On 25th January 1896, attempts were made to provide
education for the children of the Te Puna district between the Wairoa and
Waipapa rivers. Land was donated by Mr B G Armstrong for a school to be
built at Hakao( today Tanglewood Orchard) on the old Tauranga to Waihi
Road. A committee was elected to run the school - Thomas Lochhead
(Chairman), W H Smith, T M Thompson, John Munro and B G Armstrong and Miss
M J Johnston was appointed teacher. By 1898, there were 45 pupils.  1900 Te Puna school pupils wit teacher Winnie Morley (Tauranga Library Photographic Archives)
Overcrowding and distance accounted for absenteeism and truancy and a
petition was forwarded to the Education Board to have the school moved to
a more central site. This request was refused and as a protest, parents
kept their children away and only 11 students were attending Hakao.During
this time of boycott, the 31 children attended a school set up in the
Borell home with local adults appointed as teachers. Eventually the
Education Board acceded to the request and decided to move the Hakao
building to the present site on land donated by Mrs Roha Borell. Here a
temporary building had been erected 24 x 12 ft and was housing 40
children.
The 3 acre site was covered in teatree and scrub and horse drawn
machinery and manual labour was needed to level and clear this. It was a
mammoth task to move such a large building. Banks on the roadsides had to
be excavated and the school was placed on skids and using timber jacks and
rollers it was hauled by horses owned by Cotton Murray and Poutaua
Tangitu. A laborious progress with physical labour was provided by the
menfolk of the district - Borells, Bidois, Faulkners, Taraus and Europeans
working together and using all their building skills, pioneer
improvisation and determination. Eventually, the building was resited and
ready for occupation for the first term in 1905 with H O Cooney as
headmaster.
Over time, population growth has necessitated enlargement - in 1941 the
roll was 99 with a staff of three teachers; In 1953 additional land was
purchased from the Borell estate to bring the total area to 5 acres to
accommodate the 162 children. By 1972 there were 200 pupils. Today with 18
classrooms, the roll is...
Te Puna
School website
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