Approximately one in every household went to war, although in some households two and three served.
The 27 men who left for the Great War battlefields were a mixture of farmers, farm hands, engineers, a school teacher and a cheesemaker.
George Beatty was a farmer who was killed on the Somme on March 30, 1918. Edward Emmerson, a cheesemaker, died of malaria in Palestine in 1918.
Charles Linehan, farmer, and August Senk, farm hand, both of Umutaoroa, are listed on the Auckland Cenotaph memorial roll, but with no details of how they died.
Three generations of the O'Sullivan family attended the commemoration, remembering John Charles O'Sullivan who lost his life on the Somme.
"It's been a very special day," Mary Jo Frame from Napier said. "John Charles was my uncle and this has been a memorable occasion."
O'Sullivan's great-grandsons, Brendon and John O'Sullivan and Mark Frame, were also making a pilgrimage to the Dannevirke Cenotaph where the World War 1 soldier's name is etched in stone.
Descendants of the district's pioneering families, the O'Sullivans, Walshes and Larsens were represented at the Armistice Day service.
"It's been a very special day of commemoration for our small district," Black said.
The unique commemoration ended with a shared picnic and a chat with old timers from the area, with an old Umutaoroa School flag and a photo of the opening of the school swimming pool in 1941, a first for a country school, presented to the organisers of the day.