Godley Statue, Christchurch, New Zealand. The Godley Statue is a bronze statue situated in Cathedral Square in Christchurch, New Zealand.
It commemorates the Founder of Canterbury John Robert Godley. It was the first statue portraying a person in New Zealand.
The statue fell off its plinth in the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake and time capsules were discovered inside the plinth. It was four years before the statue was returned to its position.
In November 1847, Godley had a fruitful meeting with Edward Gibbon Wakefield over two days. The founding of the Canterbury Association was an outcome of this.
He arrived in Lyttelton in April 1850, eight months before the first settlers arrived through the scheme of the Canterbury Association, and acted as the 'Resident Chief Agent'. Whilst he only stayed for two days before leaving for Wellington, he stopped expenditure to address mounting debt. Godley was back in the port town for the arrival of the First Four Ships, and was then in effect governor for the Canterbury settlement. He was outspoken, scrupulous and an accepted authority. He was a strong advocate for settler self-governance. He left the colony in December 1852, only two years after the settlers arrived. The Godley statue is located in Cathedral Square, the heart of Christchurch, to commemorate theFounder of Canterbury. The statue, by English sculptor Thomas Woolner, was cast in the Coalbrookdale foundry in Sh