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Dunedin's population and wealth boomed during the 1860s' Otago gold rush, and for a brief period of time it became New Zealand's largest urban area. The city saw substantial migration from mainland China at the same time, predominately from Guangdong and Guangxi. [22] Dunedin is home to New Zealand's oldest Chinese community. [13]
The Chief Post Office Building, 283 Princes St (Category II). The Chief Post Office Building has not had an easy history. Designed by John Mair and the Governments Architects Office, construction was severely delayed by the Great Depression. Originally intended to be built in the early 1930s, it was not completed until 1937.
Dunedin North Post Office (Former) [117] 361 Great King Street Dunedin North: 1878 Post office (annex of Otago Museum) Dunedin Public Library (Former) [118] 110 Moray Place: Central city Public Library (Commercial premises) Dunedin Town Hall and Concert Chamber [119] Moray Place: Central city 1929 Town Hall (in use) Dunrobin [120] Main South ...
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The New Zealand Post Office (NZPO) was a government department of New Zealand until 1987. It was previously (from 1881 to 1959) named the New Zealand Post and Telegraph Department ( NZ P&T ). As a government department, the New Zealand Post Office had as its political head the Postmaster General , who was a member of Cabinet, and, when it was a ...
Mornington_Post_Office_(former),_Dunedin,_New_Zealand.jpg (680 × 531 pixels, file size: 76 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The post office, better known as the Stock Exchange (Exchange Building, Dunedin), was Mason's greatest achievement. It was built between 1864 and 1868. It was built between 1864 and 1868. Described at the time as the finest building in the colony, it was a notable aesthetic success.
The Chief Post Office Building, 283 Princes St (Category II). [30] The Chief Post Office Building has not had an easy history. Designed by John Mair and the Governments Architects Office, construction was severely delayed by the Great Depression. Originally intended to be built in the early 1930s, it was not completed until 1937.