Matahiwi


Matahiwi is a farming community upriver from Whanganui, New Zealand, home to the Māori hapū known as Ngā Poutama of the iwi Te Āti Haunui-a-Pāpārangi. The township takes its name from the bush-clad puke on the western side of the Whanganui River, right above the local marae, whose name translates as "the face on the ridge".

History and culture

Early settlement

The original settlement of Ngā Poutama was across the river at Hikurangi. In the 1840s it had a population of about 200. Hikurangi was renamed in 1850 with the biblical name Karatia, often spelled Karatea. That settlement is now deserted; the urupa is still known as Hikurangi.
The Kawana flour mill was gifted by Governor George Grey and named Kāwana Kerei in his honour. It operated for over 50 years from 1854 and was restored in 1980.
Matahiwi was a way station for the paddle steamers that were the main transportation up the Whanganui River before the building of the road. The remains of the sternwheeler Tuhua that grounded in 1890 are on the far side of Moutere Island.

Modern settlement

Matahiwi is predominantly a sheep and beef farming area, much of it under management of Atihau-Whanganui Incorporation, which was established in 1970 to farm 101,000 acres of land vested into the Aotea Maori Land Council by Whanganui Māori between 1902–1904.

Marae

There are three marae in the Matahiwi area. Maranganui Marae and Tuarua meeting house ar affiliated with Ngāti Tuera. Matahiwi or Ohotu Marae and Tānewai meeting house are affiliated with Ngā Poutama and Ngāti Tānewai. Waitahupārae Marae and Waitahupārae meeting house are affiliated with Ngāti Patutokotoko.
The present-day Matahiwi or Ohotu Marae was established by Maehe Ranginui in 1902. His daughter Te Kehu, noting its similarity to the one they had left behind in Karatia, shed tears in the presence of her husband Nikorima; the wharepuni is thus known as Tānewai.