The Treaty of Waitangi; or, how New Zealand became a British Colony
Transcriber's Note:
In the text a macron, denoting a long vowel, has been placed over the first e of Tamati Waaka Nene, the prominent Maori chief. Tamati Waaka Nene was also the recipient of a letter that was inserted into the book after it had been printed. This has been shifted to the end of the Appendix. In the letter mu?u has been transcribed as mutu .
The text contains quotations from instructions to Captain Hobson in 1839. After consulting alternative versions of these documents, the following corrections have been made to clarify their sense:
Apparent typographical errors have been corrected. Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been removed except where they reflect quotations from other documents.
THE TREATY OF WAITANGI
The Commemorative Monument.
The symbol on which have been engraved the articles of the treaty, so that eyes may look thereon from year to year.
Frontispiece.
BY T. LINDSAY BUICK AUTHOR OF OLD MARLBOROUGH, OLD MANAWATU, AN OLD NEW ZEALANDER WELLINGTON N.Z. S. & W. MACKAY LAMBTON QUAY 1914
TO ROBERT M'NAB M.A., LL.B., F.R.G.S.
TO WHOSE ENTERPRISE AND SELF-SACRIFICE WE OWE THE RECOVERY OF SO MUCH OF OUR FAST RECEDING HISTORY I RESPECTFULLY DEDICATE THIS BOOK
The arrival in New Zealand waters of the battleship given to the Empire by this Dominion during a grave national crisis, marks a new epoch in the life of our country, and an event so pregnant with the spirit of Imperialism seems to the author to provide an appropriate point at which to pause and retrospectively review the causes which have made possible such an innovation in our naval policy—such a milestone in our national history. The story of New Zealand's progress since 1814 has been one of splendid emulation tempered by vicissitude. There have been dark days, days of doubt, of devastation by war, but never a period when our people lost heart or renounced their national faith. No attempt has been here made to tell the whole of that story. All that I have tried to do is to get back to the beginning of things, to the birth of law and order, to the genesis of the day when we were able to say to the Mother Land, We will build you a Dreadnought, and yet another if needs must. The Treaty of Waitangi has been frequently derided and denounced, but it was in very truth the foundation of our nationhood. When we consider what Britain would have lost in material wealth, in loyalty, in strategetical advantage; when we reflect what it would have cost to have conquered the country by force of arms, then it is that we can see in clearer perspective the wisdom of Lord Normanby's policy, the breadth of his statesmanship, and we are the better able to appreciate the triumph in diplomacy which that treaty represents.
Thomas Lindsay Buick
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PREFACE
NOTE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENT
CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
FOOTNOTES
FOOTNOTES
FOOTNOTES
FOOTNOTES
SIGNATURES TO THE TREATY OF WAITANGI
FOOTNOTES
FOOTNOTES
APPENDIX
PETITION FROM MAORIS TO THE QUEEN
MAORI CHIEFS IN LONDON
MEMORIAL OF TAWHIAO AND OTHERS TO THE QUEEN
FOOTNOTES
This relic of the treaty came into the AUTHOR'S possession after the volume was printed and is now inserted as a supplement.
BIBLIOGRAPHY