Saturday, 28 February 2009
Bay Whaling in the 1820's
As we move into the 1820’s the great whales began to run out. Increasingly it became difficult to justify the economics of running a large ship and crew for long periods at sea.
Entrepreneurs in Sydney identified a cheaper method. It was easier and cheaper to keep a small crew often supplemented by local natives at a shore base close to the whale’s migratory paths (Just like Bay Whalers but cheaper).
The stations were established in the Bay of Plenty, along the east coast of both the North and South Islands. Some were temporary some were not. They were often there for long periods. The last of the Cook Strait Stations did not close until 1964.
Whaling Stations like Thoms, Barrets, the Guards, the Wellers or Jillets were set up in places like Kapiti or Porirua waiting for the ‘Right’ Whales to pass by. Whales were sighted, chased, harpooned, flensed and boiled down to oil. Every so often a ship would be dispatched to collect the oil from the stations.
Life on these stations was rough and ready. (Yes I know I used the same term for the sealers, and I’ll probably use it again.). Many more cultured observers ( Edward Wakefield included) mentioned how dreadful their conditions were as was the culture of drinking and cursing.
One thing that made them different was the way that they assimilated into local Maori society. Their presence was important to Maori, it gave them the same access to European goods that was enjoyed by Nga Puhi, thus having a Pakeha set up close to you was essential. Having a Pakeha made you “safe” and would encourage others to call by, increasing trade opportunities.
Many Europeans took (usually, but not always temporary) Maori wives and left behind numbers of half-caste children who were absorbed back into their Whanau. Maori did not view the children as anything other than Maori and they assimilated more easily into Maori society while they would have been vilified if returned to Pakeha society.
The Stations acted as a new conduit for Europe into New Zealand. They allowed more Maori from more extensive areas of the country. More Maori met Europeans, their goods and their culture. It opened more of New Zealand to exploration and exploitation.
Some of these Whalers became so entwined in their Tribes that they helped defend them against attacking Taua (War Parties) or even migrated with them when attacks drove them from their traditional lands. Some became so embedded that their names are now a well known and valued part of the Iwi.
Whalers like Johnny Jones established small empires in the areas they lived in.
The impact of the Shore Whalers should not be underestimated.
Thursday, 26 February 2009
The Impact of Ocean Whalers in the North
When they needed some RnR they made for Kororareka. It offered everything they needed without the constraints of the law. Whaling crews numbered between 20-50 and there could be as many as 15 ships in the Bay at one time. New Zealand lay outside any of the European/American nations sphere of influence and thus beyond the reach of their legal systems. While this might have given the captains and crews a free licence to do as they liked, their behaviour was tempered by the fierce nature of the local Maori.
Nga Puhi controlled the Bay of Islands although different hapu groups dominated the north and south sides of the bay. Kororareka became hugely popular with Whalers, with hundreds of visits made in the next few decades. Paul Moon has written an excellent book about the decades before 1840. Grog shops opened along the shoreline and were interspersed with Brothels. Nga Puhi supplied the Brothels with women.
Some students find this concept distasteful, but we should be careful about applying 21st century morals on people from the past who operated in a completely different time with differing values. Maori simply viewed sex in a different way, and there was little stigma attached to the trade (although I don’t believe the daughters of chiefs would have been offered to a European unless there was a distinct material advantage to the Iwi.)
Whaling crews were ashore for only a few weeks while the ships were cleaned, refitted and supplies acquired. Many of the crew took an advance on their share of the profits, spending the money on rum and women. Some of the crew could often spend the better part of their wages during this shore leave and arrive back in Nantucket no better off than when they had left 3 years before. Experienced and enterprising crew sometimes acquired cheap muskets (some left over from the War of Independence and were quite dangerous) before they left and then traded these for the favours of a Maori maiden
With no law in the town there was no limit on the behaviour of Europeans. Fighting and Drunkenness (and Drunken Fighting) were common. Behaviour was terrible and more cultured observers gave the town the name ‘Hellhole of the Pacific’. For many the town represented all that was bad about European culture and was to be abhorred.
Nga Puhi prospered under this regime. No other Iwi had as much access to Europeans and the goods they offered. This gave them enormous Mana within the wider area as well as their related Iwi north and south of the Bay.
Like other tribes many Nga Puhi took the opportunity to use the Whalers to travel overseas. Maori travelled widely around the Pacific, many landed in Sydney. While there they were often taken in by Samuel Marsden, at his property in Paramatta. Several like Te Pahi and Ruatara spent long periods there, in Ruataras case convalescing after being ill treated on his Whaler.
This gave them a greater insight into the world that existed outside of New Zealand. very quickly the Nga Puhi began to realize the advantage of possessing Muskets.
A bit of fun
Enjoy!!!
OK thats just a bit silly.
Here is another scene from the original "Moby Dick" movie, the white whale is sighted and the whale boats are lowered and the chase is afoot!
More interestingly below is an excerpt taken from the 1998 TV mini series.
Setting the scene: Ishmael has arrived in town (Nantucket?) intending to enlist on a whaler. He takes a room for the night in an Inn but must share the room with a harpooner (Queequeg) who arrives well after Ishamel has gone to bed. He has with him several articles of interest... This time Queequeg is given a more definite cultural background. See if you can figure it out?
Wednesday, 25 February 2009
Whaling and more Audio
I would also like to see some of you editing our Notemesh page. I gave out the instructions last week and you can download them from the Moodle Site. I have added to the pages but would like to see your contributions as well. Go on, have a go!
Whaling ships had the reputation for being rough and ready.
At first they called into Port Jackson to re-supply but quickly found the regulations and taxes (and corruption – early Sydney was run like a fiefdom by the Officers amongst the guards) to onerous. Luckily nearby was a tax free haven. The Bay of Islands was already recognised as a world class anchorage. A tiny settlement Kororareka developed into what the Whalers wanted most, a safe anchorage, with plenty of food and water, cheap rum and women.
Tuesday, 24 February 2009
Friday, 20 February 2009
Recording the Class
I'm pretty happy with the paragraphing and journals. Its obvious some of the class need some help but if we start now I'm sure the results will begin to come through.
Now I would just like to see some of you editing the notemesh site.... no pressure!
A reminder you have to use your SCHOOL e-mail a/c. If its the first time the password will be your network password.
You can acess your school e-mail at http://webmail.whs.school.nz
Cheers
1792 - Explotation Begins
The final sealing season in 1946 saw the slaughter of 6,187 seals
Australia First
Monday, 16 February 2009
Europe in the Pacific
Initial European interest in the Pacific was sparked by Spains desire to find a route to the Indes in particular the Spice Islands (Today part of Indonesia). They simply sailed across the Ocean with little idea of its size. Some were lucky and with ideal winds crossed quickly, others sailed into the doldrums (Horse latitudes) and perished. It was later exploration by the Dutch, English and French which would open the South Pacific and in particular New Zealand to later adventurers.
The terms "Terra Australis" or "Terra Incognita" feature in this initial period of discovery. Europeans were convinced that there must be a land mass of similar size to Europe, Russia, China and North America . It was necessary to balance the globe otherwise it would simply tip over!
It was believed that such a land would like others create vast wealth from its natural resources. Everyone who followed the Conquistadors wanted the same luck. Of course the native people would be unaware of their mineral wealth and would gladly hand over control of these resources because of the benefits that contact with the Europeans would bring. (Western civilisation including possible enslavement, disease, loss of land, language and culture....)
A second factor was religion. The indigenous people would lack any understanding of Gods word, and would need to be converted. It was their duty to seek out and convert these heathens. It was also necessary to ensure they were converted to the "true" faith dependent upon the variety of the Christian faith which was followed. Thus Catholic and Protestant competed for the souls of the natives.
Another reason was simple curiosity. The late 18th and early 19th centuries were ones of great investigation and discovery. Europeans in paticular the French and British were searching further and further afield as they sought to open up the world. Science was breaking free of the shackles imposed by religion and superstition.Tasman arrived off the coast of New Zealand in 1642 looking for Australia. He'd managed to sail from Batavia in the Dutch East Indes along the coast of Western Australia then across the Great Australian Bight and across the sea that would later bear his name. Tasman missed Victoria and New South Wales completely! He more or less crashed into New Zealand by accident.
Having sighted the West Coast and being attacked at Murderers (Later renamed 'Golden Bay' for obvious reasons) Bay he left sighting "Giants" (through an imperfect lens perhaps?) on the Three Kings. He returned to Batavia by sailing north, Australia continued to elude him. His report when it arrived in Holland would prove that the super-continent Terra Australis did not exist. This meant that the little bit of land on his map was not Australia and needed a new name. The Mapmaker chose New Zeeland.
Maps based on those left by Tasman would be used in 1769 by James Cook who as we know travelled to Tahiti to view the transit of Venus. His secret orders sent him south to confirm that there was no super-continent (trust the British not to accept the word of Europeans!). Thus he discovered and mapped New Zealand and then crossed the Tasman Sea to at last find the east coast of Australia, that the wayward Dutchman had missed. Cook had the benefit of the H4, Harrisons new chronometer which allowed him to make some of the most accurate maps ever made. The new charts and reports of the resources in both places would lay the foundations for later exploration. He reported New Zealand was populated by a fairly civilsed, industrious, people and contained large quantities of flax and timber suitable for the needs of a navy. Australia especially the area near Botany Bay was well suited to settlement despite the "wretched" people that lived there.
Archaic to Classic
Why they avoided the north is debateable. It may have been that the dark and brooding forests scared them, and despite being heavily populated by birdlife they may have found them to difficult to hunt efficiently.
In the South however there existed large areas of open grassland or scrub which it seems were grazed by large herds of birds. New Zealands extreme isolation had meant that almost no mamalian life existed here (excluding 2 species of bat). Instead birds had dominated and developed free of predators. Amongst them were many species of flightless birds including the Moa. These existed in a variety of sizes from relatively small chickens to the giants that are on display in our Museums.
The Polynesians found hunting Moa easy and like many neolithic peoples began to slowly wipe them out. These people are often called the Classic Maori but culturally were not the Maori as we know them. They developed as Hunter-Gatherers moving in small groups in an orderly fashion following the seasonal foods, kai moana, forest food etc. There were probably only a few thousand of these people as this lifestyle does not support groups larges than 40-50. Smaller groups struggle to collect enough to feed themselves, larger groups struggle to find enough to support themselves...
By the end of the 13th century the Hunter-Gatherer lifestyle was coming to an end. Quite simply the Moa was running out. Neolithic hunters often killed by driving entire herds over cliffs or into swamps. DoC would not be happy. TIt was also getting colder the Classic Maori were in danger of dying out.
Luckily for them far away something was coming to their rescue. A voyager, almost certainly Polynesian, had travelled from South America carrying a small root vegetable. The Kumara arrived in Polynesia and quickly spread across the islands suplimenting other food stuffs like yam and taro. Just as the saviour arrived the door slammed shut on voyaging and Maori were isolatd from the world until the arrival of Europe in the 18th century.
The Kumaras arrival in New Zealand allowing the Maori to survive. The Classic Maori was replaced by the Modern Maori. Necessity drove them north, the Kumara could only grow in the warmer parts of the North Island. Agriculture developed and land became important. Agriculture supports larger populations and more people demanded more food, more food needs more land.
Larger and closer family ties meant that Whanau, Hapu and Iwi developed into a complex tribal groups. Protection of crops and land demanded fortified villages. Alliances developed via Iwi and were reinforced through marriage.
38 Paragraphs
Statement
Explanation
eXample
Stick with this and you can succeed.
A second problem was answering the question. A few people managed to avoid the question almost completely while others wrote such a long introduction that they left little room for the actual answer itself.
I guess thats why thats why we practice!!!
Saturday, 14 February 2009
The Whence of the Maori
The Polynesians fascinated early European explorers. It was a period in European history when the "Noble Savage" was in vogue. The Polynesians seemed to epitomise everything that philosophers said would exist in a perfect natural world. It was warm, food grew in abundance and they seemed uninhibited about sex. Tahiti proved to be especially popular, with the crews cheerfully exchanging iron for the local pleasures. Sometimes this threatened the safety of the ship as the crew stripped the vessel of nails.
Maori were obviously Polynesian as they spoke a language not terribly dissimilar to the language used in Samoa or Tonga. What the Europeans found difficult to explain was how the had managed to spread across the Pacific despite having little more than a stone age culture. Europeans had only just begun to sail confidently across the oceans, and it was only the advent of reliable chronometers that made navigation easier.Before this there were a myriad of methods used to estimate longitude, many were fanciful at best, most were downright dangerous.
The Spanish had been in the Pacific for several centuries but had little idea just how wide the ocean was because they could only use the time spent and estimates of speed to guess. They had found and lost the Solomons three times in that period!Cook as mentioned earlier was testing Harrisons H4 chronometer, one of the cabin boys sole duty was to keep the watches wound! The timepieces allowed him to keep his longitude measurements accurate over the many months and years of his voyage. Even today his charts are remarkably accurate.Europeans had little idea how the Polynesians could have done it themselves.The presence of the Maori in New Zealand fascinated them.
Several bizzare ideas emerged in the 19th century. One believed that Maori were 'Aryan', in fact a lost European people who had somehow wandered off and got lost! This would explan why the Maori were so similar in nature to Europeans and so more advanced than other indigenous peoples (comparisons with the Aboriginals were often made). The other odd thought was that they were in fact the (lost) 12th tribe of Israel - one of Noahs sons who had somehow also wandered off and gotten lost, only to be rediscovered again on the other side of the world! Bizarre indeed.There is a form of reverse racism evident here. It was easier to admit the Maori (albeit via side door) into the Europan fold than it was to admit they (Natives!) might be as good (or better?) than them.
Today we know that Maori were the people who populated the last great land mass on earth. They arrived most likely about 750AD in large Waka(canoes) built for long distance voyaging. They had begun their journey in Asia about 2000BC, travelling further eastward driven either by curiosity or overpopulation. As they progressed and distance between islands grew larger, so did their seamnship and quality vessels improved. By about 0AD they were on the fringes of Polynesia and by 1000AD had settled on the three corners of the Polynesian triangle. (Hawaii, Easter Island and New Zealand).Andrew Sharpe in (1969?) put forward the idea that this voyaging was accidental and one way. Recent evidence has shown that this was unlikely. David Lewis spent many years in Micronesia and Polynesia studying the old navigators. He also helped with the Hokoleau a waka built in the old style which was successfully sailed across Polynesia, including form Hawaii to New Zealand. The 'Vaka Moana' exhibition at Auckland Museum is well worth a visit for more information. Thor Heyerdahl postulated in the late 1950's that Polynesia was settled by South American. His raft the Kon Tiki fired peoples imaginations but his idea is generally discredited.
The raft was basically unseaworthy especially in comparison to Polynesian waka. It didn't explain how the Kumara arrived in Polynesia from its native Peru. Except that since the trade winds blow east to west it would allow the waka to tack into the wind heading eastward and if nothing was found to simply turn about and allow the wuind to take them home. Crossing the Humboldt current (which the Kon Tiki needed to be towed across) was no great barrier. The Kumara arrived in Polynesia in the 13th or 14th century. (more on that later)Maori themselves had little or no memory of this by the time Europeans arrived. The Great Fleet story confirmed how they had arrived but little else. Europeans like Percy Smith and Elsdon Best collected many of these stories, and the Fleet myth was created. According to this Maori left Hawaiiki in seven great waka which travelled to New Zealand following in the wake of the explorers Kupe, Toi and Maui. Once here they then travelled around the country laying claim to various parts. Almost every tribe adheres to this and can trace their roots back to one or more of the waka and their captains. My own tribe is affiliated to the waka Mataatua.The only tribe that does not is the Tuhoe (Children of the Mist) from the Ureweras.
I am not sure what their spirits do after death as all other tribe believed that their spirit travelled north to Cape Reinga and the jumping off point before travelling back to Hawaiiki.Studies of language have found Hawaiiki is most likely Savaii (in Samoa) but Lapita pottery takes us back towards Asia, as does the fact that Polynesian is an Austronesian language and DNA seems to link Maori to place as far afield as the indigenous people of Taiwan (I'm sure Winston Peters is pleased).Why had the Maori lost this knowledge? It seems that sometime in the early part of the second millenium the climate changed. In London around 1000AD they grew grapes, but a sudden cooling of the planet (a mini Ice Age) changed all that. In the Pacific a long period of relative calm, with regular trade wnds became less predictable and long distance voyaging decreased. Easter Island,Hawaii and New Zealand became cut off from their brethren. In New Zealand the Polynesians became Maori.
Saturday, 7 February 2009
Welcome to 2009
A note on who uses this site....
In 2007 we had 900 individual visits, 754 were from New Zealand. Of these 381 were from Wellington, 33 from Lower Hutt and 9 from Porirua. We also had 183 from Auckland, mostly in October/November.
In 2008 we had 5000 visits (3915 individuals) from 72 countries. 3400 were visits from New Zealand and almost 700 from the USA. Of the Kiwi visitors almost 1500 were from Auckland and only 900 were from Wellington! There were visits from a total of 52 New Zealand cities and towns including one visitor from Queenstown who must have been doing some last minute revison because they spent 40 minutes and looked at 20 pages (about 60 posts!)
Lets start....