The settlement has a school and a community hall, which due to its old age has been expensive to maintain.[1]
Huia Marae and Matau Marae, located next to each other south of the main settlement, are traditional meeting grounds of the Ngāti Raukawahapū of Ngāti Huia.[2][3]
There are several Māori land blocks around the marae, and both north and south of the settlement.[4]
The party set up a defensible position against colonial forces, but received little support from other Māori. Te Rangihaeata raided Kapiti Island in 1847, as his party tried to fend off starvation. He also starting charging a toll to people travelling through Poroutawhao on the Foxton to Levin Road, until reaching an agreement with Governor Grey in 1853.[6]
Te Rangihaeata died at Poroutawhao in 1855 and was buried there with his wife, Ngāti Apa woman of mana Te Pikinga.[6][7]
In 1920, Native Land Court agent and interpreter Ben Keys travelled through Poroutawhao,[8] recording the experiences of local Māori in his diary.[9]
A 1963 photograph of the Huia marae, held at Kapiti Coast Library, shows a small carved house with Kowhaiwhai decorations on the porch.[10]
Education
Poroutawhao School is a co-educational state primary school for Year 1 to 8 students,[11] with a roll of 113 as of November 2024.[12]
^Hilliard, C (2010). "Licensed Native Interpreter: The Land Purchaser as Ethnographer in Early-20th-Century New Zealand". The Journal of Pacific History. 42 (2): 229–245. doi:10.1080/00223344.2010.501699. JSTOR25764400.