Monday, 5 March 2007

Differences of Opinion

I used the term Shore and Bay whalers earlier as being the same. Don Grady has written several books on Whaling in New Zealand. In his book (Sealers and Whalers in NZ waters) Bay Whalers are simply Ocean Whalers who anchored in the path of migrating Whales and intercepted them as they passed by - Kapiti island is one place he suggests this happened. Shore Based Whalers are obviously different as we are about to find out.

In terms of reading. I am away today (Tuesday) as my daughter has croup and will need a couple of days to recover. I'll be back on Wednesday. In the meantime continue to read the handout on Shore Based whaling.

If you have finished the questions on page 16, complete the questions on page 18 and read through to the end of page 21.
If you don't already have one go to the library and get a copy of Michael Kings "Penguin History of New Zealand". Its an easy read and a good introduction to the topics we will cover.

Sunday, 4 March 2007

Hell hole of the Pacific

In the past students have often seen the whalers as an amorphous group. It is however important that you differentiate between the Ocean Whalers who frequented (mainly) the Bay of Islands and the Shore or Bay Whalers who were scattered about the coastline. Ocean Whalers originated mainly from the USA. Most came from New England. There were crews from Britain and France but the US dominated the trade.

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.

Thursday, 1 March 2007

Intermediaries Hand Out

This is the first handout of many (about 14) that will be handed out during the year. Pages 2-3 are explanations of the 2 external standards that you will sit at the end of the year. Page 4 has questions that will help you focus you on these standards. Pages 5 to 9 concentrate on the Sealers and page 9 have more questions that will help you. Afterwards you should have read up to and completed Self Check #1, and pages 57-8. Over the weekend read Pages 10-16 of the handout on the Ocean Whalers. There are questions on the whalers on page 16. Have a good weekened.