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A FORMER MINISTER.

sir john Mckenzie.

UNVEILING OF MEMORIAL.

EARLY LAND LEGISLATION

The unveiling of the new cairn erected on- Mount Puket-apu in honour of Sir John McKenzie to replace the memorial, which stood for many years on Pukeviti Hill, took place afc Palmerston, Otago, on Saturday. The ceremony was performed by the Minister of Internal Affairs, Hon. P. A. de la Perrelle. For the benefit of the older folk, who, it was considered, might find some difficulty/in reaching the summit of Puketapu, the formal ceremony took place on the steps of the Palmerston Town Hall, and on the 1 Minister declaring the cairn unveiled, a signal was given from below, and a flag was broken out on top of the monument.

The Minister said Sir John McKenzie was a striking example of a man who achieved greatness through personal merit. He was bora at Ardross, in Rossshire, Scotland, in 1858, and arrived in New Zealand in 1861 at the age of 23. His first employment was on the run of the late Mr. John Jones, of Southern Shag Valley. In 1871, Mr. McKenzie, at the age of 33, was elected a member of the Provincial Council, and in 1881, when the general election for the House of Representatives took place, he was returned as the member for Moeraki, which seat he held continuously for 18i years.'

After the dissolution of Parliament. in 1884, and upon the formation of the StoutVogel Coalition Ministry, Mr. Mo Kenzie was appointed Senior Whip, and when the Ballance Ministry was formed in -1891 he was appointed . Minister of Lands. He continued to hold that portfolio/;in the Seddon Ministry until 1900, .when, through ill-health, he resigned. During his term of office, 1891-1900, he prevailed upon Parliament to pass laws nob only to prevent the further accumulation of large estates, but also to break up those already in existence. Furthermore, to assist men of moderate capital to obtain homesteads, he introduced the lease-in-perpetuity tenure, and thus gave the farmer a title equal to. a freehold, and with a moderate rental. Mr. McKenzie saw that the best lands of the colony had been acquired by large landowners, while the new settler had to go into the interior, away from roads and markets, and try to cultivate inferior lands. He, therefore, introduced the Land for Settlements Act of 1892, which enabled the Government to buy back, between 1892 and 1901, no fewer than 77 estates having a total area of 550,000 acres, and to place thereon over 1700 separate settlers. In addition, he introduced the Cheviot Estate Disposition Act of 1895. Under that Act 76,000 acres were allotted to 290 settlers, one of whom, time had then to show, was to hold Mr. McKenzie's portfolio of Lands. That eettler was the present Prime Minister.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19310618.2.22

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20902, 18 June 1931, Page 8

Word Count
466

A FORMER MINISTER. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20902, 18 June 1931, Page 8

A FORMER MINISTER. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20902, 18 June 1931, Page 8