- 170°40′05″E / 45.76194°S 170.66806°E / -45.76194; 170.66806
Whareakeake Whareakeake ([ˌfaɾɛˈakɛˌakɛ];
formerly and
colloquially Murdering Beach, also...
- to
visit Whareakeake in an open boat, with
Tucker and five others,
having been
persuaded by
Tucker not to take
their firearms. At
Whareakeake they had...
-
including Captain Kelly, took a
rowing boat
around Heyward Point to
visit Whareakeake, then the site of a Māori kāinga (village),
where one of the men, William...
- gang of
eleven in
November 1809.
William Tucker who
later settled at
Whareakeake (Murdering Beach), near
Otago Heads, was in the gang.
Alternatively Ragged...
-
Tunnel Beach Uretiti Beach Victory Beach Waihi Beach Whangarei Heads Whareakeake (Murdering Beach)
Whatipu Worser Bay
Playa Escameca Playa el
Yonke Bar...
-
Ryans Beach Sandfly Bay
Smaills Beach Victory Beach Warrington Beach Whareakeake (Murdering Beach) Whaka****
Beach North Beach Auckland Counties Sun Club...
-
about 1785 but
abandoned by 1826.
There were also Māori
settlements at
Whareakeake (Murdering Beach), Pūrākaunui,
Mapoutahi (Goat
Island Peninsula) and...
-
December 1817 with
William Tucker on board.
After a
visit to
nearby Whareakeake (Murdering Beach),
where Tucker had been
living since 1815, and where...
- returning. The
harbour chief, Korako,
would not
ferry across Maori from
Whareakeake, two
miles north along the coast,
where Tucker had
established himself...
-
including Aramoana, Long Beach, and the
former historic settlement at
Whareakeake. In a
broader sense, the term also
sometimes included the
parts of the...