- Defence of Pukekohe East 1863
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The Defence of Pukekohe East was an action during the Invasion of the Waikato, part of the New Zealand Wars. On 13 September and 14 September 1863, 11 settlers and 6 militia men inside a half completed stockade around the Pukekohe East church held off a Māori taua or war party of approximately 200 men from Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Pou iwi, until they were relieved by detachments of the 18th, 65th and 70th Regiments. In a series of actions around the stockade the taua sustained 20% casualties and retreated.
Contents
Background
Many Europeans (or Pākehā) settled in New Zealand between 1830 and 1860, by which time British settlers outnumbered the native Māori by more than two to one. Europeans were initially welcomed by the native Māori. However disputes over land, sovereignty and mana lead to skirmishes between Europeans and pro and anti European Maori, known as the New Zealand Wars, notably in the north in the 1840s, in Taranaki from 1860 and in the Waikato in 1863-1865. In the Waikato, south of the British settlement at Auckland, Māori formed the Kingi Movement. Kingitanga involved adopting European culture in order to preserve their own people: Kingites established a newspaper, a bank, and a parliament, as well as electing a king. These last two actions were seen as threatening British sovereignty, leading Governor Sir George Grey to invade the Waikato.
Pukekohe East
Pukekohe East lies on the rim of a giant volcanic crater, south east of Auckland. Although potentially fertile, the land remained in virgin forest, or bush, and was never densely populated. In the 1830s, those Māori who had lived closest were defeated by Hongi Hika's Ngapuhi iwi, the survivors abandoning their settlements and retreating south. When settler government came to grant titles to the land this history lead to dispute over boundaries and ownership. The land was first sold to Europeans in 1843, as part of the general land speculation in the Auckland area which seized the European settlers. Not until 1853 were disputes between different Māori claimants resolved and was the area first settled. Families of farmers built houses and began to clear the land but this process was far from complete when war broke out.
The church
The young settlement included many Presbyterian Scots. They resolved to build a Presbyterian church in 1861, undertaking the majority of the work themselves and paying for the cost of £126 2s 5d by subscription. Construction was of ¾ inch weatherboards of rimu and totara wood. These were not bulletproof. When the church was opened of 5 April 1863, this was the largest building and centre of the community - although it was just 30 feet (9.1 m) by 15 feet (4.6 m), excluding porch and belfry. The church stands on the high ground of the crater rim, in what would have been a natural defensive position, but for the dense bush which still came uncomfortably close, except to the south, where land had been cleared for a cemetery.
War in the Waikato
On Sunday 12 July 1863 General Cameron's Army advanced into Waikato territory from its frontier base of Pokeno. The settlers of Pukekohe East, a few miles away, received no official notice - they were informed that afternoon by Reverend Norrie, who had conducted a service for the soldiers. The 65th Regiment advanced through their settlements later that day.
On Wednesday 14 July, two settlers at nearby Ramarama were killed by Māori raiders, which illustrated the vulnerability of Pukekohe East. Many families, and virtually all women and children were evacuated. Those men who remained behind decided to construct a stockade around the church, as a refuge in the event of attack. During the next 3 weeks a further 13 settlers were killed on isolated farms in the area south of Auckland.
The stockade
The stockade was built 10 feet (3.0 m) from the wall of the church, excepting small bastions on the north-western and south-eastern corners, to allow enfilading fire. The entrance was built into the south-eastern corner, visitors being channelled though a chicane exposed to the defenders' fire. The walls were made of small logs – on average 6 inches (150 mm) in diameter – just enough to stop a musket ball. These were laid horizontally, and nailed to posts, instead of vertically as was the Māori custom in their forts, or pa. Gaps between logs were left for firing positions. The stockade was to be 7 feet (2.1 m) high, but was not completed in September, at which time walls were just over five feet, forcing defenders to stoop. Work had been stopped by Lieutenant Daniel Lusk, who conducted an inspection of the amateur settlers work on 31 August. Lt. Lusk ordered a moat dug around the outside, the earth being piled against the wall. A trench 3-4 feet deep and 6 feet (1.8 m) wide had been completed by the attack. Bush close to the south-eastern corner was also to ordered to be cleared. The 10 acres (40,000 m2) around the church was cleared in the days before the attack, but large stumps and low growth left, providing cover and concealment.
The taua
Most knowledge of the taua comes from an interview with a survivor, Te Huia Raureti, by historian James Cowan. The defenders estimated the taua contained 400 warriors, but Te Huia Raureti estimates it was between 170 and 200 strong. They comprised Ngāti Maniapoto, with Ngāti Pou and a few northern Waikato men. The taua assembled at Meremere on 12 September and paddled up the Waikato River in three war canoes, or waka. The party launched an abortive attack on the Alexander Redoubt, then marched to the north, keeping inside bush to the west of Pokeno, where they spent the night.
According to Te Huia Raureti, Raureti Paiaka and Hopa te Rangianini said ‘In the battle to come let us confine ourselves strictly to fighting; let no one touch anything in the settlers’ houses, or their stock, or otherwise interfere with their property.’ A dispute broke out within the taua after Ngāti Maniapoto under Wahanui Huatare disregarded this wish and looted the Scott house.
Conclusions
The church still stands today. Bullet holes can be seen in the walls and porch, and in the gravestone of Betsy Hodge.
The defence of Pukekohe East is interesting as one of the few occasions in which Māori attacked a European fortification - the more so in that they obtained more than 10 to 1 superiority in numbers, while the fortification was designed and constructed by amateurs, undermanned and incomplete at the time of attack.
The New Zealand Wars, particularly in the 1860s, can be seen simplistically as a series of sieges of defended Māori pas. These and Māori tactics have been highly rated by New Zealand military historians, while the mixed success of Pakeha armies attacking pas has been attributed to European infexibility rooted in assumptions of cultural superiority. The defence of Pukekohe East demonstrates neither side enjoyed a monopoly on offensive failures.
Sources
- James Cowan. The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Māori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period. R.E. Owen, Wellington, 1922.
- Tim Ryan, "War comes to Pukekohe", in Susanne Stone, Editor, The Original Pukekohe, W.J. Deed Printing Ltd, Waiuku, 2005
Categories:- Conflicts in 1863
- New Zealand wars
- 1863 in New Zealand
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