condensed discuss document expanded export feedback print share remove reset document_white enquire_white export_white report_white
discuss document export feedback print share

Cenotaph Stories

  • Man of Mystery: Who was John Henry Bennett?

    Matthew Nickless
    Collection Information Technician

    Nearly 100,000 New Zealanders served in World War I. Among those called to service were many conscientous objectors, men and women who were avowed pacifists. One of those was John Henry Bennett, but who was he?

    Read more
  • Lest We Forget Poetry Competition 2026

    Online Cenotaph Staff

    The final Lest We Forget poetry competition took place on Anzac Day 2026. For 20 years, the competition has provided a way for our community to pause, reflect, and mark Anzac Day together. Befitting the final year, the theme was He Ara Whakamua – Pathways Forward, inviting writers to look toward the future as well as the past. Here, our finalists read their winning poems.

    Read more
  • A Mariner’s Service: Spencer George Smith, 1915–1954

    Victoria Passau
    Online Cenotaph & Enquiry Services Manager

    Prompted by a son's search to better understand his father, this article traces the life of Spencer George Smith, a Merchant Navy engineer who served on wartime convoys. He survived a torpedo attack and sinking, returned to New Zealand after World War II, and died young in 1954, leaving a record shaped by service and family recollection.

    Read more
  • A vow kept: The Stewart whānau’s journey of remembrance

    Victoria Passau, Online Cenotaph & Enquiry Service Manager

    In 2009, Noelene Hughes travelled with her whānau from Australia to Gallipoli and Lemnos to fulfil a vow to visit the grave of her uncle, Private Pareiha Tuati (David Apanui Stewart). Their journey reconnects whakapapa, wartime diaries, and family memory, honouring the Stewart brothers and their enduring legacy across generations.

    Read more
  • Wikitoria Te Huruhuru Whatu: "My Māori Florence"

    Sophie Elborough (Collection Information Technician) and Anjuli Selvadurai (Wikimedian in Residence)

    Wikitoria Te Huruhuru Whatu (1912–2006) of Ngāti Toarangatira was the first Māori Red Cross WAAC member to serve overseas during World War II. Serving in the Middle East and Europe, she cared for wounded soldiers, especially the 28 Māori Battalion. After the war she continued community welfare work and was awarded the Queen’s Service Medal. In collaboration with Wikitoria’s whanau, and drawing on letters, diaries, and family memories, we share her story in honour of International Women’s Day 2026.

    Read more
  • Waitaki Boys' Hall of Memories

    Martin Edmond
    Guest contributor

    Written to accompany a photograph by Laurence Aberhart, Martin Edmond’s essay reflects on the Hall of Memories at Waitaki Boys’ High School as both a working school space and war memorial. The image, gifted by the Waitaki Old Boys to Auckland Museum, reinforces the Hall as a place where memory endures in the absence of those commemorated.

    Read more
  • A Year in Review: Online Cenotaph 2025

    As 2025 comes to a close, we look back on a year shaped by connection and continuity. Online Cenotaph, grounded in its role as a living memorial, continued to bring people together across Aotearoa New Zealand and beyond. Whakapapa research, volunteer mahi, digital contributions, community events, and record enhancement all contributed to another significant year.

    Read more
  • Red Cross humanitarian support for New Zealand prisoners of war, 1939-1945

    By Judy Owen, Pou Maumahara Volunteer and former Red Cross Nurse, in collaboration with Victoria Passau, Online Cenotaph & Enquiry Services Manager

    This article is the first in a two-part series on Red Cross support for New Zealand prisoners of war during World War II. Part Two looks at medical care in the camps and the work of the New Zealand doctor Dr John Borrie.

    Read more
  • Red Cross medical support for Prisoners of War: Dr John Borrie

    By Judy Owen, Pou Maumahara Volunteer and former Red Cross Nurse, in collaboration with Victoria Passau, Online Cenotaph & Enquiry Services Manager

    This article is the second in a two-part series on Red Cross support for New Zealand prisoners of war during World War II. The first explored the power of connection through letters and parcels; this post turns to medical care and the work of New Zealand doctor and POW Dr John Borrie.

    Read more
  • John Bethune McCaw: Artist-Technician

    Victoria Passau
    Online Cenotaph & Enquiry Services Manager

    Leading Aircraftsman John Bethune McCaw (1924–2010) served in the Royal New Zealand Air Force during World War II before pursuing a long career as Artist-Technician at Auckland Museum.

    Read more