The place name is believed to be a geographical reference to the high bluff nearby that offers views down the Waikato river. In Māori the word tū can mean ‘to stand’ and ākau ‘river bank’.
History and culture
Pre-European history
The area was first used as a trading centre for passing waka that would transport goods up and down the Waikato River.
European settlement
A flour mill was built in 1855. In 1863 war broke out just south of the river and the New Zealand Government stationed in Tuakau Imperial troops brought over from Great Britain. To help defend the area the Alexandra Redoubt was built as a defensive fort on the bluff near the river. The existing town which was originally intended to be built closer to the Waikato River was subsequently built in an area 2 km further inland. The railway from Auckland reached Tuakau in 1875, when the Tuakau Railway Station was opened.
Recent history
By 1914 the people of Tuakau had formed their own town district which went on to achieve borough status on 1 January 1955. During its 44 years as a borough, Tuakau had seven mayors:
Name
Term
1
E.A. Clayton
1955–1959
2
T.F. Hutchinson
1959–1961
3
A.H. Lockyer
1961–1962
4
G.A. McGuire
1962–1971
5
E.B. Wild
1971–1980
6
T.N. Tuhimata
1980–1983
7
H.B. Armitage
1983–1989
Amalgamations since 1989 has seen it first become part of the Franklin District governed by a district council and then in 2010 with border changes saw it became part of Waikato district when present-day Auckland Council boundaries were created.
The town’s ‘Tuakau Bridge’ replaced the need for a ferry from November 1902. A span of the original wooden bridge collapsed on 23 August 1929 and was replaced by the current £24,000, bridge from 22 June 1933, designed by Jones & Adams, who also built Horotiu, Te Aroha, Ngamuwahine River and Fairfield bridges. It was once part of State Highway 22.
About upstream from Tuakau Bridge, at the end of Brown Rd, the river is crossed by the First Gas 400-line gas transmission pipe, which supplies gas from the Maui gas pipeline at Rotowaro to Auckland and Northland. The pipe crosses on a, 11 pier, truss bridge, above the water, which was built in 1980 and renovated in 2007.
Demographics
The 2013 census showed 4,182 people usually live in Tuakau. This is an increase of 681 people, or 19.5 percent, since the 2006 census. The ethnic makeup of the town and surrounding areas is predominately European and Māori.