[4] The first buildings at the Grey River mouth were constructed by Ngati Wairangi Maori at Cobden.
Greymouth, the district’s largest centre, lies beside the Tasman Sea and the Grey River.
Greymouth experienced a rapid change in the cultural makeup of the region, reflecting an influx of migrants drawn to the gold rush, mining and related business opportunities.
Completed in 1990, the flood wall provides security for the town, and has allowed commerce to develop further.
A Māori settlement at Māwhera pā was long-established on the south bank of the Māwheranui river.
When the first European explorers, Thomas Brunner and Charles Heaphy, arrived in 1846, they stayed at the pā, and were given food.
Two years later, Brunner travelled up the river, which he renamed after Governor George Grey.
James Mackay negotiated with local Māori chiefs for the purchase of the West Coast region by the government, and the agreement was signed at Māwhera pā on 21 May 1860.