Map showing the Claimants’ Boundaries for the Taranaki Report to the Waitangi Tribunal From The Taranaki Report to the Waitangi Tribunal, 1996.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
American Indian Relations Indian raids were not unusual events in the early 1860s. Many settlements were open to attack because soldiers and civilian.
Advertisements

THE ERA OF GOOD FEELINGS JAMES MONROES PRESIDENCY
Common Ground Bill Macnaught Manager Puke Ariki. Pooh K R E Key.
The Waitara Dispute Crown and Te Teira vs Wiremu Kingi.
Objectives Explain the conflict between Native Americans and British settlers in Describe how the colonists responded to British tax laws. Describe.
The Articles of Confederation
The Treaty of Waitangi/ Te Tiriti o Waitangi
Warm Up Growth of the African-American Population: Year Population , , , , ,
To what extent has Canada affirmed collective rights?
Introduction to Maori history and culture
New Zealand -Maori. Facts -Ethnologists estimated that the date of the first Polynesian contact in New Zealand was 750 AD -In New Zealand 2006 census,
Location – Which battles took place on American Indian land?
Simona Nati. 1.The Maori had 66 million acres of land 2.Europeans will not give their lands for 6d. an acre - not for two pounds, or three, or ten.
Tensions Grow Between the Colonies and Great Britain
Effects of the Reformation
Red River And The Métis. The Events at Red River The Surveyors Arrive National Committee of the Métis The Lieutenant-Governor Arrives Forming a Provisional.
ne&new_date=26/08.
Chapter 8 The Courts in New Zealand. District Court High Court Court of Appeal Privy Council Family Court Disputes Tribunal Other Specialist Courts Finis.
The Story of William Penn William Penn was born October 24, 1644 in the country of England. Penn attended school until age 12. After that he had private.
PARIHAKA. Background According to the terms of the Treaty of Waitangi, the Crown had the monopoly of the purchase of Māori land. However, many Māori considered.
Constitution. What Happened After the War? 10 of the 13 states adopted their own constitutions. Soon after they started having conflicts. States were.
C H A P T E R 18 The Federal Court System
Watertown City School District Grade 4 Social Studies Test Chapter 7 Part 1 Multiple Choice Part 2 Constructed Response Questions Student Name: School.
Native American Removal from Georgia October 1, 2012.
Chapter 7 Westward Expansions & Native Americans.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Indian Removal.
Native American Conflicts and Policies
HOW FEDERAL LAWS ARE MADE Learning Objectives Explain where the ideas for laws may come from. Name the six steps it takes for a bill to become a law. Give.
Grade 4 Social Studies Test Chapter 7 Part 1 Multiple Choice Part 2
The thirteen colonies were established by what European country?
Colonies in the Wilderness Chapter 1 Intro. Canada, 1791 In 1791, Britain controlled modern- day Canada. There were five separate colonies. Colonies:
Royal Colony. Beginnings of a Royal Colony Georgia officially became a royal colony when the Trustee period ended in This meant that the Crown of.
Chapter 8 – Living with the Legacies of Historical Globalization Social Studies 10.
19 th Century New Zealand Race Relations The Maori King Movement The Kingitanga.
Growing Democracy. Conflict in England  While the American colonies were being settled, civil war and political changes were causing problems in England.
The Treaty of Waitangi When Where Why Who How does it effect us in NZ today and in the future?
Haitian Revolution Role Play Scenarios
Rethinking Identity in 21 st Century New Zealand Art in Context, October 18, 2007.
Kingitanga The Maori King Movement. Background/Context TOW Consequences –Legislative violations by governors of the 1840s. Specifically Governor George.
KING JAMES PLANTATION 2 ND YR. Ulster By 1590 most of Ireland under Eng rule Except Ulster Ulster was still controlled by Gaelic irish Ruling clans were.
Convention and Compromise. Unpacking the Standards Describe the weaknesses of government under the Articles of Confederation. Explain how national leaders.
The Articles of Confederation. THE ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION WERE RATIFIED ON MARCH 1, 1781 AMERICA’S 1 ST FORM OF GOVERNMENT AFTER SEPARATION FROM BRITAIN.
Te Papa. Region: Wellington Activity/Event: Museum of New Zealand “Te Papa is New Zealand’s national museum and is renowned for being bi-cultural, scholarly,
Welcome to New England! Click Map to Enter ©The Learning Zoo 2011.
Eighth Grade Social Studies Colonization to Independence Ohio’s New Learning Standards K-12.
Objectives Describe the culture of Native Americans in the Southeast.
Title: The English Settle in the Chesapeake
Dealing with Other Nations Chapter 10 A Changing Nation.
What happened at Parihaka The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Volume II: The Hauhau Wars, 1864–72. Author:
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Lead Up to the Revolution 1.
Bell Ringer Date: October 9 th, ) Hand in the Homework if its done. Vocabulary is due TODAY 2) Take out your Bell Ringers, answer the question below,
Chapter 6: Listening to the People. Three main ways people in BNA tried to change the government were: 1. Using about 2. Using the media to “spread the.
 The purpose of this unit is to understand the factors that led to exploration, settlement, movement, and expansion and their impact on United States.
Chapter 10- The Judicial Branch. JUDICIAL BRANCH  The Judicial Branch was created to help balance the powers of the other two branches.  It played a.
Vocabulary Multiple Choice Tell me! More Vocabulary.
Colonists expected their government to preserve their basic rights as English subjects.
Read the caption to this picture on page 160 and the top half of page 161, responding to the six questions…in writing! Scan Chapter 7 and write down five.
The Treaty of Waitangi When Where Why Who How does it effect us in NZ today and in the future?
Worldviews Perspective on historic treaties Treaties to the Europeans were originally land use agreements which were used to keep the peace and gain.
The Jefferson Administration The 3 rd President of the United States.
Learning Goal – Analyze our 1 st government & where the ideas for our government came from. Daily Routine ) Come into class and quietly sit in.
Upper Canada and the Road to Nationhood
19th Century New Zealand Race Relations
Objectives Describe the culture of Native Americans in the Southeast.
How settlement of the west develop between 1879 and 1893?
Expansion and the Mexican-American War
Chapter 10 A Changing Nation.
Objectives Describe the culture of Native Americans in the Southeast.
New Plymouth District Council Local Purposes (Waitara Lands) Bill
Presentation transcript:

Map showing the Claimants’ Boundaries for the Taranaki Report to the Waitangi Tribunal From The Taranaki Report to the Waitangi Tribunal, 1996

2 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge To understand what’s happening today, you really need to have a closer look at the past… Treaty claim held up in court HONOUR THE TREATY! The many protesters walking in the Hikoi were… Councillor says he backs local iwi’s right… Hearing dismissed as Judge calls for order. The claimants had brought their grievances to the… Farmers angry that they are not considered in land claim by local iwi

3 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge The Taranaki chapter of the New Zealand Wars began in the early 1820s with the migrations of the Te Ātiawa, Ngāti Mutunga and Ngāti Tama people south to Kāpiti and Wellington. Test your knowledge so far: 1.When and why did Te Ātiawa people migrate from and then back to the Taranaki region? 2.How (and why) did the wars in Taranaki start? 3.Describe at least one of the battles 4.What was the involvement of the Government during this time? 5.Describe the role these people had in the Taranaki Wars: a) Wiremu Kīngi Te Rangitaake. b) Governor Gore Browne. c) Tītokowaru. Introduction

4 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge In 1863, the Taranaki Wars were not over, but the Crown determined that Māori had been in rebellion against the Queen and needed to be punished – by having their land confiscated. Many Acts were passed to this effect. The New Zealand Settlements Act, 1863 The Suppression of Rebellion Act, 1863 In 1865 these two Acts were used to initially confiscate 515, 974 hectares of Taranaki land. 1.Events during the battles in Taranaki

5 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge This map, produced by the Waitangi Tribunal, shows the land that was confiscated. It was everything to the left of the red line.

6 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge However, Māori still lived on the land, and they didn’t recognise this new confiscation. The Crown’s solution was to create a court in 1866 which was supposed to determine… They would be given a Crown grant to a piece of land elsewhere. They would be placed on special ‘reserve lands’. Which Māori had remained ‘loyal’ to the Crown. And which Māori had been ‘rebels’ to the Crown.

7 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge However, this new court was really a shambles! It rarely followed any rules or regulations Court dates for sittings and hearings were not often published Lawyers often didn’t even turn up Sometimes the evidence presented was a bit dodgy….just who was loyal and who was a rebel? The Court House, New Plymouth, from The Cyclopedia of New Zealand [Taranaki, Hawke’s Bay & Wellington Provincial Districts ], (1908)NZETC.

8 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge  Apart from some “out of court settlements” in the end, the court didn’t deliver any land to the iwi of Taranaki.  No reserve lands were created. Māori effectively remained landless in their own land. “The local Māoris probably believed these initial boundaries to be final and accepted peace on this basis, reconciling themselves to a loss of acreage.” Historian James Belich However, many Māori saw more and more settlers come and they saw this ‘creeping confiscation’ as a renewed aggression. Anger simmered under the surface throughout the late 1860s and 1870s.

9 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Between 1866 and 1880 the Compensation Court had not delivered any land to any local Māori. 2. The Fox-Bell Commission of 1880 The Fox-Bell Commission was set up to investigate this, but… During this time, many people had died and it was difficult to determine who had been loyal and who had been a rebel. The Fox-Bell Commission came up with a solution which was to have long lasting negative consequences.

10 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge  Due to the complexity of determining what land belonged to whom, the Commission decided to ‘merge the titles’ of both the loyals and the rebels and create new reserve land.  The new reserve land they created was 81, 000 hectares on the ring plain around the mountain. However, the new Māori owners of this land were not allowed on it. The Crown said that the land had to be leased to Pākehā farmers who would pay a rent to the Māori.

11 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Rubbing salt into the wound It actually got worse: By 1900, this Native Trustee had sold approximately half of all the compensation land to leaseholders without consulting any of the Māori owners. The Crown legislation determined that the Pākehā farmers did not have to pay market rents, only 4-5% of the land’s true value. The Crown also decided that the rents wouldn’t go to the local iwi or hapū, but instead to a newly created Native Trustee in the Public Trust Office.

12 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Taihoa! Stop! It’s time to digest some of this information. Turn to your worksheet and work through the tasks next to Taiaha #1.

13 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge The Taranaki Wars, and indeed the New Zealand Wars, ended in 1881 with the sacking of Parihaka. location of Parihaka Part Two of Parihaka Panorama (November 1881), William Andrews Collis, Albumen print (two part panorama), Collection of Puke Ariki, New Plymouth (A64.092) 3. The devastation of Parihaka

14 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge By 1881, Māori had been defeated, largely by the advantages the European had, in terms of numbers of professional soldiers and better war technology. The direct consequences of this loss: The people were demoralised Their leaders were either imprisoned or had been killed They had become landless in their own land They could see the European systems of trade, farming and justice were taking over from their systems.

15 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge From 1881 up to 1931 there was no effective leadership amongst Taranaki Māori. In 1926 the Sim Commission of Enquiry was asked to report on the land confiscations. “Taranaki ought not to have been punished by the confiscation of any of their lands” William Sim in his report. 4. The Taranaki Māori Trust Board

16 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge As a result of the Sim Report, the Government set aside £5000 per year to be distributed to Taranaki tribes, through the Taranaki Māori Trust Board. But who was on this Board? The Government initially appointed members, even appointing some from other parts of the country. The Board was supposed to represent the iwi of Taranaki, but it only had to report back to the Government, not the local iwi.

17 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge By the late 1980s, there was a widespread realisation about the inappropriateness and effectiveness of the Board to represent the iwi of Taranaki. The iwi started to set up their own leadership committees. In some, disputes arose about which committee had the right to lead the iwi. At stake was a variety of Government funds that were meant to be distributed to local Māori for a range of social services.

18 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge What about the land? In 1976 the Paraninihi ki Waitōtara Incorporation (PKW) was established to simply collect the rental still set at peppercorn rates. This did not change until 1997 when rentals were changed to be set by negotiation but still based on the notion of unimproved land. However, the situation is that PKW still doesn’t receive proper market rents today. As a result PKW’s lands are still administered under a different set of laws to other New Zealanders. 5. The Paraninihi ki Waitōtara Incorporation (PKW)

19 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Tension! As you can imagine, there are lots of conflicting views about what the PKW should do. Should it sell all the land and buy better performing investments? Do all the local iwi agree? What do the Pākehā farmers think? Should it just be concerned with making a profit for its individual shareholders? As you can see, many of these conflicting interests cause lots of debates – some of which find themselves in the local media.

20 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Taihoa! Stop! It’s time to digest some of this information. Hopefully by now you’re beginning to see that behind a sensational news headline about a land claim, there is a lot of history. Turn to your worksheet and work through the tasks next to Taiaha #2.

21 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Historians agree that the impact of the colonial experience for Māori in Taranaki has been severe, and that a post-war syndrome has developed. 6. The loss of Mana Image: Right Place Resources Ltd

22 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Cultural and social impacts of the confiscation are still being felt today Generations of Māori were brought up to believe that there was no future in being Māori. Many older Māori in Taranaki tell of being told not to speak Māori, and to try and become Pākehā. Traditional knowledge of land management and genealogy are critically short There is a distinctive lack of te reo Māori speakers in Taranaki

23 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Regaining lost groundThere is a growing realisation amongst Māori in Taranaki that they have been victims of a harsh colonial experience. It’s time to rebuild and think ahead for a stronger future for Māori in Taranaki Image: Right Place Resources Ltd

24 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Listening post. In 2000, MP Tariana Turia described what had happened to Taranaki Māori as a ‘holocaust’. Listen to a Radio New Zealand National interview with her and other historians on this choice of word to describe the situation. Follow the tasks next to Taiaha #3

25 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge Sometimes it seems that everyone has an opinion! Now that you know a little more about what happened in Taranaki, study these quotations on the next few slides as a class and discuss why these people have these opinions. “ A perpetual lease is as much private property as freehold. It is a lawful and exclusive right to use the land, just like a freehold right, for which title of ownership is issued…In Taranaki the government is attempting to resolve a Māori grievance by giving a Māori group the private property of other New Zealanders ” Graham Robertson, past Federated Farmers’ president. 7. Quotations for discussion

26 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge “ When I look at the map of Taranaki and trace the confiscation line, it is an arrow piercing the heart of my people ” Peter Moeahu, 1990

27 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge “ The wars, in our view, were not of Māori making. The Governor was the aggressor, not Māori, and in Treaty terms it was the Governor who was in breach of the undertakings made in the name of the Queen ” The Taranaki Report to the Waitangi Tribunal, Overview, p7, 1996

28 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge This is the end of the presentation about the legacy of the Taranaki Wars. How much have you learnt? Complete the tasks as directed by your teacher as part of Taiaha #4

29 Taranaki War 1860 – Our legacy - Our challenge 1. James Belich, The New Zealand Wars 2. Stolen Dreams, North and South magazine, Sept The Taranaki Report – Kuapapa Tuatahi, The Taranaki Report: Kaupapa Tuatahi, accessed from Chapter12: Te Muru me te Raupatu: the Aftermath, in Ancestral Landscapes of Taranaki in Taranaki Whenua: Life Blood Legacy by Peter Adds, New Plymouth, Puke Ariki Museum, Taranaki War : Te Ahi Kā Roa, Te Ahi Kātoro, exhibition notes, Puke Ariki Museum, New Plymouth. References