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CHRISTCHURCH , a city near theSee also: east See also: coast of See also: South See also: Island, New Zealand, to the See also: north of See also: Banks Peninsula, in See also: Selwyn county, the capital of the provincial See also: district of See also: Canterbury and the seat of a See also: bishop
.
Pop
.
(1906) 49,928; including suburbs, 67,878
.
It stands upon the See also: great Canterbury plain, which here is a dead level, though the monotony of the site has been much relieved by extensive plantations of See also: English and Australian trees
.
A back-ground is supplied by the distant mountains to the west, and by the nearer hills to the south
.
The small See also: river See also: Avon winds through the city, pleasantly bordered by terraces and gardens
.
The wide streets See also: cross one another for the most See also: part at right angles
.
The predominance of See also: stone and brick as
See also: building materials, the dominating See also: cathedral See also: spire, and the well-planted parks, avenues and private gardens, recall the aspect of an English residential See also: town
.
Christchurch is mainly dependent on the See also: rich agricultural district which surrounds it, the plain being mainly devoted to cereals and grazing
.
Wool is extensively worked, and See also: meat is frozen for export
.
See also: Railways connect with Culverden to the north and with See also: Dunedin and the south coast, with many branches through the agricultural districts; also with Lyttelton, the See also: port of Christchurch, 8 m
.
S.E
.
There are tramways in the city, and to New See also: Brighton, a seaside suburb, and other residential quarters
.
The See also: principal public buildings are the See also: government buildings and the museum, with its See also: fine collection of remains of the See also: extinct See also: bird, See also: moa
.
The cathedral is the best in New Zealand, built from designs of See also: Sir G
.
See also: Gilbert
See also: Scott in Early English See also: style, with a tower and spire 240 ft. high
.
Among educational See also: foundations are Canterbury See also: College (for See also: classics, science, See also: engineering, &c.), Christ's College (mainly theological) and grammar school, and a school of See also: art
.
There is a See also: Roman Catholic See also: pro-cathedral attached to a convent of the Sacred See also: Heart
.
A large extent of open ground, to the west of the town, finely planted, and traversed by the river, comprises Hagley See also: Park, recreation grounds, the Government Domain and the grounds of the See also: Acclimatization Society, with See also: fish-ponds and a small zoological garden
.
The foundation of Christchurch is connected with the so-called " Canterbury Pilgrims," who settled in this district in r85o
.
Lyttelton was the See also: original See also: settlement, but Christchurch came into existence in 1851, and is thus the latest of the settlements of the colony
.
It became a See also: municipality in 1862
.
In 1903 several populous suburban boroughs were amalgamated with the city
.
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