English: Hikurangi’s original First World War memorial was erected at the north-western end of the Hikurangi bridge in 1922. This was a seven foot high slab of Oamaru stone. A marble tablet inscribed with the names of the district’s 16 fallen was set into the front of the slab, with the names of 49 men who also served inscribed on either side. The memorial also incorporated a drinking fountain and a water trough for dogs. The memorial was unveiled by Colonel C.E.R. Mackesy on 5 August 1922. The lamp of remembrance which surmounted the slab was first lit on 9 September 1922.
Less than three years later the memorial was destroyed. The story goes that it was swept down the Mangahuru Stream by a flood. In fact, on 27 June 1925 gale force winds toppled the slab, which broke into several pieces. It is not known what happened to the pieces.
For many years Hikurangi did not have a First World War memorial. In 2002, however, the Hikurangi Historical Museum Society commissioned a new First World War memorial tablet. This was erected on a concrete plinth in the museum forecourt, alongside a marble Second World War memorial tablet that had formerly been presented to the Hikurangi School by the Hikurangi Women’s Institute. The new memorial was formally unveiled on 22 March 2003.
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