Auckland Museum's collections are organised into three principal areas: documentary heritage (
manuscripts,
correspondence and other historical documents in
archives, along with
pictorial art); the major branches of the
natural sciences; and human history (broadly,
material culture). The museum maintains a high degree of regional cooperation and complementary collecting with other organisations across Auckland (among them
Auckland Libraries and
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki), and has done since its inception.
Documentary Heritage The museum's nationally and internationally significant Documentary Heritage collections comprise manuscripts, ephemera, maps,
charts and
plans, newspapers and periodicals, rare and contemporary books and
pamphlets, photographs, and works of art in the form of paintings,
bookplates, and sketches and drawings. Among the areas of significant focus are Māori and Pacific cultures, the human and natural history of the Greater Auckland region, New Zealanders' involvement in global conflicts, and exploration and discovery. The museum holds the only known extant copy of
A Korao no New Zealand, the first book written in
the Māori language, published at Sydney in 1815 by the missionary
Thomas Kendall. File:New-zealanders-first-book-title.jpg
Pictorial The museum has considerable holdings in historic paintings, rare watercolours, photographs and other artworks. The Pictorial collection numbers in the millions, and contains some of the earliest examples of the development of the photographic arts and technology in New Zealand, including
calotypes by
William Fox Talbot; some of the first known
daguerrotypes made in New Zealand, and an
ambrotype portrait of the
Ngā Puhi chief
Tāmati Wāka Nene attributed to
John Nicol Crombie. The latter part of the 20th century is substantially represented by the collection of the documentary photographer
Robin Morrison, while among the women photographers of note represented are
Una Garlick and Margaret Matilda White. Other collections include the documentary photographs of the
Auckland Star and
New Zealand Herald newspapers; some work by Arthur Ninnis Breckon and
George Bourne, including images made for the
Auckland Weekly News; the work of
Tudor Washington Collins and
John Watt Beattie, and the archive of Sparrow Industrial Pictures. The paintings and drawings collection includes works by
Charles Heaphy,
Gustavus von Tempsky,
George French Angas, and
John Webster, as well as portraits of Māori by
C. F. Goldie and
Gottfried Lindauer, and an impressive set of albums by the 19th-century clergyman and watercolour artist
John Kinder.
Manuscripts and archives The Manuscripts and Archives collection is of major regional importance and, at approximately 2,000 linear metres, it is one of the largest non-governmental archives in New Zealand. and the Reverend Vicesimus Lush; the papers of the politician
John Logan Campbell, who has been called "the father of Auckland"; the mountaineer, explorer and philanthropist
Edmund Hillary; and those of the
British Resident James Busby. In addition, the Library also holds the papers of: • Former Museum Director and Curator
Thomas Frederick Cheeseman • Botanist
Leonard Cockayne • Librarian and author
Johannes C. Andersen • Historians
Ruth Ross and Jack Lee • Potter, writer, and conservationist
Barry Brickell Among the companies and organisations represented in the collection are: •
Crown Lynn Potteries (covering the period 1959–1987) • The
Martha Gold Mining Company (covering the period 1915–1951) • Seed merchants
Arthur Yates & Co. (covering the period 1882–1940) • Pelorus Press Ltd. (covering the period 1947–1978) • The
Farmers' Trading Company (covering the period 1909–1987) The collection includes both local and national society records; some examples include: •
Ornithological Society of New Zealand • Auckland Society of Arts • Auckland Acclimatisation Society • Auckland Amateur Operatic Society •
Auckland Choral Society • Auckland Studio Potters • Auckland Photographic Society The Library is the repository of the
Presbyterian Church records for Auckland and Northland. Nearly 300 manuscripts are described as being Māori or having Māori elements. Most of these are recorded in Jenifer Curnow's 1995 book
Ngā Pou Ārahi, a tribal inventory relating to Māori treasures, language, genealogy, songs, history, customs and proverbs. and other material, including atlases, which helps record and provide evidence of early New Zealand development. There is also a small collection of significant maps relating to the discovery and exploration of the Pacific Ocean and islands by Europeans, dating from before 1800.
Serials and newspapers Serials were the first collection items ordered by the
Auckland Institute when it was formed in 1867. There are approximately 4,500 historical and current titles in the assemblage, excluding
electronic journals. The extent, and in some cases uniqueness, of the museum's holdings of historical and current journals makes their research value of national importance. The museum holds the country's most significant collection of Auckland newspapers, based on a 1967 donation by
Wilson & Horton of their historical Auckland newspapers dating from the early 1840s and supplemented by individual donations. The museum contributes to the research site
Papers Past, as well as to the national network of institutions that hold historical newspapers.
Museum Library Te Pātaka Mātāpuna The museum's own business and research archives (covering its governance, curation, exhibitions, education, publishing, building development and maintenance, and internal management) are housed alongside the above, and are accessed by way of the Museum Library Te Pātaka Mātāpuna, one of the country's leading heritage research libraries. and a number of rare volumes on
conchology. In addition, there exists an extensive collection of
ephemera, built for the most part on donations from private collectors starting in the 19th century.
Natural sciences The museum's natural sciences collections are principally a research and reference assemblage that provides information on the distribution and morphology of plant, animal and mineral species in New Zealand and the regional Pacific. The museum stores and exhibits 1.5 million natural history specimens from the fields of
botany,
entomology, geology, land
vertebrates and
marine biology.
Botany AK is the index herbariorum code for the Auckland War Memorial Museum. The botanical collections of the Auckland Museum
Herbarium (AK) were first established in 1870, and are the means by which the department carries out its function of collection and preservation of botanical materials, education—through public enquiries, individual and group visits, outreach programmes, and the display of material—and research and publication on various aspects of New Zealand flora. The focus of the herbarium collection is on wild plants (native and naturalised) in all plant groups principally from northern New Zealand and its offshore islands. Auckland Museum's is one of only three significantly sized herbaria in New Zealand; the others are at
Landcare Research Auckland and the
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, in Wellington. The herbarium contains a number of collections from significant botanists including
Thomas Cheeseman (curator, 1874–1923), and Captain James Cook's botanists,
Joseph Banks and
Daniel Solander. The Herbarium holds over 333,000 botanical specimens—including 200,000 angiosperms, 5,000 gymnosperms, 30,000 pteridophytes, 21,500 mosses, 12,300 liverworts, 22,000 algae, 27,200 lichens, and 1,000 timber samples. The museum also holds a substantial collection of
kauri gum, and a specialist collection of "fern books" (bound collections of
ferns made by amateurs and professionals) along with a small "wet" collection (specimens preserved in liquid) of flowers, fruit and algae.
Geology The Geology collection was originally focused on material from the
Waihi, Thames and Coromandel gold fields, through deliberate collecting by the museum's geologists as well as those donated by private collectors. It has been augmented by volcanic specimens of research and historical interest. The collection of around 12,000 specimens contains a number of nationally significant materials, and supports research work and collections held at other museums, universities and
Crown Research Institutes.
Paleontology The Palaeontology collection was established in the early 1900s and, with more than 20,000 specimen lots, is one of the largest collections of fossil invertebrates in New Zealand. Its importance lies in its ability to contribute understanding of evolutionary change, past biodiversity and the record of dynamic change during the past 65 million years with rapid submergence and uplift at various times during New Zealand's geological history. Past climate change and the significance of glacial cycles and oscillation are reflected in the specimens and their associated data as well.
Land vertebrates The
Land Vertebrates collection comprises more than 12,500 bird specimens, 2,500
amphibians and reptiles, and 1,000 land mammals, primarily collected from Northern New Zealand. Among the specimens are the oldest surviving New Zealand stuffed birds, bought around 1856–57, from Mr I. St John, a taxidermist from
Nelson. The collection is particularly strong in
kiwi and
moa,
oceanic seabirds,
penguins,
cormorants, ducks, waders and allies (
Charadriiformes),
passerine birds,
tuatara,
geckos,
skinks, Pacific reptiles and New Zealand
bats. File:Anomalopteryx didiformis (AM LB5548-2).jpg| File:Crocodylus porosus (AM LH622-2).jpg| File:Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae (AM LB13591-8).jpg| File:Chrysolophus amherstiae (AM LB10984-1).jpg| File:Dendroica castanea (AM LB10015-5).jpg| File:Apteryx mantelli (AM LB8984-3).jpg| File:Aeneator attenuatus Powell, 1927 (AM MA72002-2).jpg| File:Acropora sp. (AM MA143267-5).jpg| File:Austrofusus glans (Roeding, 1798) (AM MA70063-1).jpg| File:Babelomurex wormaldi (Powell, 1971) (AM MA71329-1).jpg| File:Penion sulcatus (Lamarck, 1816) (AM MA71144-1).jpg|
Human history Applied Arts Established in 1966, the museum's Applied Arts and Design collection includes ceramics, jewellery, furniture, glass, metalwork, costumes, textiles, costume accessories, musical instruments,
horological objects and ''objets d'art'' from around the world. The collection numbers nearly 7,000 objects and represents key makers, manufacturers, designs, designers and technical developments and styles primarily of Auckland, but also of the Auckland region of New Zealand, and Western and Eastern cultures. The Applied Arts and Design department receives acquisition funds from the Charles Edgar Disney Art Trust, and has a number of loan collections including the Mackelvie Trust Collection. A collection of 7,000 objects from across Asia is displayed on rotation.
Mackelvie Collection The museum has on loan all of the applied arts objects donated to the city of Auckland by
James Tannock Mackelvie, a Glaswegian Scot who lived and worked in Auckland from 1865 to 1871. He made a fortune in land speculation and gold-mining investments before returning to London, and was perhaps Auckland's single biggest arts benefactor. Mackelvie was a prodigious collector and from the beginning intended his acquisitions to one day form a teaching collection in New Zealand. The Castle Collection contains "rare violins, an 18th-century harpsichord and an eclectic collection of instruments associated with New Zealand's pioneer days". The items in the collection "range over every imaginable un-powered device capable of producing music", and includes "workable examples of every member of the
violin family, as well as
didgeridoos, a
zuffolo,
harpsichords, a
crwth,
harps,
tablas, a sáhn,
horns,
trumpets,
clarinets, [and] a
hurdy-gurdy". a
Māori war canoe from 1830 carved by
Te Waaka Perohuka and
Raharuhi Rukupō. Within New Zealand, the Taonga Māori collection is of equal significance to that of the national museum,
Te Papa Tongarewa. It is a cultural and research resource of the first order, having the most comprehensive range of types and periods of material and is essential for the whole spectrum of studies in Māori art and
material culture. The collection dates from the early decades of the founding of the museum; its focus has been on acquiring first-quality 'masterworks' from all tribal and geographic areas of New Zealand, as well as representative material-culture items. The museum's collection of ethnic musical instruments is the largest in the country, and is one of the most important in the world. New issues are published online and earlier issues are being digitised.
Papahou contain more than 450 articles written by over 150 different authors and co-authors dealing mostly with
zoology,
archaeology, ethnology, and botany. The articles contain important accounts of archaeological excavations and ethnographic objects, and descriptions of nearly 700 new
taxa (mostly new animal species and subspecies). == War Memorial ==