The Nelson Provincial Council was established with fifteen members, and the province was divided into
electoral districts for the election of the
Superintendent and members of the council. The seven districts were: Town of Nelson, five members; Suburban Districts, one member; Waimea East District, two members; Waimea West District, one member; Waimea South District, two members; Motueka and Massacre Bay District, two members; Wairau District, two members. Three candidates,
Edward Stafford,
Francis Jollie and
John Waring Saxton, ran for election as Nelson's first superintendent on 1 August 1853. Stafford won, with vote counts being: Stafford (251), Saxton (206), Jollie (130). Stafford is remembered for his free, secular and compulsory education system that became the model for New Zealand, with this 'Nelson system' introduced to all state primary schools in 1877.
Nelson was the designated seat of government and Superintendent
John Perry Robinson laid the foundation stone for the Provincial Government buildings in Nelson on 26 August 1859. The building was in Albion Square in Bridge Street. It was designed by visiting architect
Maxwell Bury and modeled on
Aston Hall near
Birmingham, although the Government buildings were built in timber, whereas Aston Hall was in stone. When the buildings were demolished in 1969, amidst much controversy, they were run down and had stood empty for some years. The Nelson District Court building now stands on the site. During the
First Taranaki War in 1860 nearly 1,200 Taranaki settlers, including women and children, were relocated to Nelson. The Nelson Provincial Council funded the building of cottages known as the "Taranaki Buildings" to house them. Upon the cessation of hostilities the war refugees were offered free passage back to Taranaki. The majority took up the offer, but some chose to remain in Nelson. From 1853 to 1873, the area that would later become
Grey County was partly in Nelson Province and partly in
Canterbury Province. The boundary between the provinces had been set as a straight line from the head of the
Hurunui River to
Lake Brunner at a time when the area was virtually uninhabited. The
West Coast gold rush of the 1860s straddled that boundary, with a population boom also straddling the boundary. The Canterbury portion was transferred to a newly created
Westland Province in 1873 and the other portion remained in Nelson Province until the abolition of the provinces in 1876.
Abolition Nelson Province was abolished under the
Abolition of Provinces Act 1875, with its former area then being administered by a number of newly constituted
boroughs and
counties, effective 1 January 1877. ==Demographics==