This is the first of three New Zealand Architecture issues, the others appearing in 1980 and 1982. New Zealand Architecture is an interesting subject that has appeared on many stamps. At first most of the buildings were copies from styles found in England but as these styles were adapted for New Zealand conditions, new and distinctly New Zealand styles began to emerge.
Buildings from the 1800s were the subject of the first issue on early New Zealand architecture. Notice the purpose of each of these buildings, one a private house, two mission buildings and one Government building.
10c - Riverlands Cottage, Blenheim.
Built about 1865 for Charles Redwood, son of a pioneering family. Redwood arrived in New Zealand in 1842 and purchased the land in 1865. The present cob cottage could date earlier than this since "squatting" was still a common practice in the 1860s. Lack of suitable timber in Wairau forced the construction of the cob style house. The cob walls were constructed from a mud and tussock mixture while the roof was made from wooden shingles. Administered by the Marlborough Historical Society, interest in the restoration of the cottage from its badly dilapidated state began in 1959. It was opened to the public in 1965.