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Arcadia Lodge Russell - The Bay of Islands

Welcome to Arcadia Lodge Russell

Plenty of room to relax & Unwind

Arcadia Is a lovely large old house. The suites & cottage have their own lounges and deck areas with outdoor furniture and there are some lovely separate areas to relax in. The front deck has a wonderful, electric shade awning to protect from the Northland sun.

Your hosts live in a separate house on the property, and are more than happy to help with anything you need, in a non-fussy way, to ensure you have the best local knowledge about the wonderful things to do in the Bay of Islands. Their goal is for you to have the best stay. Arcadia is yours to enjoy and does not accomodate children under 12 years of age.

The kitchen has a lovely selection of local fresh coffee & teas with home baking, along with our honesty bar, featuring a curated selection of Northland wines, offered at wholesale prices. All part and parcel of a relaxing stay and ensuring you enjoy every moment.

History

According to tribal traditions, Pewhairangi (The Bay of Islands) was one of the very early sites of Māori settlement in Aotearoa (New Zealand). That ancestry traces back to Kupe, the Polynesian voyager credited with the first circumnavigation of the North Island. 

Russell was originally named Kororareka by local Māori. A dying chief reportedly asked for soup made from the Little Blue Penguin caught in the area, and his remark was ‘how sweet is the penguin’, or ‘Ka reka te korora’.

The bay had been heavily settled by Māori for centuries before Europeans arrived. On sailing into the bay in 1769, Captain Cook reported: “The inhabitants of this bay are far more numerous than at any place we have yet been in and seem to live in friendship with one another”.

At the time of European settlement, Matauwhi Bay, where we are located, was the site of a Māori village and the pa (fortified village) of Ngati Manu chief Pomare.

The bay remained sparsely settled for most of the 19th century, until Reverend Boler, an Anglican pastor, built the house that is now Arcadia Lodge in 1902.

The floors, structural posts and beams are of local heart kauri and many of the components were salvaged from shipwreck and demolition timbers (totara, puriri and jarrah). Whale vertebrae were used to support the floor bearers, a piece of which you can find in the living room.

Arcadia Lodge became a guesthouse in 1924 and has seen many changes over the last century, adding to its unique charm and character. As owners of Arcadia we feel entrusted with it's care and carry on a legacy with commitment and pride .

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Arcadia Lodge Russell - The Bay of Islands

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