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LAND SETTLEMENT

LORD NUFFIELD’S DENIAL. STATEMENT BY SIR A. RANSOM. (Per Press Association.) WELLINGTON, March 10. Interviewed by telephone at his home at Dannevirke, Sir Alfred Ransom said that it was no use Lord Nutfield saying that the land settlement proposal was a ‘ 'fantastic story. feh Alfred said Lord Nuffield did not mention £1,000,000, but that was the figure mentioned by Sir Thomas AAilford when he visited New Zealand before Lord Nuffield’s visit. “Sir Thomas Wilford said £1,000,000 was the figure Lord Nuffield bad said he was prepared to consider,” said Sii Alfred. “Lord Nuffield never mentioned any amount to me, but Sir Thomas Wilford did, and be said it was through a conversation he had with Lord Nuffield in England, and that was confirmed by Mr C. J- B. Norwood.” Sir Alfred Ransom emphasised that it was useless for Lord Nuffield to describe the matter as a “fantastic story,” because when Lord Nuffield was in New Zealand he was taken on a visit of inspection to the land settlement schemes in the North Island by the Government. “When I discussed the matter with Lord Nuffield it was in his mind to settle English people/’ said Sir Alfred. “I suggested a settlement of New Zealanders, but he said that was not acceptable because he had made his money in England. I then suggested that the settlement should be carried out on a fifty-fifty basis, and he said he would consider it. If it was a ‘fantastic story,’ why should I have wasted my time in showing him the development of the lands in the Nortsh Island when he was not interested in them. Perhaps I was foolish in mentioning it, but I kept my mouth shut for 12 months.” THE SCHEME^ABANDONED. BRITISH SETTLEMENT MOOTED. WELLINGTON, March 10. In an interview Mr C. J. B. Norwood, whose close association with Lord Nuffield during his English visit ana Lord Nuffield’s visit to New Zealand enables him to speak with authority, stated that as the nature of the publicity of Lord Nuffield’s proposal to create a British settlement in New Zealand was calculated to put a wrong construction on Lord Nufficld’s intentions, he thought it only right to state that on his last visit to England Lord Nuffield discussed with him the possibilities of creating a British settlement within New Zealand to* help relieve the grave difficulties existing in England. Mr Norwood said he interviewed Sir Thomas Wilford (then High Commissioner) at Lord Nuffield’s request, and was finally asked to maintain the greatest possible confidence, making such inquiries as would be helpful when Lord Nuffield paid a visit to New Zealand. Mr Norwood said the impression he received was that the atmosphere in New Zealand was unsatisfactory for a purely 7 British settlement at that time. The matter was definitely abandoned immediately after Lord Nuffield’s arrival in New Zealand. He did not understand that Lord Nuffield’s visit to the Galatea estate as a guest of the Government had any specific purpose other than the fact of his being a great industrial visitor from, overseas.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AG19360311.2.12

Bibliographic details

Ashburton Guardian, Volume 56, Issue 127, 11 March 1936, Page 3

Word Count
511

LAND SETTLEMENT Ashburton Guardian, Volume 56, Issue 127, 11 March 1936, Page 3

LAND SETTLEMENT Ashburton Guardian, Volume 56, Issue 127, 11 March 1936, Page 3