Mauriceville is a rural locality in the Masterton district, part of the Wairarapa region of New Zealand's North Island.
Mauriceville was named after Maurice O'Rorke,[1] a contemporary New Zealand politician who was Minister of Immigration and Crown Lands when the village was first founded, and was actually present when the site for the township was chosen.
[2] The area was first settled in 1872,[3] as the Scandinavian workers brought in to clear the Seventy-Mile Bush began to move north from Kōpuaranga, these workers were mostly mixed Danish, Norwegian and Swedish families, and were seen as Model Colonists.
By 1897, the area's main industries were dairy farming and lime burning, and there were two schools, a railway station, two post/telegraph office, a Lutheran Church, several clubs and a public hall.
Like other Scandinavian townships of the Seventy-Mile Bush, such as Dannevirke, Norsewood, Eketāhuna and Kōpuaranga, this population soon diversified, and the Scandinavian settlers quickly assimilated into the Anglo-Saxon population, marrying the English and Scots settlers and fighting by their side in the World Wars.