The New Zealand Coal Range Handbook

The New Zealand Coal Range Handbook
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 130
Release: 2021
Genre: Household appliances industry
ISBN:

"The New Zealand Coal Range Handbook overviews the New Zealand industry that provided, in the pre-electric era, most every dwelling with thee ans of safe, clean and controlled cooking and warmth - from porridge on winter mornings to daily bread and from hot running water to dry footwear. It was a truth that the coal range was the 'heart of the home'. For anyone encountering a range for the first time the contents largely reproduce the manufacturers' own guidance for fitting, usage and maintenance of their product. For others it may shed light on the extent of the industry and perhaps the reason why a range is not performing as it once did. Included is a selection of range-related memories, notes on times past, and more than 250 illustrations."--Front flap.

Coal

Coal
Author: Matthew Wright
Publisher:
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2014-10-20
Genre: Coal
ISBN: 9781869537234

This book tells the story of coal's moral rise and fall and of the place it held in New Zealand hearts and minds for a century and a half. Coal was the heroic fuel of New Zealand's 19th and early 20th centuries, the fuel on which the colony grew ¿ the stuff that made possible the heating, cooking and lighting essential to family life, a lifestyle exalted during two World Wars and a depression. The hero fuel; pivotal, essential, exalted even as everybody grumbled about the mess it made. Then, suddenly, as the 20th century grew old and cynical, it wasn¿t. The fall from grace that was, at first, driven by convenience became, as the twentieth century turned into the twenty-first, a death spiral as coal was back in mind again, recognised ¿ and demonised ¿ as one of the most prolific generators of greenhouse gases around. Yet, as coal was vilified, NZ¿s production climbed steeply and the race was on to extract more and more to fuel exports to booming economies. Then demand fell sharply and Pike River reminded the nation that coal mining was as dangerous as ever it was in centuries past.

Coal, Class & Community

Coal, Class & Community
Author: Len Richardson
Publisher: Auckland University Press
Total Pages: 382
Release: 1995
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781869401139

A history of the United Mineworkers of New Zealand from 1880 to 1960. The book shows the beginnings of the coal industry, when a group of miners from Britain found themselves in a more hostile and remote environment than they were used to. The efforts of following generations of miners to gain control of the work process are described. The role of the miners in the great industrial struggles is examined, as in the Maritime Strike of 1890, the unrest of 1912-13, and the 1951 waterfront dispute. The book is illustrated with black and white photographs of people and their environment.