1814 in New Zealand

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

1814
in
New Zealand

Decades:
See also:

With the purchase of a vessel by

Church Missionary Society at the beginning of the year the establishment of a mission in New Zealand is at last possible. After a preliminary scouting trip Marsden and the missionaries arrive at the end of the year and the first mission is begun at Rangihoua Bay in the Bay of Islands
.

A small number of sealing vessels are operating/visiting Campbell, Macquarie and Auckland Islands. At least one visits the Bay of Islands while other also make provisioning stops in Foveaux Strait. Whaling ships and ships collecting timber from Tahiti and other islands in the Pacific also visit the Bay of Islands.

Incumbents

Regal and viceregal

Events

Undated
  • Having received a hand flour mill from Marsden, Ruatara is at last able to grind the wheat that he has been growing and also that which he brought back from Sydney two years earlier.[7][9]

1813 or 1814

  • 6 lascars from the Matilda desert the ship at 'Port Daniel' (Otago Harbour). One later takes the moko and is still living with Māori on Stewart Island in 1844.[10]
  • Robert Brown and 7 others of the Matilda sail from Stewart Island in a ship's boat to search the east coast of the South Island as far as Moeraki and Oamaru looking for the missing lascars. They are all killed and, presumably, eaten.[10][13]

Births

Undated

Deaths

See also

References

  1. ^ Dictionary of Australian Biography: Lachlan Macquarie
  2. ^ a b Dictionary of New Zealand Biography: Samuel Marsden
  3. ^ a b c d e f g NZETC: Maori Wars of the Nineteenth Century, 1814
  4. ^ a b c New Zealand Encyclopaedia 1966: Thomas Kendall Biography
  5. ^ a b Dictionary of New Zealand Biography: Thomas Kendall
  6. ^ a b Dictionary of New Zealand Biography: Hongi Hika
  7. ^ a b c Dictionary of New Zealand Biography: Ruatara
  8. ^ a b New Zealand Encyclopaedia 1966: Hongi Hika Biography
  9. ^ a b c New Zealand Encyclopaedia 1966: Ruatara Biography
  10. ^ .
  11. ^ New Zealand Encyclopaedia 1966: Samuel Marsden Biography
  12. ^ "Early Europeans in New Zealand". Archived from the original on 9 November 2007. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
  13. ^ Anne Salmond's Between Worlds describes in the narrative (p.312) the following two incidents as having taken place in 1814 (as do reports in the histories of Moeraki and Oamaru) but in the appendix (p.524) as having occurred after the Matilda left Port Jackson on 4 August 1813 and implying they happened later that year, as is the case in NZETC: The Matilda at Otago, 1813.
  14. ^ Godley bio at Chch City Libraries
  15. ^ Starke, June. (22 June 2007). "'Hadfield, Octavius 1814? – 1904'". Dictionary of New Zealand biography.
  16. ^ No Mean City by Stuart Perry (1969, Wellington City Council)
  17. ^ "Obituary: Death of the Hon Robert Hart", in Taranaki Herald, Volume XLIII, Issue 10110, 17 September 1894, Page 2.
  18. ^ alington, M.H. (18 September 2007). "'THATCHER, Frederick', from An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, edited by A. H. McLintock, originally published in 1966". Te Ara – The Encyclopedia of New Zealand.