Please show your support of Waihekepedia by adding a link to us from your web site. Waihekepedia T Shirts now available at the Ostend Market

Difference between revisions of "Cowes Bay"

From Waihekepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Stack images; were overlapping. Format)
 
(23 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Cowes Bay is situated between Days and Arran Bays on the eastern end of Waiheke. This general area was some of the first to be settled on the island by European immigrants from the mid 1800s.
+
[[Image:Cowes_Bay_1944.jpg|thumb|Cowes 1944]]
 +
[[Image:Cowes_Bay_1944a.jpg|thumb|Looking down on Cowes, 1944]]
 +
[[Image:Cowes bay 2006.jpg|thumb|Cowes Bay 2006]]
 +
'''Cowes Bay''' is between [[Days Bay]] and [[Arran Bay]] at the eastern end of Waiheke. This end of the island was the first to be settled by European immigrants from the mid-1800s.
 +
Innes Parrez was the first owner of Cowes Bay. As a 13-year-old boy from Portugal, Parrez was rescued by Joseph Hodgson in the Hauraki Gulf; "Innez", as he gave his name, told of the mistreatment aboard a ship from the captain and crew. He and another boy jumped ship but the other boy drowned. This was in the 1850s (no official date).
  
 +
He owned the Bay from 1865 to 1906 and built the hotel (about 1890) and also operated the Post Office there from 1886. The area became very popular and in the early 1900s became the site for the Auckland Anniversary Regatta. Paul Monin's book ''Waiheke Island - A History'' has photos of Cowes Bay with steamers tied end-on-end and against each other, having carried the crowds from Auckland for a day of boat racing and family fun.
  
The Cowes Bay Hotel was popular during the 1940s with honeymooners and holiday makers wanting  slightly more comfortable accommodation that was generally available on the island.
+
Currently Cowes Bay is famous for being one of the most expensive properties available in New Zealand, valued currently around 30 million dollars.
  
Currently Cowes Bay is famous for being one of the most expensive properties available in New Zealand, valued currently around 30 million dollars.
+
[[Category:Beaches]]
 +
[[Category:History]]

Latest revision as of 09:50, 7 October 2007

Cowes 1944
Looking down on Cowes, 1944
Cowes Bay 2006

Cowes Bay is between Days Bay and Arran Bay at the eastern end of Waiheke. This end of the island was the first to be settled by European immigrants from the mid-1800s. Innes Parrez was the first owner of Cowes Bay. As a 13-year-old boy from Portugal, Parrez was rescued by Joseph Hodgson in the Hauraki Gulf; "Innez", as he gave his name, told of the mistreatment aboard a ship from the captain and crew. He and another boy jumped ship but the other boy drowned. This was in the 1850s (no official date).

He owned the Bay from 1865 to 1906 and built the hotel (about 1890) and also operated the Post Office there from 1886. The area became very popular and in the early 1900s became the site for the Auckland Anniversary Regatta. Paul Monin's book Waiheke Island - A History has photos of Cowes Bay with steamers tied end-on-end and against each other, having carried the crowds from Auckland for a day of boat racing and family fun.

Currently Cowes Bay is famous for being one of the most expensive properties available in New Zealand, valued currently around 30 million dollars.