to 174° 55' east; and thence along a right line (bearing approximately 320°) to Bollon’s Rock, the commencing point.
Dated at Wellington, this 12th day of March, 1942.
F. JONES, Minister of Defence.
Notification under the Shipping Control Emergency Regulations 1939.
PURSUANT to the Shipping Control Emergency Regulations 1939 the Naval Board hereby gives notification as under:—
-
This notification may be cited as the Hauraki Gulf Anchorage and Passage Prohibition Notice 1942.
-
This notification shall take effect on the day following the date of publication hereof in the Gazette.
-
So long as this notification remains in force no master or person in charge of any ship to which the said regulations apply shall anchor his ship or cause or permit his ship to be anchored in any part of the waters described in the First Schedule to this notice.
-
So long as this notification remains in force no master or person in charge of any ship to which the said regulations apply shall permit his ship to be in the waters described in the Second Schedule to this notice.
-
The waters described in the said Second Schedule being part of the waters described in the said First Schedule each of the prohibitions set out in clauses 3 and 4 hereof is without prejudice to the generality of the prohibition set out in the other of those clauses.
FIRST SCHEDULE.
PROHIBITED ANCHORAGE.
ALL those waters of the Hauraki Gulf lying within and bounded by a line commencing at Rakauananga Point on the southern side of Whangaparaoa Peninsula, and running thence on a bearing of 120° for a distance of approximately five miles to a right line between Bollon’s Rock on the western side of Tiritiri Island and Gardiner’s Gap between Rangitoto Island and Motutapu; thence along the said right line (bearing approximately 175°) to Gardiner’s Gap aforesaid; thence along the northern shore of Motutapu to Home Bay Point on the eastern side of Motutapu; thence along the limit of the Auckland Harbour to Waiheke Island; thence along the northern shore of Waiheke Island to Thumb Point on Waiheke Island; thence on a right line (bearing approximately 326°) to Flat Rock; thence on a bearing of 300° to Kawau Island; thence along the southern shore of Kawau Island to Momona Point on Kawau Island; thence on a right line to Fish Point at the southern end of Kawau Bay; thence in a southerly direction along the coast of the mainland to the commencing point, excluding, however, the waters of Mahurangi Harbour, Waiwera Creek, and all other rivers, creeks, and streams entering the Gulf between Fish Point and Whangaparaoa Peninsula aforesaid.
SECOND SCHEDULE.
PROHIBITED PASSAGE.
ALL those waters of the Hauraki Gulf lying within and bounded by a line commencing at Bollon’s Rock on the western side of Tiritiri Island, and running thence along a right line (bearing approximately 175°) to Gardiner’s Gap between Rangitoto Island and Motutapu; thence along the northern shore of Motutapu to Home Bay Point on the eastern side of Motutapu; thence along the limit of the Auckland Harbour to Waiheke Island; thence along the northern shore of Waiheke Island to Thumb Point on Waiheke Island; thence on a right line (bearing approximately 326°) towards Flat Rock (for a distance of approximately fourteen miles) to the point 36° 33' south and 175° 01' east; thence on a bearing of 270° to 174° 55' east; and thence along a right line (bearing approximately 320°) to Bollon’s Rock, the commencing point.
Dated at Wellington, this 12th day of March, 1942.
By authority of the Naval Board—
N. H. BEALL, Naval Secretary.
The Cellophane Control Notice 1942.
PURSUANT to the Factory Emergency Regulations 1939, I, George Augustus Pascoe, Factory Controller, hereby direct and give notice as follows:—
-
This Notice may be cited as the Cellophane Control Notice 1942.
-
This Notice shall come into force on the day next following the date of publication hereof in the Gazette.
-
No person being the occupier of a factory or the owner of factory materials shall use the material commonly known as cellophane for any purpose without the precedent consent of the Factory Controller.
-
Any such consent may at any time be withdrawn or varied by notice in writing given by the Factory Controller to the person to whom such consent was given.
Dated at Wellington, this 9th day of March, 1942.
G. A. PASCOE, Factory Controller.
Next Page →
PDF embedding disabled (Crown copyright)
View this page online at:
VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1942, No 26
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1942, No 26
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🛡️ Declaration of Prohibited Place under Defence Emergency Regulations
🛡️ Defence & Military6 March 1942
Prohibited place, Great Barrier Island, Military area, Defence regulations
- F. Jones, Minister of Defence
🛡️ Shipping Safety Order for Hauraki Gulf
🛡️ Defence & Military12 March 1942
Shipping safety, Hauraki Gulf, Prohibited anchorage, Prohibited passage, Small craft
- F. Jones, Minister of Defence
🛡️ Notification under Shipping Control Emergency Regulations
🛡️ Defence & Military12 March 1942
Shipping control, Hauraki Gulf, Anchorage prohibition, Passage prohibition
- N. H. Beall, Naval Secretary
🏭 Cellophane Control Notice
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry9 March 1942
Cellophane, Factory regulations, Material control
- George Augustus Pascoe, Factory Controller