Knowledge (XXG)

Invasion of the Waikato

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three Armstrong guns, advanced on an estimated 100 Māori manning the frontline on the morning of 22 February. With the Armstrong guns firing over their heads, the infantry, cavalry and Forest Rangers moved towards the defensive line before finally charging with bayonets, revolvers and sabres, driving out the Māori. The British forces pursued the Kingites to Rangiaowhia, where they looted the village and later built a redoubt. Belich claims the so-called "Battle of Hairini" was simply a delaying tactic by the Māori, allowing them to move as many supplies as they could from Rangiaowhia and the Paterangi line. He says the Kingites, by abandoning the Paterangi line, managed to save their army which otherwise would have been destroyed in an all-out pitched battle; Cameron's decision to outflank the Paterangi line, meanwhile, was described as a "brilliant" strategy that forced his enemy out of one of its richest economic centres with minimal British losses, becoming the greatest British victory of the Waikato invasion. For Kingitanga supporters, who after the Rangiriri battle had been urged to fight in a "civilised" manner by the British, and had moved their families away from their fortifications to an undefended, open village, the assault on Rangiaowhia was an almost "incomprehensible act of savagery".
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murders ... You are now assembling in armed bands; you are constantly threatening to come down the river to ravage the Settlement of Auckland and to murder peaceable settlers. Some of you offered a safe passage through your territories to armed parties contemplating such outrages ... Those who remain peaceably at their own villages in Waikato, or move into such districts as may be pointed out by the Government, will be protected in their persons, property, and land. Those who wage war against Her Majesty, or remain in arms, threatening the lives of Her peaceable subjects, must take the consequences of their acts, and they must understand that they will forfeit the right to the possession of their lands guaranteed to them by the
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casualties. Members of the 12th and 14th regiments who tried to climb the earthworks near the centre of the line with the aid of ladders were shot down and within a short time 40 of the British were dead or wounded. Members of the 65th Regiment, however, were more successful in reaching the trenches at the river side of the fortification, bridging them with planks and penetrating the Māori line. They killed about 30 Māori, with the surviving defenders fleeing south or towards the main redoubt. But when Cameron ordered an attack on the redoubt from the river side, his men began to come under heavy fire. Cameron ordered two more unsuccessful assaults on the central redoubt, which lifted British casualties to about 110.
856: 801:, led 870 troops to attack a party of about 50 Māori on the Tataraimaka block, killing 24. Concerned by the renewed aggression, some Kingites began resurrecting their plan to raid Auckland and its frontier settlements. The colonial ministry remained unconvinced Auckland or Wellington were in any danger and had refused to call out the Auckland militia following the Ōakura ambush, and missionaries and even Gorst dismissed the likelihood of an attack. But in correspondence to London Grey cited that incident as further proof of the imminent danger to New Zealand settlers. 1201: 1165:
death in their houses and at least one attempted to surrender, but was murdered by troops ignoring their orders. Women were raped and killed in front of children. About a dozen houses were burned down. The British claimed they killed 12 Māori, including two chiefs, and took 30 prisoners. Their own losses totaled five, including several officers. Some unofficial estimates suggest there were more than 100 Māori deaths. As the village was largely occupied by women, children and older men, the deaths have been regarded as murder, rather than an act of war.
200: 1126:, from where they judged the defences were "immensely strong". Cameron, whose men continued to be targeted daily by sniper fire and attacks on short reconnaissance missions, decided that rather than a frontal attack, the more prudent approach would be to outflank the Paterangi line. He gained the help of two Māori guides, Himi Manuao (James Edwards) and John Gage, who had previously lived in the area, who revealed a route that bypassed it to the west and south to reach Te Awamutu. A new supply line was established from Auckland, using boats to 1388:" ("I shall fight you forever, and ever, and ever") When a shot was fired at Mair as he withdrew, grazing his shoulder, the British forces responded with a heavier hail of grenades, artillery and gunfire. The Ōrākau garrison repulsed two more attempts by the Waikato militia to rush the north-west outworks, but at 4:00 pm the chiefs, realising the end was near, decided to break out. Placing women and children in the middle of the group and their best warriors in front, the Māori broke through the earthworks at the south-east corner of the 386: 181: 172: 163: 136: 127: 983: 50: 240: 1517:. The Maniapoto, by contrast, had been more zealous for war than the Waikato, yet suffered no loss of land because its territory was too remote to be of use to white settlers. The 1927 Royal Commission on Confiscated Land, chaired by senior supreme court judge Sir William Sim, concluded that although the government restored a quarter of the 1,202,172 acres (486,500 hectares) originally seized and paid almost £23,000 compensation, the Waikato confiscations had been "excessive". The 569: 1525:
an admission by the Crown that it had "unjustly confiscated" the land. It formally and publicly apologised to Waikato–Tainui and the Kingitanga for unjustly invading Waikato–Tainui lands, for sending imperial forces across the Mangataawhiri, and for the loss of life and the devastation of property that ensued. The Crown expressed profound regret and apologised unreservedly for the invasion and the crippling effects it had on the welfare of the Waikato-Tainui people. Queen
1437:, devised in the Otago goldfields to prevent injury and ruin to horses carrying heavy loads, to be the best suited to their needs. In a report to the War Office, Commissary General Humphrey Stanley Herbert Jones described the CTC as "the foundation of the whole service". The work of the commissariat helped ensure the sick rate of soldiers never rose above 5 percent—a rate far below that of the Crimean War a decade earlier, when 14 percent of the force was incapacitated. 152: 844: 892:. British casualties totalled one dead and 12 wounded. But the same day a Māori war party ambushed a convoy of six carts and its 50-man escort well behind British lines, at Martin's Farm near Ramarama on the Great South Road. A third of the British force were cut down—five soldiers killed and 11 wounded—while Māori losses were limited to two. The attack prompted the establishment of five new redoubts on the route, taking 510 of Cameron's men. 111: 1055:
lake." He said they might have also been gaining time waiting for reinforcements who were almost on the scene. About 35 of the Māori force were killed, along with six women and children. Probably an equal number of injured were evacuated by canoe across Lake Waikare. With the capture of more than 180 warriors, the battle became the most costly Māori defeat in the Waikato wars. The 183 prisoners were held without trial on an old coal hulk in
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party of Māori snatched up the rifles and ammunition from a group of 25 soldiers who were timber-felling beside the Great South Road—part of an effort to destroy cover for Māori raiders intent on mounting further ambushes—and killed two soldiers. On 2 September a British party of 62 men was fired on from the rear during a march on the village of Pokeno, but managed to pursue their attackers and inflict some casualties.
1433:(CTC), established in mid-1861, almost two years before the invasion began, was the "vital kernel" because of its efforts in building the southern road and being a separate military supply train. Commissariat sourced much of its food from England and Australia and sent it along with other supplies up to 160 km into the interior via a combination of steamers, barges, bullocks and pack horses. The CTC had found the 374: 355: 344: 302: 1209: 3174: 1364:
broke and the fog lifted, removing their cover. Through the morning the British sap advanced close enough to the outer trenches of Ōrākau for hand-grenades to be thrown over the ramparts. At noon Cameron arrived with more men, bringing the besieging imperial and colonial force to 1800. One of the Armstrong guns was moved to the head of the sap and fired at the
1081: 614:. The campaign lasted for nine months, from July 1863 to April 1864. The invasion was aimed at crushing Kingite power (which European settlers saw as a threat to colonial authority) and also at driving Waikato Māori from their territory in readiness for occupation and settlement by European colonists. The campaign was fought by a peak of about 14,000 901:
missions and pursuits of armed Māori bands. Cameron wrote: "The bush is now so infested with these natives that I have been obliged to establish strong posts along our line of communication, which absorbs so large a portion of the force that until I receive reinforcements it is impossible for me to advance further up the Waikato."
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Grey claimed it was a defensive action, historian B. J. Dalton claimed his reports to London had been "a deliberate and transparent falsehood" and that the invasion was an act of "calculated aggression". On 12 July Duncan Cameron and the first echelon of the invading army crossed the Mangatāwhiri Stream.
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The 'fertile and most beautiful fields' and the river itself provided the incentive and the means for an invasion of the Waikato. Auckland was swelling with new settlers; government ministers and land purchase officers were determined to acquire the fruitful acreage south of the city; the fact that
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The campaign itself was warfare of a kind never seen before in New Zealand, designed and conducted to drive the Waikato from their territory and to occupy it in readiness for settlement by Europeans. Although it was indended to 'inflict punishment' upon the Waikato wherever they would stand to fight,
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Proclamations under the act were issued on 30 January 1865 for the seizure of the East Wairoa and West Pukekohe blocks for settlement and colonisation, followed by the Central Waikato district and the Māngere, Pukaki, Ihumata and Kerikeri blocks (16 May 1865). As the occupants were evicted from their
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Early on 31 March the first attack was made on Ōrākau, whose parapets and exterior fence was still incomplete. The Ōrākau garrison spotted the attacking force to their west just minutes before the bugle was sounded to charge and warriors were ordered by Rewi into the outer trenches. The Kingites held
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For Rewi, a skilled strategist and warrior, the major concerns about Ōrākau were that it had no immediate water supply and, sited on a low hill, overlooked by the nearby "California" ridge, 850m to the southwest, could also be easily encircled. The land immediately to the south of the pa was a series
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Cameron attracted both praise for his "skilful measures" in the capture of Rangiriri and severe criticism over the high number of British losses. Yet the battle had highlighted the rapidly growing disparity between British and Māori forces and the inability of Waikato Māori to maintain their manpower
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on a hill above the stream. Reinforcements continued to arrive and within days he had 500 troops. On the morning of 17 July Cameron led 553 men on a raid on a new and unfinished entrenchment at Koheroa, near Mercer. Cameron ran ahead of his force after they took early fire from Māori outposts and the
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Europeans living quietly on their own lands in Waikato have been driven away; their property has been plundered; their wives and children have been taken from them. By the instigation of some of you, officers and soldiers were murdered at Taranaki. Others of you have since expressed approval of these
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in September that year, and the Kingites in turn abandoned their plan for their uprising. Grey instead instituted a peace policy that included a system of Māori local administration in which they could participate, hoping it would encourage Māori to abandon the Kingite movement and "reduce the number
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Sixteen of the British forces died in the three-day battle and 53 were wounded, some of them mortally; while estimates of Māori fatalities range from 80 to 160, with half of the casualties coming from the Urewera contingent. Another 26 wounded were taken prisoner. The bodies of the Māori were buried
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was held before dawn on 2 April and again Tupotahi urged them to break out. Though many of the chiefs remained steadfast in their refusal to retreat, Rewi insisted the effect of the water shortage was now so severe they had to break out, but urged they go out fighting. The plan was aborted when dawn
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without detection and arriving in Te Awamutu at dawn. They advanced to the village of Rangiaowhia, where they attacked about 100 mostly elderly men, and about 100 women and children. Most terrified villagers fled, a few shot at the troops, some sheltered in the churches, at least seven were burnt to
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Cameron responded by creating a series of about 20 stockades and redoubts all over the district, designed to protect the supply line and impede the ability of Māori to attack further north. Each stockade needed its own garrison—from 25 to 55 men—and supply line, eventually accounting for almost 6000
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describes as a campaign of misinformation, Grey retained the Taranaki army and began appealing to the colonial office for more troops to avert "some great disaster", claiming tensions remained high, with a high likelihood of Māori aggression. In November 1862 he ordered a gunboat steamer from Sydney
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In the early 1990s Tainui opted to bypass the Waitangi Tribunal and concluded a treaty claims settlement with the Crown through direct negotiation. In May 1995 the Crown signed a deed of settlement with Waikato–Tainui that included cash and land valued at $ 170 million. The settlement included
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that zig-zagged towards its western face from a distance of about 120 metres. A party of Māori reinforcements appeared about 2 km to the east, but retreated, unable to break through the British lines. Sporadic shooting continued through the night, with the besieged occupants of Ōrākau chanting
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to defend their families and began rapidly digging a new trench on the crest of a ridge at Hairini, cutting the route between Te Awamutu and Rangiaowhia. The trench, fortified with a parapet and stakes, ended in swamp at one end and thick bush at the other. A thousand of Cameron's men, supported by
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Cameron, meanwhile, was attracting sharp criticism from both the colonist press and Grey himself about the lack of progress in the eight weeks since Ngāruawāhia's capture. On the night of 20 February, he set out on the narrow bush track to bypass Paterangi with 1230 men led by one of his guides and
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regiments, to make the frontal assault. A second division of 320 men of the 40th Regiment under Lieut-Colonel Arthur Leslie with additional naval backup, were transported by barge further south with the aim of gaining possession of a ridge 500 metres behind the main entrenchment and cutting off any
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The defeat and confiscations left the King Movement tribes with a legacy of poverty and bitterness that was partly assuaged in 1995 when the government conceded that the 1863 invasion and confiscation was wrongful and apologised for its actions. The Waikato–Tainui tribe accepted compensation in the
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and ran downhill without opposition 200 metres towards a ridge to the south, behind which the some men of the 40th were sheltering. They then dropped down a sloping 10-metre bank, surprising members of the 40th Regiment, who formed the south eastern edge of the cordon before running for cover in a
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A significant engagement took place on 11 February when an assault party from Paterangi ambushed a group of soldiers bathing in a loop of the Mangapiki Stream at Waiari, near the British forward position. Two hundred of Cameron's troops, with the Forest Rangers, became involved in a running battle
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As night fell, the British, dispirited by the scale of losses, slept on the wet ground, ready to renew the combat in the morning. But about 5am the Rangiriri garrison—still with arms and ammunition and with an escape route open to the east—raised a white flag, expecting to talk terms with Cameron.
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church on 14 September, losing about 40 men, and the same day a 20-man Ngāti Pou force attacked a homestead at Paerata, midway between Pukekohe and Drury, but were driven off by neighbours. The turning point for Cameron came in late October when hundreds of Waikato militia replaced regulars at the
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or be expelled south of the river. As many young men retreated into the bush with their weapons, officials began seizing others—including the ill and aged—who declined to swear the oath, imprisoning them without charge. Two days later Grey issued a proclamation directed to the "Chiefs of Waikato",
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through the cordon at the east, but were driven back twice, suffering the loss of one of their chiefs. One Kingite told Cowan: "We were in better spirits after our fight in the open; nevertheless we realized that our position was hopeless, short of food and water, short of lead, and surrounded by
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to Meremere and Paparata—had been built, commanding about 2000 square kilometres of bush and manned by a force of up to 1500. The Meremere Line allowed bands of between 20 and 200 Māori warriors to freely cross the Waikato River and harass troops and kill settlers towards Auckland. On 25 August a
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near Papakura and were pursued into the forest by the Auckland militia. Seven Māori were killed. When two more settlers were killed at isolated farms near Drury on 24 July, the government formed a special corps of bush fighters named the "Forest Rangers", who began a series of bush reconnaissance
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as commander-in-chief of the British troops, began the invasion with fewer than 4000 effective troops in Auckland at his disposal. But the continuous arrival of regiments from overseas rapidly swelled the force. (Total troop numbers reached 10,000 in January 1864 before peaking at about 14,000 in
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Within a day—before the proclamation had even reached the Waikato—Grey ordered the invasion of the Kingite territory, claiming he was making a punitive expedition against Rewi over the Ōakura ambush and a pre-emptive strike to thwart a "determined and bloodthirsty" plot to attack Auckland. Though
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Belich wrote: "The capture of Rangiriri was not the result of assault or encirclement, but of the British misuse of a flag of truce. The Māoris might conceivably have eventually decided to surrender unconditionally anyway, but they might also have repelled further assaults and escaped across the
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It is now settled and will be thoroughly understood by the natives, that if they choose to make war upon us, we shall take their land, fill it up with military settlers, & perpetually advance our frontier ... The governor has quite made up his mind to turn out all the hostile natives on the
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Three weeks later, on 20 November, Cameron, commanding a battle force of more than 1400 men, launched an attack on Rangiriri, further up the Waikato River. The battle cost both sides more than any other engagement of the land wars and also resulted in the capture of 180 Māori combatants, which
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and armoured barges steamed past Meremere—drawing fire from rifle pits and batteries of ships guns, some of them firing pieces of iron chain and pound weights—and landed 600 men at Takapau, 15 km upriver, ready to attack the heart of the defensive line from the rear. The flotilla returned
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In mid-1863 the New Zealand government began planning legislation designed to punish armed Māori resistance and aggression by widespread confiscation of their land, which would be given to colonial settlers. The New Zealand Settlements Act was passed in December 1863 and in 1865 Governor Grey
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beyond. Cameron remained at Rangiaowhia, preparing to pursue him. Rewi Maniapoto, with the other main division, moved south into the Hangitiki Valley to defend Ngati Maniapoto bases. Ngati Maniapoto fighters and their allies remained determined to continue the war, but were divided over their
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downstream, intending to bring up another 600 men the next day for the attack, but the plan was dropped when the Māori force evacuated the Meremere fortifications the following day and escaped eastwards across flooded lagoons by canoe, falling back to their next defensive system at Rangiriri.
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About 3pm Cameron launched a two-hour bombardment from artillery and gunboats. Without waiting for Leslie's division, which was delayed by adverse conditions on the river, he began his frontal attack, storming the Māori positions across a 600m gap under heavy fire and immediately suffering
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Regiments, as well as Forest Rangers and Waikato Militia, set out for Ōrākau with two Armstrong six-pounders, arriving before daybreak. The total force for the mission was 1120 men. The two cannons were set up on a small plateau 350m to the west and about the same height above the
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on the north bank of the Waikato River near Tuakau. The Ngāti Maniapoto then attacked a British redoubt overlooking Pokeno, from which they were driven off. The attack on the supply line, said Belich, "was easily the most important single action of the first phase of the war".
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soldiers many times outnumbering our garrison, and with big guns throwing shells into our defences." Further British reinforcements arrived, including a second company of Forest Rangers, taking the British strength to almost 1500. Shelling continued as the sap approached the
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was attracting the allegiance of increasing numbers of Māori across the North Island. Browne concluded that members of the Kīngitanga movement would have to be compelled to submit to British rule. After attempting to achieve a peace settlement through
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was enclosed within a rectangular redoubt and contained interior bunkers, trenches, firing apertures. The main parapet was just 1.2 metres high, the outer trench a metre deep and the entire system was surrounded by a post and three-rail fence. The
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The Māori saw Ōrākau as a defeat, but both Cameron and Grey were angered by the failure of the 40th Regiment to halt the Ōrākau breakout and kill Rewi, which deprived them of the crushing victory over the Kingites they desperately sought.
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decided they should stay and fight. With ammunition now running very short, the Kingites—so parched they could not swallow their remaining food—began firing peach stones, 5 cm-long sections of apple tree branches and pieces of metal.
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Soon after arriving, Cameron, impressed by the courage of the garrison, decided to give them the opportunity to surrender. Two interpreters were sent to the head of the sap with a white flag and Major William Mair called out the offer in
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By dawn the second day—with fog so thick the combatants could not see one another—the Ōrākau garrison realised they had exhausted their water supplies and most of their ammunition. Ngāti Maniapoto chief Winitana Tupotahi suggested at a
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Belich has described the Waikato campaign as one of the best-prepared and best organised ever undertaken by the British Army, proving that many lessons had been learned from the logistical fiasco of the Crimean War. He said the
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spaced about 8 km apart, each of which included complex sets of entrenchments and parapets. The defence system, which included two cannons, was manned by a force of between 1200 and 2000 men from a dozen major Waikato
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was abandoned and then taken by Cameron's troops. But Māori were still opposed to the British demands of submitting to the Queen and surrendering all arms and lands and began building further defences south of Ngāruawāhia.
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in mass graves in the trenches of Ōrākau (just to the north of the road opposite the existing memorial) and beside the nearby swamp to the south. Rewi escaped through the swamp, unharmed, escorted by a 12-man bodyguard.
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Following the fall of the Paterangi line, Wiremu Tamihana, leading one of the two major Kingite divisions, retreated east to Maungatautari to block a British advance up the Waikato River into Ngāti Raukawa territory and
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with several lines of concealed rifle pits at its southern side. The defences consisted solely of earthworks, with no palisading; a redoubt midway along the main line, had a low profile and was deceptively strong.
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The bush raid was the beginning of a new Māori strategy that would drain Cameron's resources and halt his advance for another 14 weeks. On 22 July a group of about 40 Māori fatally shot a settler cutting timber at
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on 1 September and burn the town and slaughter most of its residents. This has since been dismissed by such historians as James Belich as being fear-mongering from Browne in order to try and gain military support.
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Construction of a new and even more formidable defence line began 25 km south of Ngāruawāhia, soon after the fall of Rangiriri. The line included fortifications at Pikopiko and Rangiatea and was centred on
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and reoccupy it. Māori viewed the reoccupation as an act of war and on 4 May a party of about 40 Ngati Ruanui warriors carried out a revenge attack, ambushing a small military party on a coastal road at nearby
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Two weeks after capturing Ngāruawāhia, Cameron's 3000-strong striking force, protected by another 4000 men, began slowly and cautiously advancing south. In late January Cameron moved his army headquarters to
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had ended in March 1861 as an uneasy truce between the government and Māori forces, with both sides recognising they had reached a stalemate. The lack of a clear victory by imperial forces led Governor
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by Kingite Māori. Grey used, as the trigger for the invasion, the Kingite rejection of his ultimatum on 9 July 1863 that all Māori living between Auckland and the Waikato take an oath of allegiance to
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has noted that Cameron would later become disillusioned with the war, suggesting that his role in ordering the attack on non-combatants may have been the beginnings of his "first pangs of remorse".
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their fire until the attackers were within 50 metres, then fired in two volleys, halting the advance. Two more waves of attack were similarly repulsed, with several casualties, including officers.
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Māori fighters fled. According to Belich, the Māori force numbered between 100 and 150 and about 15 were killed, some of them by bayonet. Among the dead were their leader Te Huirama, a relative of
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The general site of the battle is today marked by a memorial on Arapuni Road, 4 km east of Kihikihi, with the road running through the middle of what were the defences. The site of the
1451:Ōrākau was the last major battle of Cameron's Waikato campaign. Leaving his captured territory occupied by troops, he resumed his preparations to assault one of the strongest of Tamihana's 934:
war party launched an attack on that supply line, killing resident magistrate James Armitage—who was supervising a shipment of stores—and burning a stores depot with 40 tons of supplies at
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Early on 30 March two surveyors working at Kihikihi observed through a telescope construction of entrenchments at the Ōrākau pā and immediately passed the information to Brigadier General
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the Forest Rangers, leaving a large masking force in front of Paterangi. The force marched through rough bush in silence and complete darkness, passing within 1500 metres of the Paterangi
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British soldiers advanced on the redoubt and entered, shook hands with their combatants, then surprised the Māori by demanding they surrender all their arms and taking them prisoner.
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is on private farmland and no traces of it are now visible. Plans have been proposed to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the battle in 2014, with a call made for a new memorial.
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and began shelling it from about 350 metres, though the design and construction methods of the bunkers neutralised the force of the bombardment. He then ordered a start on a shallow
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of our enemies". At the same time, however, Grey began planning for war, using troops from the newly formed Commissariat Transport Corps to start construction work on a road from
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of low undulating hillocks leading to swamp. For two days the villagers, as well as Rewi's forces and the new reinforcements, labored in shifts to strengthen the defences of the
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The Rangiriri line, engineered by Te Wharepu, a leading Waikato chief, was a one kilometre-long system of deep trenches and high parapets that ran between the Waikato River and
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as too strong to assault and incapable of outflanking. On 2 April he settled his troops in front of it, and prepared to shell it. After three days the Kingites abandoned the
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form of cash and some government-controlled lands totalling about $ 171 million—about 1 percent of the value of the lands confiscated in 1863—and later that year Queen
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in the bows—as well as boats, barges and canoes. But Māori defences had also grown: the so-called Meremere Line—a 22 km-long line of fortifications that spread from
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survivors of the war, at the jubilee gathering on the battlefield of Orakau, 1 April 1914. All but Hekiera shared in the defence of Orakau pa, and fought through to the
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outposts, another 500 imperial troops arrived from Australia—now giving him a striking force of almost 2000 and a total of 8000 effectives—and a second river steamer,
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The role of Bishop Selwyn in the Rangiaowhia attack is unclear. He came with the invading forces, but also helped with Māori burials. The wife and two daughters of
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land, their belongings were looted by colonial forces and neighbouring settlers, with houses ransacked, cattle seized and horses transported for sale in Auckland.
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leaders understood they would be unharmed. There were about 200 Ngati-Apakura and Ngati-Hinetu people at Rangiaowhia, supplying food to the garrisons at Paterangi
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and the return of plunder taken from Taranaki; when it was rejected he began drawing up plans to invade the Waikato and depose the king—a plan opposed by both the
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that would run about 18 km south through forest to the Kingite border at the Mangatāwhiri Stream—a tributary of the Waikato River—near Pokeno. The so-called
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and purchased another in Lyttelton to supplement the supply system. By early 1863 the imperial government had provided Grey with 3000 men for the expected war.
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was defended by between 200 and 250 warriors—mainly Tūhoe and Ngāti Raukawa—drawn from at least nine tribes, as well as about 50 women and children.
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about 30 metres away, breaching the wall. Under the combination of shells, hand grenades and rifle fire, Māori casualties began to climb rapidly.
2679: 943:
of his men, further draining him of frontline manpower. But Māori raids continued: almost 200 Ngāti Maniapoto surrounded a militia stockade at a
2595:"The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Volume I: 1845–1864 Chapter 37: The Invasion of Rangiaowhia" 1228:
strategy: whether to guard the hinterland with large defensive systems on the fringes, or to challenge the nearby occupying forces with a new
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and the New Zealand General Assembly. According to Browne, in response to his belligerence, Kingite leaders formed plans to launch a raid on
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continuously. Several Waikato chiefs including Te Wharepu expressed a willingness to negotiate and on 8 December the Kingite capital at
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Events in early 1863 brought tensions to a head. In March Kingites obstructed the construction of a police station at Te Kohekohe, near
3125: 3062: 3051: 674:. The campaign ended with the retreat of the Kingitanga Māori into the rugged interior of the North Island and the colonial government 3408: 3292: 1487:
remained native territory, with Europeans warned they crossed it under threat of death. The area subsequently came to be known as the
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on the upper Waikato. On the way he encountered a group of about 140 of the dispersed Paterangi army, mainly warriors from distant
3357: 3110: 2842: 2791: 2512: 2483: 2342: 2317: 2297: 2246: 2217: 2188: 2131: 2050: 1993: 2267: 668:(March–April 1864), which became arguably the best-known engagement of the New Zealand Wars and which inspired two films called 3470: 1888: 1876: 922:
In mid-August the British established an alternative supply line to the Great South Road, using a combination of steamers from
2014: 3389: 3335: 3312: 3251: 3083: 1446: 675: 277: 2705: 2419:"Journal of the Polynesian Society: Maori Flour Mills Of The Auckland Province, 1846–1860, By R. P. Hargreaves, P 227-232" 944: 750: 2632: 3460: 3455: 855: 664:(November 1863)—which cost both sides more men than any other engagement of the New Zealand Wars—and the three-day-long 630: 1138:—one of the most important components of the transport and supply system—accidentally sank in the Waipa on 8 February. 3465: 1401:
as the garrison fled, bayoneting and shooting many of the wounded, including women and children. One of the women was
3162: 1184:, who had led the Rangiaowhia cavalry charge, was mortally wounded. His remains are buried at the Nixon memorial in 3445: 3440: 618:
and colonial troops and about 4,000 Māori warriors drawn from more than half the major North Island tribal groups.
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When Cameron's forces returned to Te Awamutu, the men of Rangiaowhia abandoned Paterangi, Pikopiko, and Rangiatea
653:. Government troops crossed into Waikato territory three days later and launched their first attack on 17 July at 3450: 3304:
The People of Many Peaks: The Māori Biographies from the Dictionary of New Zealand Biographies, Vol. 1, 1769–1869
3257: 1521:
in 1985 declared the Tainui people of the Waikato had never rebelled, but had been forced into a defensive war.
905: 3302: 3237: 3009: 2450: 2390: 2160: 1840: 1799: 1756: 1681: 1599: 754: 385: 313: 282: 180: 171: 162: 135: 126: 3269: 1384:. Although there are several versions of Rewi's reply, he is reputed to have declared through his messenger, " 1200: 904:
By the end of August Cameron's forces had grown to 6000 effectives. He had the armoured 40-ton paddle-steamer
773:, seizing the printing press on which he published a newspaper and taking it to Kihikihi. The raiders, led by 1260:, located on a slight rise of land in the midst of peach groves. Measuring about 30 metres by 12 metres, the 3401:
White Chief: The Story of a Pakeha Maori. The Colourful Life and Times of Judge F. E. Maning of the Hokianga
3185: 1739:
Auckland frontier allotting their land on conditions similar to those which are in the gazette for Taranaki.
1710:
it was controlled by a movement pledged not to sell land damned the Kingites in the eyes of most Europeans .
1036: 1011: 634: 257: 2993: 1509:
The war and confiscation of land caused heavy economic, social and cultural damage to Waikato-Tainui. King
1479:, but Cameron decided further effort in the region would be fruitless and withdrew, switching his focus to 1063:, north of Auckland, but in September 1864 they escaped and eventually made their way back to the Waikato. 1338:
That night, Tupotahi suggested they make a breakout under cover of dark. Rewi supported the plan, but the
1233: 982: 603: 130: 49: 3205: 665: 549: 2571: 1402: 1302: 1122:, about 5 km from Paterangi, with an advance camp for 600 men positioned just 1.2 km from the 595: 267: 120: 1084:
Operations at Rangiaowhia and Hairini, showing positions captured by the British on 21–22 February 1864
1180:
were killed in the attack, and his sister was killed in defence of the Hairini line a few days later.
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period, Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
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The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
1999:
The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Vol. 1, 1845–1864
1189: 1127: 977: 868: 794: 661: 568: 537: 2963: 2846: 2795: 2594: 2516: 2487: 2346: 2321: 2301: 2250: 2221: 2194:
The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period:Vol. 1, 1845–1864
2054: 1997: 2757: 2236:
The History of Howick and Pukuranga and Surrounding Districts.p37. A LaRoche.1991.Kyodo.Singapore
949: 827: 746: 708: 703: 622: 573: 519: 513: 327: 228: 220: 212: 2726: 2654: 1514: 1285:. They were shooting across the front of the 40th Regiment who were situated 250 m south of the 931: 927: 395: 54: 3126:
Report of the Sims Royal Commission into Confiscated Native Lands and Other Grievances, Page 17
3063:
Report of the Sims Royal Commission into Confiscated Native Lands and Other Grievances, Page 16
3052:
Report of the Sims Royal Commission into Confiscated Native Lands and Other Grievances, Page 15
3404: 3385: 3331: 3308: 3288: 3247: 3211: 3106: 3079: 3017: 2995:
Bush Fighting: Illustrated by Remarkable Actions and Incidents of the Maori War in New Zealand
2933: 2870: 2542: 2458: 2398: 2370: 2168: 2127: 1918: 1848: 1807: 1764: 1727: 1691: 1635: 1607: 1562: 1537: 1518: 1480: 1434: 1377: 1068: 555: 531: 654: 3307:. Wellington: Bridget Williams Books and Department of Internal Affairs, New Zealand. 1990. 3265: 1669:
fighting was subordinated to the prime object of clearing and holding a great tract of land.
1015: 843: 770: 587: 481: 410: 252: 41: 2076:
Seven soldiers were shot and tomahawked by warriors certain they were killing the governor.
1237: 610:
is a territorial region with a northern boundary somewhat south of the present-day city of
428: 405: 2925: 2625:"150 years since attack on Rangiaowhia in the NZ Wars | Ministry for Culture and Heritage" 2362: 1181: 729: 721: 626: 287: 175: 3186:
Waikato Raupatu Claims Settlements Act 1995, Parliamentary Counsel Office, NZ Legislation
778: 2089: 711:
to turn his attention to the Waikato, the centre of the Kīngitanga movement, where king
3365: 3098: 2119: 1394: 1177: 1131: 817: 774: 753:
would provide quick access to troops in the event of an invasion. Using what historian
725: 646: 400: 166: 151: 724:, in mid-1861 he sent an ultimatum to the movement's leaders, demanding submission to 572:
Chart from the medical and surgical journal of A. B. Messer, assistant surgeon aboard
3434: 1456: 1020: 650: 543: 501: 495: 2952: 2418: 1185: 1134:. But a further advance into the heart of Kingitanga territory was delayed when the 1534: 1526: 1488: 1060: 1032: 995: 897: 812:
On 9 July 1863 Grey issued a new ultimatum, ordering that all Māori living between
691: 683: 591: 245: 1142:
with the attackers and killed an estimated 41 Māori, losing six of their own men.
3424: 1685: 1455:, Te Tiki o te Ihingarangi, about 25 km northeast of Ōrākau near modern-day 1208: 1098: 935: 864: 741: 638: 58: 17: 1326:, but Rewi rejected the proposal. At midday many attempted to break out of the 986:
Military posts and scenes of engagement in South Auckland and the Waikato, 1863
424:
14,000 British and colonial troops, several hundred British-allied Māori troops
1510: 1149: 1102: 889: 766: 712: 205: 184: 991:
impacted on their subsequent ability to oppose the far bigger British force.
3271:
The Maori King: Or, the Story of Our Quarrel with the Natives of New Zealand
2891: 1090: 926:
to the Waikato Heads and canoes paddled up the Waikato by friendly Māori to
717: 2572:"Inglorious Dastards: Rangiaowhia raid and the 'great war for New Zealand'" 1097:, and was designed to block the main approaches to the agriculturally rich 874: 872:
March 1864—9000 imperial troops, more than 4000 colonial and a few hundred
787: 3241: 3175:
Deed of Settlement between the Queen and Waikato-Tainui, 17 December 2009
2680:"'This one was personal': Mihi Forbes on the new Tainui wars documentary" 1249: 1224: 923: 915: 813: 782: 762: 733: 642: 611: 1080: 1365: 1310: 1119: 1028: 999: 808:
Proclamation requiring Māori to take an Oath of Allegiance, 9 July 1863
607: 82: 1496: 1040: 955:, was brought to the front. On 31 October a river flotilla including 1502:(tribe) in the Waikato as punishment for their earlier "rebellion". 881:
Cameron's initial invasion force set up camp on the site of an old
586:
became the largest and most important campaign of the 19th-century
449: 2655:"THE ENGAGEMENT AT RANGIAWHIA. (Daily Southern Cross, 1864-05-28)" 2300:(1922). "30, The defence of the Pukekohe East stockade, section". 1351: 1350: 1214: 1207: 1199: 1079: 981: 883: 854: 842: 803: 567: 1867:
Waikato Raupatu Claims Settlement Act 1995, s 6."Text in English"
740:
Browne's invasion plan was suspended when he was replaced by Sir
2976:"Commemoration plans under way to mark watershed Waikato battle" 2727:"DEPARTURE OF BISHOP SELWYN. (Daily Southern Cross, 1868-10-21)" 1393:
nearby swamp. The group, many of them holding empty shotguns or
1006:
Cameron arrived at Rangiriri with about 850 men, chiefly of the
453: 851:, commander-in-chief of British forces in New Zealand, 1863–65 599: 3328:
The Waikato War 1863–64: A Guide to the Main Events and Sites
1690:. Penguin Random House New Zealand Limited (published 2013). 2998:. London: Sampson Low, Marston, Low and Searle. p. 260. 1533:
in the presences of the head of the Kingitanga, Māori Queen
1513:
and his people were forced to retreat into the heartland of
797:
and on 4 June the new British commander, Lieutenant-General
1335:, its progress slowed by accurate fire from the Kingites. 1035:, faced a Māori force of about 500 men, mostly armed with 765:, and 80 armed warriors raided the 80 hectare property at 2731:
paperspast.natlib.govt.nz National Library of New Zealand
2659:
paperspast.natlib.govt.nz National Library of New Zealand
1130:
and packhorses across the ranges to meet steamers on the
621:
Plans for the invasion were drawn up at the close of the
1495:
confiscated more than 480,000 hectares of land from the
910:—20m long, drawing one metre of water and armed with a 3138:"Report of the Waitangi Tribunal on the Manukau Claim" 1917:(2000 ed.). Auckland: Penguin. pp. 138–142. 1724:
The great war for New Zealand : Waikato 1800-2000
2191:(1922). "25, The second Taranaki campaign, section". 2090:"Choosing peace or war: the 1863 invasion of Waikato" 1666:. Sydney: Sydney University Press. pp. 176–179. 1965:(3). The Polynesian Society: 193–205. Archived from 1942:. Sydney: Sydney University Press. pp. 128–135. 694:
to legislation by signing on the monarch's behalf.)
3105:. Wellington: Allen & Unwin. pp. 166–170. 1726:. Wellington: Bridget Williams Books. p. 398. 1301:Realising the strength of Ōrākau, Carey decided to 657:, but were unable to advance for another 14 weeks. 2445: 2443: 2441: 2439: 2266: 2072:Climates of War; New Zealand in Conflict 1859–1869 2016:British logistics in the New Zealand Wars, 1845–66 594:of New Zealand between the military forces of the 3382:Climates of War: New Zealand in Conflict, 1859–69 2040:Climates of War.p126. E.Bohan.2005. Hazard Press. 1529:affirmed the apology of the Crown by signing the 3041:. Sydney: Sydney University Press. p. 260. 823: 793:Imperial troops were moved back to Taranaki as 34: 2869:. Hamilton: self-published. pp. 103–117. 2126:. Wellington: Allen & Unwin. p. 165. 1996:(1922). "26, The Waikato War and its causes". 1835: 1833: 1831: 1829: 1827: 1825: 1823: 1355:A memorial at the site of the battle of Ōrākau 1322:, or council of chiefs, that they abandon the 859:The action on the Koheroa ridges, 17 July 1863 816:and the Waikato take an oath of allegiance to 3078:, London: Faber & Faber, pp. 94–98, 2566: 2564: 2562: 2560: 2558: 465: 8: 2920: 2918: 2860: 2858: 2541:. Hamilton: self-published. pp. 45–69. 2155: 2153: 2151: 2149: 2147: 2145: 2143: 2053:(1922). "25, The second Taranaki campaign". 1248:at the agricultural village of Ōrākau, near 1019:escape. The assault force, armed with three 3330:. Te Awamutu?: Te Awamutu District Museum. 3207:The Invasion of Waikato / Te Riri ki Tainui 2953:Siege of Orakau, Te Ara Online Encyclopedia 2930:Ka Whawhai Tonu Matou: Struggle Without End 2532: 2530: 2528: 2515:(1922). "37, The invasion of Rangiaowhia". 2367:Ka Whawhai Tonu Matou: Struggle Without End 2268:"The Church Missionary Gleaner, March 1864" 2074:. Christchurch: Hazard Press. p. 128. 1908: 1906: 1904: 1902: 1900: 2837: 2835: 2833: 2831: 2829: 2786: 2784: 2782: 2780: 2507: 2505: 2503: 2501: 2499: 2478: 2476: 2474: 2337: 2335: 2333: 2212: 2210: 2208: 2206: 2204: 1988: 1986: 1984: 1531:Waikato Raupatu Claims Settlement Act 1995 688:Waikato Raupatu Claims Settlement Act 1995 472: 458: 450: 31: 3039:War and Politics in New Zealand 1855–1870 1940:War and Politics in New Zealand 1855–1870 1877:"Queen's Royal Assent Returns Maori Land" 1794: 1792: 1790: 1788: 1786: 1784: 1782: 1780: 1751: 1749: 1747: 1664:War and Politics in New Zealand 1855–1870 1244:. The Tūhoe chiefs urged Rewi to build a 2810:"Walking the Waikato Wars", C. Pugsley, 2486:(1922). "36, The advance on the Waipa". 2320:(1922). "34, The trenches at Meremere". 1889:"The Queen says sorry to wronged Maoris" 1657: 1655: 1653: 1651: 1594: 1592: 1590: 1588: 1586: 1584: 1582: 1580: 1578: 769:occupied by magistrate and Commissioner 27:1863–64 campaign of the New Zealand Wars 3321:from the original on 15 September 2024. 3260:from the original on 15 September 2024. 2823:"Walking the Waikato Wars". Spring 1997 2713:Ministry of Justice – Waitangi Tribunal 2457:. Auckland: Penguin. pp. 160–165. 2345:(1922). "35, The battle of Rangiriri". 2167:. Auckland: Penguin. pp. 133–134. 2022:(Ph.D.). Massey University. p. 136 1847:. Auckland: Penguin. pp. 166–176. 1806:. Auckland: Penguin. pp. 142–157. 1763:. Auckland: Penguin. pp. 125–133. 1606:. Auckland: Penguin. pp. 119–125. 1549: 1386:Ka whawhai tonu ahau ki a koe, ake, ake 1380:, which was passed to Rewi, within the 867:veteran who had replaced Major-General 690:. (The Governor-General normally gives 2751:O'Malley, Vincent (21 February 2024). 1625: 1623: 698:Background and origins of the invasion 3287:. Martinborough, NZ: Alister Taylor. 3285:Te Riri Pakeha: The White Man's Anger 3278:from the original on 22 October 2012. 3224:from the original on 4 September 2024 2851:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2800:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2765:from the original on 21 February 2024 2699: 2697: 2619: 2617: 2615: 2521:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2492:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2351:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2326:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2306:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2255:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2226:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2220:(1922). "28, The first engagements". 2197:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2059:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 2002:. Wellington: RNZ Government Printer. 1959:The Journal of the Polynesian Society 7: 1471:, or boundary. Cameron assessed the 1293:31 March – 1 April, days one and two 678:about 12,000 km of Māori land. 2897:Dictionary of New Zealand Biography 2845:(1922). "39, The siege of Orakau". 2794:(1922). "38, The siege of Orakau". 2704:O'Malley, Vincent (December 2010). 2249:(1922). "33, The river war fleet". 3016:. Auckland: Penguin. p. 127. 2964:Orakau memorial, NZ History Online 2932:. Auckland: Penguin. p. 126. 2397:. Auckland: Penguin. p. 158. 2369:. Auckland: Penguin. p. 124. 1632:The Penguin History of New Zealand 1559:The Penguin History of New Zealand 25: 2902:Ministry for Culture and Heritage 633:opposed action, and the incoming 427:~4000 troops, including 170 from 2992:Alexander, James Edward (1873). 930:at Pokeno. But on 7 September a 660:The subsequent war included the 590:. Hostilities took place in the 384: 372: 353: 342: 300: 238: 198: 179: 170: 161: 150: 134: 125: 109: 48: 2706:"Te Rohe Potae War and Raupatu" 3384:. Christchurch: Hazard Press. 2094:New Zealand Journal of History 1955:"Tamihana's Visit to Auckland" 1634:. Penguin Books. p. 214. 1561:. Penguin Books. p. 216. 1463:formed part of a long line of 1447:New Zealand land confiscations 1: 2753:"The incident in Rangiaowhia" 1431:Commissariat Transport Corps 649:or be expelled south of the 631:New Zealand General Assembly 444:1000, plus 80 taken prisoner 3358:"Taranaki and Waikato wars" 2682:. The Spinoff. 3 March 2021 2574:. NZ Listener. 6 March 2021 2013:Taylor, Richard J. (2004). 3487: 3362:New Zealand History Online 3347:The Waikato War of 1863–64 3210:. Bridget Williams Books. 2088:O'Malley, Vincent (2013). 1722:O'Malley, Vincent (2016). 1444: 975: 3403:. Christchurch: Penguin. 3326:Ritchie, Neville (2001). 2865:Stowers, Richard (1996). 2814:, Spring 1997, pp. 32–36. 2537:Stowers, Richard (1996). 1076:Pāterangi and Rangiaowhia 878:, or pro-British Māori.) 491: 435: 418: 190: 143: 102: 73:12 July 1863 – April 1864 65: 47: 39: 3399:Nicholson, John (2006). 3163:The Waikato-Tainui claim 3076:The Story of New Zealand 1915:A History of New Zealand 1913:Sinclair, Keith (2000). 1037:double-barreled shotguns 2892:"Hine-i-turama Ngatiki" 1182:Colonel Marmaduke Nixon 584:invasion of the Waikato 526:Invasion of the Waikato 35:Invasion of the Waikato 3380:Bohan, Edmund (2005). 3283:Simpson, Tony (1979). 3274:. Macmillan & Co. 3103:The Treaty of Waitangi 3074:Oliver, W. H. (1960), 3037:Dalton, B. J. (1967). 2423:www.jps.auckland.ac.nz 2273:The War in New Zealand 2124:The Treaty of Waitangi 2070:Bohan, Edmund (2005). 1953:Dalton, B. J. (1963). 1938:Dalton, B. J. (1967). 1356: 1219: 1205: 1085: 1059:before being moved to 987: 860: 852: 832: 809: 686:personally signed the 579: 144:Commanders and leaders 2593:Cowan, James (1955). 1662:Dalton, B.J. (1967). 1630:Michael King (2003). 1557:Michael King (2003). 1403:Hine-i-turama Ngatiki 1354: 1289:behind a small hill. 1211: 1203: 1083: 985: 858: 846: 807: 571: 436:Casualties and losses 121:Colony of New Zealand 3014:The New Zealand Wars 2812:NZ Defence Quarterly 2599:nzetc.victoria.ac.nz 2455:The New Zealand Wars 2395:The New Zealand Wars 2277:Adam Matthew Digital 2165:The New Zealand Wars 1845:The New Zealand Wars 1804:The New Zealand Wars 1761:The New Zealand Wars 1604:The New Zealand Wars 1467:the Kingites called 1146:Bishop George Selwyn 912:12-pounder Armstrong 598:and a federation of 508:Hutt Valley campaign 3471:Māori King movement 3461:1864 in New Zealand 3456:1863 in New Zealand 1969:on 12 February 2018 1891:, 2 November 1995, 1212:Plan of the Ōrākau 978:Battle of Rangiriri 847:Lieutenant-General 795:hostilities resumed 662:Battle of Rangiriri 604:Kingitanga Movement 596:colonial government 538:Second Taranaki War 139:North Island allies 3466:History of Waikato 3425:War in the Waikato 3368:on 12 October 2008 3144:on 15 October 2007 1483:. Land behind the 1357: 1347:2 April: day three 1240:and Ngāti Raukawa 1220: 1218:and fortifications 1206: 1101:district, east of 1086: 988: 861: 853: 828:Treaty of Waitangi 810: 709:Thomas Gore Browne 704:First Taranaki War 623:First Taranaki War 580: 520:First Taranaki War 514:Whanganui campaign 295:Medical Department 3446:Conflicts in 1864 3441:Conflicts in 1863 3266:Gorst, John Eldon 3202:O'Malley, Vincent 1538:Te Atairangikaahu 1519:Waitangi Tribunal 1435:Otago pack saddle 1057:Waitematā Harbour 839:First engagements 671:Rewi's Last Stand 565: 564: 532:Tauranga campaign 448: 447: 98: 97: 16:(Redirected from 3478: 3451:New Zealand Wars 3414: 3395: 3376: 3375: 3373: 3364:, archived from 3353: 3352: 3341: 3322: 3298: 3279: 3261: 3233: 3231: 3229: 3188: 3183: 3177: 3172: 3166: 3160: 3154: 3153: 3151: 3149: 3140:. 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Retrieved 3206: 3181: 3170: 3165:, NZ History 3158: 3146:. Retrieved 3142:the original 3132: 3121: 3112:086861-634-6 3102: 3093: 3075: 3069: 3058: 3047: 3038: 3032: 3013: 3004: 2994: 2987: 2979: 2974:Matt Bowen, 2970: 2959: 2948: 2929: 2905:. Retrieved 2895: 2885: 2866: 2847: 2843:Cowan, James 2819: 2811: 2806: 2796: 2792:Cowan, James 2767:. Retrieved 2756: 2746: 2734:. Retrieved 2730: 2721: 2712: 2684:. Retrieved 2674: 2662:. Retrieved 2658: 2649: 2637:. Retrieved 2633:the original 2628: 2602:. Retrieved 2598: 2588: 2576:. Retrieved 2538: 2517: 2513:Cowan, James 2488: 2484:Cowan, James 2454: 2426:. Retrieved 2422: 2413: 2394: 2385: 2366: 2357: 2347: 2343:Cowan, James 2322: 2318:Cowan, James 2312: 2302: 2298:Cowan, James 2292: 2280:. Retrieved 2272: 2261: 2251: 2247:Cowan, James 2241: 2232: 2222: 2218:Cowan, James 2193: 2189:Cowan, James 2183: 2164: 2133:086861-634-6 2123: 2114: 2102:. Retrieved 2097: 2093: 2083: 2075: 2071: 2065: 2055: 2051:Cowan, James 2045: 2036: 2024:. Retrieved 2015: 2008: 1998: 1994:Cowan, James 1971:. Retrieved 1967:the original 1962: 1958: 1948: 1939: 1933: 1914: 1892: 1884: 1872: 1863: 1844: 1803: 1760: 1737: 1723: 1717: 1708: 1701:. 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Carey 1132:Waipā River 1099:Rangiaowhia 1069:Ngāruawāhia 1027:with fixed 936:Camerontown 865:Crimean War 863:Cameron, a 742:George Grey 639:George Grey 558:(1868–1872) 552:(1868–1869) 546:(1865–1866) 540:(1863–1866) 528:(1863–1864) 522:(1860–1861) 59:Puniu River 3435:Categories 3391:1877270962 3337:0478220510 3314:0908912196 3253:0824818903 3085:0571056652 2282:24 October 2104:8 February 2100:(1): 41–45 1973:13 October 1703:13 January 1544:References 1150:Kingitanga 1103:Te Awamutu 771:John Gorst 767:Te Awamutu 429:Ngāi Tūhoe 406:Ngāi Tūhoe 334:Steam-tug 206:Royal Navy 131:Kīngitanga 2026:28 August 1441:Aftermath 1395:tomahawks 1234:Cambridge 1091:Paterangi 972:Rangiriri 718:kingmaker 401:Ngāti Pou 3319:Archived 3276:Archived 3268:(1864). 3258:Archived 3240:(1996). 3222:Archived 3101:(1987). 3012:(1986). 2928:(1990). 2907:23 April 2763:Archived 2758:Newsroom 2736:30 April 2664:25 April 2639:25 April 2604:24 April 2453:(1986). 2428:24 April 2393:(1986). 2365:(1990). 2163:(1986). 2122:(1987). 1843:(1986). 1802:(1986). 1759:(1986). 1684:(1977). 1602:(1986). 1481:Tauranga 1359:Another 1303:encircle 1250:Kihikihi 1225:Matamata 1029:bayonets 924:Onehunga 916:Pukekawa 814:Auckland 783:Taranaki 763:Meremere 734:Auckland 643:Auckland 635:Governor 616:Imperial 612:Auckland 419:Strength 326:Gunboat 320:Gunboat 312:Gunboat 78:Location 2686:6 March 2578:6 March 1511:Tāwhiao 1368:of the 1366:outwork 1361:runanga 1340:runanga 1320:runanga 1186:Ōtāhuhu 1120:Te Rore 1041:muskets 1000:redoubt 965:Pioneer 961:Curacoa 952:Curacoa 713:Tāwhiao 655:Koheroa 608:Waikato 576:Curacoa 390:Waikato 360:militia 336:Koheroa 329:Sandfly 315:Pioneer 231:Eclipse 223:Harrier 215:Curacoa 185:Tāwhiao 83:Waikato 3407:  3388:  3334:  3311:  3291:  3250:  3214:  3148:25 May 3109:  3082:  3020:  2936:  2873:  2545:  2461:  2401:  2373:  2171:  2130:  1921:  1851:  1810:  1767:  1730:  1694:  1638:  1610:  1565:  1485:aukati 1469:aukati 1459:. 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Index

Battle of Ōrākau
New Zealand Wars

Ngāti Maniapoto
Puniu River
Waikato
United Kingdom
Colony of New Zealand

Kīngitanga

United Kingdom
Duncan Cameron

Rewi Maniapoto

Wiremu Tamihana

Tāwhiao
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Royal Navy
HMS Curacoa
HMS Harrier
HMS Eclipse
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
British Army
12th Regiment
14th Regiment
18th Regiment
40th Regiment

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