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The Taranaki Report: Kaupapa Tuatahi
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The Taranaki Report - Kaupapa Tuatahi
THE TARANAKI WARSCHAPTER 4THE TARANAKI WARS
Friend Colonel Murray, Salutation to you in the love of our Lord
Jesus Christ . . . You say that we have been guilty of rebellion
against the Queen, but we consider we have not, because the Governor
has said he will not entertain offers of land which are disputed.
The Governor has also said, that it is not right for one man to
sell the land to the Europeans, but that all the people should
consent. You are now disregarding the good law of the Governor,
and adopting a bad law. This is my word to you. I have no desire
for evil, but on the contrary, have great love for the Europeans
and Maories. Listen; my love is this, you and Parris put a stop
to your proceedings, that your love for the Europeans and the
Maories may be true. I have heard that you are coming to Waitara
with soldiers, and therefore I know that you are angry with me.
Is this your love for me, to bring soldiers to Waitara? This is
not love; it is anger. I do not wish for anger; all that I want
is the land. All the Governors and the Europeans have heard my
word, which is, that I will hold the land. That is all. Write
to me. Peace be with you.
Wiremu Kingi, on the eve of war, 21 February 1860
We shall live in a dreamland until we fairly conquer the rebel
natives (meaning all of them) and when we are absolute masters
of the country it will be time enough to talk of technical law
and civilized justice . . .
Judge Maning, 1869
This is the year of the daughters, this is the year of the lamb.
Titokowaru, 1867
4.1 PURPOSE
On behalf of the Government, Crown counsel accepted in this claim
that the Waitara purchase and the wars constituted an injustice
and were therefore in breach of the principles of the Treaty of
Waitangi. That admission is appropriate. The historical record
leads indelibly to the view that Wiremu Kingi and his people never
rebelled but were attacked by British troops in violation of the
principles of the Treaty. Thereafter, a climate for war developed,
where, in our view, Maori could not expect anything like the protection
promised in the Treaty. They had cause to consider, in the circumstances
of the time, that their best hopes for keeping their homes, lands,
and status lay in the assertion of arms.
Despite the Crowns admission, a review of the wars is required
to determine who was responsible. To begin with, the Government
of the day portrayed the wars as divided into two parts and admitted
responsibility for the first but blamed Maori for the second,
and on the basis of the second war, confiscated Maori land. More
particularly, in the Governments view, the first war, which started
with the assault on Kingis Te Kohia Pa on 17 March 1860, ended
with a truce on 18 March 1861. The second war, in the Governments
view, began with a Maori assault on a British escort at Oakura
on 4 May 1863 and continued intermittently until March 1869. The
confiscation was based on the second war and assumed that those
Maori who attacked the escort at Oakura, and those who subsequently
joined the fighting, were guilty of rebellion. For the reasons
given in this chapter, we consider that the second war began earlier
with the Governors invasion of that area and that the Government
was responsible for the second war, just as it admitted responsibility
for the first. We also consider, bearing in mind that the land
was confiscated from Maori on account of their alleged rebellion,
that rebellion against the Queens authority was not in fact the
Maori intent and, for the most part, cannot be shown to have existed
at the time the confiscations took place.
The wars at the time are also examined because they illuminate
the Maori positions. The fighting was such that inevitably there
were moments of attrition, yet we would say of the Maori leadership
that their actions were directed not against Pakeha as such but
against Government aggression and the denial of their rights.
The Maori search, as we read the record, was not for war but for
a peace where Maori would be respected and a proper relationship
with the Government would be forged.
To begin with, some factors may be noted to dispel popular misconceptions.
It is unlikely that Maori were unprepared for the size of the
force or the weaponry deployed against them. As a British ally
near Cook Strait, Wiremu Kingi had previous experience of British
troops. It is clear, however, that the British underestimated
the Maori capacity for war. Maori fighting strengths lay in their
careful strategies; ability to form common policy in war; familiarity
with the land; history of war experience; and ability to adapt
fortifications of palisades, bunkers, and trenches against artillery
attacks. Weakness lay in the absence of a central command, disparate
armies, and the lack of a full-time force. Maori fighters were
often accompanied by their families and regularly stopped war
to tend to crops. As a result, engagements were abandoned at crucial
times for domestic chores, especially during planting. None the
less, there was a capacity for sustained warfare with the result
that the anticipated quick victory at Waitara did not happen,
and hostilities continued for nine years. This was despite the
fact that an appreciation of Maori military capacities grew rapidly,
as evidenced by the early import of additional troops so that
Maori were outnumbered and outgunned throughout. The war opened
with 423 regular troops and 300 militia and volunteers against
Kingis force, which was estimated at 300. By September 1860,
there were 2300 Imperial troops. When other hapu joined the battle,
the fighters were estimated at 600 in the north and 800 in the
south. By 1864, and for the purpose of the Waikato campaign, the
Governor had amassed a force of 14,000. By early 1865, when General
Cameron opened a second front in Taranaki at Waitotara, nearly
5000 troops were employed in the province. It was apparent that
by then Maori fighting strengths were well known, though the taua
in Taranaki at this time comprised only about 1500 men, women,
and children to stand against the Imperial and colonial troops.
4.2 THE FIRST WAR
The record suggests the Governor assumed a quick and decisive
victory would be obtained to bring Kingi to submission and deter
others from joining the action. He was in fact to start a nine-year
war - a war that would spread widely through the island. On 17
March 1860, some 500 troops began the bombardment of Kingis Te
Kohia Pa. That night the defenders quietly evacuated, without
loss of life, and the next day the pa was taken empty. If it was
a British victory, it was a small one, for the ground was taken
but not the enemy. From a Maori point of view, the strategy was
necessary and proved successful. As discussed in chapter 3, the
aim was to gain support from other Maori by exposing the Governments
aggression (see sec 3.7).
The reprisals from other hapu came quickly. Those south of New
Plymouth, particularly Taranaki, Ngati Ruanui, and Nga Rauru,
attacked outlying settlers, who were forced to take refuge in
the township. The Governor was compelled to face opponents on
two flanks.
The next engagement, the so-called battle of Waireka on 28 March,
was a badly coordinated attempt by regular troops and local militia
to rescue besieged settlers south of New Plymouth. Though most
of the settlers were saved, Waireka was not the victory that the
Governor claimed. The European casualties numbered 14, according
to Cowan, and the Maori fatalities probably . . . 50, with as
many wounded, but Belich considers the Maori casualties were
grossly exaggerated and amounted to about one. In his view,
it was a classic example . . . of a paper victory. In reality,
the victory lay with the Taranaki war party and its allies, who
plundered the settler farms and endangered New Plymouth. Indeed,
in the early months of the war, Kingi and his allies held the
upper hand, with the settlers and the Imperial troops confined
to the township of New Plymouth and stockades at Omata and Waitara.
Many of the women and children were shifted to Nelson.
Far from being over quickly, it was soon apparent that the war
would be a prolonged encounter. Civilians were to be targeted
as well. Just as Maori attacked settlers and burned their homes,
the military attacked Maori villages and productive Maori farms,
leaving defended pa untouched. The bombardment of Warea Village
on 29 March and the destruction of its stores, stock, and crops
was a case in point.
The Governor waited for reinforcements before resuming the offensive.
Meanwhile, Maori were courting allies. In April, a delegation
representing Te Atiawa, Taranaki, and Ngati Ruanui tendered their
allegiance to King Potatau. Although the King advised his own
people against any intervention, others associated with the King
movement could not be stopped and war parties, mainly from Ngati
Maniapoto, went to Kingis aid. They moved along the old war trails
into north Taranaki, setting aside their traditional enmities
to fight in common cause.
Ngati Maniapoto first became involved in the fighting at Puketaukauere,
near Waitara, which Belich describes as the most important battle
in the Taranaki war. The Ngati Maniapoto taua, under Epiha Tokohihi,
joined forces with Te Atiawa under Kingis military commander
Hapurona, along with contingents from Taranaki, Nga Rauru, and
Whanganui - which gives some illustration of the widespread unity
of the time. Maori were opposed by elite troops from the 40th
Regiment, assisted by a naval brigade and guided by none other
than Ihaia Te Kirikumara. Though the British had superior numbers
and weaponry, they were outwitted by Hapurona and subjected to
what Belich has described as one of the three most clear cut
and disastrous defeats suffered by imperial troops in New Zealand.
The British defeat had a twofold effect. On the one hand, it engendered
a confidence in the Maori camp whereby some moved to the outskirts
of New Plymouth (though no frontal attack was mounted), with sections
of Waikato joining in. On the other, the British changed tactics,
preparing for a long haul. Colonel Gold, who was seen as incompetent,
was replaced by the cautious General Pratt, who used his troops
to dig long, laborious saps to the ramparts of pa before the final
assault. It was a slow and costly business, which much amused
Pratts foe, who offered to help in the work for a shilling a
day, only to abandon the pa at the last moment and start again
elsewhere.
In the spring of 1860, the pressure was reduced when Maori withdrew
to plant their crops. Even so, the British were unable to gain
any effective victories until, fortuitously, they won a battle
at Mahoetahi early in November. There, more than 600 British regulars,
colonial militia, and Maori allies attacked some 150 Waikato,
mostly Ngati Haua, under the command of Wetini Taipourutu, before
they managed to entrench themselves. Though they fought with reckless
bravado, Taipourutu and his men were heavily outnumbered, unable
to withstand the British bayonet charges, and suffered heavy casualties.
One-third of the force was killed and another third was wounded,
the British losing only four men, with 16 wounded.
Waikato reinforcements arrived seeking revenge, and the local
hapu who had not been engaged at Mahoetahi continued to harass
the army while constructing further pa. At the end of December,
Pratt took the field once more, carefully advancing by sap before
assaulting strongly defended pa at Kairau and Huirangi on the
northern approaches to Waitara. These pa also guarded Te Arei,
at the approach to the historic pa of Pukerangiora. It took Pratt
a month to capture Huirangi, though he also repulsed a reckless
counter-attack by Te Atiawa and Waikato troops on one of his redoubts,
inflicting almost as many casualties as were suffered at Mahoetahi.
After this, the military settled down to push a long double sap
towards Te Arei, while constructing further redoubts to protect
the rear. This incipient trench warfare was inconclusive, however,
with progress frequently being interrupted by Maori sniping by
day and filling the saps by night.
4.3 PEACE
So far, the war had produced no clear result but was enough to
encourage the Governor to accept a truce. The initiatives appear
to have come from Waikato. The Kingitanga was committed to supporting
Kingi, who had placed his lands under the mana of the Maori King,
but the support was through emissaries for peace rather than through
arms. The chief peacemaker was Wiremu Tamehana, the Ngati Haua
leader known as the kingmaker for his role in the selection
of a king. He opposed involving the Kingitanga in the Taranaki
war, urged Ngati Haua against joining Taipourutu there, and initiated
peace moves. For that purpose, the Kingitanga first met the Governor
in Auckland early in 1861. At that time, the Governor did not
agree. In March, Tamehana arrived in Taranaki but had difficulty
in persuading the military officers of his peaceful intent. The
Governor, however, sent the Native Secretary to the scene and
a cease-fire was agreed on 18 March. Tamati Ngapora and two other
Waikato rangatira then accompanied the Governor from Auckland
to Taranaki to finalise the peace terms.
The terms, formalised on 3 April, included a promise by the Governor
to investigate the Pekapeka purchase and to divide the land .
. . amongst its former owners. It was agreed that plunder taken
from settlers would be restored by Te Atiawa, who would submit
to the Queens authority. Tamehana signed for Waikato and Hapurona
for Te Atiawa, but not all Waikato felt bound, nor did all Te
Atiawa agree, Kingi himself declining to sign at that time. Other
Taranaki hapu were not involved.
Later, Kingi wrote to the Governor to say that he consented to
the peace, and then, as if to prove the integrity of his word,
he left Taranaki to take up residence with Rewi Maniapoto at Kihikihi,
where he remained for some two years. The cease-fire was maintained
for over two years, and there is no record that Kingi or his followers
ever returned to arms once their consent to the peace terms had
been given.
Following the peace agreement, Pekapeka remained occupied by the
military, pending an inquiry, while by way of set-off, the hapu
of central Taranaki, assisted by Ngati Ruanui from the south,
held on to Omata and Tataraimaka. Although not party to the peace
terms, they abided the arrangement and New Plymouth was not attacked.
There then occured what we consider a most provocative act, assuming
Maori were aware of it and understood its portent. Despite the
truce and though a question of land tenure had sparked the preceding
war, and without awaiting the Governors promised inquiry into
Pekapeka, the General Assembly passed the Native Lands Act 1862.
This replaced traditional communal tenure with ownership of prescribed
pieces in severalty along the very lines that the Governor had
sought and Kingi, rightly in our view, had opposed. Thus, the
Taranaki settlers had their way, even though the earlier Act,
the Native Territorial Rights Act, which provided for individual
Maori land ownership, had formerly been disallowed in Britain.
The purpose of the Native Lands Act, as we see it, was to facilitate
the sale of Maori land and prevent tribal leaders from exercising
any kind of tribal authority that might constrain sales.
The historical record also leaves little doubt that during this
period the Governor temporised with peace while preparing for
war. He used the time to plan the invasion of Waikato, because,
in his view, the Kingitanga was the core of the rebellion. During
the truce, which Maori scrupulously observed, most of the British
troops were shifted to Auckland to construct a military road through
the Hunua Ranges to the Waikato River. New Plymouth was very vulnerable
at this time, but no Maori attack was made.
The policy of promoting peace while preparing for war was continued
by the new Governor, Sir George Grey, who arrived late in 1861.
Grey established civil institutions in Maori districts, which
were headed by a European civil commissioner and officials but
included Maori assessors and constables, to work alongside Maori
runanga. While purporting to recognise Maori authority, this system
brought it under European control. In Waikato, it was seen as
a direct challenge to the Kingitanga, along with various other
measures aimed at military intervention, including the construction
of the military road from south Auckland towards the Kings inner
border at Mangatawhiri. With preparations for war becoming more
evident, the Kingitanga sent Pakeha residents out of Waikato and
declared they would fight if the military road crossed the Mangatawhiri
River. On 12 July 1863, the Imperial army and local militia crossed
the river, and the war in Waikato began.
The invasion of Waikato, for which the Government has now admitted
responsibility, enlarged the scope of the war. It assumed a national
character as Maori from as far afield as the East Coast went to
the support of the King.
Meanwhile, even before the invasion of Waikato, steps had been
taken to resurrect the Taranaki war.
4.4 RESUMPTION OF WAR
The events leading to the resumption of warfare in Taranaki need
analysis, because it is only on the second war that the land confiscations
were based. We summarise the events as follows:
That circumstances connected with the purchase of Waitara having
come to light which made it, in the opinion of Government, inadvisable
to complete the purchase, the government are willing and ready
to restore the Waitara to its former owners, and to publish a
general amnesty for all former offences; on condition that those
engaged in the late insurrection should absolutely separate themselves
from the Southern tribes and leave the punishment of the late
murders entirely in the hands of the Governor.
If they failed to comply and assisted the southern tribes:
the whole of their own land at Waitara will be declared forfeited
in like manner as the territory between Omata and Tataraimaika.
The retraction in respect of Pekapeka was amazing in light of
the tragedy of the previous war and startling for its omissions
and timing. The question of whether land could be sold without
a general hapu agreement was not considered. Instead, legislation
(the Native Land Act 1862) had already been passed to enable land
to be sold without tribal consent and control. The retraction
blatantly avoided an honest inquiry into who was to blame for
the war and gave no thought to compensating Maori. The retraction
was also made after the Oakura ambush and the resumption of hostilities.
If it were true that Maori had held the southern blocks as a quid
pro quo for Pekapeka, pending its return, and if the abandonment
of Pekapeka had been announced beforehand, the ambush might not
have happened. In a touch of irony, Pekapeka was confiscated two
years later on the basis that Kingi was at war, although there
is no evidence that he had engaged in hostilities since the resumption
of the war.
The retraction, it seems to us, was simply play-acting; the fabrication
of a scene to place blame on the former Governor, so that the
new Governor might restart the war with a clean slate.
We can thus reach some conclusions on the resumption of the war.
The Government contends that the second war dated from the Oakura
ambush of 4 May, a view that posits Maori as the aggressors and
responsible for the second war. That position has long been regarded
as untenable. The second war arose from the Governments breach
of the peace, the failure to inquire promptly and honestly into
Pekapeka, the military reoccupation of Omata and Tataraimaka,
and the military trespass on Maori land. These were hostile acts,
in our view, which were undertaken during the truce and which
could have implied only that the war had been unilaterally resumed.
They were contrary to the honest conduct expected under the principles
of the Treaty of Waitangi.
Our conclusion is thus similar to that reached by the Sim commission
in 1927, which apportioned no blame to Maori for the outbreak
of the second war but saw it as a continuation of the first. That
commission went further to observe that the armed occupation
of Tataraimaika was, in the circumstances, a declaration of war
against the Natives, and [it] forced them into the position of
rebels.
4.5 THE SECOND WAR
Some commentators have written of a Maori custom so precise that
even in war certain courses of action were predictable. In practice,
the war conventions of races are imperfectly observed but breaches
are not proof that no rules applied. With that qualification,
it may be said of the first war that it was characterised by set
battles, where gallantry and honour were not rare. Some indication
of the Maori attitude to warfare may be found in the Maori word
for enemy - hoariri, or ones friend in a fight. It may be said
of the second war, however, that it was marked by a descent to
attrition, as the Government faced criticism over progress and
as Maori saw that the war was no longer a dispute on the method
of buying land but part of a programme for confiscating their
land.
Change came in response to the Governments new policies. Formerly,
Maori had taken set positions, challenging the army to an open
contest. In the second war, the settlers were to remain behind
a protecting ring of redoubts, which the army gradually extended.
As the line of fortresses expanded, military settlers were introduced
to fill the land behind them. By this means, the frontier was
pushed beyond the lands claimed by purchase, to effect a creeping
confiscation of Maori land. It was a strategy of systematic military
conquest and colonisation that had been used as early as Roman
times in Britain. Under this new system, it was clear the objective
was no longer to define the settler and Maori pieces but to take
all the territory. In support came a series of proclamations,
laws, and regulations to make the process legal and to put Maori
in rebellion at law, irrespective of the position in fact.
Based on the research provided, we emphasise some features of
the war that might not otherwise be obvious. The war was not a
war between Maori and Pakeha. There were Maori on both sides,
and many Pakeha advocated a Maori point of view. Most prominent
among the latter were Sir William Martin, the retired chief justice,
who wrote extensively on the topic, Bishop Selwyn, and the Reverend
Octavius Hadfield. Even military officers were opposed to what
was happening, the commander of the Imperial forces eventually
resigning his office in protest. In effect, the war was about
Government policy, not race.
Similarly, it is not sufficient to say that certain hapu participated
in the war but the balance did not, because some hapu were divided
and, irrespective of the general tribal position, there were always
individuals who would go the other way.
In addition, the Maori involved were not limited to those from
Taranaki. Much to the Governments dismay, Maori from elsewhere
joined them, and much to Maori dismay, the Government itself recruited
Maori from outside.
Finally, the war should not be seen as an isolated event or one
continuous fight. While a constant tension was evident throughout
the nine-year course of the wars, there were lulls in the fighting
and civilian activities never ceased to expand. As stockades were
built, farms were settled, lands were surveyed, roads and (eventually)
railways were built, courts sat, and provincial councils deliberated.
The infrastructure of European settlement and officialdom was
being established.
4.6 THE MILITARY OCCUPATION OF CENTRAL TARANAKI
The second Taranaki war began in a desultory pattern of raids
and engagements south of New Plymouth. Once more, Tataraimaka
was abandoned by the Imperial army and the troops pulled back
to defensive positions at Omata and the Bell block. The settlers
remained in the sanctuary of the town or redoubts, while the army
conducted occasional raids on Maori pa and kainga.
The first indication of an invasion was a proclamation under the
Governments new policy of creeping confiscation. The proclamation,
published in the New Zealand Gazette on 6 July 1863, set
out conditions for a military settlement on Maori land between
Omata and Tataraimaka. The land was to be confiscated because,
it was claimed, the owners were responsible for the Oakura ambush.
The proclamation proposed the allocation of lands for settlers
in return for military service, prescribed the terms of service
and the allotments to be received, and defined the area to be
taken. All this was done, even though the empowering law for confiscation
had still to be enacted.
The military settlers, recruited mainly from the Victorian and
Otago goldfields, were rapidly introduced during the latter months
of 1863 and were soon engaged in hostilities alongside the Imperial
troops of the 57th Regiment and local Taranaki settler militia.
They were known variously as the Taranaki Military Settlers and
the Melbourne and Otago Volunteers and fought as a separate company
in a series of search and destroy missions south of Oakura. They
gave new impetus to the scorched earth practice of laying waste
to Maori villages and cultivations in the area.
It was soon apparent that the establishment of the military settlement
in central Taranaki was likely to be but a foretaste of much more.
The New Zealand Settlements Act of 3 December 1863, which followed
soon after, envisaged large-scale land confiscation of loyal and
rebel land alike. Military settlements; a scorched earth policy
of attrition, with indiscriminate attacks on villages, whether
warlike or otherwise; confiscation without distinction as to loyal
or rebel land; and the Governments unlikely claim to have purchased
Waitotara, despite the trouble over Waitara, could have served
only to convince Maori that the settlers hunger for land knew
no bounds. Unsurprisingly, a new level of desperation became evident
in the Maori response. This was first apparent following a search
and destroy operation and the destruction of Maori crops at Ahuahu,
near Oakura, by a party from the 57th Regiment. The group was
taken by surprise on 6 April and the captain and six others were
killed. This was the first known action in the war by the adherents
of Pai Marire, a religion based largely on the Old Testament and
founded by Te Ua Haumene at Te Namu in September 1862. Following
tradition to demonstrate the vulnerability of an enemy, and with
the biblical precedent of David and Goliath and others to sustain
it, the slain soldiers were decapitated. The heads were preserved
and later taken around the island by emissaries of the new faith
to symbolise their power and enlist support for their cause. They
suceeded in attracting many, and they then directed their efforts
away from their own area to relieving Te Atiawa in the north.
The Te Atiawa position is now explained.
4.7 THE MILITARY OCCUPATION OF NORTH TARANAKI
There was little sign of Te Atiawa aggression after the resumption
of war in May 1863 and yet their lands were also about to be invaded
and confiscated. Kingis Natives, as they were called in the
local press, reinforced their old pa and were sometimes engaged
in skirmishes with the settler militia, usually over cattle, but
they did not go on the offensive. Kingi himself was not involved.
On the contrary, his actions were exemplary. When the first war
ended, he left Waitara to live with Rewi Maniapoto at Kihikihi
in the King Country, and he was still there when the second Taranaki
war started. Having agreed to the truce and having obtained the
Governors admission that the Pekapeka arrangements were wrong,
for the most part Kingi distanced himself from the scene, providing
the Governor with no proper grounds for further military action
against him or for the confiscation of his land, but his lands
were invaded and confiscated just the same.
The army, which had begun its attacks on central Taranaki, extended
its raids on Maori pa and kainga into north Taranaki, initially
utilising strongholds at New Plymouth and on the Bell block. Later,
in September 1863, the colonial troops went on the offensive when
the Forest Rangers attacked Te Atiawa Maori in the bush between
the Bell block and Mataitawa.
Subsequently, the military presumed not merely to attack Maori
on Crown land but to begin the occupation of the Maori lands as
well. Early in the execution of that strategy came the occupation
of a pa on Maori land at Sentry Hill, north of the Waiongana River,
by the Taranaki Volunteers in January 1864. In February, troops
under the command of Colonel Warre began constructing a redoubt
there, at this stage without resistance from local Maori, though
they were reported to have called for support from the south.
The Maori response, when it finally came on 30 April 1864, was
led by prophets of the Pai Marire faith, though the founder, Te
Ua, was not there. With a combined force of some 200, thought
to be of Te Atiawa, Taranaki, Ngati Ruanui, Nga Rauru, and Whanganui
hapu, they assaulted Sentry Hill. The redoubt, being on Te Atiawa
land, was a deliberate affront and challenge to Te Atiawa and
their allies. According to British reports, the Pai Marire force
advanced on the redoubt in broad daylight, fully exposed with
their right hands raised and chanting hapa, pai marire. They
were cut down in droves, with about 50 killed, including the leader,
the apostle Hepanaia Kapewhiti. A recent historian, Paul Clark,
has cast doubts on this and other depictions of Pai Marire and
their alleged blind fanaticism at Sentry Hill. Such characterisations
helped justify British aggression. The Pai Marire party, in Clarkes
view, had expected the troops to emerge from the redoubt to fight
them in the open. Pai Marire, meaning peace, was indicative
of the movements ostensible purpose. The name Hauhau was given
to it by the settlers.
Late in 1864, as the war in other parts of the country ended,
troops were released to concentrate on Taranaki, and the military
occupation of Maori land in north Taranaki was resumed. In October,
the troops captured Manutahi Pa near Sentry Hill. Then, the formidable
Te Arei Pa, which had frustrated General Pratt in 1860 and 1861,
was taken without a fight. Wiremu Kingis people, who had put
up little resistance, withdrew along the Whakaahurangi track into
Ngati Maru country on the upper Waitara River, where they were
to stay for the remainder of the war. Later on, Kingi was to join
them there.
The military established a line of redoubts along the lower Waitara
at Mataitawa, Manutahi, Matakara, Te Arei, and Huirangi. These
in turn provided security for military settlements that were later
established at Mataitawa, Manutahi, Huirangi, and Manganui. At
the same time, the lands on either side of the Waitara River were
formally confiscated, as will be discussed in chapter 5, by proclamations
on 31 January 1865 (for the lands to the south) and 5 September
1865 (for the lands to the north).
In the early months of 1865, the pattern of military occupation
and creeping confiscation was extended northwards, not because
of any local hostility but because of a rumour that the old war
paths would be used again by the Waikato tribes. In April, Pukearuhe
in the far north was occupied by troops on Colonel Warres instructions
after reports were received of the movements of the Rebel Natives
apparently with a view to recommencing hostilities in the Province.
In fact, there is no record of any hostilities at all but a military
settlement was established. A military redoubt was erected soon
after at Urenui. Although the Ngati Mutunga people there and at
Mimi were seen as loyal to the Crown, the military were concerned
about Kingi, who had returned to Taranaki and was said to be at
Kaipikari, near Urenui. Kingi did not offer any resistance and
retired to the upper Waitara River, where he remained until 1872.
In May, another military settlement was established at Tikorangi,
on the north bank of the Waitara, where the local Ngati Rahiri
people were also loyal. All this occurred before the land was
formally confiscated by the proclamation on 5 September 1865.
With such a lapse of time as now prevails, one cannot be certain
of all the facts, but the historical record certainly suggests
that the whole or at least the greater part of northern Taranaki
was invaded, occupied, and finally confiscated without any act
of rebellion having taken place from and after 1 January 1863,
being the date from which the law of confiscation for rebellion
applied. In so far as Maori fought at all - and few did - they
were merely defending their kainga, crops, and land against military
advance and occupation. The only possible exception of which we
are aware is the Maori attack on Sentry Hill. This redoubt, erected
on Te Atiawa land after the truce and without any act of aggression,
rebellion, or insurrection to justify the occupation of the land,
was an unlawful trespass, if not an invasion, and Te Atiawa were
entitled to seek the recovery of that which was theirs. Technically,
however, the attack may be classed as a rebellion, but a Pai Marire
rebellion, not a rebellion by Te Atiawa as such, unless there
is evidence that the Te Atiawa leadership was implicated. Whatever
the view, however, Sentry Hill was a small part indeed of the
tribal and geographical landscape of north Taranaki, and the attack
could not possibly have justified the confiscation of the whole
area, including lands well beyond Te Atiawas influence.
Indeed, with the absence of Maori-initiated warfare in north Taranaki
after the truce, one could fairly ask whether, apart from immediate
responses to the initiatives of the Imperial troops, the second
war ever really happened there. In the result, when most of north
Taranaki was eventually confiscated in 1865, for the ostensible
purpose of introducing settlers to the land to keep the peace,
in terms of the legislation all that was necessary to keep the
peace was for the army to withdraw. There was no need or justification
for the Act to be applied, because Maori were not at war.
In other words, on the evidence, such as it is now, one can assume
only that the confiscation of the whole of north Taranaki was
not only contrary to the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi
but unlawful in terms of the confiscation legislation itself,
for the fundamental circumstances on which any action under that
Act might be taken did not exist at the time that action was taken.
Of course, it may be that there were circumstances that were known
at the time and of which we are now unaware, even though we have
examined a substantial collection of documents. We consider, however,
that the confiscation of the thousands of acres of a distinct
people could not be said to have been done with any measure of
integrity when there was no carefully documented record of the
acts of aggression and warlike circumstances that would justify,
without any measure of doubt, such an extreme measure. In fact,
the evidence is rather of a culpable lack of concern. At best,
it was assumed a warlike state applied. At worst, evidence that
a warlike state did not exist was deliberately ignored. This applies
especially to the confiscation in the far north and to the first
military settlements there. It is perfectly clear, and was obviously
known at the time, that the war had not extended that far and
the hapu there were at peace. If, on military grounds, there had
been a case for a military outpost at Pukearuhe - to guard against
possible Kingitanga raids into Taranaki - that could not justify
the confiscation of the surrounding land of local people who were
not in rebellion.
In any event, the war in north Taranaki was at an end. The only
subsequent trouble, the killing of the Wesleyan missionary John
Whitely and several military settlers in February 1869, was carried
out not by local hapu but by others from outside Taranaki and
occurred long after the confiscations had been made.
4.8 THE MILITARY OCCUPATION OF SOUTH TARANAKI
The third expansion of the military frontier came from Whanganui
in the south. Though the Imperial troops and military settlers
held redoubts beyond New Plymouth as far as Tataraimaka, the long
territory from there to Whanganui remained in Maori hands. In
the southern region lay the Waitotara block. In July 1863, the
Government claimed to have completed the purchase of that block
by a payment to some Nga Rauru Maori. In 1864, in preparation
for the sale of Waitotara land to settlers, a road was pushed
into the block, to the consternation of local Nga Rauru, who viewed
it as Waikato had viewed the military road to Mangatawhiri. A
sale was held in Wellington on 17 October 1864, when 12,475 acres
of land were sold, including 1980 acres for military land orders.
In November, as the road work approached the Waitotara River,
the road makers were stopped by Hare Tipene and Pehimana. Though
the sale of the Waitotara block was hotly disputed, to have taken
the road beyond the Waitotara River would have been to invade
what was clearly Maori land. The Governor responded by instructing
General Cameron, who had now completed the Waikato and Tauranga
campaigns, to use two regiments to secure sufficient possession
of land between Whanganui and the Patea River in order that the
Waitotara road could proceed. It was the beginning of a grand
strategy for a thoroughfare north from Whanganui to New Plymouth,
with redoubts and military settlements to protect it along the
way.
As in north Taranaki, the military advance and settlement preceded
formal confiscation. Camerons advance from Whanganui began early
in 1865. The confiscation itself was not effected until 5 September
1865, when the whole of the coast from Whanganui to Tataraimaka
was taken. The military fought an engagement at Nukumaru, in the
middle of the Waitotara block, on 24 January, crossed the Waitotara
River on 3 February, and then continued their advance northwards.
They were continually harassed by Maori forces, being unwilling
to follow them into the bush or even assault them in strongly
entrenched pa. The failure to attack Weraroa, subsequently captured
by a mixed force of colonial militia and Maori auxiliaries, serves
as an example. Nevertheless, the slow advance continued and military
posts were established at the various river crossings. By the
end of March, the troops had reached the Waingongoro River, deep
in Ngati Ruanui territory. Settlement proceeded behind the military
progression.
At the same time, Colonel Warre was extending military outposts
south of New Plymouth. In April 1865, he established posts at
Warea and Opunake. Early in June, two small British forces, one
from Opunake, the other from Waingongoro, effected a junction.
The old coastal track from Whanganui to New Plymouth was thus
reopened, but it was only precariously held since the military
authority hardly extended beyond rifle-shot from the redoubts.
Over the next few months, there was considerable fighting following
the destruction of undefended kainga in the vicinity of Warea.
At the end of 1865, the character of the war changed again. The
scorched earth policy of stripping the land of Maori homes and
crops that had been applied since the beginning of the war in
1863 was supplemented by bush-scouring. This strategy aimed
to take the fight to Maori in the bush, the army by then having
the assistance of Maori contingents from other districts. Though
the British regiments were being withdrawn, in accordance with
the self-reliant policy of the Government of the time, the remaining
troops were put under the command of Major-General Trevor Chute.
Cameron had been reluctant to prosecute the war, which he saw
as being prolonged in order to facilitate land confiscation. Chute,
on the other hand, was prepared to wage the war relentlessly and
to carry it into the bush. On 30 December, he led a mixed force
of Imperial troops, colonial militia, and the Whanganui Native
Contingent to attack bush settlements and destroy crops north
of Waitotara. In mid-January 1866, Chutes force captured the
strongly fortified Otapawa Pa on the Tangahoe River. The force
then moved across the Waingongoro River, destroying kainga as
it went. Instead of proceeding along the coast, however, Chute
went inland, following the ancient Whakaahurangi track, which
ran around the eastern foothills of Taranaki to Pukerangiora on
the Waitara River. After an exhausting nine days march, Chutes
force arrived in New Plymouth on 26 January 1866. Then, to complete
the subjugation of the province, he took the troops back round
the coast, completing the encirclement of Taranaki mountain and
assaulting Maori pa along the way. In a campaign that lasted five
weeks, Chutes force destroyed seven fortified pa and 21 kainga
and inflicted heavy casualties. Belich was to write:
Not all the pa stormed were hostile, not all the villages destroyed
were fortified, and not all the Maori slain were armed, but the
devastation was just the same. This was the terrible strategy
known as bush-scouring - sudden attacks on soft targets, even
deep in the bush.
This was the last significant involvement of British troops in
the New Zealand wars. Although one British regiment remained in
New Zealand until 1871, it was largely confined to barracks. For
the remainder of the war, the fight against Maori resisters was
carried out by colonial militia, military settlers, and Maori
units.
It was now assumed that the confiscated land of south Taranaki
could be occupied by military settlers. Some 50,000 acres between
the Waitotara and Waingongoro Rivers were laid out for military
settlers around townships at Kakaramea, Mokoia, and Ohawe, while
a military camp was established at Patea under Major Thomas McDonnell.
A survey of land for settlement was started at Manutahi in Pakakohi
country, but it was resisted and warfare was resumed. In the second
half of 1866, McDonnells forces fought several engagements against
Ngati Ruanui and their allies, including a sharp conflict at Pungarehu,
just to the west of the Waingongoro River.
4.9 TITOKOWARUS WAR
The final phase of the war is named after its chief protagonist,
Riwha Titokowaru, the leader and prophet of Nga Ruahine. Though
much of the person and his motives for beginning and abandoning
the war remain obscure, his reputation was widespread. Titokowarus
onslaught on the settlements of south Taranaki was so successful
that Whanganui was threatened and fears were held for settlers
as far south as Wellington. Yet his military campaigns ended when,
for unknown reasons and while at the height of success, his forces
abandoned their position. Titokowaru himself took refuge with
Ngati Maru.
On General Chutes March by Gustavus von Tempsky. Photograph
courtesy of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.
The extent of Titokowarus influence and his initial hopes for
peace were apparent when he announced 1867 as the year of the
daughters and the lamb, because Maori resistance then ceased.
European settlement was to proceed unhindered, save that Ngati
Ruanui and Pakakohi expected the settlers to obey Maori laws and
exacted muru against settlers as punishment for offences. In Belichs
view, Titokowarus peacemaking was so successful that it alone
would have made him famous had he done nothing else. Cowan,
on the other hand, claimed that Titokowaru used the peace to organise
for war.
Whatever the explanation, the year of the lamb was replaced by
the year of the lion. The change apparently followed a dispute
over some horses and the overly zealous actions of a magistrate
in arresting three of Titokowarus men. In June 1868, three military
settlers were killed in reply at Te Rauna, east of the Waingongoro
River, by a party from Titokowarus pa at Te Ngutu-o-te-manu.
Another military settler was killed a few days later near the
redoubt at Waihi. A hotel and house belonging to Edward McDonnell,
Colonel McDonnells brother, were burned down. It appeared Titokowaru
was challenging Colonel McDonnell to fight. McDonnell was the
target of Maori criticism following allegations that he had been
party to a cavalry charge on, and killing of, a group of defenceless
children. Then, on 12 July, a force led by Haowhenua, a close
relative of Titokowaru, stormed the redoubt at Turuturu-mokai,
near Hawera, killing 10 and wounding six of the garrison of 27.
Upon the arrival of a relief force led by Von Tempsky, the Maori
troops withdrew, leaving three dead.
With only one Imperial regiment remaining, the colonists had to
rely largely on their own resources. McDonnell assembled a mixed
force of nearly 1000 volunteer militia, military settlers, and
Maori allies from Whanganui for an advance on Titokowarus settlement
at Te Ngutu-o-te-manu. Titokowaru, by contrast, had a force of
about 60, mostly Nga Ruahine. Despite the imbalance, the contest,
when it finally occurred on 21 August, was indecisive. McDonnell
attacked an undefended settlement, but his troops were continually
harassed as they withdrew. His second attack on 7 September was
a disaster. In seeking to advance on the pa from the rear, many
of the soldiers became lost in the bush. When they reached a clearing
and began to attack the pa, they were met by withering fire from
Maori concealed in the surrounding bush. McDonnell lost control
and could not coordinate his forces, and his withdrawal turned
into a rout, his fleeing troops being continually harassed. Altogether,
24 of McDonnells men were killed, including five officers. The
claim that Titokowarus losses were 28 was unsubstantiated and
is thought to be unlikely.
Titokowaru then challenged McDonnell again by moving south across
the Waingongoro River and occupying open country at Taiporohenui.
McDonnell made a desultory attack on 20 September, but retreated
without dislodging him. With the remnant of his volunteer army
disintegrating and the Maori allies returning to Whanganui, McDonnell
was forced to retreat still further. All redoubts north of the
Patea River were abandoned, along with the main military camp
at Waihi, though a garrison remained holed up at the Patea township.
Titokowaru, on the other hand, increased his strength with the
addition of Pakakohi and Nga Rauru allies, and proceeded to harass
settlers still in occupation of land south of the Waitotara River.
Before McDonnell could organise a counter-attack, he was dismissed
from the command and replaced by Colonel Whitmore. Titokowaru
had built a new pa at Moturoa, just inside the bushline between
the Waitotara and Whenuakura Rivers. Whitmore assaulted the pa
with a combined force of colonial volunteers and Whanganui allies
but they were repulsed by a counter-attack from the pa and the
surrounding bush. This time the troops beat an organised retreat,
suffering some 50 or 60 casualties. Once again, Titokowarus victory
brought him new recruits - from the local Nga Rauru and even,
it appears, from central and north Taranaki - giving him a force
of about 1000. He then continued his relentless advance southwards,
threatening the small garrison at Weraroa and another at Nukumaru,
and constructing a pa at Tauranga-ika, within 20 kilometres of
Whanganui. Whitmores troops were forced to retreat yet further,
and by 18 November, Titokowaru had reached Kai Iwi, within eight
kilometres of Whanganui.
The threat to colonial settlements was not confined to Whanganui.
Te Kooti had escaped from the Chatham Islands and on 10 November
he had attacked the settlers at Matawhero near Gisborne. Whitmore
had to withdraw his best troops for an East Coast campaign, leaving
Titokowaru in command of the countryside throughout south Taranaki
to the outskirts of Whanganui. With the forts, redoubts, and military
camps of south Taranaki abandoned, the settlers in refuge at Whanganui,
and 1000 Maori troops encamped in a pa nearby, and with the contemporaneous
attacks from Te Kooti in Poverty Bay and the Bay of Plenty, the
colony faced its darkest moment. Titokowaru, however, did not
attack.
It was not until Te Kooti was dislodged from his fortress at Ngatapa
early in January 1869 that operations against Titokowaru could
be resumed. On 2 February, Whitmore and some 2000 troops began
an artillery bombardment on Titokowarus elaborately engineered
and virtually impregnable pa at Tauranga-ika. Titokowarus troops
returned fire then, unexpectedly, evacuated the pa in the night.
The remainder of the war consisted of the pursuit of Titokowarus
disbanding forces. In the weeks that followed, there were engagements
at Weraroa, on the west bank of the Waitotara River, and at Otautu,
on the east bank of the Patea River, with a last engagement in
March 1869 at Whakamara near Taiporohenui, the site of one of
the first anti-land selling hui as long ago as 1854. Titokowaru,
now a fugitive with a price of £1000 on his head, inflicted
casualties on his pursuers but always managed to extricate himself.
He was never captured and took refuge with Ngati Maru in the upper
reaches of the Waitara River. The long Taranaki wars had ended.
In recognition of that fact, 233 Pakakohi men, women, and children
came down from the hills and surrendered on the basis of promises
they would not be harmed. Of these, 96 were tried for treason
and 74 were sentenced to death, the sentences being later commuted
to imprisonment in Dunedin. It was the start of a new route for
Taranaki Maori - the trail of broken promises.
4.10 CONCLUSIONS
For the reasons given in chapter 3, the Governments initial invasion
of north Taranaki was, in our view, contrary to the principles
of the Treaty of Waitangi. Wiremu Kingi was forthright in the
pursuit of peace and did not rebel, but he was attacked. In the
second war, north Taranaki was invested once more, and again,
there was no prior act of aggression or provocation from Maori
to justify the action taken. Kingi actually left the district,
which gave the Government no ground to fight again or to take
his peoples land. The record is sufficiently clear to establish
that the Government was the aggressor and, consequently, that
its action in taking up arms against Maori in north Taranaki and
occupying and confiscating their land was contrary to the Treaty.
In addition, though questions of law require another standard
of evidential proof, now hampered by lapse of time, we think it
probable, on the historical record and for the reasons given earlier,
that the confiscation of north Taranaki was unlawful as well.
Central Taranaki was invaded on the basis that local hapu had
breached the truce by carrying out the Oakura ambush. In fact,
the Government had earlier breached the truce by taking Omata
and Tataraimaka and by conducting military manoeuvres on Maori
land. The Oakura ambush must be seen as an attempt by Maori to
stop the militarys continued trespass. The Sim commission came
to the view that the Crowns armed occupation of the Tataraimaka
block was, in the circumstances, a declaration of war against
the Natives . . . [which] forced them into the position of rebels.
The commission appears to have concluded that in the first war
Maori were not in rebellion but fighting in self-defence and that
in the second they were forced into rebellion. Leaving aside for
the moment some questions as to the extent to which Maori could
lawfully respond to aggression, we concur with the Sim commissions
view that the second war began with the Crowns taking of Omata
and Tataraimaka. In addition, we would give weight to the military
activity carried out on Maori land between those blocks. It seems
to us that the Maori action was carefully planned to occur on
their own land so there could be no doubting that they were responding
to aggression.
Given the circumstances in which the Crown invaded the area -
during a truce, without prior discussion, and without mention
of the proposed return of Waitara - it is apparent that the Government
was setting up a situation where the inevitable Maori response
would put Maori in the wrong. Accordingly, the intention as we
see it was not to challenge the Queens authority but to respond
to an invasion. That invasion was without just cause and contrary
to Treaty principles.
Whether or not the confiscation was unlawful for lack of evidence
of rebellion is another issue. The legal issues are more fully
developed in the next chapter, but it may be said here that there
were occasions when the Maori response, though justified, was
not strictly limited to self-defence and that therefore there
was a rebellion in terms. That in itself, in terms of the law,
was sufficient to permit the area to the south of New Plymouth
to be confiscated, as was done in January 1865. Our concern for
the moment is that in September 1865 the land confiscated extended
far beyond the area to the south of New Plymouth and covered the
whole of central Taranaki. We can find no evidence that, as at
the date of that confiscation, the central hapu were in rebellion
in any part, save, for the above reasons, for the Oakura area.
At the time in question, they were subjected to the invasion of
troops under Cameron and Warre, with indiscriminate attacks on
pa and kainga, but the evidence is that their response at the
time (but not afterwards) was entirely in self-defence. From this
distance in time, one cannot be completely sure of the facts,
but once more it certainly appears that the confiscation of almost
all of central Taranaki was unlawful at the time and that the
New Zealand Settlements Act 1863 was wrongfully applied.
The war in the south was also commenced by the Government and
again, being done without just cause, was contrary to the Treaty
of Waitangi. More particularly, the Government began the war not
because of any prior hapu acts but because of Maori opposition
to the Governments purchase of the Waitotara block and the construction
of a military road over the land. The purchase of that block,
however, was even less defensible than that of the Pekapeka block,
where the Government admitted its wrongdoing. Here again, Maori
had good cause to protest the survey and sale of the block and
the construction of roads on that land. There was thus no justification
for the use of military force to take the land or to extend the
invasion well beyond the block to take the whole of south Taranaki.
In our view, that action was also contrary to the principles of
the Treaty.
Here again, we consider there was no rebellion at the time of
the confiscation, but rather there were at that time acts of self-defence
in the face of an overt invasion. Certainly acts of aggression
well beyond self-defence came later in response to the confiscations
and other Government action. It appears to us, however, that at
the material times (from 1 January 1863 to the confiscation in
1865) there had been no rebellion in terms anywhere within the
relevant part of the Ngati Ruanui confiscation district. Again,
it would seem that the lawfulness of the confiscations, in terms
of the Governments own legislation, is very much in question.
Speaking more broadly, and not in terms of the strict letter of
the law, it is doubtful that any Maori could be seen as acting
from other than a defensive position once Wiremu Kingi was so
clearly and unjustifiably attacked and the Pekapeka and Waitotara
blocks were so easily acquired, or once Omata and Tataraimaka
were taken during a truce, for the trust in the Governor was broken.
Conversely, no Government action can be read as being consistent
with Treaty principles when underlying the action as a whole was
an intention, manifest at an early stage of the war, to confiscate
the greater part of the land for European settlement. Thereafter,
the Government could no longer be impartial. The appearance became
more important than the reality. All that was needed to justify
the Governments actions was for Maori to react predictably to
the deployment of troops, or settlers, on Maori lands. Similarly,
promises and proclamations that lands would not be confiscated
from those who laid down arms were meaningless when they bore
no relation to the creeping confiscation that was happening on
the ground and the indiscriminate attacks on villagers. Maori
were not rebelling but simply responding and had been left with
no choice if they were to avoid being subjugated and dispossessed
of their land. On their own terms, they were bound to take action
to keep the balance, as required by utu.
Legal machinations to define, declare, and create rebellion, as
referred to hereafter, were likewise unjustified when what was
fought for was that which no free society could deny and that
which the Treaty had guaranteed. It was evident from an early
stage that Maori were fighting to protect their way of life, their
freedoms as a people, and, more pragmatically, their hearth and
home.
Though the wars united the Maori of Taranaki in unexpected ways,
with taua coming from all over to assist those who were attacked,
the wars also divided people, because while most of the friendly
native contingents came from outside Taranaki, some of the local
hapu actively assisted the Government. The local divisions created
a lasting bitterness between the loyals and the rebels.
There was also some particular anger from the loyals. The confiscations
included the land of loyals and rebels alike, and the former had
to prove their loyalty before a court. As is noted later, in most
cases the court then failed to protect loyal groups in the ownership
of their land. Certain Maori auxiliaries who found they were treated
no better than those branded as rebels were particularly bitter.
The outstanding loyalist Major Keepa, for example, became a leading
opponent of the Government over the alienation of Maori land,
and other leading loyals were later to be imprisoned for their
protest actions. It was one of the surer points of the war that
in the end it did not matter which side one had been on. Maori
loyalty was something the Government respected when it had need
to and forgot when it did not.
Relevant in assessing the impact of the war is the length of it.
It is sometimes not appreciated that the wars lasted longer in
Taranaki than anywhere else. The New Zealand wars began there.
The focus then shifted to other parts of the country, but the
main engagements lasted for only 18 months in Waikato and were
over even sooner in other centres like Tauranga, Whakatane, Opotiki,
Gisborne, Wairoa, and Hawkes Bay. Throughout this time, the war
in Taranaki continued and it was there that, after nine years
and following the concentrated efforts of the battalions that
had fought elsewhere, the major engagements of the New Zealand
wars ended. That was in 1869, but even then, Maori resistance
had not finished. Passive resistance continued in Taranaki, culminating
in the 1881 invasion of Parihaka by a force of 1500 soldiers,
who sacked the village and harassed and dispersed its population.
Some indication of the scale of the war is apparent from the record
of troop deployments. At the start of the first war in 1860, British
troops in Taranaki numbered 800. By 1861, that number had risen
to 3500, and by 1865, it was nearly 5000. Maori were consistently
outnumbered, there being an estimated 200 to 300 Te Atiawa and
400 to 500 central and southern fighters and not more than 1500
altogether, if we include women and children with the men. Titokowaru
fought his first campaign outnumbered by nearly 12 to one. By
the mid-1860s, there were several native contingents serving with
the Imperial army, including 457 men of the Whanganui Native Contingent
in the field in November 1868.
At this distance in time, it is impossible to quantify the losses
of life and property. Cowans casualty figures (taken from official
records) were, as he admitted, clearly too low with regard to
the Maori side, because, in accordance with certain beliefs, Maori
removed their dead and wounded from battle sites. The record for
Taranaki, however, is that 534 Maori were killed and 161 wounded,
while 205 Taranaki and colonial troops and Maori allies were killed
and 321 wounded.
Personal injury and the loss of crops and homes is part of the
equation in assessing the consequences. Of course, settlers lost
too, but without wishing to minimise the extent of destruction
and slaughter that they suffered, it should not be forgotten that
a claims system was introduced for their property losses, and
they were compensated from the proceeds of the sale of Maori land.
There was no compensation for Maori and their loss was permanent.
The greater part of Taranaki was simply confiscated.
The larger loss on both sides arose from the legacy of fear and
loathing. The prospect of a conquest by Maori seemed never more
likely than in Taranaki. The consequential fear led to an outburst
of hatred, with Maori regularly depicted in cartoons, papers,
and periodicals in an unwholesome way. Some sensitivity to racial
characterisations remains, for cartoon images of a heathen and
contemptible people survived to influence generations of racial
attitudes.
Retribution was also swift and terrible. For reasons given later,
we doubt that any Maori were more harshly treated in post-war
operations than those of Taranaki. Incarceration was to became
the order of the day, beginning with the Pakakohi people sent
to Dunedin.
For Maori, the picture of Pakeha was little better. Recollections
of atrocities were passed down, mainly from the scorched earth
and bush scouring periods, and though their veracity may not all
be proven, the significant reality is that such images remain.
Those incidents with some corroboration in contemporary written
accounts include attacks on civilian targets, of which a notable
example is the bombardment and sacking of the prosperous Warea
Mission, which traded in flour and other foodstuffs, while the
nearby pa, which was set up for an encounter, was avoided. The
slaughter of unarmed persons is also referred to; for example,
the attack on Pokaikai after it had sought neutrality or peace
and the sabre charge on a party of 12 boys aged six to 12, which,
by the soldiers reckoning, killed eight. The bounty of £10
a head for chiefs and £5 for ordinary men, which unexpectedly
led to decapitations, has also been recorded, together with various
reports of rape, plunder, pillage, and the destruction of crops,
waka, homes, and sacred shrines.
The consequences cannot be assessed solely in terms of property
loss and personal injuries: the homes destroyed, crops burned,
and numbers killed or maimed. The atrocities of the war, real
or imagined, linger in peoples minds. The legacy of fear and
racial hatred was manifest in acts of retribution against Maori
for many years to come. On the Maori side, memories of the war
have lasted longer because they were, and remain, excluded from
their forebears lands. Every nook and cranny of those lands was
redolent with ancient history and meaning, and the silent land
spoke loudly to them of their ancestors and their own dispossession.
They were confronted by a new landscape, peopled by military settlers
and grid-ironed with forts and redoubts. They had to contend with
new layers of authority, exercised by local, provincial, and central
government officials. All came to supplant the rangatiratanga
of their chiefs, who were submerged by colonisation.
We were reminded of this in certain submissions during the Tribunal
sittings at Waitara. It became obvious there that, though the
wars are remote for some, for others the message remains alive;
this dark era of our history is deeply entrenched in their consciousness
and a litany of landmarks serves as a daily reminder to them.
Beneath the escarpment that marks the Owae-Waitara Marae, for
example, is the town of Waitara, where the wars began. There,
on the lands that were once held by Wiremu Kingi and generations
of his forebears, and to the offence of many Maori, the street
names are a celebration of military and political conquerors.
It is our view that name changes are needed. It is when leaders
like Kingi, who understood the prerequisites for peace, are similarly
memorialised on the land and embedded in public consciousness
that those names will cease to stand for conquest and the Waitara
war will end.
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