Puke Ariki is a combined museum and library at
New Plymouth
New Plymouth () is the major city of the Taranaki region on the west coast of the North Island of New Zealand. It is named after the English city of Plymouth, in Devon, from where the first English settlers to New Plymouth migrated. The New Pl ...
, New Zealand, which opened in June 2003. It is an amalgamation of the New Plymouth Public Library (founded in 1848) and the Taranaki Museum (founded in 1919). Its name,
Māori for "hill of chiefs", is taken from the Māori village that formerly occupied the site.
Site
Puke Ariki (
Māori: hill of chiefs)
was the site of a significant Māori
pā
The word pā (; often spelled pa in English) can refer to any Māori people, Māori village or defensive settlement, but often refers to hillforts – fortified settlements with palisades and defensive :wikt:terrace, terraces – and also to fo ...
of
Te Āti Awa
Te Āti Awa or Te Ātiawa is a Māori iwi with traditional bases in the Taranaki and Wellington regions of New Zealand. Approximately 17,000 people registered their affiliation to Te Āti Awa in 2001, with about 10,000 in Taranaki, 2,000 in We ...
, dating back to 1700, with a marae called Para-huka. It was the home of the paramount
rangatira (chief) Te Rangi-apiti-rua.
The pā was deserted around 1830 when the majority of Te Āti Awa moved to the
Wellington
Wellington is the capital city of New Zealand. It is located at the south-western tip of the North Island, between Cook Strait and the Remutaka Range. Wellington is the third-largest city in New Zealand (second largest in the North Island ...
region and
Kāpiti Coast. When colonial settlement began in the area, the hill was renamed Mount Eliot by the
New Plymouth
New Plymouth () is the major city of the Taranaki region on the west coast of the North Island of New Zealand. It is named after the English city of Plymouth, in Devon, from where the first English settlers to New Plymouth migrated. The New Pl ...
settlers,
and was the location of government buildings and a signalling station for ships in the area.
It was used as a military camp for British forces in the 1850s and 1860s, and was a barracks for the
Naval Brigade during the
First Taranaki War
The First Taranaki War (also known as the North Taranaki War) was an armed conflict over land ownership and sovereignty that took place between Māori people, Māori and the Colony of New Zealand in the Taranaki region of New Zealand's North Is ...
.
Most of the hill was removed for
land reclamation
Land reclamation, often known as reclamation, and also known as land fill (not to be confused with a waste landfill), is the process of creating new Terrestrial ecoregion, land from oceans, list of seas, seas, Stream bed, riverbeds or lake ...
to form the railway yards,
and by 1905 it had largely been demolished.
Origins
The New Plymouth Public Library was founded in 1848, as a Mechanics Institute and Library (often referred to as the institute). It initially was run from the premises of a school on Vivian Street, then in October 1852 moved to an auction room on Devon St. It was renamed the Literary Institute in 1856, but had no funding to build a permanent home for some years, and much of its collection was destroyed in a fire in 1859. The institute and library occupied the ground floor of the newly built
Provincial Council Town Hall building in 1865, but despite paying no rent it fell into debt and was dissolved in 1878, although the reading room remained.
The first museum exhibits in New Plymouth date back to 1865 and were housed in the Town Hall; for many years the museum, library, and reading room were regarded as one organisation. Reading room fees were imposed from 1880, but in 1884 the council declared that the reading room would function as a "free public library", although funding was quite limited, its librarians were untrained, and its collection was very disordered.
All this changed when a new Carnegie Free Library, funded by a £2,500 grant from philanthropist
Andrew Carnegie
Andrew Carnegie ( , ; November 25, 1835August 11, 1919) was a Scottish-American industrialist and philanthropist. Carnegie led the expansion of the History of the iron and steel industry in the United States, American steel industry in the late ...
, was built on a site on King Street and opened in July 1908. The first full-time librarian, a Miss Free, was appointed in 1908 at a salary of £60 (she remained on staff for 22 years, later as Assistant Librarian, resigning in 1942).
In November 1895,
William Skinner first petitioned the council for a dedicated room for the museum in the Town Hall building; a similar petition was received in 1900.
In 1913 Skinner and his son Prof.
H. D. Skinner offered the town their collection of Māori artifacts and historical documents, on the condition that they be displayed in a suitably furnished fireproof building that would function as a "purely Taranaki museum".
An annex was eventually built behind the Carnegie Library at a cost of £3,000; the old Town Hall exhibits were moved there in 1918, and the Skinner collection in 1919.
The Taranaki Museum opened on 28 August 1919.

The library was reorganised on a
Dewey system in 1922, and the headquarters of the
Polynesian Society moved to Wellington in 1925, creating more space. In 1927 contention over the ownership and display of two Māori treasures – the anchor stone of the
Tokomaru canoe and the adze used in its construction – was resolved in a meeting between museum administration and representatives of three
iwi
Iwi () are the largest social units in New Zealand Māori society. In Māori, roughly means or , and is often translated as "tribe". The word is both singular and plural in the Māori language, and is typically pluralised as such in English.
...
.
By the 1930s, the museum and library were considered hopelessly overcrowded, and a new site was sought, but it was many years before approval was granted for a combined library, museum, and war memorial building on a site bounded by King, Brougham, and Ariki streets.
The building was designed by Taylor and Collins, and the contractors were Fairbrother, Snowden and Wheeler Ltd.
Planning began in 1954, and the four-story building opened on 14 July 1960.
Its top floor was the War Memorial Hall, the next floor the Taranaki Museum, and the mezzanine and ground floors the library.
One wing, designated for art display, was occupied by the North Taranaki Society for Arts, until they were forced out by a need for more museum display space.
2003 building

By the 1980s, both library and museum were running out of room for storage and display.
Planning for an expanded building to be called Puke Ariki, after the original pā site, began in 1993. It was intended to amalgamate the Taranaki Museum and existing public library. The
New Plymouth District Council committed NZ$12.3 million in funding, and another $11 million was raised externally.
The architects were local firm Boon Goldsmith Bhaskar (Team Architecture), and construction was carried out by Clelands Construction.
Their brief was to retrofit the original 1960 War Memorial building and construct an addition 5000 m
2 museum space. The architects designed the new building to reach the same height as the former Puke Ariki hill before it was excavated as landfill, placing the Māori Taonga level at the original height of above ground level. The building exterior was clad in a woven wall. Puke Ariki was opened by the Prime Minister
Helen Clark
Helen Elizabeth Clark (born 26 February 1950) is a New Zealand politician who served as the 37th prime minister of New Zealand from 1999 to 2008 and was the administrator of the United Nations Development Programme from 2009 to 2017. She was ...
on 15 June 2003.
Eight Taranaki iwi collaborated on the Puke Ariki project; in 1996–97 a Komiti Māori was formed to represent them and give input into the project.
The 1960 War Memorial building contains the library, archives, and research centre, and connects via a second floor airbridge with the new building containing the museum, iSite information centre, cafe, and restaurant.
In front of Puke Ariki is a 2001 carved pou (pole), ''Tukotahi/Standing Together'', depicting the first meeting of Māori and Pākehā settlers in Taranaki. The largest cultural project ever undertaken in the Taranaki region,
Puke Ariki won
Creative New Zealand's prestigious Creative Places Award for 2003.
Collections
The founding museum collections donated by William Skinner were well-documented Māori taonga (treasures), including a rare dogskin cloak (huruhuru
kurī). Skinner was a Taranaki surveyor, and later Commissioner of Crown Lands in Blenheim, so had travelled extensively and was well known to local iwi. The current collections consist primarily of archives, social history,
taonga
''Taonga'' or ''taoka'' (in South Island Māori) is a Māori-language word that refers to a treasured possession in Māori culture. It lacks a direct translation into English, making its use in the Treaty of Waitangi significant. The current ...
Māori, and a large pictorial collection.
A significant feature of the taonga Māori collection are the Motonui ''epa'' or panels. Forming the back wall of a pataka or storehouse, they are thought to have been crafted by
Te Āti Awa
Te Āti Awa or Te Ātiawa is a Māori iwi with traditional bases in the Taranaki and Wellington regions of New Zealand. Approximately 17,000 people registered their affiliation to Te Āti Awa in 2001, with about 10,000 in Taranaki, 2,000 in We ...
artisans between 1750 and 1820.
The panels were buried in a swamp near
Motonui for safekeeping during tribal warfare. Rediscovered in 1972, they were sold to
George Ortiz, a Bolivian collector residing in Switzerland, for US$65,000.
Ortiz took them out of New Zealand, violating laws on the export of national treasures, then in 1978 attempted to sell them to recoup a ransom he had paid for his kidnapped daughter.
After many years of negotiation and Ortiz's death in 2013, the New Zealand government paid $4.5 million to have them returned, and in March 2014 they were deposited in Puke Ariki under a guardianship arrangement agreed to by the Crown, Te Āti Awa, and
Ngāti Rahiri.
They went on display in the Takapou Whariki o Taranaki gallery in October 2015.
The greater part of the photographic collection is the Swainson/Woods studios collection of over 111,000 negatives of vernacular photography from the 1920s to the 1990s, donated in 2005 and digitised by 2016.
Staff
Rigby Allan, appointed Acting Curator of the then-Taranaki Museum in 1959, became Director in November 1961 and retired in 1973.
Ron Lambert became director of the museum in 1975, at which time there were only three staff.
He became Collection Manager in 1999, then Senior Researcher in 2001 before that role was disestablished in a 2016 restructure.
Roger Fyfe was Deputy Director from 1979 to 1992, before joining
Canterbury Museum as Curator of Ethnology.
From 2005 to 2011
Bill Macnaught was Manager, leaving to become National Librarian. Fiona Emberton headed the institution from September 2011 to November 2012. Kelvin Day, who started at Taranaki Museum in 1992, and had been Manager Heritage Collections since 2008, was appointed Director in March 2013. He left in January 2019, and was replaced as Manager by the acting director of the
Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, Colleen Mullin.
Exhibitions
Puke Ariki's most popular exhibition was ''Bugs! Our Backyard Heroes'', curated by Aimee Burbery, which ran from November 2016 to May 2017.
As well as pinned specimens from the Ken Fox collection, it featured live cockroaches, stick insects, centipedes, and spiders. ''Bugs!'' attracted over 65,000 visitors, and broke the daily visitor record on 3 January 2017 with 1788 attendees.
''Hina'': ''Celebrating Taranaki Women'' featured the stories of 11 different Taranaki women, and was curated by
Kararaina Te Ira, Curator of Taonga Māori. It opened on the 125th anniversary of
women's suffrage in New Zealand
Women's suffrage was an important political issue in the late-nineteenth-century New Zealand. In early colonial New Zealand, as in European societies, women were excluded from any involvement in politics. Public opinion began to change in the ...
and closed in March 2019.
References
External links
Puke Ariki websitePuke Ariki Online Collection
{{Authority control
Museums in Taranaki
Buildings and structures in New Plymouth
Local museums in New Zealand
Libraries in New Zealand
Physical museums with virtual catalogues and exhibits