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New Plymouth District Council.

Ngā kōrero mō Taranaki 
Ngā taukumekume - Land Wars Start Over Pekapeka Block  
'Time to put Pekapeka Block to Rest'Back to list
Jim Bailey

Jim Bailey: Time to let the Pekapeka Block rest in peace.

Image: Provided by The Daily News

By Virginia Winder

 

Te Atiawa elder Jim Bailey was prepared to let go of the Pekapeka Block - but not the leasehold land within it.


The Owae Marae board of trustees chairman, who died on 1 February 2004, said the controversial 600-acre (243-hectare) block on the south side of the Waitara River had been the subject of debate for many years.


"That's an issue that's been around so long - it's been brought up and thrown out, brought up and thrown out," he said of past land court hearings.


The issue surrounds whether Te Atiawa man Te Teira had the right to sell the land to the Crown back in the late 1850s.


While many historians, academics and tribal members say "no", Mr Bailey said people needed to look at all sides.


"He had the right up to a point," he said of Te Teira. "They (his followers) were land owners too. A lot of these people had a right as much as anybody else. That's where it gets a bit confusing. Our people lived on the land and it was free grazing and when you are on the land, you feel it's yours."


But in reality, that was not the case. "The chief has the right to sell the land and the people living on it; they go with it. The law is the chief, eh?"


Te Atiawa paramount chief of the day was Wiremu Kingi te Rangitāke - and he was totally against selling the land.



Wiremu Kingi te Rangitāke
Land Fighter: Wiremu Kingi te Rangitāke.

Mr Bailey believed everybody had the right to argue the point, but he said it was time to let the Pekapeka Block rest in peace.


"Was the land sold? Was the land paid for? What I look at is our tupuna (ancestors) lived through it, went through the pain and our tupuna died for it."


He said people were trying to resurrect the Pekapeka Block. "As far as I'm concerned, it's gone. It's happened in the past."


But the Waitara endowments were another story. Mr Bailey believed the 179.71 hectares of lease land was worth fighting for.


He said the Crown gifted pieces of confiscated Waitara land to the Waitara Borough Council and Taranaki Harbours Board. Only half of the endowment land was within the Pekapeka Block.


"The harbours board, they needed land. They were going to build the harbour here," Mr Bailey said.


The port in Waitara was built and, initially, it was in high use for industrial purposes. Over time the wharves became used less and less and in 1940, the port was officially decomissioned and the Waitara Harbour Board disbanded. However, the land was kept to fund a bridge over the Waitara River, the prevention of erosion of the river and loan repayments. The borough council also used its endowment land to fund town improvments.


In 1989, when local body amalgamations came into effect, the endowments were transferred to the New Plymouth District Council.


"This land, I think it should go back to the people - Te Atiawa," Mr Bailey said.


"A lot of blunt words have been said (about the land). It's been stolen, if you want to put it that way," he says.


While he had wanted a settlement on the Waitara endowments and had been keen to see the land returned, Mr Bailey had a final word of caution for his people. "We are saying 'don't sell your land'."


He understood that people needed money to live, but warned: "At the end of the day, the land will always be there, but the money just evaporates and will be gone ... and the next minute you have got nothing. Be thankful for what you have got."


The Waitara leasehold land has been the subject of a series of high-profile hearings this year. On 12 August 2004, the New Plymouth District Council voted 13-3 to return the land to Te Atiawa. A final decision about the future of the land has yet to be made.

 

This story will be updated as more events come to hand.

 

 




This story was originally published in May 2003

It was last updated on 2 February 2004

 

Comment on this Story

 

Add your own Story

Alexander, Ada C, Waitara: a record past and present, (1979), New Plymouth: Taranaki Newspapers
 

Belich, James, The New Zealand Wars and the Victorian Interpretation of Racial Conflict, (1988), Auckland: Penguin
 

Browne, Harriet, Narrative of the Waitara Purchase and the Taranaki War, (1965), Dunedin: Univeristy of Otago Press
 

'Waitara and the Native Question', The Southern Monthly Magazine, (1863-1864), Auckland: Creighton and Scales

 

Missen, E.A., The Life and Times of Wiremu Kingi Te Rangitāke E Whiti, (1936)
 

Woods, Sarah, Octavious Hadfield and the Waitara Dispute, (1972), Thesis (MA), Christchurch: University of Canterbury


Starke, June, The Waitara Purchase, Turnbull Record 6 #1, May 1973, p. 12-25

 

ARTEFACT RESOURCES

Watercolour painting by William Spain. Panorama of New Plymouth from Queen Street, 1844. Shows William Spain's land tenure meeting on Mt Eliot (Puke Ariki) in the distance.

 

 

Survey Pegs from Bell Block and Manutahi surveys.

 

Survey pegs (above) from Bell Block and Manutahi surveys.

 

Posters of Waitara Historical Exhibition at Owae Marae.

 

Tauihu found in Swamp north of Manukorihi Pa and kept at Owae Marae.

 

Painting of Owae Marae with statue of Maui Pomare.

 

Bottle used as survey mark.


 

ARCHIVES

Carrington's statement of the Waitara purchase in draft and final form.

 

Garrison order book from Camp Waitara

 

Proclamations and notices issued by the military and civil authorities during the period 1858-1861.

 

Contemporary diary: Events of the land wars 1860-1861 through the diary of 13 year old boy.

 

Letters between Capt. James Barton and pro-European Maori in early 1860.

 

WEBLINKS

Puke Ariki is not responsible for the content of these external websites.

 

The Knowledge Basket - New Zealand research site including the Waitangi Tribunal Report (1996) on the Taranaki Wars.

 

The New Zealand Wars - an excellent resource for information and materials dealing with the New Zealand Wars.

 

Waitara today - the Waitara page on the Windwand site

 

More about Waitara - read more about the town on Wikipedia.

 

RELATED TARANAKI STORIES

The Plunder of Parihaka

 

EDUCATION
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Land Wars Battle: The Battle of Puketakauere

 

Voices and Images from the First Taranaki War

 

Worksheet

For help with downloading and saving these worksheets, see the Help page.

 

Pekapeka Block (PDF)

 

TreasureLink
A weekly resource for teachers based on a Taranaki Story. Activities, ideas for more study and links to Puke Ariki's treasures.

 

ORGANISATIONS

Waitara History Project Group and Waitara Genealogy Branch Resource Library

 

A warm welcome is extended to researchers, historians, students, genealogists and anyone interested in Waitara history.

 

Waitara Genealogy Branch NZSG

Memory Bank
33 Queen Street
Waitara

Telephone: 06 754 3212

Email: waitarahistory.genealogy
@xtra.co.nz



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INANAHI, INAIANEI, ĀPŌPŌ.
Whārangi tūwhera Ngā kōrero mō Pukeariki Ngā taonga Ngā kōrero mō Taranaki Whare pukapuka Rauemi Taranaki he tirohanga
Mana pupuri 2003 Puke Ariki