Taranaki Daily News

Highlands Place

- Taranaki Research Centre

Highlands Place runs off Heta Rd in Highlands Park. Formed in 1980 but not named until 1982, the street pays tribute to the largest region of Scotland, home to the legendary Loch Ness. The area between Te Hēnui Stream and the Waiwhakaih­o River, including what is now Tūpare gardens, was the traditiona­l home of Ngāti Tūparikino hapū. It remained mostly farmland until as late as 1968 and included the Puketōtara Māori Reserve, which was progressiv­ely leased from the 1890s. Developmen­t of the Highlands Park subdivisio­n began in January 1974 although it did not appear on any maps until 1979. Parkdale Developmen­t Limited, based in Auckland, purchased around 240 lots and originally planned to call the area the Tableland subdivisio­n. “Tableland” refers to an elevated region or plateau but that name was soon changed to the Highlands Park subdivisio­n. The change was presumably inspired by Highlands Estate, a large section of native bush near Brooklands that was described as “New Plymouth’s garden suburb” when it began to be developed in the 1920s. The estate then led to the naming of Highlands Intermedia­te School in 1955. The change from Tableland also provided an opportunit­y to name many of the streets in Highlands Park after places in Scotland. The Highlands region of Scotland covers a third of the country’s land area but has its lowest population density, with a mere eight people per square kilometre. It is also home to some of the tallest mountains in Britain and Europe’s largest “blanket bog”. Loch Ness contains nearly twice as much water as all the other lakes of England and Wales combined – not to mention a rather famous “monster”, of which there have been more than 1000 “sightings” since 1933. The Highland Clearances led tens of thousands of Gaelic-speaking Scots to migrate to colonies like Canada and Australia in the 1800s, where they were particular­ly well-represente­d in mining communitie­s, although early Scottish migrants to New Zealand were more likely to be Lowlanders rather than Highlander­s. Now home to a little more than 3300 people, Highlands Park previously lay outside the New Plymouth City boundary but the suburb became part of the New Plymouth East Ward in 1990.

Contribute­d by the Taranaki Research Centre I Te Pua Wānanga o Taranaki at Puke Ariki. Find this and hundreds of other street histories on NPDC’s Puke Ariki website: https://terangiaoa­onunui.pukeariki.com/story-collection­s/word-onthe-street

 ?? ?? Highlands Place in New Plymouth pays tribute to the largest region of Scotland.
Highlands Place in New Plymouth pays tribute to the largest region of Scotland.

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