A New Way to Experience a Hidden Piece of New Zealand’s Defence History
On 7 March 2026, visitors were able to explore several of the historic Belmont ammunition magazines during the Belmont Historic Bunker Walk, an event organised by Greater Wellington Regional Council as part of the development of the Magazine Mile walking track.
While the magazines themselves have long been visible to walkers within Belmont Regional Park, the event marked a new way of experiencing and understanding them, with interpretation and displays now explaining their history and purpose.
Since the Belmont ammunition depot closed in the late 1960s and the land eventually passed into public ownership, the magazines have remained accessible to those walking through the hills above the Hutt Valley. However, because the surrounding land has continued to be used for grazing, livestock often had access to the structures. Over time this left the interiors unsuitable for visitors and meant that their historical significance was not easily understood.
Recently Greater Wellington Regional Council undertook work to clean out several of the magazines, install gates to keep livestock out, and establish the Magazine Mile walking track, allowing visitors to safely reach and explore these structures. Three of the magazines have now been fitted with interpretive displays that explain the history of the site and the role it played in New Zealand’s defence.
Rather than simply encountering unexplained concrete bunkers scattered across the hills, visitors can now step inside selected magazines and discover the story behind them.
A Landscape with a Much Older History
The Belmont hills have a long human history that predates both European settlement and the Second World War structures scattered across them.
Early Māori used two major routes linking Wellington Harbour and Porirua Harbour, both crossing the hills that now form Belmont Regional Park. One route began near the mouth of the Korokoro Stream, winding over the hills before descending to Porirua Harbour. Another ran from the Pauatahanui arm of Porirua Harbour, travelling south across the hills and down Speedy’s Stream in Belmont.
These routes initially connected Ngāti Ira communities living in the Hutt Valley and Porirua, and were later used by iwi from Kāwhia and Taranaki who migrated to the region during the 1820s.
European use of the area followed similar paths. The Old Coach Road was first walked in 1857 and later developed into a dray road by 1872, linking the Hutt Valley with Pauatahanui. Horse-drawn coaches used the route until the mid-1880s, when it was replaced by what is now Haywards Hill Road (State Highway 58). Portions of the original road can still be walked today.
The growing settlement of Petone also shaped the area. In 1903 the Korokoro Stream was dammed to provide a secure water supply, and under the Public Works Act the government acquired 1,214 acres of Te Āti Awa land known as the Maungaraki Reserve.
War Comes to the Hills
The arrival of the Second World War dramatically altered the purpose of the Belmont hills.
Following the rapid expansion of Japanese forces across the Pacific in 1941–42, New Zealand faced a dramatically altered strategic environment. The fall of Singapore and Japanese advances through Southeast Asia created genuine fears that the war might reach New Zealand’s shores.
Although most New Zealand combat troops were serving overseas with the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force in Greece, North Africa and later Italy, the country still had to prepare for the defence of its own territory and support operations in the Pacific theatre.
As part of this effort the Public Works Department constructed 62 reinforced concrete ammunition magazines across just over 1,000 acres in the Belmont hills. According to local accounts the layout was intended to resemble a poultry farm from the air, helping disguise the site from enemy reconnaissance.
The magazines were designed to safely store large quantities of ammunition and explosives. Thick reinforced concrete walls, heavy roof slabs, and internal support pillars were intended to contain blast effects should an accident occur.
Much of the ammunition stored here supported the training and preparation of forces for the Pacific campaign.
A Quiet Extension of National Defence
Stepping inside one of the magazines today reveals a stark and functional interior supported by rows of concrete pillars. The engineering reflects strict safety principles developed internationally for the storage of military explosives.
During the opening event one of the magazines displayed the New Zealand Ensign, accompanied by the line from the national anthem:
“Guard Pacific’s triple star from the shafts of strife and war.”
The symbolism is appropriate. Ammunition depots like Belmont formed part of the quiet infrastructure that enabled New Zealand’s defence. Soldiers in the field depended on ammunition being safely stored, inspected, accounted for, and issued when required. Behind every operational unit stood a network of ordnance depots and logisticians ensuring that munitions were available when needed.
The phrase “Pacific’s triple star” refers poetically to the three principal islands of New Zealand — the North Island, South Island, and Stewart Island. Written in the nineteenth century by Thomas Bracken, the line expresses the hope that these islands, lying in the Pacific Ocean, would be protected from the dangers of war. Displayed inside a former ammunition magazine, the words serve as a reminder that facilities such as Belmont were built precisely to help defend those islands.
The Pacific War Story
The first preserved magazine is marked externally with the Pacific Star, the campaign medal awarded to Commonwealth forces who served against Japan during the Second World War.
The symbol reflects the strategic context in which the Belmont magazines were constructed. The rapid expansion of Japanese power forced New Zealand to strengthen its home defences and expand its logistical infrastructure.
Interpretive panels inside this magazine explain the wartime circumstances that led to the construction of the depot and place Belmont within the wider network of ammunition storage facilities supporting New Zealand’s defence.
One lesser-known aspect of Belmont’s wartime role is that the site also briefly stored chemical warfare munitions, held as part of Allied contingency planning during the war.
The Ordnance Soldiers
The second magazine focuses on the soldiers responsible for operating the depot. Mounted on its exterior is the First World War badge of the New Zealand Army Ordnance Corps, originally adopted by the New Zealand Expeditionary Force in Europe.
During the Second World War the badge was worn by personnel of the New Zealand Temporary Staff (NZTS) who filled many ordnance roles across the country, as well as members of the New Zealand Ordnance Corps, the territorial component of the wartime organisation.
These men formed the backbone of the Army’s ammunition system. Their duties included inspecting ammunition, maintaining storage conditions, accounting for every item in stock, issuing munitions for training and operations, and safely disposing of obsolete or dangerous stores.
Displays inside this magazine explain the types of ammunition that would have been stored here and the wider industrial and logistical system that supported wartime munitions supply.
The Post-War Depot
The third magazine represents the final operational phase of Belmont. Displayed on its exterior is the post-1953 badge of the Royal New Zealand Army Ordnance Corps (RNZAOC).
The Corps had been granted the Royal title in 1947 in recognition of its wartime service, and the revised badge introduced in 1953 became the symbol worn by the post-war generation of ordnance soldiers.
These were the men who operated the Belmont depot during the Cold War years, maintaining ammunition reserves and supporting Army training until the site eventually closed in the late 1960s.
Displays inside this magazine broaden the story further, exploring the earlier human history of the Belmont hills, the movement and dispatch of ammunition, and the geological formation of the landscape following the last ice age around 14,000 years ago.
From Ammunition Depot to Regional Park
After the depot closed the land gradually transitioned to public ownership. Belmont Regional Park opened in 1989, becoming the first park in New Zealand designed to combine recreation, conservation, and farming within a single landscape.
In 2005 the entire area was secured in public ownership and is now managed by Greater Wellington Regional Council.
Today walkers following the Magazine Mile track can explore a landscape where layers of history meet — from Māori travel routes and colonial roads to wartime infrastructure and modern recreation.
Revealing a Hidden Chapter
The opening of the Belmont magazines on 7 March 2026 has helped bring new attention to a landscape that quietly played an important role in New Zealand’s military history.
For decades these reinforced concrete structures stood largely unexplained among the hills. With interpretation now installed and access improved, visitors can better understand how this remote site once formed part of the logistical backbone supporting the New Zealand Army.
Today the magazines stand silent, their concrete walls no longer holding ammunition. Yet they remain powerful reminders of a time when the defence of New Zealand depended not only on soldiers overseas, but also on the hidden infrastructure at home that helped ensure the nation could indeed guard
“Pacific’s triple star from the shafts of strife and war.”
Equipment Complexity, Scaling Logic, and the Reform of New Zealand Army Stores Accounting, 1945–1961
Introduction
Military accounting systems rarely attract sustained historical attention. Yet they form the structural architecture of sustainment. As equipment becomes more complex, accounting systems must evolve with it. When institutional pressures change, entitlement architecture must adapt accordingly. Where structural translation does not occur, friction emerges between operational requirement, organisational structure, and administrative control.
By the late 1950s, the New Zealand Army confronted such friction. It was sustaining large quantities of ageing Second World War equipment while introducing increasingly complex, composite systems. Simultaneously, it was reorganising from a divisional concept towards a brigade-based structure reliant upon a relatively small Regular Force core and a substantial Territorial component. Units trained intermittently and depended upon depot-held war reserves for large-scale exercises and mobilisation.
The inherited G1098 War Equipment Table system, highly effective for wartime expansion and numerical mobilisation, was structurally misaligned with this environment. G1098 enumerated quantities against establishments. It did not enforce completeness of integrated systems. It did not embed sustainment depth within entitlement control. Nor did it institutionalise scaling as a disciplined and traceable process within a part-time, depot-supported force.
The core issue was not procedural inefficiency. It was an architectural limitation.
This article argues that the reforms undertaken between 1960 and 1966 constituted structural redesign rather than incremental administrative refinement. Through the institutionalisation of the New Zealand Entitlement Table (NZET), the New Zealand Complete Equipment Schedule (NZCES), the New Zealand Block Scale (NZBS), and the embedding of sustainment outfits such as FAMTO and FATSO, the Army replaced wartime quantity enumeration with a layered entitlement architecture capable of governing composite equipment integrity, modular scaling, depot-supported uplift, and lifecycle sustainment. The subsequent establishment of the Equipment Documentation Section (EDS) consolidated entitlement governance under General Staff authority, transforming documentation control into configuration management in an analogous form.
The significance of this reform lies not merely in its historical context but in its structural maturity. The layered entitlement architecture achieved between 1960 and 1966 institutionalised control of completeness, scaling discipline, sustainment integration, and centrally governed amendment procedures within a coherent national system.
Yet institutional architecture does not remain static. From the mid-1980s onward, computerisation, doctrinal evolution, commercialisation of logistics functions, and workforce restructuring reshaped the problem set confronting Army sustainment. The digitisation of supply accounting addressed different priorities: transactional efficiency, enterprise visibility, financial integration, and contractor interoperability.
The evolution from wartime enumeration to layered entitlement control, and later to digital enterprise platforms, therefore reflects not a linear progression but a sequence of structural adaptations to changing institutional pressures. Examining this evolution reveals a broader lesson: technology alone does not preserve entitlement coherence. Architectural discipline must be consciously reconstructed within each new administrative and doctrinal environment.
Foundations: From Custodial Control to Wartime Expansion
New Zealand Army stores accounting evolved over more than a century. Early colonial practice emphasised custody and financial accountability, and this was formalised in legislation such as the Public Stores Act of 1867.[1] Over time, the British-derived accounting discipline was adapted to local conditions.
The Second World War represented the greatest stress test of that system. Between 1939 and 1944, the Army expanded rapidly, mobilising personnel, vehicles, weapons, and technical stores at an unprecedented scale.[2] Wartime accounting focused on:
Rapid issue and replacement
Authorised holdings by establishment
Bulk provisioning
Mobilisation responsiveness
Under these conditions, War Equipment Tables such as G1098 were entirely appropriate. They authorised quantities against establishments and enabled scaling for mobilisation.[3] The central question was numerical sufficiency.
However, wartime systems prioritised expansion and speed over composite completeness. The focus was on ensuring that units possessed the authorised number of items, not necessarily on embedding lifecycle sustainment architecture within entitlement control.
This wartime success laid the foundation for post-war structural tension.
The Post-War Paradox: Ageing Mass and Emerging Complexity
At the conclusion of the war, the Army retained substantial quantities of equipment and infrastructure. By 1959, it was acknowledged that many vehicles still in service were of pre-1942 manufacture and “most uneconomic.”[4] Wartime store buildings remained in use despite being “beyond repair.”[5]
The Army was sustaining mass holdings within a shrinking peacetime force.
A Centurion tank and a Valentine tank operating side by side at Waiouru in New Zealand, illustrating the logistical and training challenges of managing a mixed fleet as New Zealand transitioned from 1940s wartime equipment to more modern 1950s and 1960s equipment.
Simultaneously, new equipment was being introduced. In 1957, the Army recognised that it must “keep abreast of technological advances over the last ten years.”[6] Obsolete armoured fighting vehicles and wireless sets required replacement.[7]
But replacement was no longer a simple substitution. Equipment was increasingly composite.
Army Headquarters observed in 1960 that “most equipment tables contain items which are a collection of individual stores which are demanded and accounted for as a complete equipment.”[8] It distinguished between “simple equipment” and “complex equipment,” using the Bren gun and the Centurion tank as examples.[9]
A tank was not merely a vehicle. It comprised:
Armament
Communications systems
Ancillary fittings
Specialist tools
Spares
Documentation
The accounting system had to recognise this structural reality.
Example of the equipment included in a Centurion Tank, a typ of tank use by NZ in the 1950s/60s. 1965 , Regiment Huzaren Prins Alexander , 101st Tank battalion of the Dutch Army
The Limits of G1098 Enumeration
The G1098 War Equipment Table system was structurally flat. It authorised quantities. It was ideal for mobilisation. But it did not inherently enforce completeness of integrated systems.
By the mid-1950s, administrative strain was visible. The Army Stores Accounting Committee reviewed returns in 1950 to eliminate unnecessary paperwork.[10] In 1956, a Treasury–Public Service–Army committee introduced simplified procedures to reduce redundant documentation.[11]
These reforms addressed procedural inefficiency, not structural mismatch.
At the same time, stores accounting itself was undergoing parallel development. From the late 1940s onward, formal committees and reviews examined accounting practices, refining ledger systems, stocktaking procedures, and unit responsibilities.
By the 1960s, accounting systems incorporated both record-based control and physical verification, supported by structured reporting and periodic checks. This development did not follow entitlement reform; it evolved alongside it.
Entitlement defined what should exist. Accounting recorded what was held. The effectiveness of the emerging system depended on the interaction between the two.
The core limitation remained: G1098 could count platforms, but it could not structurally bind together the full sustainment ecosystem required by modern equipment.
Example of G1089 Form
This transition was not immediate. G1098 equipment tables remained in use well into the 1960s, even as their limitations became increasingly apparent.
Formal reviews identified issues with relevance, flexibility, and the ability to reflect evolving equipment and roles. Working groups were convened to examine deficiencies and recommend improvements, indicating that the system was under sustained pressure rather than being abruptly replaced.
As a result, the move from wartime enumeration to structured entitlement was gradual. Legacy tables and emerging systems coexisted for a period, creating a layered and sometimes inconsistent framework that only stabilised over time.
Scaling as the Structural Concept
The bridge between enumeration and sustainment architecture is scaling.
Scaling is the deliberate adjustment of authorised holdings to align equipment, personnel, consumables, and maintenance depth with operational intent.[12] It transforms strategic design into a counted and auditable reality.
Wartime G1098 tables contained implicit scaling logic through peace and war establishments. However, the logic was not structurally integrated with completeness control.
By the late 1950s, scaling required institutionalisation within the accounting architecture itself.
The Layered Entitlement Reform, 1960–1961
Between 1960 and 1961, the New Zealand Army did not create an entirely novel accounting system. Rather, it adapted and formalised a layered entitlement architecture within national structures that was already evolving within the British Army and the Australian Army. The reform drew upon British War Equipment Table practice, Complete Equipment Schedules (CES), and Commonwealth entitlement doctrine, while modifying these instruments to suit New Zealand’s force structure, scale, and administrative arrangements.
In several instances, British or Australian entitlement documents were adopted directly for New Zealand service rather than being rewritten from first principles. This was consistent with long-standing Commonwealth ordnance practice, in which equipment scales, CES documentation, and technical publications were often standardised across allied forces, with national supplements issued only where divergence was necessary.
What changed in the New Zealand case between 1960 and 1961 was therefore not the invention of a wholly new conceptual model, but the formal institutionalisation of a layered entitlement system within New Zealand’s own system of accounts. The Army replaced flat G1098-style enumeration with a structured entitlement architecture built on five integrated components:
NZET – New Zealand Entitlement Table
NZCES – New Zealand Complete Equipment Schedule
Line Items as Discrete Items
NZBS – New Zealand Block Scales
FAMTO and FATSO Sustainment Integration
The significance of the reform lies not in originality but in structural integration. British-derived CES principles were embedded into New Zealand ledger control. The scaling doctrine was formalised within NZET. Sustainment packages were incorporated into entitlement logic. Commonwealth models were localised into a coherent national architecture suited to New Zealand’s smaller force scale and administrative environment.
NZET: The Authoritative Entitlement Ledger
The New Zealand Entitlement Table (NZET) mapped unit holdings against NZCES definitions. Army direction explicitly stated that “the NZET is the ledger.”[13] Holdings were cross-referenced to entitlement pages.[14]
Peace and war establishments were integrated within a single entitlement architecture.
NZCES: Defining Complete Equipment
The New Zealand Complete Equipment Schedule (NZCES) defines equipment as an operationally viable system.[15] Each schedule included:
Principal item
Ancillaries
Accessories
Special tools
Defined spares
Consumables
NZCES schedules were ledger-status documents.[16] Deficiency columns allowed accounting officers to maintain equipment integrity.[17]
Publications accompanying the equipment were embedded within the entitlement.[18] Documentation became part of the equipment system.
This reflected a deeper shift in the definition of capability. Equipment was no longer understood as a standalone physical item but as a system requiring associated knowledge, maintenance instructions, and technical references to remain operationally viable.
In practical terms, this meant that entitlement extended beyond platforms and ancillaries to include the information required to operate, repair, and sustain them. The integration of publications within NZCES, therefore, represents an early form of configuration control, linking equipment, documentation, and sustainment into a single governed framework.
The practical effect of the NZCES system is best demonstrated by the breadth of items captured under NZCES serial control. Rather than limiting “complete equipment” to major platforms, the NZCES series encompassed a wide spectrum of capability, from combat weapons and vehicles to radios, instruments, tool kits, cookers, tents, and specialist support sets. This breadth reinforces the central analytical point, the NZCES construct operationalised completeness as an accounting principle, ensuring that equipment was managed as an integrated package, including ancillaries, tools, spares, and consumables, rather than as a standalone principal item.
By May 1961, the NZCES framework was already being applied simultaneously to armament and artillery systems (25-pounder, 4.2-inch mortars, anti-aircraft predictors and radar equipment), small arms systems (L1A1 rifle equipment, Browning pistols, sub-machine guns), communications equipment (A41, A42, A40 radio stations, switchboards, loudspeaking telephones), vehicle fleets (Bedford 3-ton GS 4×4, Land Rover ¼- and ¾-ton), and the supporting sustainment ecosystem (cleaning kits, special tools, tool kits, maintenance and repair equipment). In other words, NZCES treated “equipment” as a force-wide integrity category, not a narrow technical sub-system.
Illustrative NZCES Entries (selected examples)
The following examples, drawn from the NZCES list, demonstrate the diversity of “complete equipment” serials and the way principal items were formalised as complete holdings:
NZCES 115: Machine Gun, .303-in Bren, all marks, equipment
NZCES 455: Machine Gun, 7.62-mm L7A1 and L7A2, complete equipment
NZCES 850 (2 Oct 1970): Rifle Equipment, 5.56-mm M16 or M16A1
Vehicles and tracked platforms
NZCES 3: Truck 3-ton GS Cargo, 4×4, Bedford
NZCES 78: Truck ¼-ton and ¾-ton GS, 4×4, Land Rover
NZCES 81: Tank, Combat, Full Tracked, 76-mm gun, M41A1
NZCES 533: Tank ARV Centurion Mk 1
NZCES 620 (26 Jun 1966): Tank Centurion Mk 5 and 5/1
Signals, wireless, and communications systems
NZCES 2: Radio Station A510, complete station
NZCES 61: Radio Station A41 Manpack/Ground
NZCES 63: Radio Station A42 Manpack/Ground
NZCES 88: Radio Station A40, Type ‘B’ Manpack/Ground
NZCES 1002: Radio Set, AN/PRC-77
Technical instruments, calibration, and specialist sets
NZCES 6: Meters Circuit Magnification Type TF1245
NZCES 7: Wattmeter, Absorption, H.F., Marconi Type TF 957/1
NZCES 8: Calibrator, Crystal No. 10 kit
NZCES 10: Signal Generator No. 12 CT 320 equipment
Sustainment, repair, and tool-kits
NZCES 75: Cleaning Kit, 7.62-mm, Mk 1
NZCES 34/17 (in the broader entitlement ecosystem): Special Tools for RNZEME ‘B’ vehicles, Land Rover ¼- and ¾-ton GS (mirroring the logic of CES-controlled sustainment packages)
NZCES 298 (May 1963): Camouflage Equipment Mk 1
NZCES 303–306 (May 1963): Tool kits, sheet metal workers, blacksmiths, and metal workers (basic and supplementary sets)
NZCES 283 and 285 (May 1963): Tents, marquee universal and tent GS Mk 2, complete
NZCES 439: Tent, bivouac, cotton duck
Structural Implications
The breadth of NZCES serialisation demonstrates that “complete equipment” was not confined to major platforms. Combat systems, vehicles, radios, instruments, tents, tool kits, and calibration sets were all treated as integrated holdings. Completeness was therefore not descriptive but structural. Equipment identity was inseparable from operational viability.
Equally significant was the inclusion of ancillaries, spares, specialist tools, publications, and consumables within each schedule. This closed the planning-to-sustainment gap inherent in flat authorisation tables. A rifle, radio, vehicle, or mortar was no longer an isolated principal item. It was an authorised system with defined integrity requirements.
In practical terms, NZCES introduced an integrity layer into the entitlement architecture. It made equipment accounting compatible with modern system complexity and laid the foundation for NZET ledger control and NZBS modular scaling to operate coherently.
Line Items: Residual Control within a Structured Architecture
Not all stores were suitable for aggregation under a Complete Equipment Schedule. Certain items, by their nature, did not form part of a composite equipment system and therefore remained controlled as discrete line entries within the NZET.
These typically included:
Individually issued articles not tied to a specific equipment system
General stores with wide cross-unit applicability
Items whose usage patterns varied independently of platform authorisation
The decision to retain such stores as line items was not an omission within the layered architecture. It was a deliberate structural choice. NZCES governed integrity of composite systems; line entries preserved administrative precision where aggregation would have obscured demand behaviour or distorted entitlement logic.
This dual approach avoided two risks inherent in entitlement reform. First, it prevented over-aggregation, in which unrelated stores might be artificially bound into a schedule merely for accounting neatness. Second, it avoided fragmentation, in which equipment systems would be broken into atomised components and lose structural coherence.
Within NZET, line items therefore functioned as controlled residuals. They remained fully auditable and entitlement-linked, but they did not distort the integrity model established by NZCES. The architecture preserved clarity: composite systems were governed through CES; discrete articles were governed through line entitlement.
In structural terms, this completed the layered model. NZET provided the ledger authority; NZCES defined system completeness; NZBS enabled modular uplift; FAMTO and FATSO embedded sustainment depth; and line entries ensured that flexibility and granularity were preserved where aggregation was neither practical nor doctrinally sound.
NZBS: Block Scale Overlays
New Zealand Block Scales (NZBS) provided modular uplift mechanisms.[19] Supersession procedures ensured discipline and traceability.[20]
The structural significance of the NZBS system becomes clearer when examined in operational detail. Unlike the earlier G1098 War Equipment Tables, which tended to authorise equipment in aggregate against establishments, NZBS operated as a modular scaling overlay within the layered NZET–NZCES entitlement architecture. It did not replace core entitlement; it augmented it in a controlled and serialised manner.
Block Scales were organised by functional code groups, each representing a broad capability domain. For example:
Code 01: Personal Weapons and Equipment
Code 13: Royal Engineers Plant and Ancillary Stores
Code 21: Weapons (Ground Use), Spares and Ancillaries
Code 33: “A” Vehicles
Code 36: Armaments
Code 37: Small Arms
Code 41: General Stores
Within each code group, serialised subdivisions allowed granular uplift. Thus, Code 33 encompassed “A” Vehicles, but specific serials defined particular platforms:
33/21 – Scout Car, Ferret Mk 1 and 2
33/28 – Tank Cruiser, Centurion Mk 3 and 6
33/41 – Tank, Combat, Full Tracked, M41A1
Similarly, Code 36 (Armaments) included defined artillery and heavy weapons:
36/09 – Howitzer, 105mm Pack, L10A1
36/14 – OQF 25-Pounder
36/17 – OBL 5.5-in Gun and Carriage
Small Arms were separately grouped under Code 37, with serials identifying specific weapons such as the Browning 9mm pistol (37/02), Browning .30-in machine gun (37/04), 3.5-in rocket launcher (37/11), and 7.62mm L7A1 machine gun (37/14).
This categorisation reveals several structural characteristics.
First, NZBS was functionally organised rather than purely platform-driven. Equipment was grouped according to operational domain, allowing controlled uplift of a capability cluster rather than isolated articles. A unit authorised uplift under Code 13, for example, would receive equipment associated with water procurement and treatment, differentiated further by field force engineers (13/51), non-engineer field force units (13/52), and static units (13/53). Scaling logic was therefore sensitive to role, not merely quantity.
Second, serialisation enabled modular augmentation. Instead of rewriting the NZET entitlement when operational requirements changed, Block Scales provided defined packages that could be applied as overlays. This preserved the integrity of the core entitlement ledger while permitting rapid adjustment. In structural terms, NZBS functioned as a plug-in architecture.
Third, war entitlement was explicitly embedded. Certain serials, such as 31/13 (Consumable and Expendable Stores for Care and Preservation of Small Arms, Machine Guns, Rocket Launchers and Mortars), were marked “War Entitlement Only.” This formalised the scaling switch between peace and war establishments. Unlike the implicit mobilisation logic of G1098 tables, NZBS made scaling visible, traceable, and auditable.
Fourth, sustainment elements were embedded alongside platforms. Cleaning kits (21/01), preservation materials (31/13), tyre maintenance equipment (41/04), and special technical tool sets for RNZEME vehicle support (34/17) were included within the same block structure as combat platforms. This demonstrates that scaling was not limited to combat mass; it encompassed maintenance depth, technical support, and sustainment resilience.
The NZBS system therefore reveals the maturity of the entitlement architecture introduced in the early 1960s. Where G1098 had authorised numbers against establishments, NZBS enabled structured capability uplift without undermining entitlement discipline. The NZET remained the authoritative ledger; NZCES defined equipment completeness; NZBS provided controlled expansion.
In practical terms, this meant that when a unit transitioned from peace footing to a higher readiness posture, scaling did not require ad hoc authorisation or administrative improvisation. It required activation of defined Block Scale serials, already codified, categorised, and integrated within the entitlement regime.
The architectural implication is significant. NZBS transformed scaling from a mobilisation reflex into a governed process. It embedded operational flexibility within a disciplined accounting framework. Equipment uplift became modular, serialised, and audit-traceable.
This was the culmination of the shift from wartime enumeration to peacetime sustainment architecture. Scaling was no longer simply about adding numbers. It was about activating defined capability packages within a layered entitlement system that preserved completeness, sustainment integration, and documentary control.
FAMTO and Sustainment Integration
Maintenance support packages, including FAMTO, were integrated within the entitlement control regime.[21] Sustainment was embedded, not external.
A key indicator that the post-G1098 system represented a genuine sustainment architecture, rather than merely a refined equipment ledger, is the way maintenance and technical support were embedded as formal entitlements. First Aid for Mechanical Transport Outfit (FAMTO) and First Aid for Technical Stores Outfit (FATSO) were not ad hoc workshop holdings. They were structured outfits, scaled against defined vehicle fleets and technical capabilities, and integrated into the entitlement control regime in a manner consistent with NZET and NZCES principles.
The practical logic of these outfits aligns with the broader shift from wartime enumeration to peacetime integrity control. Under a flat war-table approach, equipment authorisation tended to focus on platforms and headline quantities. Maintenance depth was often managed separately, frequently through unit practice, workshop discretion, or supplementary provisioning. Under the layered entitlement architecture, sustainment capability itself became an authorised holding, and therefore accountable, auditable, and scalable.
Your FAMTO extract demonstrates that the “first aid” concept was directly linked to specific mechanical transport holdings, and therefore to the unit’s platform mix. In the New Zealand First Aid Mechanical Transport Outfits list, the outfit was indexed to particular vehicle types and equipment fleets, including:
Bedford RLW and RLC
Land Rovers
Trailer, ½-ton GS water tanker (100-gallon, two-wheel Sankey)
Commer trucks
Scout Car, Ferret
Tank, Light, 76mm, M41A1
This provides a clear structural insight: the “first aid” sustainment entitlement was not generic. It was platform-dependent. The unit’s authorised fleet drove a correspondingly structured sustainment entitlement, which enabled predictable maintenance support and rapid recovery of serviceability. Even in this abbreviated list, the inclusion of both soft-skin fleets (Bedford, Commer, Land Rover) and A Vehicle platforms (Ferret, M41A1) indicates that the sustainment logic recognised materially different maintenance burdens across classes of vehicle.
Similarly, the FATSO extract demonstrates that technical sustainment was treated as a defined capability package rather than as incidental holdings. The New Zealand First Aid Technical Stores Outfit included items such as:
Water purification unit, trailer-mounted, 1,000 GPH, engine-driven
These are not minor stores. They are enabling systems, with dedicated spares, maintenance requirements, and technical servicing demands. Their inclusion within a formal outfit structure reflects the same conceptual move evident in NZCES; equipment is managed as a complete operational capability, not as an isolated principal item.
Analytically, these examples reinforce three points central to the argument of this article.
First, FAMTO and FATSO show that sustainment depth was itself an entitlement, not simply an outcome of local practice. This supports the claim that the post-G1098 system institutionalised lifecycle management rather than leaving it to discretionary arrangements.
Second, the outfit structure reinforces scaling logic. As the unit’s authorised platform holdings changed between peace and war configurations, or under modular uplift arrangements, the associated sustainment outfit could be adjusted accordingly. In other words, the architecture did not merely scale combat mass; it scaled maintainability.
Third, embedding these outfits within the entitlement regime helped close the traditional gap between authorisation and serviceability. A unit might be authorised a vehicle or a technical system, but without the corresponding first aid support outfit it would not reliably sustain it in the field. The formalisation of FAMTO and FATSO therefore represents a deliberate shift towards operational viability as a governed accounting principle.
Taken together, the presence of platform-linked FAMTO listings and capability-linked FATSO holdings provides concrete evidence that the layered entitlement system treated sustainment as an integral dimension of equipment control. It moved maintenance support from the periphery of accounting practice into the core logic of authorised holdings.
Force Structure, Cadre Strength, and Entitlement Literacy in a Part-Time Army
The structural importance of the layered entitlement system cannot be understood solely through the lens of technological complexity or legacy holdings. It must also be situated within the Army’s organisational reality during the late 1950s and early 1960s.
During this period the New Zealand Army was transitioning from a divisional concept towards a brigade-based structure. Simultaneously, it remained heavily dependent upon a relatively small Regular Force core and a larger number of Territorial units. Many Territorial units were maintained with only a limited Regular cadre. Both Regular and Territorial formations trained intermittently, typically through evening parades, weekend training, and annual camps.
Army trainee, 1950, laying out the individual scale of issue, from blankets and webbing to rifle and Bren light machine gun. Even at the lowest level, the range of equipment required to sustain a single soldier is substantial. When multiplied across a unit and then expanded to include vehicles, heavy weapons, ammunition, and stores, the true scale and complexity of military equipment provisioning become clear. : Army trainee. Evening Post (Newspaper, 1865-2002) : Photographic negatives and prints of the Evening Post newspaper. Ref: 114/164/10-F. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/22798905
This organisational model imposed a distinctive administrative and readiness burden.
Units were required to hold sufficient authorised equipment to sustain routine training and local readiness. Yet the full war-scale entitlement could not practically be maintained permanently on unit lines. Storage constraints, maintenance demands, equipment density, and fiscal discipline all militated against holding complete war establishments in peacetime.
The solution was layered custody.
Core entitlements sufficient for day-to-day training were held by units. The balance of equipment, including war-scale uplift, specialist holdings, and reserve stocks, remained under the control of RNZAOC vehicle depots and Ordnance depots. As units commenced mobilisation for annual camps, large exercises, or operational preparation, additional stores were drawn from the relevant RNZAOC Vehicle or Ordnance Depot. Upon completion of the activity, those stores were returned, reconciled, inspected, and reabsorbed into depot holdings.
Such an arrangement required far more than numerical authorisation. It required:
Clear definition of core entitlement
Structured identification of scalable uplift
Serialised control of complete equipment
Defined sustainment depth accompanying platform holdings
Accurate scaling of ammunition
Controlled issue of consumables and expendables
Rapid reconciliation and deficiency visibility post-activity
In a force largely composed of part-time elements exercising only a few times per year, ambiguity in entitlements would have generated chronic friction. Mobilisation for annual camps or brigade-level exercises would otherwise have required improvised authorisation, ad hoc scale construction, and manual reconciliation — precisely the weaknesses inherent in flat G1098 enumeration.
The layered NZET–NZCES–NZBS architecture provided a structural solution. Core entitlement was permanently codified at the unit level. War or exercise uplift was activated through defined Block Scale serials. Equipment completeness was preserved through NZCES schedules. Sustainment depth, including FAMTO and FATSO outfits, scaled predictably alongside platform holdings.
Yet the architecture alone was insufficient. Its effectiveness depended upon professional interpretation at unit level. Central to this process was the Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant (RQMS).
In Territorial-heavy units with limited Regular cadres, the RQMS functioned as the practical custodian of entitlement integrity. He was required to understand in detail the interactions among NZET holdings, NZCES completeness definitions, NZBS overlays, line-item entitlements, and depot-held reserves to ensure that the unit demanded and received precisely its authorised scale.
This responsibility extended well beyond weapons and vehicles.
An RQMS preparing a battalion for annual camp might need to transition from routine peacetime holdings to a fully scaled field configuration capable of sustaining approximately 1,000 personnel. Such a deployment required the structured assembly of a complete field ecosystem, including:
Officer, Warrant Officer, SNCO, and Other Rank tented accommodation
Segregated messes and catering arrangements
Field kitchens, cookers, fuel holdings, and ration scales
Water purification and distribution equipment
Sanitation and ablution systems
Signals detachments and communications equipment
Transport fleets scaled to the establishment
FAMTO maintenance support and repair capability
Ammunition holdings aligned to authorised scales
Tool kits, preservation materials, and specialist equipment
Camouflage and field engineering stores
Equally critical, though less conspicuous, were:
Stationery required for orders, returns, accounting documentation, and field administration
Consumable stores such as lubricants, fuels, cleaning materials, and preservation compounds
Expendable items consumed during training and maintenance activity
Catering expendables and mess consumables
Replacement components subject to predictable wear
Without these elements, a tented camp could not function, regardless of the number of rifles or vehicles present.
Under a flat enumeration system, such stores risked being treated as incidental or locally improvised. Under the layered entitlement architecture, many were embedded within NZCES completeness definitions or structured through NZBS overlays and controlled line entitlements. Their issue and reconciliation were governed, not assumed.
The RQMS had to ensure that:
The unit demanded neither more nor less than the authorised entitlement.
Complete equipment schedules were drawn intact, including ancillaries and documentation.
Sustainment and maintenance elements accompanied platforms.
Ammunition was scaled correctly to the training or war establishment.
Consumables and expendables were scaled to the duration and intensity of activity.
Stationery and administrative stores supported field accounting and command functions.
Temporary uplift from Ordnance Depots was accurately reconciled upon return.
Deficiencies were visible and recorded at the ledger level.
In a brigade-based force reliant upon depot-held war reserves and characterised by cyclical mobilisation, entitlement literacy became a professional necessity. Misinterpretation of Block Scales could lead to under-equipment in the field or excessive demand on finite reserve stocks. Failure to understand the completeness of NZCES could result in drawing principal items without essential ancillaries, tools, or sustainment depth.
The layered entitlement system, therefore, depended not only on structural documentation but also on disciplined custodianship. The architecture provided order; the RQMS ensured correct execution.
In this environment, entitlement control was not clerical precision. It was operational discipline. The reform did not merely restructure accounting tables. It structured readiness itself, ensuring that a unit could scale from peacetime holdings to a fully functioning field formation, complete with weapons, vehicles, tents, ammunition, stationery, consumables, expendables, and sustainment depth, without administrative improvisation.
The layered entitlement architecture did not eliminate complexity. It organised it.
Institutionalisation of Entitlement Governance: The Equipment Documentation Section, 1960–1966
The transition from wartime enumeration to layered entitlement control did not conclude with the introduction of the NZCES and the NZET in 1960–1961. Rather, these instruments required a central authority capable of governing their lifecycle, version control, amendment, and distribution. That authority emerged as the Equipment Documentation Section (EDS).
Reform Phase, 1960–1961
By May 1961, NZCES serialisation was demonstrably operational. Contemporary schedules show structured entries for major combat, communications, transport, and support systems, including artillery equipment, armoured fighting vehicles, wireless stations, tool kits, and complete weapon equipment. The dating of multiple CES entries to May 1961 confirms that the conceptual shift from G1098 to structured completeness had moved from policy intent to administrative execution.
Simultaneously, NZET documents were defining unit-level entitlements by reference to NZCES serials, while NZBS overlays provided modular variation in scaling. By 1963, the system had expanded to encompass artillery, armour, signals, engineer, water purification equipment, mechanical transport, and small arms categories.
Thus, between 1960 and 1963, the layered entitlement framework was not theoretical; it was fully operational across the Army’s equipment spectrum.
Formalisation and Centralisation, 1963–1966
The next stage was institutional consolidation.
A March 1966 administrative instruction defines the Equipment Documentation Section as a permanent component of the Army General Staff Branch at Defence Headquarters.[22] This document confirms that by 1966, entitlement governance had been fully centralised and formalised.
Crucially:
EDS was part of the Army General Staff Branch, Defence HQ.
It was not an Ordnance unit, although normally staffed by RNZAOC personnel.
It operated under the operational control of the Director of Equipment Policy (DEP).
Administrative control was exercised by Home Command.
The Officer Commanding EDS reported directly to DEP.
For stores’ accounting purposes, EDS was catered for by the Trentham Camp account.[23]
These arrangements demonstrate that entitlement documentation was no longer treated as a subordinate accounting function. It was a policy-controlled, General Staff-directed governance mechanism.
Structured Project Governance
The 1966 instruction reveals a highly disciplined documentation lifecycle.
EDS could not initiate work independently. All projects required prior approval from the Director of Equipment Policy. Each authorised project was assigned:
A project number,
A priority classification,
A formal Project File,
Entry into a Master Project Register was maintained numerically.
Additional card indexes were maintained by document category, including NZET, NZCES, and NZBS.[24]
This was a controlled configuration-management system in analogue form.
A formal priority system applied:
Red Star – Highest priority, overriding all others.
This hierarchy demonstrates that entitlement documentation was directly aligned with operational and policy imperatives.
Entitlement Recording and Aggregation
The Entitlement Section of EDS maintained structured requirement records using standardised cards:
AF NZ 244A – Requirement Cards (Field Force and Static Force),
AF NZ 244B – Requirement Cards (NZCES and summary records).
Entitlements were extracted from NZET, NZCES, and NZBS and recorded by the VAOS catalogue number.
To determine the total Army requirement for an item, the system required aggregation across:
Field Force entitlement,
Static Force entitlement,
NZCES-derived scaling.
Where an item formed part of a CES, the number of schedules held was multiplied by the scale entitlement within that schedule.
This was force-modelling logic executed through controlled card systems. It represents an early analogue form of entitlement-driven capability accounting.
Publication and Control Mechanisms
The 1966 instruction further confirms that the entitlement documents were not circulated informally. Certain categories required promulgation through New Zealand Army Orders (NZAOs), including:
The Co-ordinating Section drafted NZAOs monthly for DEP approval. Distribution was centrally managed through Defence Publications. EDS itself did not issue documents directly to units.
This ensured:
Version control,
Central authorisation,
Audit traceability,
Uniformity of promulgation.
Chronological Synthesis
The dating evidence allows a clear institutional sequence:
1960 – Introduction of the NZCES concept.
May 1961 – Serialised NZCES entries formally issued.
1961–1963 – Expansion of layered entitlement structure across major equipment categories.
By March 1966, EDS was formally defined within the Army General Staff Branch under DEP authority.
The layered entitlement reform, therefore, evolved in two phases:
Conceptual and structural reform (1960–1963).
Institutional consolidation and governance formalisation (1963–1966).
By the mid-1960s, entitlement control had become embedded within Defence Headquarters as a policy-directed, centrally governed system.
Structural Significance
The establishment of EDS marks the final break with the wartime G1098 enumeration model.
Under G1098:
Authorisation tables were primary.
Amendments were reactive.
Documentation was dispersed.
Completeness was not structurally enforced.
Under the EDS-governed NZET architecture:
Unit entitlement was controlled through NZET.
Equipment integrity was defined through NZCES.
Variations were structured through NZBS.
Maintenance integration occurred via FAMTO and FATSO.
The documentation lifecycle was centrally governed.
Amendments required DEP approval.
Entitlements were mathematically aggregated.
In modern terminology, EDS functioned as the Army’s configuration-control authority for equipment entitlement. It ensured that force structure, scales, and materiel authorisations were codified, registered, version-controlled, and traceable.
The layered entitlement reform was therefore not merely an administrative improvement. It was the institutionalisation of sustainment governance.
Structural Consequences
Taken together, the layered entitlement reform achieved six interlocking outcomes:
Composite completeness control
Deficiency in visibility at the ledger level
Integration of publications and documentation within entitlement
Coherent peace-to-war scaling architecture
Embedded sustainment depth through FAMTO and FATSO
Modular capability uplift via NZBS overlays
These were not procedural efficiencies. They were architectural changes.
Alongside entitlement and accounting, a third layer emerged, one focused on verification and assurance.
By the mid-twentieth century, units were required to conduct regular internal checks covering both physical stock and accounting records. These included periodic stocktakes, reconciliation of ledgers and vouchers, and formal reporting through the chain of command. This introduced a structured system of oversight that ensured recorded holdings aligned with actual holdings and authorised scales.
Taken together, the system can be understood as a three-part framework: entitlement defined what should exist, accounting recorded what was held, and control verified accuracy. This layered approach marked a decisive shift from wartime enumeration toward modern logistics governance.
Under G1098, equipment was authorised numerically against establishments. Completeness was not structurally enforced. Scaling was implicit. Sustainment depth was frequently managed separately from core authorisation tables.
Under the NZET–NZCES–NZBS architecture, equipment identity became inseparable from operational viability. A platform was authorised as a defined system. Its ancillaries, tools, spares, and documentation were codified within entitlement. Variations between peace and war holdings were serialised and traceable. Maintenance depth was embedded rather than appended. Amendments were centrally governed through EDS under General Staff control.
The reform, therefore, replaced wartime mobilisation logic with peacetime lifecycle governance. It transformed entitlement control from a flat enumeration model into a layered, scalable, system-aware architecture.
G1098 had served wartime expansion. The layered entitlement system institutionalised sustainment governance.
Digitisation, Doctrinal Evolution, and Structural Adaptation after 1966
The layered entitlement architecture institutionalised between 1960 and 1966 was constructed in an analogue era. It relied upon disciplined ledger practice, structured documentation control, and professional entitlement literacy at the unit and depot levels.
From the mid-1980s onward, the New Zealand Army entered a new phase characterised by computerisation of supply accounting systems, first through DSSR and DSSD, and subsequently through SAP-based enterprise resource planning platforms.
This transition occurred within a broader environment shaped by multiple influences:
Changing defence doctrine and strategic posture
Reduced large-scale mobilisation assumptions
Increasing expeditionary commitments
Workforce rationalisation and trade restructuring
Growing financial integration requirements across the government
Progressive commercialisation and outsourcing of selected logistics functions
Emerging digital accounting and audit standards
Digitisation, therefore, addressed a different set of institutional problems from those that drove the entitlement reform of the early 1960s.
Where the earlier reform focused on embedding completeness, scaling discipline, and sustainment integration within ledger architecture, later reforms increasingly prioritised:
Transaction processing efficiency
Enterprise-wide stock visibility
Financial compliance and audit traceability
Integration with civilian accounting standards
Reduction of clerical burden
Interoperability with contracted service providers
Commercialisation formed part of this evolution. As aspects of warehousing, distribution, maintenance support, and transport were progressively rationalised or integrated with civilian contractors, the structural centre of gravity within logistics shifted.
Under the 1960s model:
Entitlement definition, scaling logic, and sustainment depth were codified centrally in military-controlled documentation.
Depot holdings were intrinsic to readiness architecture.
Scaling was activated through internal serialised instruments such as NZBS.
Under later models:
Distribution networks increasingly reflected commercial supply-chain principles.
System design emphasised inventory movement and financial reconciliation.
Readiness modelling became partly dependent upon externally delivered capability.
These developments were not regressions. They reflected adaptation to a leaner force structure, fiscal constraints, and evolving government policy.
However, the cumulative effect of doctrinal change, workforce contraction, digitisation priorities, and commercial integration was a gradual rebalancing of emphasis:
From entitlement architecture toward supply-chain efficiency.
From mobilisation-scale modelling toward steady-state sustainment.
From centrally codified analogue configuration control toward enterprise visibility platforms.
The layered entitlement principles of the 1960s did not disappear. They remained embedded in doctrine and professional knowledge. Yet they were not always fully encoded within digital enterprise architecture or contractor interfaces.
This represents structural evolution under multiple concurrent influences.
The entitlement revolution of 1960–1966 was designed for a brigade-based, depot-supported, cyclically mobilising force. Later reforms responded to expeditionary commitments, whole-of-government financial integration, commercial supply-chain integration, and workforce rationalisation.
Each phase addressed the dominant pressures of its era.
The historical insight is therefore not one of loss or decline, but of shifting emphasis. When institutional pressures change, architectural priorities shift accordingly. The preservation of entitlement coherence requires deliberate reconstruction within each new structural context.
What becomes historically visible in retrospect is that the layered entitlement discipline achieved during the 1960–1966 reform was not systematically re-embedded as digital system architecture during the early phases of computerisation. The underlying principles of completeness control, modular scaling, and sustainment integration persisted within doctrine and professional knowledge, but they were not always translated into enforced system relationships. In this sense, the first entitlement revolution established an architectural maturity that subsequent digital platforms did not initially replicate in full.
Over time, the analogue entitlement architecture of the 1960s had achieved a notable degree of structural coherence. Early digital implementations, designed primarily to improve transactional efficiency, financial integration, and audit compliance, did not fully reproduce that layered entitlement logic. This outcome was not the result of neglect, but of differing institutional priorities and operating assumptions. Nevertheless, the contrast highlights an enduring lesson: digitisation does not automatically preserve architectural discipline unless it is deliberately and consciously encoded within system design.
That governance is not derived from a single mechanism, but from the interaction of layered systems. Entitlement establishes the requirement, accounting records the state, and control ensures integrity between the two. Together, they transform equipment from a collection of items into a managed capability.
This layered logic, first institutionalised in the early 1960s, remains the foundation on which modern logistics systems continue to operate, whether executed through ledger books or digital enterprise platforms.
Conclusion
The reform of New Zealand Army stores accounting between 1960 and 1966 represents the culmination of a long evolution from custodial accounting to systemic entitlement governance.
The Second World War demonstrated the effectiveness of bulk enumeration for rapid mobilisation. In that context, G1098 War Equipment Tables were entirely appropriate. However, the post-war environment exposed the structural limits of that model. The Army was required to sustain technologically complex systems within a brigade-based structure reliant upon a small Regular cadre, a large Territorial component, and depot-held war reserves. Units trained intermittently, scaled cyclically, and depended upon disciplined uplift from Ordnance Depots to generate field-ready capability.
In such an environment, flat numerical authorisation was insufficient.
The introduction of NZCES formalised the accounting principle of completeness of equipment. NZET embedded entitlement authority at the ledger level. NZBS institutionalised modular scaling and made the peace-to-war transition visible and traceable. FAMTO and FATSO integrated sustainment depth within authorised holdings. The establishment of the Equipment Documentation Section formalised entitlement governance as a centrally controlled, configuration-managed system under the authority of General Staff. Amendments were governed, serialised, and traceable. Completeness was codified. Scaling became modular rather than improvised.
This architecture was constructed and administered in an era before digital databases, spreadsheet modelling, or enterprise resource planning systems. Computers and integrated ERP platforms lay decades in the future. Entitlement aggregation, scale multiplication, deficiency tracking, amendment control, and version management were carried out using ledger books, index cards, carbon paper, typewriters, and Gestetner duplicating machines. Structural coherence was achieved through disciplined governance rather than automation.
From the mid-1980s onward, digitisation introduced a new structural phase. Computerised supply systems and, later, SAP-based enterprise platforms prioritised transaction-processing efficiency, financial compliance, enterprise-wide stock visibility, and integration with commercial providers. These reforms responded to a leaner force structure, expeditionary commitments, fiscal constraint, and whole-of-government integration. They addressed a different institutional problem set.
In retrospect, it becomes visible that the layered entitlement discipline achieved during the 1960–1966 reform was not systematically re-embedded as digital system architecture during the early phases of computerisation. The underlying principles of completeness control, modular scaling, and sustainment integration persisted within doctrine and professional knowledge, but they were not always translated into enforced system relationships. Early digital implementations did not fully reproduce the structural coherence of the analogue entitlement architecture. This was not the result of neglect, but of differing institutional priorities and operating assumptions.
Notes
[1] “New Zealand Army Stores Accounting 1845–1963 (Part 1: 1845–1918),” To the Warrior His Arms, History of the Royal New Zealand Army Ordnance Corps and it predecessors, 2026, accessed 1 March, 2026, rnzaoc.com/2025/03/02/new-zealand-army-stores-accounting-1845-1963-part-1-1845-1918/.
[4] “H-19 Military Forces of New Zealand Annual Report of the General Officer Commanding, for period 1 April 1958 to 31 March 1959,” Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives (22 June 1959 1959).
[5] “H-19 Military Forces of New Zealand Annual Report of the General Officer Commanding, for period 1 April 1957 to 31 March 1958,” Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives (3 July 1958 1958).
[6] “H-19 Military Forces of New Zealand Annual Report of the General Officer Commanding, for period 1 April 1956 to 31 March 1957,” Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives (20 May 1957 1957).
[7] “H-19 Military Forces of New Zealand Annual Report of the General Officer Commanding, for period 1 April 1956 to 31 March 1957.”
[8] “Publications – Military: Army Form G1098: War Equipment Tables,” Archives New Zealand Item No R17189361 (1951-1963).
[9] “Publications – Military: Army Form G1098: War Equipment Tables.”
[10] Army HQ memorandum, 19 May 1960 Army Stores Accounting Committee, Proceedings No. 72, 20 July 1950, “Conferences and Committees: Committee Stores Accounting Establishment of Minutes Meetings,” Archives New Zealand Item No R22497304 (1947-1953).
[11] “H-19 Military Forces of New Zealand Annual Report of the General Officer Commanding, for period 1 April 1956 to 31 March 1957.”