About this item
- Title
- Waitangi Day 1973
- Content partner
- Manatū Taonga, the Ministry for Culture and Heritage
- Collection
- Te Ara - The Encyclopedia of New Zealand
- Description
On Waitangi Day 1973 Prime Minister Norman Kirk announced that from 1974, 6 February would be a public holiday, and would be called New Zealand Day. His intention was that all New Zealanders, regardless of ethnicity, would be able to regard it as their national day. The name reverted to Waitangi Day in 1976, in recognition that it commemorated the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi by the British Crown and Māori chiefs in 1840 – but the day remained a public holiday and New Zealand's official ...
- Format
- Video
- Date created
- 14 March 2012
- Contributing partner
- TVNZ Television New Zealand
- URL
- https://teara.govt.nz/en/video/32477/waitangi-day-1973
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Manatū Taonga, the Ministry for Culture and Heritage has this to say about the rights status of this item:
http://www.teara.govt.nz/copyright, Crown Copyright administered through the New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu Taonga. All text licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 New Zealand Licence unless otherwise stated. Commercial re-use may be allowed on request. All non-text content is subject to specific conditions. TVNZ Television New Zealand This item has been provided for private study purposes (such as school projects, family and local history research) and any published reproduction (print or electronic) may infringe copyright law. It is the responsibility of the user of any material to obtain clearance from the copyright holder.
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Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 30 April 2013, and updated 26 November 2025.
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