There were four Taylor brothers in Auckland, the sons of a British man who had had a military career in India.
[3] Their brother Allan Kerr Taylor had a farm estate in Mount Albert, whose house was called Alberton.
Glen Innes is a low-income, working class area with around 1,500 state houses.
The Tāmaki Regeneration Programme will also target 2500 public homes that will transform into 10,500 new private market, affordable and public homes across the area creating new vibrant and mixed-tenure neighbourhoods.
Allotments were bought for farming by Charles Whybrow Lidgar, John Armitage Buttery, and Patrick Anderson.
William Innes Taylor arrived in Auckland in November 1843 made his first purchase of land shortly after.
Although the homestead is no longer in existence, a Morton Bay fig tree thought to have been planted by Taylor still stands at the entrance of the school.
The results were 42.2% European (Pākehā); 18.5% Māori; 36.8% Pasifika; 16.1% Asian; 3.6% Middle Eastern, Latin American and African New Zealanders (MELAA); and 1.7% other, which includes people giving their ethnicity as "New Zealander".
[15] Sacred Heart College is a state-integrated Catholic boys' school (years 7–13) with a roll of 1,264.
[19] It is an outdoor public lighting festival that runs throughout Maybury Reserve, and typically takes place over nine nights, representing the nine stars of Matariki.
There have been protests in Glen Innes over proposals to redevelop existing state-owned housing.
[22] Many protests have resulted in arrests of demonstrators, including Mana Party MP Hone Harawira on one occasion, as well as a number of reported police brutality cases.
[23] Housing New Zealand argues that the development will "make better use of land" and enable the provision of higher quality homes to their tenants, however community members argue it is a gentrification process which is tearing apart their community.
The results were 33.0% European (Pākehā); 26.1% Māori; 19.3% Pasifika; 33.0% Asian; and 4.5% Middle Eastern, Latin American and African New Zealanders (MELAA).