Immigration Regulations and Appointments




[From the New Zealand Gazette, No. 66, Dec. 12, 1872.]

REGULATIONS for the Conduct of Immigration to New Zealand, on the Nomination of Immigrants by Persons Resident therein.

  1. The Immigration Regulations and Forms of Application may be obtained at any Post Office or Immigration Office in the Colony; but applications and payments for passages can only be made to Money Order Post Offices or the Immigration Officer at the capital town of each Province or County.

  2. Any person resident in the Colony desirous of nominating relatives or friends in Europe for passage to New Zealand, may do so by paying at any Money Order Post Office or to the Immigration Officers aforesaid the sum of £4 for each adult (except single women between 50 and 12 years of age, and £2 for each child under 12 years of age. Infants under one year, in certain cases, bills will be taken in lieu of cash payments, and passages will be provided for persons over fifty years of age. (See clause 6.)

    Widows with families and, as a rule, not eligible, and applications for passages in their behalf are only to be made to the Immigration Officer addressed. (See clause 6.)

  3. Free passages will be granted to girls of 12 years of age and upwards accompanying their parents, and to single women between the ages of 16 and 35, provided they are able to produce proof of good character to the satisfaction of the Agent-General in London; and a gratuity of 10s. will be paid by the Agent-General to heads of families emigrating under these Regulations for every such single woman, not being a member of the family, brought out under their protection.

  4. Every adult emigrant will be required, before embarkation, to pay to the Agent-General 20s. (and children in proportion), for bedding, blankets, and mess utensils.

  5. In the event of any emigrant applied for declining to emigrate, whatever money or bills may have been deposited with the Government will be returned to the applicant so soon as the Agent-General shall have apprised the Government thereof; but in the event of any emigrant applied for accepting the offer of a passage in a particular ship, and then, by failing to present himself for embarkation at the time appointed by the Agent-General for the sailing of such ship, be left behind, the passage money will be forfeited.

  6. The Immigration Officer at the capital town of each Province or County (and he only) will receive applications as under:

    (1.) From persons who may wish to give bills for the passage money of their relatives or friends, instead of paying cash, as provided for in clause 1. The amount of the bills to be taken will be 50 per cent. over the amount above fixed to be paid in cash, and the bills will become due 30 days after the arrival of the immigrants sent for, and may be paid by instalments, the terms and periods of which must be arranged with the Immigration Officer.

    (2.) From persons whose friends are over 50 years of age.

    (3.) From persons whose friends are widows with children.

  7. The above rates being only for the passage from the port of embarkation to the Colony, the cost of conveyance to such port and to the residence of their friends after arrival in the Colony, must be defrayed by the emigrants themselves.

  8. All the ships employed in this service will be under the provisions of the Passenger Act.

  9. It is to be distinctly understood that, notwithstanding applications may have been granted at Money Order Post Offices, the Immigration Officers aforesaid are empowered to object to any of the emigrants so nominated being sent out, either from unsuitability of occupation or from any other cause; and the Agent-


Dunedin, Dec. 13, 1872.

To James M’Kellar, or owner of Section 1, Block 30, Invercargill; J. A. R. Menzies, or owner of Section 4, Block 30, Invercargill; H. J. Tancred, or owner of Section 20, Block 30, Invercargill; and J. C. W. Russell, or owner of Section 21, Block 30, Invercargill.

TAKE NOTICE that I desire the boundary or separating fence between your sections and sections 2 and 3, Block 30, Invercargill, to be made immediately, and that such fence shall be a substantial post, two-and-board fence, at least five feet in height; posts two feet in the ground, and not more than eight feet asunder; and that, failing the erection of your half of the said fence, I shall cause the same to be erected at your cost and charges.

GEORGE HUSH,
Owner of Sections 2 and 3, Block 30, Invercargill.

Invercargill, 25th Nov., 1872. 3t—27s. 6d.


Medical Referee appointed.

Government Annuities Office,
Wellington, 21st November, 1872.

HIS Excellency the Governor has been pleased to appoint the under-mentioned gentleman to be a Medical Referee, under “The Government Annuities Act, 1869”:

William Brown, Esq., Waikouaiti.

W. Gisborne, Commissioner.


Registrar of Births, Deaths, and Marriages.

Colonial Secretary’s Office,
Wellington, 22nd November, 1872.

HIS Excellency the Governor has been pleased to appoint George Renner, Esq., to be Registrar of Marriages, and of Births, Deaths, and Marriages, for the District of Balclutha, as the same is defined in Proclamation of 11th February, 1872, and published in New Zealand Gazette, No. 8, of 7th day of February, 1872.

John Hall.


Justices of the Peace appointed.

Office of the Minister of Justice,
Wellington, 21st November, 1872.

HIS Excellency the Governor has been pleased to appoint:

Bendix Hallenstein, Esq., of Queenstown, Otago; and
James Cook, Esq., of Riverton, Otago, to be Justices of the Peace.

John Hall.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF Otago Provincial Gazette 1872, No 827





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🛂 Regulations for the Conduct of Immigration to New Zealand

🛂 Immigration
Immigration, Nomination, Passages, Regulations, Application

🗺️ Notice to Property Owners Regarding Boundary Fence

🗺️ Lands, Settlement & Survey
25 November 1872
Boundary Fence, Invercargill, Sections 2 and 3, Block 30
  • James M’Kellar, Owner of Section 1, Block 30, Invercargill
  • J. A. R. Menzies, Owner of Section 4, Block 30, Invercargill
  • H. J. Tancred, Owner of Section 20, Block 30, Invercargill
  • J. C. W. Russell, Owner of Section 21, Block 30, Invercargill

  • George Hush, Owner of Sections 2 and 3, Block 30, Invercargill

🏥 Appointment of Medical Referee

🏥 Health & Social Welfare
21 November 1872
Medical Referee, Government Annuities Act, 1869
  • William Brown (Esquire), Appointed Medical Referee

  • W. Gisborne, Commissioner

🏥 Appointment of Registrar of Births, Deaths, and Marriages

🏥 Health & Social Welfare
22 November 1872
Registrar, Births, Deaths, Marriages, Balclutha
  • George Renner (Esquire), Appointed Registrar of Marriages and Births, Deaths, and Marriages

  • John Hall

⚖️ Appointment of Justices of the Peace

⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement
21 November 1872
Justices of the Peace, Queenstown, Riverton
  • Bendix Hallenstein (Esquire), Appointed Justice of the Peace
  • James Cook (Esquire), Appointed Justice of the Peace

  • John Hall