Eureka

The farming area known as Eureka was created through the reclamation of part of the vast Piako Swamp. Starting in 1874, 16km of enormous drains were dug by hand to lower the water level sufficiently to farm the land. The Swamp had extended from the edge of Hamilton East to the Piako River, and was part of the land confiscation by Government at the end of the Waikato Land Wars in 1865. A section of the Confiscation Line can still be seen defining the boundary of the east side of Eureka.

The homestead built in 1875 on the Eureka Hill was the first headquarters for the Woodlands Estate, which at one time stretched from Taupiri to Morrinsville.  Legend has it that the name Eureka was formed from the initials of the ladies in a picnic party which chose the site for the homestead.

Significant features of early Eureka were the railway station on Holland Road built around 1884, the school which opened at the crossroads in 1904, and the butter (later cheese) factory, built in 1903.  Since 1914 a hall has provided a meeting place for the community and its activities, with the first structure being replaced in 1968 by the present building.

While the Eureka of today is just a short drive from Hamilton, for much of its history it was a farming-based community, linked to the world by the railway and somewhat swampy roads.  But the sense of community remains, largely through the publication of the 36 year old Eureka Express magazine, providing local news and recording the achievements and comings and goings of its residents.

JUST east of Eureka a 35 kilometre straight line of fences and hedges can be seen from vantage points on the hills of the Pakaroa Range. Now more than a century old the Confiscation Line is the boundary of the land confiscated from the Maoris by the Crown at the conclusion of the war in the Waikato in 1865.
Today it forms the eastern boundary of the Waikato Country and still serves as a reminder of Eureka's past. 

Mr Jackways and his First Assistant, Mr Campbell, outside the original Eureka Dairy Company's factory with some of the early suppliers in 1904.
Mr Jackways and his First Assistant, Mr Campbell, outside the original Eureka Dairy Company's factory with some of the early suppliers in 1904.

LIKE the mythical phoenix, the Eureka Butter Factory has continued to rise anew s

Eureka store with petrol pumps, circa 1960.
Eureka store with petrol pumps, circa 1960.

SPENDING winter camping out would be considered somewhat eccentric in today's world. The chill winter mornings, the Waikato fogs and the dismal rain were only a few of the hardships endured by the Shine family when they moved to Eureka. 

Haymaking with the horses on Duncan's farm in the late 1940s
Haymaking with the horses on Duncan's farm in the late 1940s

A CHALLENGING scene confronted Eureka's pioneer farmers as they settled in the community at the turn of the century.

Eureka Transport's depot in the mid-1970s
Eureka Transport's depot in the mid-1970s.

THE depression years of the thirties were a grim time for many Eureka folk. However, the relief work schemes started by the Waikato County Council set in train the development of much of the country.