Elizabeth Cox (historian) explained

Elizabeth Cox
Birth Name:Elizabeth Cox
Alma Mater:Victoria University of Wellington
Discipline:Historian
Workplaces:Bay Heritage Consultants
Website:https://bayheritage.co.nz/

Elizabeth Cox is a New Zealand historian who specialises in architectural and women's history. She is a heritage consultant and senior historian at the Ministry for Culture and Heritage.

Education

Cox studied New Zealand history at Victoria University of Wellington, completing an MA.

Career

Cox has previously worked at the New Zealand Historic Places Trust, at the National Trust in the UK, and as a historian for the Waitangi Tribunal. She is currently a senior historian at the Ministry for Culture and Heritage, and runs a consultancy business exploring the history of New Zealand's heritage buildings. Her book A Friend Indeed: The Saving of Old St Paul's, about the battle to save Old St Paul's Church in Wellington, was published in 2018.

Cox was the editor of the 2022 publication Making Space: a history of New Zealand women in architecture, which contained contributions from 30 women architects, architectural historians and academics. The publication is considered to be a valuable contribution to the recording and honouring of women practicing architecture in New Zealand. In 2023, she received a New Zealand Institute of Architects President's Award.[1]

Cox is also a trustee of the Futuna Chapel in Wellington.

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2023 President's Awards . . 12 August 2023.