No Maori Allowed: New Zealand’s Forgotten History of Racial Segregation
Updated Edition
You are still able to order No Maori Allowed through Amazon: Order here
Written by Robert E. Bartholomew
No Maori Allowed Updated Edition with new foreword, plus 18 pages of historical documents & interviews covering everything from segregated toilets & swimming baths to reports of abuse at the Native school.
From 1952 to 1964, Pukekohe housed the only segregated Māori school in the history of the country. Tragically, hundreds of Māori infants and children died as a result of their segregation in slums where they were forced to live on the edge of town. No Maori Allowed looks at what happened at Pukekohe and the extent of racial intolerance across the country.
Using records from the National Archives and firsthand interviews, chapters cover the extent of racial intolerance across the country in housing and employment during the segregation period from 1925 to the early 1960s. Did you know that on ‘K Road’ in Auckland, shops had signs reading ‘No Credit for Maori,’ in Hamilton stores refused to let them try on pants, hospitals had segregated maternity wards and gave them less expensive cutlery, while many stores and major banks had official policies of not hiring ‘coloureds’.
When a New Zealand University Press insisted that I modify the text as it was too pro-Māori, I decided to publish it myself, because the true history of Māori cannot be censored.
Anyone wishing to order 10+ copies, can contact us for bulk order discounts at: rebartholomew@yahoo.com
Why did we update the book?
People continually come up to me after talks claiming what is in the book isn’t true. That is why I felt it was necessary to include indisputable evidence in the form of documents, which settle the issue once and for all.
Updated Edition
You are still able to order No Maori Allowed through Amazon: Order here
Written by Robert E. Bartholomew
No Maori Allowed Updated Edition with new foreword, plus 18 pages of historical documents & interviews covering everything from segregated toilets & swimming baths to reports of abuse at the Native school.
From 1952 to 1964, Pukekohe housed the only segregated Māori school in the history of the country. Tragically, hundreds of Māori infants and children died as a result of their segregation in slums where they were forced to live on the edge of town. No Maori Allowed looks at what happened at Pukekohe and the extent of racial intolerance across the country.
Using records from the National Archives and firsthand interviews, chapters cover the extent of racial intolerance across the country in housing and employment during the segregation period from 1925 to the early 1960s. Did you know that on ‘K Road’ in Auckland, shops had signs reading ‘No Credit for Maori,’ in Hamilton stores refused to let them try on pants, hospitals had segregated maternity wards and gave them less expensive cutlery, while many stores and major banks had official policies of not hiring ‘coloureds’.
When a New Zealand University Press insisted that I modify the text as it was too pro-Māori, I decided to publish it myself, because the true history of Māori cannot be censored.
Anyone wishing to order 10+ copies, can contact us for bulk order discounts at: rebartholomew@yahoo.com
Why did we update the book?
People continually come up to me after talks claiming what is in the book isn’t true. That is why I felt it was necessary to include indisputable evidence in the form of documents, which settle the issue once and for all.
Updated Edition
You are still able to order No Maori Allowed through Amazon: Order here
Written by Robert E. Bartholomew
No Maori Allowed Updated Edition with new foreword, plus 18 pages of historical documents & interviews covering everything from segregated toilets & swimming baths to reports of abuse at the Native school.
From 1952 to 1964, Pukekohe housed the only segregated Māori school in the history of the country. Tragically, hundreds of Māori infants and children died as a result of their segregation in slums where they were forced to live on the edge of town. No Maori Allowed looks at what happened at Pukekohe and the extent of racial intolerance across the country.
Using records from the National Archives and firsthand interviews, chapters cover the extent of racial intolerance across the country in housing and employment during the segregation period from 1925 to the early 1960s. Did you know that on ‘K Road’ in Auckland, shops had signs reading ‘No Credit for Maori,’ in Hamilton stores refused to let them try on pants, hospitals had segregated maternity wards and gave them less expensive cutlery, while many stores and major banks had official policies of not hiring ‘coloureds’.
When a New Zealand University Press insisted that I modify the text as it was too pro-Māori, I decided to publish it myself, because the true history of Māori cannot be censored.
Anyone wishing to order 10+ copies, can contact us for bulk order discounts at: rebartholomew@yahoo.com
Why did we update the book?
People continually come up to me after talks claiming what is in the book isn’t true. That is why I felt it was necessary to include indisputable evidence in the form of documents, which settle the issue once and for all.