James Prouse, 18531918 (aged 64 years)

Name
James /Prouse/
Given names
James
Surname
Prouse
Birth
Type: Birth of Prouse, James
2 October 1853 23 22
Birth of a brother
Country: New Zealand
Birth of a sister
17 July 1856 (aged 2 years)
Birth of a brother
16 October 1857 (aged 4 years)
Birth of a brother
3 October 1859 (aged 6 years)
Death of a brother
3 November 1859 (aged 6 years)
Birth of a sister
1 October 1860 (aged 6 years)
Death of a sister
Birth of a sister
Birth of a sister
Birth of a sister
4 October 1865 (aged 12 years)
Birth of a brother
Birth of a brother
Death of a paternal grandmother

The Prouse Connection has her death on 18 December (as does her tombstone), but the newspaper obituary refers to 15 December.

Death of a brother
Birth of a sister
Death of a paternal grandfather
MARRIAGE OF PROUSE, JAMES AND SEDCOLE, CLARA ANN
Birth of a son
Birth of a son
Death of a sister
25 December 1883 (aged 30 years)
Birth of a son
Death of a brother
Death of a sister
11 June 1888 (aged 34 years)
Birth of a daughter
5 October 1889 (aged 36 years)
Death of a father
Country: New Zealand
Birth of a son
Death of a mother
26 April 1899 (aged 45 years)
Marriage of a son
Marriage of a son
Burial of a father
Country: New Zealand
Death
Type: Death of Prouse, James
9 February 1918 (aged 64 years)
Burial
Type: Burial of Prouse, James
Country: New Zealand
Family with parents
father
18291894
Birth: 4 October 1829 37 42 Devon, England
Death: 11 March 1894Wainuiomata, New Zealand
mother
MARRIAGE OF PROUSE, RICHARD II AND GORRIE, JANET MARRIAGE OF PROUSE, RICHARD II AND GORRIE, JANET4 October 1852Australia
1 year
himself
16 months
younger brother
18551921
Birth: 3 February 1855 25 24 Wainuiomata, New Zealand
Death: 11 October 1921Levin, New Zealand
18 months
younger sister
15 months
younger brother
2 years
younger brother
1 year
younger sister
1 year
younger sister
18 months
younger sister
3 years
younger sister
3 years
younger brother
19 months
younger brother
21 months
younger sister
18721948
Birth: 9 February 1872 42 41
Death: 29 July 1948Greymouth, New Zealand
Family with Clara Ann Sedcole
himself
wife
MARRIAGE OF PROUSE, JAMES AND SEDCOLE, CLARA ANN MARRIAGE OF PROUSE, JAMES AND SEDCOLE, CLARA ANN19 August 1879
10 months
son
18801968
Birth: 21 June 1880 26 20
Death: 14 March 1968
2 years
son
3 years
son
18851962
Birth: 13 April 1885 31 25
Death: 4 April 1962
5 years
daughter
5 years
son
18951955
Birth: 31 January 1895 41 35
Death: 29 June 1955
Shared note

James was chairman of the Horowhenua County Council in 1906.

Shared note

From The Prouse Connection:

Sawmiller and farmer (end of era), interested in civic and church affairs. Gave land for Methodist Church in Levin 1895, then Prouse Bros. gave 5 acres for the parsonage (the church was later built for 230 pounds).

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Page 3 Advertisements Column 1
Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 14614, 25 May 1918, Page 3

The probability that, after the war, America would be a competitor witli England for New Zealand butter was mentioned by Mr. James Prouse at a meeting of dairymen at Levin. Mr. Prouse said there was no question that when peace oame again those factories which catered for American tastes would be able to command a high price. He complained that while butter equal to any that ever came out of Denmark was sent Home in the pre-war days, it was never given a value equal to that of the Danish product. New Zealand had all the natural advantages - virgin soil, and purest grasses and the finest climate - and when these were combined with the highest scientific processes of manufacture, the result could only be a butter that was equal to, if it did not excel, the produce of any, other country.

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THE MOTU FOREST.
Star , Issue 7045, 11 March 1901, Page 3

[Per Press Association.] GISBORNE, March 11. At a meeting of the Motu Settlers' Association, the complete report of Mr James Prouse, the well-known Levin sawniiller, on the Motu Forest, was received. This states that though he had only been able to inspect a portion of the district, there were within sight thirty miles of bush, four miles wide, of excellent timber, worth fully a. million pounds. He saw specimens of white pine and rimu six feet in diameter at the butt and sixty or seventy feet in the bole; also matai five and six feet in the butt and thirty and forty feet in the bole. The meeting decided to urge on the Government, in the strongest possible manner, the completion of a railway to tap this forest, which under advancing settlement is rapidly being destroyed.

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THE MOTU TIMBER.
Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XXVIII, Issue 9063, 4 February 1901, Page 3

INSPECTION BY AN EXPERT.
A MOST FAVORABLE REPORT

The views that have frequently been expressed as to the value of the timber in the Motu district have received most abundant confirmation, after a visit of inspection paid by Mr James Prouse, the well-known sawmiller of Levin, Manawatu, one of the most experienced millers in the colony. Mr Prouse returned to Gisborne last night, after three days spent amongst the hills and valleys of the Motu, and he comes back charmed with the country, and highly impressed with its suitability for the establishment of the sawmilling industry. With Mr Hutchinson as pilot, he covered a great amount of ground, and took many surveys of the land from the tops of hills, for, says Mr Prouse, "I am an old New Zealander, used to bush life, and whenever we came to any likely country I would climb to the hilltops to get a good view." His general impressions were that under the lee of the western hills, where the bush was not so much affected by the wind, the timber was best and finest, but altogether it is splendid bush. On both sides of the river for miles there is good timber. Mr Prouse travelled up the Waiwhero Valley, ten miles long, with a beautifully easy grade, and found the timber to be very fine, being lengthy and clean in the barrel, and not ring-straked. In some districts, he explained, where there is stony ground the timber, is liable to run in circles from the heart of the tree, so that when it is cut it splits and falls to pieces. There is no stony ground in the Motu, and no ring-straked timber. In the bush that he saw Mr Prouse judged the timber to be about two-thirds rimu, a little less than one-third white pine and the balance matai (a very valuable timber), a few totaras, maire, and kaikawhaka, a timber that is suggested may be used for the manufacture of lead pencils. There was a great deal of black birch on the high flats, but it was a different birch to that which he has been used to handle, and he cannot speak as to its quality. It is, however, big, heavy timber, in shapely looking trees, like totaras, and should be valuable. All land over 200Q ft high is covered with it. From the Waiwhero Valley, before mentioned, Mr Prouse travelled past Hansen's, and on the lefthand side of the valley he saw a very valuable block of bush. He ascended the hill at Richardson's and looked across a valley, perhaps a mile, perhaps two miles wide, thickly clad with first-class timber. Below Hansen's, on this side, there had been splendid areas of bush destroyed. He believed that about one-third of the bush of the district had been "destroyed by fire, about one-third was doomed, and one third would be saved for the railway, unless the railway was pushed on with much greater expedition. Two-thirds was still standing, and it was highly to the interest of the district that it should be saved. "Can you give any idea of the probable number of trees per acre?" Mr Prouse was asked, and he replied that he considered there was from 12,000 to 18,000 feet per acre over the whole area. In one quarter-acre he saw 25,000 ft, and on a half-acre there was a patch of 50,000 ft of white pine. Two-thirds of the bush was red pine, a valuable building timber, and one-sixth of the remaining two-thirds was matai (medium to large trees), worth 16s per 100 in Wellington. Asked as to the accessibility of the country, Mr. Prouse replied: "It is simply a grand country to get logs out of. It has easy, grades, gravitating towards your railhead, and it is easy to work either with trams or bullocks. There are no gorges such as we know on the West Coast. There are many fine flats in it." ; Mr Prouse went on to state that he had seen a good deal more of the country than above described, but there was a great deal also that he did not see, and he was told that it was all well-bushed. There was, he estimated, for about four miles due east of trig H two valleys full of rimu. Opposite Trig H he saw a man falling bush, and though he knew there was a clearing there by fallen logs, it looked almost like solid bush, the rimu trees that were left being, so large. Some day, remarked Mr Prouse, "there will be a tremendous bush fire there, when the standing rimu burns, and many sheep will be lost. Looking from another high hill, a distance of 12 or 15 miles, with valleys on even grades, there was more timber, but he could not say what kind it was. Asked whether he considered the country was worthy of being opened up by rail, and whether it would pay to put a railway there Mr Prouse said that if the railway, was put there for timber alone it would pay interest for ten years on all the expenditure of construction. He would put it stronger than that: If a railway was going through to the Motu I and it was to take ten or twelve years, it would pay them to put it through in two, for the freight from the timber alone for the eight years would more (sic) went on to point out how other revenue went on to pount out how other revenue would be developed as the country was cleared of its timber, considering the district most suitable for dairying. The increased population that would be settled on the country would also make it worth while to lay the line. The district had in the timber there a vast amount of capital. Utilise the timber, and that capital became circulating capital, and brought prosperity to the district. There had been fully two millions' worth of bush there, and one-third was gone. He considered that the man who burned bush in the Motu might as well burn the deposit slips of his bank account. The timber there was wanted in Gisborne, and was most valuable. "It was some thirty miles from Karaka to Beaufoy's, where was the nearest timber, and that would be a splendid place to start from, there being stretches of easy country from there. For tramming it was splendid country, and he did not notice the slippery papa that he had seen in other parts of the district. There was ample timber there to last a few mills for years to come. The altitude was 1700 ft, and it was a delightfully cool climate in contrast with the heat of Gisborne today. It was a district splendidly adapted for fruitgrowing, and Mr Hansen had a 'crop of gooseberries that he should get £50 for if he had the means of getting them into town. Mr. Prouse is of the opinion that timber, from the Motu could be landed in Gisborne at a cost of 6s per 100, as against 12s 9d, the present price of medium kauri, or 18s first-class kauri. Mr Prouse will write an extended report of his visit for the Motu Settlers' Association, and we have no doubt that, if that is used properly it may be made the means of getting the railway constructed much more expeditiously, so that the timber wealth of the Motu may be saved to the district.

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TOWN EDITION
Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLI, Issue 13297, 5 February 1914, Page 6

The story of an interesting discovery was told to a meeting, of fruitgrowers by Mr J. Prouse at Levin, states an exchange. A few years ago he noticed that a limb of one of his trees was more heavily laden than the others, and he found near the trunk of the tree a bandage round the limb. The bandage had held and to a certain extent checked the growth of the limb. He tried the idea on a. tree and the result was the same, the tree bore more fruit, the wire bandaging apparently checking undue growth of wood. Mr Prouse said that at present he had more trees wired up and expected good results. Of course, the wire needed watching, and should be loosened.

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Colonist, Volume LVII, Issue 14208, 21 June 1916, Page 5

CLAIM FOR RECTIFICATION.

Taitapu Gold Estates, Ltd., v. Jas. Prouse, Richard Prouse, J. P. Prouse, and M. S. Prouse. This was a claim for rectification of a transfer and certificate of title. Mr Hayes appeared for plaintiff and Mr C. R. Fell for defendants. Each of the defendants had a written agreement with the company for the purchase and sale of blocks of land in the Pakawau district, and containing a reservation to the company of all minerals. When the purchases were completed & transfer was prepared and registered without any reservation of such minerals. The plaintiffs claimed that the omission was accidental, and asked the Court to rectify it; the defendants set up a, plea that there was no mistake, or if there was it was not one which the Court could rectify. They said they understood that when they got their title it would be clear of all encumbrances, and reservations. After the evidence of Messrs C. Harley, N. L. Buchanan, Jas. Prouse, and J. P. Prouse, and a lengthy legal argument, judgment was reserved.

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Evening Post, Volume XCVII, Issue 34, 11 February 1919, Page 6

Mr. James Prouse, one of the most prominent residents of Levin, died suddenly at his home on Sunday. The deceased was born at the Lower Hutt 65 years ago, and was a son of the late Mr. Richard Prouse, who arrived at Wellington by the Duke of Roxburgh in February, 1840, and who established a sawmill at Wainui-o-mata. Mr. James Prouse was educated at the Hutt. As a young man, he removed to Levin, and remained there until his death. For some years he carried on a sawmilling business at Weraroa, in partnership with his brothers (Messrs. John and Richard Prouse) and Mr. John Wright, and subsequently he went in for farming. He took a prominent part in local affairs, and was a leading member of the local Methodist Church. Mr.. Prouse, who was held in great respect, has left a widow, four sons, and a daughter. The funeral will take place to-morrow.

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ProuseJames
ProuseJames