Matiu / Somes Island
Matiu / Somes Island is the largest of three islands in the northern half of Wellington Harbour, New Zealand. The island is 24.9 hectares (62 acres) in area, and lies 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) south of the suburb of Petone and the mouth of the Hutt River.
Matiu / Somes Island | |
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Matiu (Māori) | |
![]() Matiu / Somes Island as seen from Mount Kaukau | |
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Location | Wellington Harbour |
Coordinates | 41°15′29.7″S 174°51′55.4″E |
Area | 24.9 ha (62 acres) |
Max. elevation | 74 metres (243 ft) |
Designation | Scientific Reserve, Historic Reserve |
Designated | 1995 |
Governing body | Harbour Islands Kaitiaki Board |
Matiu / Somes Island was used as a place of refuge by pre-colonial Māori. Middens and other remnants of habitation have been found on the island. There is also a long and varied European history. The island was used for human quarantine from 1840 until the 1920s. Ships arriving in Wellington Harbour with infectious passengers or crew would unload them at Matiu / Somes Island for care and treatment before berthing in the city. During World War I and World War II the island was used as an internment camp for "enemy aliens", including long-term residents of New Zealand who originated from enemy countries. Military structures were built on the island during World War II and their remains can be seen today. The island was used for animal quarantine until 1995 and a maximum security animal quarantine station was built in 1968.
Since 1995, Matiu / Somes Island has been designated as a scientific and historic reserve. The island's environment had become degraded during its long period of use for military and quarantine purposes, but following environmental restoration and the translocation of species, the island is now home to many native birds, invertebrates, reptiles and plants.
In 2009, ownership of the island was transferred to the Māori collective Taranaki Whānui ki Te Upoko o Te Ika, as part of cultural redress for Taranaki Whānui included in the settlement of their claims against the Crown for breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi. The island is managed by the Department of Conservation. For many years the public was banned from visiting the island due to its role as a human and animal quarantine station, but visitors are now welcome and may stay overnight on the island.
Toponymy

Legend has it that Matiu and the nearby Mākaro island received their original Māori names from Kupe, the semi-legendary first navigator to reach New Zealand and return home with knowledge of the new land.[1][2] He named them after his two daughters (or, in some versions of the tale, nieces) when he first entered the harbour about 1000 years ago.[3][4]
After European settlement, the island was known for over a century as Somes Island. In 1839 it fell under the control of the New Zealand Company along with much of the greater Wellington region. The island was renamed after Joseph Somes, the company's deputy-governor and financier at the time. In 1997, after 10 months of investigation and consideration of submissions by the public, the New Zealand Geographic Board assigned the official bilingual name of Matiu/Somes Island in recognition of the island's colourful European and Māori histories.[5] Ward Island was renamed as Mākaro/Ward Island at the same time. Since then the board has adopted the formatting convention of placing a space before and after the slash, so the official name is now written Matiu / Somes Island.[6][7]
Geology and geography
The island is 24.9 hectares (62 acres) in area, and lies 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) south of the suburb of Petone and the mouth of the Hutt River. Just off the northern tip of Matiu / Somes Island lies tiny Mokopuna Island, also known as Leper Island.[8] Matiu / Somes Island is about 5 kilometres (3 mi) northwest of the much smaller Mākaro / Ward Island.
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Wellington Harbour and the surrounding landforms are a product of tectonic activity. Matiu / Somes Island is an uplifted horst block of greywacke, thought to be the remnant of a ridge warped up between faults that ran north-south between Petone and the Miramar peninsula.[9]: 42 [10]: 22, 24 The island has three benches or platforms at 30, 45 and 75 metres above the current mean sea level.[11]: 18 The origin of these benches is uncertain. No marine deposits have been found on the benches, and it is possible that they result from a combination of fluvial processes and tectonic uplift.[12]: 36 The 1855 Wairarapa earthquake raised Matiu / Somes Island by about 1.5 metres.[13] The perimeters of both Matiu / Somes and Mokopuna Island have shore platforms that were eroded by the sea prior to the 1855 earthquake. There are some remnants of an earlier platform at 2.4 to 3 m above the present mean sea level. A rock arch and platform at the northern end of Matiu / Somes Island was formed by the action of the sea, but was raised above sea-level by successive earthquakes, including the 1855 Wairarapa earthquake. The arch now appears as a hole in the rock, above sea level.[12]: 49
A distinct gully runs from the south of the former quarantine station and terminates at the sea on the southern end of the island between two largely forested ridges on either side to the east and west.[14] Generally, this gully is a swampy area but it also represents an ephemeral watercourse and during and following heavy rain a small creek flows down it. A 1942 map shows a small dam across the creek.[15]
Despite being surrounded by sea water, Matiu / Somes Island has access to fresh water from the Waiwhetu artesian aquifer. Water from the Hutt River infiltrates into porous gravels in the vicinity of Taita Gorge, with between 3.8 and 5.7 million litres per hour flowing from the bed of the river into the underlying gravels between Taita Gorge and Melling. South of Melling, a layer of clay forms an impervious cap (or aquiclude) that holds the artesian water underground and causes it to build up pressure as it flows through the gravel layer southwards towards Wellington Harbour. The pressurised water can rise to the surface if the fresh water layer is penetrated with a bore hole. There are also artesian gravels beneath much of Wellington Harbour, in some places hundreds of metres deep, and they extend out to the present harbour entrance.[9]: 58–59 [10]: 22–23 The water level in the harbour was much lower 20,000 years ago, and the ancient Hutt River used to flow down a paleochannel to the east of the Matiu / Somes Island ridge as far as present-day Kilbirnie.[11]: 28 [10]: 75 [16] The Waiwhetu aquifer flows under the sea bed from the direction of the Hutt River to the harbour mouth via the paleochannel. Matiu / Somes Island gets its fresh water from a bore sunk into the aquifer just offshore at the main wharf. In February 2016, the Department of Conservation temporarily restricted access to the island because a long dry summer had lowered the volume and pressure of water from the aquifer, necessitating strict water conservation.[17]
Somes Rock is an underwater pinnacle off the southwest point of Matiu / Somes island.[18][19]
History
Māori history
During the 18th century Ngāti Ira, an East Coast iwi, settled in Petone and around the eastern shores of the harbour. They built two pā on the island but there was no permanent settlement on the island due to limited resources there.[1] Ngāti Mutunga and Ngāti Tama from Taranaki drove Ngāti Ira from their settlements in the 1820s.[1]
In November 1835 Ngāti Mutunga people, affiliated to Te Āti Awa, seized the ship Lord Rodney at Wellington and got its captain John Harewood to take them to the island. The crew were tied up and Harewood was forced or bribed to take a group of hundreds of Māori to the Chatham Islands.[20] To ensure his compliance, his chief mate was held hostage on Matiu / Somes island.[21][22] There was no Māori occupation on Matiu / Somes from about 1840.[1][23]
Archaeological sites
At the northern end of the island on a site with steep cliffs there was the Te Moana–a–kura pā which contained terraces and middens.[1][24] Haowhenua pā was built in the middle of the island, where the quarantine station was sited, but the only remaining sign of occupation is a midden.[24] The midden, which was underneath the hospital building, was uncovered and excavated during building work in 1999. Faunal remains included shellfish (species from the mainland), fish and bird bones.[23]
European history

At various times throughout the 19th and 20th centuries the island hosted quarantine facilities for both human immigrants and animals, and enemy alien internees during wartime.
Human quarantine
In 1868 the island was declared a quarantine ground and used to isolate passengers from a ship carrying smallpox.[25] When the immigrant ship England arrived in 1872 carrying several passengers with smallpox, passengers and crew were quartered in makeshift accommodation on the island.[26] On other occasions, new arrivals would spend ten minutes in a smokehouse of chlorine, potassium nitrate and sulphur fumes for de-lousing.[27] During the influenza pandemic of 1918-1920, a few people were quarantined on Matiu / Somes Island, but there was general agreement that the facilities were completely inadequate.[28][29][30] The government then built accommodation for hundreds more people.[31] In 1920, some passengers and crew from the ship Mahana were quarantined on Matiu / Somes Island with scarlet fever, but after this the quarantine station fell out of use.[32] In 1935 the Government announced that it would reduce the number of quarantine beds on the island from 600 to about 50,[33] but the Ministry of Health continued to restrict access to the island.[21]: 74 In 1946, after World War II had ended, the island was offered back to the Ministry of Health but it declined to retake control.[21]: 121
Forty-five people are known to be buried on the island, mostly immigrants who arrived in the 1870s. In 1971, individual gravestones were removed from the overgrown cemetery and replaced with a large memorial.[34][35] In January 2000, four of the old headstones were retrieved from storage and placed next to the communal memorial.[36]
Animal quarantine
Use of the island as an animal quarantine facility is recorded as early as 1864, when an advertisement in the Wellington Independent recorded that a man named James Sellars had been permitted to use it as a quarantine ground for his sheep.[37] In 1889 Matiu / Somes Island was declared as the first animal quarantine station in New Zealand.[38] In 1892 the government established a Department of Agriculture to protect New Zealand's farming industry, and in 1893 passed the Stock Act.[39][40] The Stock Act 1893 gave the Department of Agriculture power to quarantine all live animals arriving in the country, so it built permanent animal quarantine facilities on Matiu / Somes Island (in 1893) and at other locations for this purpose.[38] In 1916, internees on the island built stables for the quarantine station.[38]
In 1968 the government built a maximum security animal quarantine station. It had laboratories, animal pens and other facilities for quarantining up to 35 cattle and 150 sheep, and there were associated new homes for the workers and their families. Other animals quarantined included goats, alpacas, llamas and deer. The quarantine station was officially opened in December 1970.[21]: 132–133 It closed in 1995 after in-vitro fertilisation technology was developed, making importation and quarantining of live breeding stock unnecessary.[38]
World War I internment camp

During World War I the island continued to be used for quarantining animals[41] but was also used for an internment camp which imprisoned about 300 "enemy aliens". Prisoners during this time included many German prisoners of war and suspected Danish imposter Hjelmar von Danneville.[42] Other "enemy aliens" included German residents of New Zealand who were considered dangerous or who were reservists in the German or Austrian armies, sailors who had been at sea when war broke out, Germans from Samoa and musicians in a German band.[21] In April 1916 there were 246 prisoners on the island, of whom 94 were military and 152 were civilians, and by May 1918 there were 314 internees.[43]
In March 1915 two prisoners escaped from the island by swimming to Petone,[44] where they turned themselves in at a police station, seeking to alert the authorities to allegedly poor treatment of internees.[45] In July 1918 four men escaped on a raft made of wood with oil drums for buoyancy, landing at Ngauranga; one of the men died of exposure on the beach and the others were recaptured after seeking help.[45][46]
An inquiry was held towards the end of the war into numerous accusations of mistreatment of alien internees on the island.[43][47] Although in general the inquiry report found an absence of evidence to support charges of ill-treatment, it did make some recommendations to improve conditions for internees, and noted the use of "disrespectful language" by the camp overseer.[43][47]
After the war ended, the internees were transferred to Featherston military camp and from there 260 of them were deported back to Germany.[45] The island reverted to use as a human quarantine station.[48]
World War II internment camp
On 29 August 1939 Matiu / Somes Island was handed over from the Health Department to the Army and again shifted from quarantine station to internment camp, with the first group of internees arriving in late December 1939.[49] Internees included German and Italian residents of New Zealand and men from Pacific Islands plantations. By January 1942 there were also 45 Japanese internees who were New Zealand residents and fishermen from Suva. Tensions developed amongst the various national groups, in particular between German Nazis and German Jews.[21] As in World War I, there were allegations of ill-treatment of the men on the island. Three men escaped in November 1941 in a boat stolen from the island's caretaker and made it to the Akatarawa hills before hunger forced them out to buy food and they were rearrested.[50][51]
In 1942, the island was fortified with heavy anti-aircraft gun emplacements on the summit, but they were never used.[42] A large area was levelled for this construction, with the result that 17 metres (56 ft) was removed from the island's previous overall height. A degaussing station was built to provide protection for ships against magnetic mines.[52] Many of the physical features of these sites are present on the island today. The Swiss Consul in 1942 protested that with military equipment on the island it had become a potential target, and that keeping prisoners in a potential conflict zone was against the Geneva Convention.[53] The Government moved the internees to a camp at Pahiatua, but in September 1944 this was needed for Polish refugee children so the prisoners were sent back to Matiu / Somes Island (apart from the Italians who had been allowed to return to their families after Italy signed an armistice in March 1944). At the end of the war the internees were released and allowed to stay in New Zealand if they wished, since Europe was in a mess.[21] In 1994, Italians erected a monument listing the Italians who had been interned on the island during the war.[21][54]
Quarantine station to scientific reserve
From 1947 to 1995 the island was used as a quarantine station for livestock, with limited access to the public from 1981 onwards.[55] In December 1983, the island was still a maximum security animal quarantine station. However, over the 1983/84 summer period, the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries agreed to allow day visits to the island by members of the public, limited to 120 visitors per open day. The visits were by permit only, and access to the quarantine station was not allowed. The day visits were co-ordinated by the Wellington Regional Council.[56]
Matiu / Somes became part of Lower Hutt in 1989 and came under the full control of the Department of Conservation (DOC) as a scientific and historic reserve in August 1995.[57]
Transfer of ownership

In 2009, ownership of the island was transferred to the Māori collective Taranaki Whānui ki Te Upoko o Te Ika. The transfer of ownership was part of cultural redress for Taranaki Whānui included in the settlement of their claims against the Crown for breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi. Following the passing of the 'Port Nicholson Block (Taranaki Whānui ki Te Upoko o Te Ika) Claims Settlement Act 2009', ownership of the island is vested in the trustees of the Port Nicholson Block Settlement Trust.[58] A kaitiaki (management) plan was prepared in 2012, to guide the administration of the island's scientific and historic reserves in accordance with the Reserves Act 1977.[59] A small team of rangers lives on the island to maintain facilities, manage visitors and volunteers, and monitor bait stations.[60]
A waharoa, or carved gateway named Tane Te Waiora was unveiled next to the wharf at the entrance to the island in 2017.[61]

Environmental restoration
Revegetation
During its time as a farm and quarantine station, much of Matiu / Somes Island was converted to pasture. The Lower Hutt branch of Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society of New Zealand (Forest & Bird) began planting native plants on the island in the 1980s and by the 1990s had planted over 100,000 plants.[62] Species introduced or reintroduced to Matiu / Somes Island include Cook's scurvy grass, northern rata, large-leaved milk tree, taupata, hebes, ngaio, and five finger.[63][64] The 'Karo Busters' group spent ten years poisoning established karo trees on the island, since this species does not grow naturally in the area.[62][65] Many of these projects have been supported by the community and the local iwi, Taranaki Whānui.
Pest eradication
Rats and mice were successfully eradicated between 1988 and 1989, but Department of Conservation rangers on the island remain vigilant. In 2012 a contractor reported seeing a mouse, so rangers laid a series of traps and baits. They eventually concluded that the sighting may have been that of a lizard.[66][67]
Reintroduction of birds
Red-crowned kākāriki (parakeets) from Kapiti Island were re-introduced in 2003 and 2004.[68] North Island robins sourced from Kapiti Island were released in April 2006; they bred for the first time in late September that year and this was viewed as encouraging by DOC staff as it appeared to indicate that the island ecosystem represents a suitable habitat for this species.[69] The island is a stronghold for the little blue penguin,[70] the spotted shag and black shag,[71][72] and the red-billed gull.[71]
Between 2012 and 2014, 237 fluttering shearwater chicks were translocated from the Marlborough Sounds to Matiu / Somes Island and hand-fed until they fledged. Some of the now-adult birds have since returned to the island and begun to breed. A solar-powered speaker system was also installed to transmit fluttering shearwater calls each night, and has attracted wild birds to Matiu / Somes Island. This species is common in Wellington Harbour but there has been no local breeding population since pre-European times. They were once an important food source for local iwi.[73][74]
Reintroduction of invertebrates
There are more than 500 species of invertebrates on the island including three species of wētā. Wellington tree wētā were transferred to Matiu / Somes Island in 1996 and 1997, and 67 Cook Strait giant wētā were successfully transferred from Mana Island in 1996. A species of small ground wētā had survived on Matiu / Somes Island after deforestation.[75]
The island is now home to several species of native reptiles, including the common skink, spotted skink, copper skink and common gecko. Twenty-five forest geckos were transferred to the island in April 2005,[76] and more than 90 Wellington green geckos were released in several transfers between 2006 and 2013.[77] Two of these geckos were fitted with transmitters so that they could be monitored after release.[78] In 2015 the green geckos were confirmed to be breeding on the island.[79] Tuatara are known to have been living on Matiu / Somes island in the 1840s[80][81] but later died out. In 1998 the Brothers Island tuatara was released on the island, and by 2007 had begun breeding there.[82]
Matiu / Somes Island Charitable Trust
The Matiu / Somes Island Charitable Trust was established in 1999 and launched in March 2000 as a partnership between local iwi and the general community to help protect, nurture and enhance the island by raising funds for projects that increase biodiversity and enhance visitors' enjoyment of the island.[83][84] Through its active arm, "The Friends of Matiu / Somes", it encourages community participation in work on the island. It also works closely with DOC and community groups such as Forest & Bird.
Transport
Scheduled ferry services from the Wellington CBD to Matiu / Somes Island and Days Bay operate as part of ferries in Wellington, landing at the main wharf at the northeast of the island. An electric ferry was introduced in 2022.[85] Visitors arriving in private boats may only land at the main wharf or nearby beach, and must check in at the whare kiore ('rat house') to have their bags inspected.[86]
Tourism
Matiu / Somes Island is an increasingly popular tourist attraction and educational resource for local schools, with about 15,000 visitors per year. The island is free of introduced mammalian predators such as stoats. Visitors to the island must make sure they are pest-free. Before arriving they must check, clean and seal all gear to make sure no pests, soil, or seeds are brought to the island.[57] Visitors may stay overnight on the island in one of two houses managed by the Department of Conservation (Education House built in the 1970s or the historic caretakers' cottage), or in a tent at one of 12 campsites.[87][88][89]
Just to the north lies a much smaller island, Mokopuna Island. To protect endemic wildlife on Mokopuna Island – particularly nesting seabirds – landing by members of the public is prohibited.[90]
Matiu / Somes Island lighthouse
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The Matiu / Somes Island lighthouse is a harbour navigation light for Wellington Harbour. It is a sector light, marking a safe approach through the harbour channel. The first lighthouse on the site was established in 1866. It was the first inner harbour lighthouse in New Zealand, and one of only eight lighthouses nationwide at that time. However, by 1895 there were multiple complaints that it was inadequate. A replacement lighthouse with a more powerful light was built on an adjacent site and commissioned on 21 February 1900. The light was automated on 1 April 1924 and converted to electricity after 1945.[91] The lighthouse is owned and operated by the Greater Wellington Regional Council.[92]
Matiu / Somes Island in the arts
Maurice Gee's book Live Bodies was set in part on Matiu / Somes Island, with the main character spending time interned there during the Second World War.[93]
In 1998, Oscar Kightley co-wrote and performed in a play Eulogy that was based on the story of Samoan and German prisoners interned on the island during the Second World War.[94]
Melanie Drewery's book for children Papa's Island tells the story of a family caught up in the internment of "enemy aliens" on Matiu / Somes Island.[95]
David McGill's spy novel The Death Ray Debacle is based on a true story about Victor Penny, an Auckland bus garage attendant and amateur radio enthusiast who in 1935 managed to convince government authorities that he could produce a 'death ray' that was capable of stopping an army, immobilising trucks, and bringing down enemy aeroplanes in flight. Penny was placed under the protection of defence authorities initially on Matiu / Somes Island and later at Fort Dorset.[96][97]
In 2013 Bard Productions staged an adaptation of Shakespeare's The Tempest on Matiu / Somes Island, with the boat journey across to the island forming part of the play. Scenes took place at the former animal quarantine station and in the open air.[98][99]
See also
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Further reading
- Buchanan, Rachel (2011) 'Re-making Memory on Matiu and Other "Settlement" Sites' Memory Connection, Vol 1, no. 1: 284–300.
- Burr, Val (1998). Somes Island Internment Camp for Enemy Aliens During the First World War: An Historical Enquiry (PDF) (MA). Palmerston North: Massey University.
- Hansford, Dave (2005) 'Matiu / Somes – secrets in plain view' Forest and Bird magazine, no. 318 :14–17.
- McGill, David (2001). Island of secrets : Matiu/Somes Island in Wellington Harbour. Wellington [N.Z.]: Steele Roberts & Silver Owl Press. ISBN 1-877228-37-0. OCLC 48397525.
- Werry, Philippa (2011). "An Island in Time / School Journal Story Library / Instructional Series / English - ESOL - Literacy Online website - Instructional Series". instructionalseries.tki.org.nz. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
- Hector, Janet (2011). A new cloak for Matiu: the restoration of an island ecology. Lower Hutt [N.Z.]: Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society of NZ, Lower Hutt Branch. ISBN 978-0-473-18388-2. OCLC 712647074.
External links

- "Somes Island 1845, drawing by William Swainson". NZETC. 1845.
- Map of Somes Island in 1942, showing natural and man-made features and topography
- Interview with author of book about First World War internees on Matiu/Somes Island at RNZ