UQ B |i LI, 1 1 Ml vvlOSA 5 .M>Sv V//o\n»i - <: c3 aOSANCElfj] ^lOSANCElfx %a3AlN^■lW^ .^WEUN'lVERS//, vvlOSA.\GElfx> o ^TilJDNVSOl^"^ %a3AINn3WV ,\WEUNIVER% ^vVOSANCElfj;> T30If PEI^riEB BT SPOTTISWOODE AND CO. jrliW-STKEET SQUAEE DU CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Origin of the war — Military force on the island — Martial law proclaimed — Operations confined to the Taranaki district — Arrival of reinforce- ments from Australia — Commencement of hos- tilities PAGE 1 CHAPTER II. Operations in the neighbourhood of New Plymouth — Attack on Puketakauere pah repulsed by the natives — True cause of the quarrel — Native opinion of our tactics — Cause and results of the failure at Puketakauere . . . .26 CHAPTER m. Major-General Pratt arrives at New Plymouth — Number and distribution of the troops — Topo- graphy of the Taranaki district — Description of Warea Forest pah — Strength of the enemy — 882455 IV CONTENTS. CHAPTER 111.— continued. Sources of information regarding their movements — Their military capabilities — Native commis- sariat ....... PAGE 44 CHAPTER IV. Nevp- Plymouth fortified — Refusal of the civil autho- rities to aid in the removal of the women and children, and in sanitary operations, with its con- sequences — Plans for victualling the town — Selfish- ness of the settlers — Presumption and inefficiency of the Volunteers — The enemy abandon their pahs, and retire into the forest — Expedition to Burton's Hill, and escape of the enemy — Maori tactics — Plan adopted by General Pratt . 71 CHAPTER V. Attack and destruction of the Ngatiparirua, Kairau, and Huirangi pahs — Difficulty of the country — The enemy retreat into the forest — Major Hutchins reconnoitres the position on the Kahihi River — Misrepresentation of the colonial press . 96 CHAPTER VI. Expedition to the Kahihi river — Difficulties of the march — Encampment at the Tartaraimaka block — Destruction of the Orongomaihanghai,Pukekakariki, and Mataiaio pahs — Their formidable construction CONTENTS. V CHAPTER \\.— continued. — Conduct and consequences of the expedition un- justly disparaged — Return to New Plymoutli — Movements and strength of the enemy — Attack and capture of the Mahoetahi pah — Political re- sults of this important victory . . page 108 CHAPTER VII. Military preparations — Expedition to the Waitara — Pukerangioria pah — Difficulties of the approach — Defeat of the enemy at Matarorikoriko — Mr. Wilson visits the Miiori camp — Strong position of the enemy . . . . . . 138 CHAPTER Vlir. Construction of redoubts — Attack by the Maoris re- pulsed — The enemy retires further into the forest — Operations against Te Area pah — Tamahana arrives in the Maori camp — Increased energy of the natives — Truce granted — Arrival of the Go- vernor — Negotiations for peace — General Pratt leaves New Zealand . . , .160 CHAPTER IX. State of the country — Review of military operations — Conclusion 181 /' THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND IN 1860-1861. CHAPTER I. Origin of the war — Military force on tlie island — Martial law proclaimed — Operations confined to the Taranaki district — Arrival of reinforcements from Australia — Commencement of hostilities. I PROPOSE in the following pages to give a brief narrative of the events of the New Zealand war of 1860-1861, in the Taranaki district, so far as the military operations under Major-General Pratt are concerned. It is not my intention, nor would it be- -^me me, to enter on the justice or policy B 2 THE AVAR IX NEW ZEALAND. of the quarrel. These considerations be- long more especially to those whose duty it has been to investigate that portion of Maori history, which discusses native title to land, and the proper interpretation of our treaties Avith the natives.* I shall, therefore, only slightly touch upon the origin of the war, and confine my- self principally to the military operations of the troops, under the command of Major- General Pratt — commencing in August I860 — by which the war was brought to a successful termination in March 1861. The unsettled appearance of European politics, the supposed increase of the French force in New Caledonia, and other circumstances, had for some time caused attention to be dra^vn to the small military and naval forces in the Australian colonies, * The Government despatches, and others referred to, will be found in Parliamentary papers on New Zealand, presented to Parliament in March 1861, and at the pages as here noted in the margin. THE MAORIS. 3 and to the great interests there at stake. Some of these colonies — and Victoria in particular — had made most expensive pre- parations for iSelf- defence. In addition to these external causes of anxiety, New Zealand had an internal dis- turbing element of its own to guard against, in its Maori inhabitants of the northern island, who were numerous, warlike, and independent, and who, though living nomi- nally under our rule, had never acknow- ledged themselves a conquered race. Nor had our successes in former wars given them much reason for so doing ; and while they had been willing at first to see the white man in their country, and to accept the benefits and luxuries he introduced, they had neither contemplated his soon overpowering them, and becoming the dominant race, nor had they calculated upon seeing their lands and old regal sway pass into his hands. The probability that such results would B 2 4 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. follow was brought prominently before them by the vain boasting of the settlers, who openly declared to these proud tribes, that, whether they liked it or not, they must sell their lands to them. While to keep this race in good temper, as much care and respect had hitherto been paid to their prejudices and habits as to those of the most high-caste Hindoo! For undeniably, for the interests of the colony and its colonists, collision with the native population was on all accounts to be avoided. At the commencement of the year 1860, the military and naval force in the colony was particularly small : the infantry, by the withdrawal, in October 1858, of the 58th Regiment, being reduced to one regiment. The colonists were scattered over the face of the island without the slightest regard, either in the choice of their land, or of sites for their houses, to military or even to mutual defence. The country itself was a network of gullies, ravines, marshes, and INTERNAL DEFENCE. " 6 impenetrable forest ; and, except in the neighbourliood of the townships, destitute of roads; and even those near towns were hardly better than cart-tracks, impassable in winter. To these matters His Excellency the Governor appears to have been fully alive, when, in March 1859, he entertained the offer of Te Teira to sell the block of land at the Waitara, which became, if not the origin, certainly the pretext for the war. For in pressing, in August of the isame year, on the Secretary of State for the Colonies the danger of a foreign invasion, he adds in a despatch : — ' The internal defence of the colony is, however, a difficult ques- tion ; I cannot but see with some unea- siness the continuance of the movement in favour of the Maori King. With the means at my disposal nothing can be done or could be done to avoid it ; nor do I apprehend any immediate danger from it. Should any unforeseen circum- 6 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. stances lead to a collision, the union of a large body of natives under a single chief, with their central position and the fast- nesses of their country, would give them a great advantage. ' There are seldom wanting in New Zea- land disaffected Europeans, who, for selfish purposes, desire to foment discord between the two races; and by the last mail from Wellington I learn that a deserter, and others, have been disturbing the minds of the natives in that district, and exciting them to arm ; that they were purchasing arms extensively, and being drilled, and had used menaces that had alarmed the settlers and the civil authorities. ' I trust that these fears will prove exag- gerated, and that the evil influence may not yet spread beyond the district. If, however, blood were once shed by the Europeans, even in self-defence, it would be impossible to foresee the consequences. Some defenceless family would be murdered THE COLONISTS. 7 in revenge. The murderers would find countenance and support in their tribe; and the flame of war, once kindled, would extend through the whole island. ' There can be no doubt of the ultimate success of Her Majesty's arms in any contest with the native race ; but the consequences to the scattered European population of the colony of even a success- ful conflict could not but be ruinous and distressing in the extreme.' This opinion, so strongly expressed, can- not but have been the firm conviction of all the thinking portion of the community, who had at heart not only their personal interests, but the general- good of the colony which they had adopted as their home. But though the colonists held much more land than they did or could cultivate, still land was the cry of the greedy ; and when- ever a rich tract, cultivated or uncultivated, came under their notice, they considered themselves entitled to insist on the purchase 8 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. of it by the Government (and subsequent sale to them), whether the native owner desired to part with his property or not. Thus the Governor, who virtually, under the new constitution, has little power, may have found himself compelled to take the course he adopted by the political pressure brought to bear on him by interested parties. Possibly he was deceived by the misrepre- sentation of facts, and by exaggerated and partial statements, more especially of those who insisted on the ease with which, with a show of determination, the desideratum could be obtained ; and he was therefore, perhaps, driven to yield to the cry, and to agree to the purchase of an insignificant block of land; and thus, although he strongly deprecated any resort to arms to bring to an issue the question of the native king movement, which, in his despatch of August 1859, he states he has not means at his disposal to resist. No greater proof need be required that CAUSE OF QUARREL. 9 both the quarrel itself, and the time selected for it, were of our own seeking, and that the issue might have been postponed until a more convenient season, than the tardiness with which the more powerful and influen- tial tribes implicated themselves in large numbers in it, and the extreme caution with which they avoided being the first to shed blood. Our own acts left them no choice. They were driven either to take up AYilliam King's quarrel, or to give up the native king movement ; and it was not likely that the proud and independent Waikato vv'ould take this latter course. The territory in which the land in ques- tion lay had long been a bone of contention, and the legal title to it by Te Teira, the na- tive possessor, a doubtful point. Tins chief, however, at the instigation of interested Europeans, who coveted the land, and con- trary to the wish of his own people, and particularly of William King — who claimed a right of sovereignty over it, and power to 10 THE TTAR IX NEW ZEALAND. forbid its sale (and this he did in a most insulting manner) — offered, in March 1859, to dispose of the property. The Governor consented to buy it, if the seller could prove his title. Te Teira appears to have done so; for in January 1860, the purchase was ordered to be completed. Here it may be remarked, that New Zealand treaties provided that all land should be sold, in the first instance, by the Maori to the Government, who retailed it to the settlers; and that no land should be bought unless the settler could prove indefeasible right to the pro- perty. Since the reduction of troops in the island in 1858, and during all 1859, and until March 1860, the whole military force in New Zealand consisted of Royal Ar- tillery, Royal Engineers, and the 65th Regiment, in all about 1,000 rank and file, and distributed thus : — TROOPS IN NEW ZEALAND. 11 Auckland 400 Wellington 100 Wanganui 200 Napier 120 and those in the Taranaki district, sta- tioned at New Plymouth, twelve miles from the seat of the dispute, who numbered only:— Captains Subalts. Sergeants Rank and File Royal Artillery . . Royal Engineers . . 65th Regiment . - 2 3 1 1 11 6 4 182 Total . , . 2 3 13 192 In January 1860, the purchase was ordered to be made, and, as affairs looked far from settled. His Excellency furnished Captain and Bt. Lieut.-Colonel Murray, 65th Regiment, at that time in command at New Plymouth, with certain instructions as to the course he should pursue, in the event of opposition being offered to the surveyors sent to complete the sale, and 12 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. entrusted to him a proclamation of martial law,* to be used if requisite. The survey and the actual taking possession of the land was not at this time begun, and matters remained in this unsatisfactory- state, even becoming worse, until the 11th February, when Colonel Murray wrote to Auckland, recommending that he should be supplied with a small reinforcement of 50 men, in case he should have to move to the Waitara. On the 20th of the same month he wrote to William King, that ]\Ir. Parris, the native commissioner, sent down to complete the purchase, had reported that the surveyors had been interrupted, and that they could not carry on their duties ; and that this interruption by his tribe was an overt act of rebellion : he warned him of the consequence of persist- * Proclamation of martial lasv is interpreted by the natives to mean a declaration of war. Power to call out the militia for service was also at this time transmitted to Colonel Murray. MARTIAL LAW DECLARED. 13 ing in this course, and gave him till the 22nd to reflect on the matter; and on that day William King, not having given a satisfactory reply to this communication, he put in force the proclamation of martial law entrusted to him in January previous. Though the natives had committed them- selves to an act of rebellion against the Queen, they had done it in a very cautious and innocuous manner. Some stones had been thrown at the surveyors, and some old women had taken up the end of the chain, and had interfered with the per- formance of their work. But no blood had been shed ; and the natives at this time, and ever after, declared that the step they had taken was in no hostility to the Queen of England, but was in defence of their own lands, which they maintained we were forcing unjustly from them in an unprecedented manner, in defiance of ex- isting treaties. In this opinion, as to the justice of their cause, they were strongly 14 THE WAR IX XEW ZEALAND. supported by the clergy, as well as by a large and influential portion of the com- munity generally, and they would have been supported by others also, had not personal interests been concerned in the possession of the coveted land. The effect of this division of opinion among the European population acted most preju- dicially on the native mind, as is well shown in a speech attributed to a native, who, after the termination of the war in March 1861, is reported to have said, in a conversation at Auckland, ' How can you expect the Waikato to give up his king movement, when half your own council are for it?' The antagonistic views held by our people, and their unguarded and impolitic expression, enhanced greatly the difficulties surrounding the Governor ; led the natives to believe that he w^ould be obliged to yield the point in dispute ; and tended greatly to foster the growing disaffection THE SEAT OF WAR. 15 among the tribes. William King, at a later period, by putting the piece of land at the disposal of the native king, obliged the Waikato to espouse his (W. King's) quarrel, or to resign the king movement. The latter could not be expected. But in taking the former course, the Waikato was understood to have entered into at least a tacit if not an express agreement with the Government, that the quarrel should be kept in the Taranaki district, and that all fio-htino; should be there alone. This sin- gular arrangement remained virtually in force until the end of the war in March 1861. It was an excellent one for the natives. They had gained the choice of a battle-field in a country most difficult to Europeans, and favourable to themselves. They had selected a spot distant from their own homes and cultivations, where they had nothing to lose but life. It was a most central position for the union of their tribes. But yet it was not without 16 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. its advantage to us; for, as long as we could depend on the natives keeping to the agreement, it saved the ruin of the other exposed provinces ; and it enabled the officer in command at the time, who had not men nor means at his disposal for general offen- sive operations, to adopt the views of the Governor, which were to endeavour to over- awe the native mind by the greatest display of the small military force at his command. And subsequently — some months after — by confining the war to this district, pending the arrival of reinforcements, it enabled Major-General Pratt, instead of breaking up his small army for the defence of our widely-scattered settlements in the northern island, at that time left with most inadequate garrisons, to carry out a well- digested plan of operations, with his increased though still inadequate force. By repeated and unvaried successes over the enemy, in this their chosen seat of operations, he was enabled heartily to MARTIAL LAW PROCLAIMED. 17 disgust them with a war in which they got nothing but hard blows, and wliich compelled them to send back to Waikato hosts of maimed, besides, according to their own confession, leaving above 400 of their best and bravest dead upon the field, as well as abandoning the bodies of many chiefs to the Europeans ; while at the same time large reinforcements and supplies were on their way from England ; and preparations were being made for a general war, should an event so lamentable to the colony be unavoidable. The news of the proclamation of martial law, and of the unsatisfactory state of affairs in the province of Taranaki, reached Auck- land on the 24th February, and the Gover- nor decided on proceeding at once to the spot with all available men. Colonel Gold, commanding in New Zea- land, embarked with about 200 men at the Maimkau, on the 28th of February, and landing next day at New Plymouth, c 18 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. assumed the direction of military affairs. The troops at his disposal were then : — F. O. Capts. Subalts. Sergt-. IJank ind File Royal Artillery . Royal Engineers 65. h Regiment . 1 4 1 ] 8 2 1 28 20 10 360 These were further strengthened by such forces from the navy as could be spared from the ships on the coast, and by the Taranaki Militia, who had been called out on proclamation of martial law, on the 22nd February. The intimation that these steps had been taken, and that a collision had become inevitable, reached General Pratt, at Mel- bourne, on the 14th March 1861, in a letter dated February 26th. The terms in which the letter was worded, however, showed that no great alarm existed that hostilities would be of long duration, nor was the necessity for any reinforcement hinted at. DEMAND FOR TROOrS. 19 Colonel Murray had, indeed, on the 20th of February, in a letter addressed to the au- thorities in Auckland, brought under their notice the terrible consequences that might fall on the wives and families of those called on to serve in the militia, and on the want of training of the volunteers, and their numeri- cal weakness. Of this, however, little notice was taken at the time. On April 5th 1860, the Governor-Gene- ral, Sir William Denison, telegraphed to Melbourne that he had received despatches from New Zealand conveying a demand for troops, and he expressed his willingness to spare a portion of those stationed in New South Wales, should General Pratt require them. The same patriotic course was adopted by the Governors of Victoria and the other Australian colonies, their only anxiety apparently being that reinforce- ments should be sent without delay. The colony of Victoria also placed at the dispo- sal of the Major-General for the transport c 2 20 THE WAR IN XEW ZEALAND. » of troops, and otlier service that might be requisite, their fine war steam-sloop ' Vic- toria.' The whole of the expense of this ship, its wear and tear, and all outlay, with the exception of coal, was borne by the colony of Victoria. From the 17th of April 1860, until her return to Melbourne, on the ter- mination of the war, this sloop, which, from its build and steam power, was better suited for this service than any of Her Majesty's navy on the coast, rendered the most valu- able assistance as a transport ; while at the same time her indefatigable and ever-ready commander, Captain Norman, was always anxious to advance the interests of the State in every way, by furnishing such officers and men as he could spare for duty on shore ; thus enabling them to share in the military operations of the campaign in which the}" rendered most effectual service. General Pratt lost no time in comj)lying with the demand for aid, though this de- ' ARRIVAL OF REINFORCEMENTS. 21 mand had only reached him by telegram, and was necessarily vague and incomplete ; and on the 10th April 1860, the first rein- forcement, consisting of a small detachment of the 12th Regiment and of Artillery, sailed from Sydney. On the 17th, the ' City of Hobart ' steamer left Melbourne with two companies of the 40th Regiment, and the ' Victoria ' started for Tasmania to convey further reinforcements from that colony. These troops, besides being well supplied with camp equipage, ammunition, &c., took one month's provisions and as large a supply of stores for general service as the ships could carry. On the 16th (the day previous to the embarkation), Colonel Gold's despatch, to which the telegram referred, arrived : it was dated ' Gore Browne Redoubt,' Waitara, March 19th, 1860. It gave no information, but simply asked for reinforcements. It, however, enclosed an important document from Mr. M'Lean, the native secretary. 22 THE TTAR IX NEW ZEALAND. who saw the magnitude of the quarrel, and recommended 5,000 men at once for the defence of the colony. These letters, which had been delayed in consequence of having been forwarded through an unusual channel, were quickly followed by further despatches from Colonel Gold at New Plymouth, dated March 31st, enclosing duplicates of a des- patch to the Military Secretary, Horse Guards, detailing the capture and destruc- tion by the troops under his command, on the 18th, of a small pah that had been erected by William King's tribe on our pur- chased land. Some letters were still missino;, and on May 28th 1860, duplicates of letters from March 6th to the 20th were received. From the earliest of these it appeared that about the 4th of March Colonel Gold had moved all the troops he could muster to the Waitara, where a camp had been selected and entrenched, and named, in honour of His Excellency, who was present at the time, ' Gore Browne Redoubt ; ' the name was, NEW PLYMOUTH. 23 however, changed, on the 19th of the same month, to ' Camp Waitara.' From these letters it appeared, too, that on the 20th of the same month, Colonel Gold urged His Excellency to demand further reinforcements from the Australian colonies, ' as their very appearance would, in all probability, induce the natives to sue for peace.' The same mail also brought a despatch from Colonel Gold at New Ply- mouth, dated March 26th 1860, stating that at the request of His Excellency, in consequence of the unprotected state of the town, he had gone there with a portion of the force, but had left the camp adequately protected. And another despatch, dated March 30th, stated that, on ascertaining that some families still residing at a distance on the Omata block were in danger from the natives surrounding them, he had sent a small force, consisting of military, naval brigade, and militia, to bring them in. This force came into collision with the natives at 24 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. Waireka Valley, who, with few casualties on our side, were repulsed. The immediate cause of alarm for the safety of these fami- lies was, that after the capture and destruc- tion of William King's pah, on the 18tli of the month, some Europeans had been at- tacked and killed by the natives on the Omata block. These fatal results Colonel aold described as ' barbarous murders ' — a :erm hardly applicable, however much the casualties were to be deplored, when we reflect that a guerilla warfare, in this intri- cate country, was the only one in which the Maori could hope to gain any advantage, and that the acts occurred after martial law had been proclaimed by us; after we had attacked a native pah, and blood had been shed on both sides; and after these very Europeans had been warned by the natives that war having now begun, it was no longer safe for them to wander about the district. Though the natives, in resisting the sur- vey, had made the first overt act of rebellion, WAR COMMENCED. 25 they had left it to us to commence the first act of bloodshed, by our attack on the pah on the 18th. The fact that the deaths above alluded to took place eight or ten days after our attack on this pah, was care- fully kept in the background by the local papers, which tried to make it appear, and for a long time succeeded in doing so, that the Maori had commenced the war by the murder of unarmed, unwarned, and inoffen- sive settlers. Whereas war having been begun by us, the natives naturally enough considered this retaliation a legitimate mode of fighting. 26 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. CHAPTER 11. Operations in the neiglibourliood of New Plymouth — Attack on Puketakauere Pah repulsed by the natives — True cause of the quarrel — Native opinion of oiu- tactics — Cause and results of the failure at Puketa- kauere. In the early part of April His Excellency returned to Auckland, whence he wrote thanks for the prompt and valuable aid sent him from Melbourne and from the other colonies; and on the 16tli of May intimation was received that all the troops sent had arrived. During the first few weeks of April no movements took place at New Plymouth or at the Waitara, and the troops were only employed in furnishing escorts, collecting crops, &c. ; and the Go- vernor sanctioned the raising a company of COLONEL GOLDS ADVA^X'E. 07 fifty natives from the friendly tribes to aid them in these duties. On the 20th of April Colonel Gold, anxious to afford relief to the settlers to the south of the town, organised a small column for that purpose, and moved as far as the Tartaraimaka block,* about eighteen miles distant. New Plymouth, however, was, by this withdrawal of part of the gar- rison, left as unprotected, that he did not think it j^rudent to move farther off until the 26 th April, when the first detachment of the 40th Reo-iment arrived. Feeling^ the place more secure, he then pushed south as far as the Warea Pah, destroying native pahs, villages, and crops on the way; and havino- done all the damao:e he could, and not thinking it prudent to remain any longer away, he returned by the 1st of May, * The word block is used in New Zealand to desig- nate a portion of land purchased at a particular time, and opened to settlement : thus, the Omata block, the Bell block, the Grey block, &c. 28 THE WAE IX NEW ZEALAND. leaving a military post on tlic Tartarai- maka block. On the 14th of May, Colonel Gold Avrote to His Excellency, urging on him the ne- cessity of his being furnished with spe- cific instructions regarding the operations against William King, as the approach of winter rendered all further delay dangerous. To this he received His Excellency's reply, dated Auckland, 17th May: — ' The operations at Taranaki are of minor importance to those which must ensue if the Waikato tribes take part in the war. I have, therefore, to request that you will abstain, until you hear from me again, from all interference with William King, unless he sliould himself commence hostilities. ' Should he do so, I recommend your offering a free passage to any of the Waikato tribe who, being with him, may be willing to leave his pahs. ' Your not having attacked the pah in the south, as described by Mr. Keimen- SPREAD OF DISAFFECTION. 29 sclmeider, appears to me to have been very judicious ; and I am not aware that any- thing more can be done to punish the Ta- ranaki and Ngatiruanui tribes; but should you find an opportunity you will, of course, not neglect it.' And on the 31st March His. Excellency wrote to General Pratt : — ' The disaffection which commenced at New Plymouth has spread through the more powerful tribes that reside in the Waikato, and it is not possible to form any satisfactory opinion of the future. At the present moment the aspect of affairs is threatening. My wish has been to confine military operations to the province of New Plymouth as much as possible, and, in order to do so, Auckland should be placed in such a state of defence as to offer no temptations for an attack; at present this is not the case, for the garrison consists of untrained militia, partially armed, some volunteers, 30 THE WAR IX XEW ZEALAXD. and about fifty men of the 65th Regiment, available for duty.' Enclosed with this letter was one from Mr. M'Lean, reporting matters as looking gloomy — large native meetings having been held, and declarations having been made of throwing off Her Majesty's allegiance; and adding : — ' I do not apprehend any immediate move on the part of the natives, unless some insult or attack is made upon their people about Auckland or elsewhere. The force applied for will not be sufficient to bring them under subjection of the British law and authority.' On the 14th and 16th of July letters from Colonel Gold reached Melbourne. In these he reported that nothing had taken place up to the 23rd of June, in consequence of His Excellency having requested him not to move against William King, for political reasons, involving the rising of some of the WILLIAM king's TRIBE. 31 largest tribes in the neighbourhood of Auck- land and other posts denuded of troops. The troops in the Taranaki district now amounted to 1,700 ; of these, 600 were militia and volunteers ; they occupied an extended line of posts, the largest of which was under the command of Major Nelson, 40th Regiment, at the camp Waitara, which consisted of a few Royal Artillery, Royal Engineers, and about 300 of the 40th Regiment. On the 23rd of June the commanding officer at the Waitara reported to New Ply- mouth that, having reason to believe that some of William King's tribe, who held Puketakauere (a pah on native land about 2,000 yards distant from our camp), were trespassing on our purchased block, he had sent out a reconnoitring party, which, on its return, was followed by the natives ; that when it neared the Waitara camp it was fired on by the enemy, who at this time were, it was presumed, on our land, and 32 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. that then, and not till then, were the troops directed to fire. Some further correspondence took place on the 24th and 25th, and on the 26th the Brigade-Major wrote to Major Nelson, by direction of Colonel Gold, as follows : — ' In consequence of the representations contained in your letter of yesterday's date, I am directed by the Colonel Commanding to inform you that he sends down by the " Tasmanian Maid " an augmentation to your force, as per margin; and he trusts that with them you will be enabled to teach these troublesome natives a lesson they will not easily forget. * You will be pleased to take every neces- sary precaution against the wily foe, as regards ambuscades, which the friendly na- tives would be the best to discover ; as also, if possible, cut off their retreat. From the elevated position of the rebels a good view can be obtained of your camp, which must remain amply garrisoned, all remaining on duty armed and accoutred. REINFORCEMENTS. 33 ' I have caused ample information to be afforded to Captain Richards, 40th Regi- ment, and Lieut. Macnaughten, R. A., and I am directed to add that Colonel Gold, from your former experience, relies confidently on your proceedings.' This letter as it reached Melbourne was incomplete, the strength of the reinforce- ments having been omitted in the margin. The addition, however, was some of the 40th Regiment and Naval Brigade, enabling Major Nelson, leaving what he considered sufficient for the defence of the camp, to detail the following for an attack on the enemy's position : — F. O. 1 Capts. Subalts Sergts. Rank and File Royal Artillery . Royal Engineers Naval Brigade . 40th Regiment . Royal Marines . 1 1 3 1 1 3 5 1 — 20 6 50 245 10 Total 2 3 11 — 331 D 34 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. At daybreak on the 27tli of June this small force, in three divisions, moved to the attack of the enemy's pah. The action commenced at 7 a.m., and notwithstanding the bravery of the officers and men engaged they were completely defeated, and retreated into the camp, which they gained at half- past 11 A.M., with a loss of thirty — miss- ing, killed, or wounded, left on the field, and thirty-tAvo wounded, who were con- veyed to the camp. The news of this severe disaster was first made known at Melbourne, by telegraph from Sydney, on the 12th July; and with- out waiting for further news an additional reinforcement was sent from Sydney. The Major-General in command decided on proceeding at once to the seat of war, and taking every available man from the other colonies. The Head-quarters of the 40tli Re2;iment embarked at Melbourne on the 18th, and on the 24th the General and staff sailed in the ' Victoria.' REINFOKCEMENTS. 35 The colonies were now quite denuded of troops, and in Victoria the garrison duties were done by the volunteer force. The Head Quarters, 40th Regiment, reached New Plymouth on July 31st, and the Major-General landed on the 3rd August 1860, from which time he took personal direction of the war. In the above account I have been com- pelled to avoid going into detail as to the operations themselves, and as to the mode in which they were conducted ; j)artly be- cause my information on these subjects at a distance was meagre, and partly because the many various statements of the occur- rences precluded any true notions being arrived at, without an investigation, for which there was no time or means, while the war lasted. Moreover I have since heard that a court of enquiry has been sit- ting to enquire into some of these matters. And also my object hitherto has been simply to point out clearly the chain of events and D 2 36 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. their results, which brought affairs to the crisis in which they were on the 3rd of August 1860. At the outbreak in February 1860, the native tribes opposed to us were, William King's at the Waitara, and the Taranaki and Ngatiruanui tribes at the south — men whom the Waikato looked down on as slaves, and whom our own people acknow- ledged as an inferior race, in customs, inde- pendence, build, and courage to the Waikato and other tribes that shortly joined in the iight. The capture of the pah on the 18th of March, and the skirmish at the Waireka, were in themselves of too little consequence to affect materially the general quarrel, which, though not yet fully developed, clearly did not originate in the purchase of a block of 600 acres of land, but in the question as to the right of the chief of the tribe to allow or forbid the sale. The very exaggerated view we took of the importance SKIRMISHES. 37 of these two skirmishes, and our public boasting of them, tended greatly to lower our military character ; and the means and appliances for conquest at our disposal seemed small in the eyes of the more warlike native tribes, who openly expressed their surprise that so much should be thought of these events, and plainly declared that the fighting they meant would be a very different and much more serious matter. The march to the south as far as the Warea pah (though the only move, appa- rently, that Colonel Gold could make) was, with the exception of saving some furni- ture, property, and crops, productive of no good; and by the burning of the native ' wharees ' or houses, and by the destruction of deserted pahs on the road, furnished the natives with the pretext of a systematic raid on the empty and deserted stations of the settlers. The real event of importance, and that which drove the martial spirit of the Maori 58 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. beyond the bounds of discretion or com- mon sense, and gave great impetus to the king movement, and to the assembling of the native tribes for war, was the defeat sus- tained by us on the 27th June. The fol- lowing extract from a letter received later during the war will show the view the natives took of the matter. It is from a native, Tamati Ngapora: — 'September 27, 1860. ' Tamati Ngapora states that the natives engaged in the conflict at Puketakauere ex- press their great astonishment at the mode of warfare adopted by the military, by which they continually expose themselves to great loss, though vastly superior in numbers to the natives. He says, why are not soldiers taught to fight after the native fashion? They cannot help being beaten if they con- tinue to fight as if they were fighting Pakehas. The natives admire their per- sonal courage, but say that it is this that causes their destruction, for they move so TAMATIS LETTER. 39 steadily and so close that one bullet kills two men.' Tamati further states that the natives laugh at the idea of being taken by the soldiers, and feel fully assured that with the advantage of cover, and their knowledge of the country, they are more than a match for any number of soldiers ; and that if peace is brought about, the road to it will not be fighting. Tamati also states his conviction that if the natives continue on every occasion to beat the soldiers, as they maintain they have done, it is to be feared that the native tribes will forget their old feuds and join against us. Tamati further adds that the number of natives actually engaged at Puketakauere, at the Waitara, has been much over-esti- mated, and that the number of the Waikato, exclusive of the natives of Kawhia, was 140, and of that party none were killed. Their exclamation after the fi^rht was one 40 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. of extreme surprise, followed by the ques- tion — How is it that we all escape ? Puketakauere itself was a strong well- built pah, fortified and garrisoned by the tribes of the district, aided by some Wai- katos, fewer than were supposed at the time; but it was still well garrisoned. It was in a position difficult of access, sur- rounded by gullies, marshes, dense fern and brambles, and intricate and dangerous ground. Its capture, with loss to the enemy, would at this time have had a marked effect on the war; and if it had not ended it would, at all events, have deterred many tribes not yet implicated from joining in it. In the manner in which it was under- taken it could not have succeeded without much loss on our side, while the probability was that it could not succeed at all ; and if it did, the escape of the Maori garrison could hardly have been prevented. A small body of 300 men was divided into three parties, and sent with bad guides DEFEAT OF OUR TROOPS. 41 into an unknown, swampy, and impracti- cable country broken with ravines, the nature of which totally precluded the pos- sibility of mutual support or communication. Heavy rains and the clayey soil added to the difficulties; and our troops, from the first, had no chance. The Maori had baited the usual trap, and we walked into it. The defeat of the troops was so signal and so complete that the Maori declared ultimate victory over us to be in his own hands, and therefore many wavering tribes joined in the quarrel. In addition to the moral effect of this defeat, our actual loss had been so great (viz. sixty casualties, of which half, killed and wounded, left on the field, had been tomahawked and killed by the natives), that the most cautious among them felt that the time for negotiation and terms was now past, and that they were too deeply implicated to be admitted to favour without such sacrifices as they were not prepared to make. It had, in fact, been 42 THE WAR IX XEW ZEALAND. too great a success, and one greater than they hoped or wished for. Nor could the Governor now Avithdraw from his line of policy, or entertain propositions, until some signal and decisive success should attend our arms, and should thus compel the Maori to acknowledge his inferiority and ask for peace. Native emissaries carried the news of the victory all over the country, and, while admitting the bravery of the Pakeha, they laid much stress on our ignorance of the country and manner of fighting, and on the certainty of our being beaten. They thus gained many adherents to the king lea2:ue. From this date affairs remained at a standstill, and no operations were under- taken. The Europeans were confined more closely to their townships and camps, and the natives, emboldened by their success, ventured near to the town of New Plymouth by night, burnt houses, and marauded in every direction. COLONEL GOLD. 43 Colonel Gold, who then commanded, was much maligned for inactivity ; but it is quite clear that, up to the 28tli of June at all events, his hands were tied, and that, in allowing the attack of the day previous, he had carefully satisfied himself that the grounds on which that attack was made were supported by evidence that the enemy had fired the first shot at the reconnoitring party sent out on the 23rd. After this event no choice was left him but to await the result of his despatch to Melbourne soliciting reinforcements. Any further re- verse, or even success, if attended with great loss of life on our side, would, without doubt, have crippled his small force, and would have been the ruin of all the scat- tered settlements in the northern island. 44 THE WAE IN NEW ZEALAND. CHAPTER III. Major-General Pratt arrives at New Plymoufh — Number and distribution of the troops — Topography of the Taranalii district — Description of Warea Forest Pah — Strength of the enemy — Sources of information regarding their movements — Their military capabili- ties — Native commissariat. On the 3rd August 1860, Major-General Pratt landed at New Plymouth, and took personal direction of the war. The troops in the colony of New Zealand were in numbers and distribution aS here shown ; and out of these 860 were militia and volunteers : — F. o. Capt. Subs. Depart- ment:il Staff Sergts. Drs. Rank and File Taranaki . . 11 29 60 23 139 44 2,320 Auckland . . — 2 2 1 14 2 212 Napier . . . — 2 4 1 5 2 144 Wellington . 1 5 11 — 17 1 269 Wanganui . . 1 1 3 — 10 2 187 Total . . 13 39 80 25 185 51 3,132 TROOPS IN TARANAKI. 45 ^' 3 o a >. Ph & (U ^ J*? I 1 1 1 •^ o -f m in »• 1 1 1 1 1 w 0\ (M «~-. Tj" Q 1 1 1 ^^ "^ TO . to -* • 1 1 1 1 -< C^ irs CI 00 t^ CD OJ 1 1 1 1 1— * eo . O 1 1 1 1 O d "* 1 1 1 1 1 "^ _^ 1 '=^ __ C5 b • • • • • s 0) a * ' 6 o o • • s< ■c TS (U • • tt b ^ _^ 1 -§ _j^ ^ s a a (-1 C3 O •S bo s ■D "3 1 a « « -I 03 P! fe fl -3 > t^ >-. J= -a > .ti M o o S ■A s i ^ s ^ S (N 46 THE WAR IN NEW ZEAL.\ND. 03 Bell Block. s o in O — in 1^ (M ^ o ■>*< rt in C-4 ^ -q" « C5 « to r-i in t^ w «3 (M 1 1 ^ ^ 1 o 1 <" 1 CI - 1 1 -- « 1 1 i e: - 1 CM 1 r~ ^ 00 w ^ r- -* rt" O in 11-^1 (M 1 ^ 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 r-H — in «o 1 « 1 -v CI «D 1 1 1 CI (M -* Q 1 1 ■* '^' 1 CD 1 ^ 1 (M - 1 1 - - (N 6 u.' 1 1 - 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 - 5° ^ !- « -- .2 Pi Pi ^ ^ f^ • o § s • - P5 .5 tf S s O Eh .5 • b s - - J S g 5 S Td a .s ■^ -s ^ ^ ^ >> -s s « « 2 § -3 1 DISTRIBUTION OF FORCES. 47 This distribution was the one that was adopted by Colonel Gold when his force was too small for any operations at a distance, and when his hands were tied from attack- ins; William Kino; at the Waitara. It was clearly made to afford confidence to the settlers, and to encourage them to occupy their farms and cultivate their grounds, at all events in the neighbourhood of New Plymouth, and was not made with the intention of undertaking active offensive movements against the native tribes. Col. Gold's object might, to a certain degree, have been attained previous to the defeat of the 27th of June, but after that the arrangement proved totally inoperative ; and by disseminating his small force over a large district, it quite precluded the assembly of a column sufficient for the field, and was of no advantage to the colonists. To the non-military reader the effective force may appear larger than it really was; and it may be well here to remark that 48 THE WAE IN NEW ZEALAND. these numbers represent every man in the service, sick, infirm, wounded, orderlies, semaphore station-men, and others, em- ployed on duties that necessarily devolved on the army. The militia, numbering on paper 425, could barely muster 100 for service; except in case of an attack on the town, when each man had his appointed post. Many of them, however, made no secret of it, that if this did happen, they would stand at their own houses, and defend their families there, and not attend to orders. The militia and volunteers were the whole male population of the town capable of doing any work; consequently large numbers had to be struck ofp garrison duty to carry on the trades of butchers, bakers, grocers, carters, and for employment as commissariat la- bourers, boatmen, &c. — not only for the army but for the population of the town, now largely increased by the influx of settlers from the more distant parts of the NEW PLYMOUTH. 49 district. Nor was it fair to expect any good service from them ; they "were ill armed, ill organised, and without any dis- cipline, and had not as yet had either time or means to become an efficient auxiliary force, however anxious they might be to learn their duty. The situation of the town of New Ply- mouth, and the configuration of the whole of the Taranaki district, were most adverse to military operations. The district ex- tends on the north from the Waitara, and to the river Patea on the south. Small and divided parts of it belong to Europeans, the much larger portion to the natives — friendly, hostile, and doubtful. The tow^n itself is on the sea-coast, twelve miles from the Waitara. Landing, only to be effected by means of surf-boats, at all times difficult and dangerous, is at many periods of the year impracticable. No master of any sailing-ship would ever stay on the coast a moment longer than absolutely necessary. E 50 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. Steamers, with troops on board, had fre- quently to put out to sea for days until the weather moderated ; and during the winter the steamers in the naval squadron on the station were kept away for as long as ten days at a time. The colonial steam-sloop ' Victoria,' which having most steam-power held her ground the longest, had on one or two occasions to put to sea, and did not return for some days. The striking features of the place were Marsland Hill, on which were the barracks, Mount Elliot, and the Sugar Loaves. In the background, about thirty miles distant, stood Mount Egmont, 8,250 feet high, dur- ing the greater part of the year a perfect cone of snow, which, though partially melt- ing, never during the greatest heat entirely disappears. The torrents caused by the melting snow and heavy rain rush down the sides of the deep and precipitous ravines vz-hich rise from it or from its offshoots, and which intersect the whole of this part of the DIFFICULT COUXTRY. 51 district to the very coast, and even to the toNvn of New Plymouth. Thus the ravines, which are sometimes dry and covered with furze and brambles, are at other times rapid mountain torrents, often impassable. Difficult and adverse as this description of country was to military operations, even it did not extend above three to five miles inland, where began the interminable and impracticable forest, running nearly parallel with the coast. A better description of this forest can hardly be given than is contained in the following letter from Mr. Eeimen- schneider to Colonel Gold. It will be borne in mind that the country he describes is that in which the officer in command was expected, with the inadequate means at his disposal, to carry on sharp, secret, and de- cisive operations : — ' New Plymouth: May 15, 1860. 'Sir, — I have the honour to inform you that on the occasion of my recent visit at my station, at the Warea, I have availed E 2 52 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. myself of the opportunity it afforded me for visiting the native forest pah, situated in the more immediate neighbourhood of that locality, and which, as you are aware, forms one of the three different pahs, or strong- holds, of the Taranaki tribe, which have been erected by them since their defeat at, and their return from, Waireka. ' As in all probability it may be interest- ing to you to obtain from an eye-witness a somewhat more precise and exact view than it is otherwise easy to obtain, respecting the site and description of either (if not all) of the three pahs now extant in the Taranaki district, I take the liberty of submitting to you the following brief statement of what I have seen. ' The Warea Forest pah (the only one I have as yet found an opportunity to ap- proach and to enter) is situated at a distance of about four or five miles from off the coast inland, in the midst of a dense and, as it appears, almost interminable, of what may THE WAREA FOREST. 53 perhaps be termed, light forest (i.e. of no heavy timber), on the summit of a small hill, called Mahainui, which at its base covers, perhaps, about one acre, whilst it is of so moderate a height as to render the pah (as far as I was able to discover it) altogether indiscernible from any distance (owing to the woody and undulating country by which it is surrounded), except within about 200 paces of it, more or less ; all around up to its very base, the hill is sur- rounded by the thick forest, whilst the sloj)e of the hill is cleared of bush, and rendered smooth, and more steep, by the red earth which has been thrown up out of the in- terior earthworks of the pah, previous to the erection of the outer double rows of strong palisade fences. Just upon the im- mediate edge above the hill, and without allowing any landing to take a footing upon, is the outer stockade or double row of pali- sade fence erected, which have the usual appurtenances for preventing their being 54 THE WAE IX XEW ZEALAND. scaled from without. Through a narrow entrance through the outer stockade you arrive at a sort of terrace of about eio;ht or ten feet deep, the whole of which has been converted into what might be termed a deep or broad moat, and this again is sub- divided by strong banks of earth and fern into square compartments — say 8 by 8, or 10 by 10 feet, and all of which communi- cate with each other by a narrow cut through the embankments (on the inner- most jDart) that divide them. In these holes are the covered galleries, from under which the natives fire upon their assailants ; and above them there are fighting stages, &c., to defend the upper part of the stockades. ' Having passed through the outer stock- ade and the earthworks inside of it, as just described, you reach the second terrace of the hill, which at the same time forms its summit, and the surface of which has much the form of a basin, being concave, and which is again, upon its outer edge, sur- THE WAKEA FOREST PAH. 55 rounded by a very strong palisade and fence. This forms the inner pah, where the women and children chiefly are kept. About in the centre of it, I observed what appeared much like a companion-way on board ship, and looking down into it I saw what seemed to me to be a strong subter- ranean vault, and a retreat against anything that might come in overhead, such as shot or shell. I would have been glad to have gone down into it, but this, and also making more particular enquiries, would have only raised suspicion, more than I am suspected already, and would therefore have led to no more satisfactory result; but, even as it is, I have seen sufficient to convince me that, in my humble judgement, the pah as it stands and is, is such that both the attack upon it and the taking it cannot fail proving to be a very severe task, and one connected with immense difficulties and considerable loss of life. At all events, it is by far the strongest and best defended of all native pahs 56 THE WAR IX XEW ZEALAND. I have ever yet had an opportunity to see. Now a few words about the road that leads to it. The road takes its starting-point at the Warea village, recently destroyed ; from thence it leads straight inland through an open fern country, only here and there ap- proached by some small bush of koromiko, and very level for about a distance of two miles. At the end of this first part of the way begins the more woody part of the country, and the road, hard and level as before, passes through between plantations interspersed here and there, but all backed in the rear on both sides, by thick and dense bush and forest, afi'ording every shelter and lurking-places to ambuscades. Thus it may be about one mile or more, when the road, which is thus far wide enough for a cart to pass, suddenly closes in with strong bush and woodland, so as to leave only a very narrow footpath to proceed on; and this continues all the way, say about two miles farther (with but one trifling little spot KPIKAPAREA RIVER. 57 from which you can see nothing but trees all around you) to the very foot of the stronghold, through a forest as thick and dense with underwood as hardly to allow a cat to get through it, though natives (and perhaps they only) can make way through it. At all events it would require a road to be cut through it before any number of men, or more especially any artillery, could advance through it. ' Further, in the very thickest of this road it is divided by the Kpikaparea River, a river certainly of no great consequence; still, just where it is to be forded, there it would, as far as I am able to judge, require either to have some bulky rocks blasted, which ob- struct the passage, or else the cannon &c. would have to be dismounted and cari'ied through, and all this in the midst of, and surrounded by, an interminable forest, and more or less broken surface of country, swarming everywhere and in all directions with native skirmishers and ambuscades 58 THE WAR IX XETT ZEALAND. (who, being on the ground they are grown upon, and thoroughly familiar with, would have great advantages over approaching strangers), and without, perhaps, of afford- ing any clear and eligible spot (at least, I could discover none from among the trees) from which to bring cannon to bear upon the pah. ■'As I have stated already, the thick woods reach to the very base of the hill on ^vhich the pah stands, and surrounds it on all sides, whilst the sides of the hill are cleared, so that, in order to make an attack upon it, our forces would have to undergo a most murderous fire ; and, in the attempt of sur- rounding it, either to breach or undermine it, they would by day, and more especially by night, be harassed by hostile native hordes infesting the forest all around. ' Allow me. Sir, to add a remark which I extract from a letter I have just lately written to a friend, and which runs thus : — "I do believe the Commander of the Forces THE WAREA FOREST PAH. 59 has exercised a very sound judgement in not marching at all up to the pah with the forces &c. at present at his disposal." ' The number of fighting men collected in the stronghold may amount to about a, hundred or upwards, but immediately they see danger approaching (and they have their spies out always) they obtain assist- ance from the other pahs; so it has been on your late going down there. ' When you went first to the neighbour- hood of the Wareatea Pah, nine miles this side that of Warea, the other pahs sent at once, through the back bush, their men as reinforcements ; and so Warea received the same when you got do^vn as far as there ; and on your return from thence you were followed up by the people from Warea and Upper Taranaki as far back as the Wareatea Pah, as they suspected that there an attack might be made, and other re- inforcements had been sent for from 60 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. Ngatiruanui, and were afterwards only countermanded. 'Another consideration is that the natives, if it comes to close quarters upon them, and after they might have harassed and cut off many of our brave troops on the road to the pahs, will in all probability evacuate the pah before it could possibly be sur- rounded and closed in, and retreat to another one, about ten or eighteen miles farther off, and there try the game over again. ' I must close in hurry, for the present time permits no more. ' I have, &c., (Signed) 'J. L. Reimenschneider. ' To the Hon. Colonel Gold, Commander of the Forces. ' From this letter the reader will easily comprehend some of the difficulties that must be encountered in carrying on a war in New Zealand. New Plymouth contained at this time, WILLIAM KING S POSITION. 61 in addition to its male population, about 1,700 women and children. The actual position of the enemy was difficult to ascer- tain. William King's strongholds and places of retreat would certainly be Mataitawa, Manutahi, and Kairan — ^places near the Waitara, well embedded in the forest ; and, in addition, he occupied Puketakauere, the pah unsuccessfully attacked by our troops on the 27th of June, and distant about two thousand yards from the camp Waitara. The Taranaki and Ngatiruanui tribes to the south surrounded Omata and Waireka in detached bodies. Scattered in small parties in the forest between this and the Waitara, they could, under its cover, unite at a very short notice, and could break up again as suddenly — as indeed they often did, even before we had heard of their union. This was done with no apparent, and I believe no real, object in view, though it actually caused continual alarms in the overcrowded town. The natives who 62 THE WAR IX NEW ZEAL.iXD. remained friendly to us were the husbands, fathers, and relatives of many of those in the camp of the enemj^, and intercourse between the friendly and rebel natives could not be prevented. Those who still remained faithful to the English, did so because they felt that English power must, in the end, triumph over the small means at the dis- posal of the New Zealanders. Still, their feelings were with their own race, whose cause of complaint they believed to be a just one. The last success of the natives at Puketakauere had given many of them an exaggerated notion of their power, and led some of our staunchest friends to doubt if the reign of the Pakeha was not really about to terminate, and the Maori again to become an independent nation ; so that the whole country was ripe for rebellion, and very little was required to cause a general rising of the tribes throughout the northern island. As may be supposed, information from the natives was difficult THE NATIVE DEPARTMENT. G3 to be obtained, and when given, it was given unwillingly ; it was generally too late to be of any use, and was always neutralised by our plans and movements being communicated to the enemy. The Native Department, which was not organised as an intelligence department, was the principal and best source from which to obtain information ; and its officers ventured during the war into the interior of the country, and even into the very camps of the enemy, gaining all the infor- mation possible. The Maori, however, though glad to maintain some show of friendship with his old master and adviser, which might be to his advantage if the fortune of war turned against him, was too cautious to let any- thing be seen that did not suit him; and the daily and hourly contradictory reports that came in, while they created anxiety as to the progress of the outbreak, gave little information that could be depended on. 64 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. Another source of intelligence was from the missionaries residing in the Waikato and in other disturbed districts; and dur- ing the heat of the war, and up to its termination, these gentlemen remained at their posts in the midst of the most tur- bulent tribes, whose blood was inflamed by news of repeated defeats, and by the sight of their maimed and wounded com- rades returning from the field. From such a source it was natural to expect that valuable information might be obtained; such, however, was not the case, and the intimation of movements was either old, contradictory, or too vague to be of any use. In addition to this, the missionaries had little knowledge of military matters; and, speaking from their experience of the manner in which our feuds with the Maori had hitherto been conducted, they had over- estimated his sagacity, his superiority to the European, and the inaccessibility of his strongholds against systematic attack. SOURCES OF INTELLIGENCE. 65 There still remained two other sources from which intelligence might be gained, viz., from the settlers and those military officers who had been some time in the country. On enquiry it turned out that the settlers, located on their own farms and occupied with their own affairs, could tell little beyond the limits of their homesteads ; and the few observations they could make in driving cattle, farming, and the other pursuits of their calling, were not valuable for military purposes. Officers had been discouraged from travelling into the inte- rior, partly because the state of our relations with the Maori did not render it safe, and probably also because the habits of the for- mer would have done more to estrang^e than to conciliate the independent tribes in the interior; and in the few excursions that they had been enabled to make into the interior, officers appeared to have re- marked mostly on the picturesque. After-experience showed the Maori that E 66 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. his superiority to the European was a mis- take. The advantage he really had lay in his knowledge of the country, and his aptitude, individually, to avail himself of its many difficulties; but as to his boasted sagacity and military genius, the positions he took up, the strong ones he abandoned, and the want of opposition made to the force, on all occasions, on its advance to the attack through an intricate country, where every inch could have been defended, and daily loss inflicted on the advancing party, did not bear out the idea of high military talent so generally attributed to him by all parties. No strategical knowledge was shown by the Maori in his plans, and but little praise need be given to him in the mere selection of a place on which to build a pah, in a country where the difficulty was to find a bad one. One principle, however, he main- tained all through, viz., that his escape should be secure; and no pah was ever placed on a spot of bush that could be sur- MAORI VALUATIOX. 67 rounded, or in such a position that his line of retreat could be intercepted. The fact was, our repeated failures in former wars with the Maori had been caused by our own blunders and want of system. We had ignored this, and had attributed our want of success to the superior military genius of the savage, who at last, taking us at our own valuation, maintained openly that he was more than our match. The following extract of a memorandum by the Governor's Ministers, dated Auck- land, April 27th 1860, bears out this view: ' The absurdity of these pretensions does not render them less dangerous. Unfortu- nately they are supported in the minds of the natives by an overweening opinion of their own warlike skill and resources. It must be confessed that the imperfect suc- cess of military operations in New Zealand has given some countenance to the na- tives' fixed opinion of their own superiority. In the debates of the Maori Council a r2 68 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. Kgaruawahia, the experience of the wars against Heki and Rangihaeata, and of the Wanganui war, are constantly referred to as showing how little is to be feared from the prowess and the boasted warlike appliances of the Pakeha.' Still the Maori was by no means an enemy to be despised : he was a noble -look- ing, stalwart man, well armed, brave, natu- rally fond of war and excitement, and a patriot fighting for his country's indepen- dence. His clothing was light — usually a blanket, which in fighting was dispensed with. The following letter from Epiha, the wife of the chief who commanded the tribes at the Waitara, on hearing of the reverse sus- tained by the Waikatos under his command at Mahoetahi, will show the proper care taken of their husbands' clothes by the Maori women, and the small amount of baggage required : — LETTER OF EPIIIA. 69 'Kihikihi: November 21, 1860. *Go this my loving letter to Epiha. Salutations to you and to your fathers Avho are lost, and all your relatives. Their death is very bad, having passed into the hands of the Europeans. If you had re- covered them it would have been clear in our thoughts, because it was you who moved them about. ' Enough of my sighing ! " Friend Epiha, salutations to you : great is my love towards you, because you escaped from death. 'I have a question to put to you respect- ing your garment. If you lost all in the fight, write, and I will send you a blanket. (Signed) 'Hana Epiha.' The Native Commissariat Department was also easily managed. The women car- ried the food for the men on their backs, and to any distance, consuming little them- selves. All the tribes conversfino: on 70 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. Taranaki also adopted the plan of planting potatoes, &c. on the road to the seat of war; so that by these means they might secure food for their return after a few months ; or, in the event of their requiring them, the crops could be raised and forw^arded to the front. The sites of these plantations were quite beyond all reach of our opera- tions. NEW PLYMOUTH. 71 CHAPTER IV. New Plymoutli fortified — Refusal of the civil author- ities to aid in the removal of the women and children, and in sanitary operations, with its consequences — Plans for victualling the town — Selfishness of the settlers — Presumption and inefficiency of the Volun- teers — The enemy abandon their pahs, and retire into the forest — Expedition to Burton's Hill, and escape of the enemy — Maori tactics — Plan adopted by General Pratt. Immediately on landing, the Major-Gene- ral proceeded to inspect the defences of the town and its outposts. For the former little had been done, and the latter were clearly on too extended a scale. Orders were at once issued to surround the main portion of the town with a parapet and ditch, or stockade, according to circumstances, and for curtailing as far as possible the extended 72 THE WAR IX NEAY ZEALAND. line of outposts. The latter could at the time be only partially done, but the former was at once taken in hand most energeti- cally. The defence of the town by an en- ceinte was at that time, and up to the end of the war in March 1861, much criticised, both as to its necessity, and as to the actual security obtained. It was, however, a very necessary measure ; it gave a defined limit, beyond which people were warned not to reside or to venture. Those who disobeyed orders, and many did so, did it at their own risk; and most of the casualties that oc- curred to the settlers, all of whom, capable of bearing arms, were at a distance beyond these limits, where they had apparently gone for the mere pleasure of disobeying orders, and in defiance of repeated procla- mations and warnings, and with no object in view but to look at, not to look after, their lands and houses, to which at present their visits could do no good. It made the posts of alarm more easily accessible, and FORTIFICATIONS. 73 enabled a chain of sentries to be kept with some continuity. It also prevented ma- rauders from creeping through the nume- rous ravines, and setting fire to the wooden houses of the town. It is quite true that this work was not an insurmountable ob- stacle to an enemy, nor was it capable of resisting at all points an organised and de- termined attack. Neither time nor means were at hand, nor was it ever contemplated, to erect such a defence. It was, however, a good fieldwork, answering the purpose for which it was mainly constructed ; and inter- posing with its ditch, and parapet thickly covered with broken bottles, a very formi- dable interruption — especially to savages with naked feet — in making a night attack. Had such an attack been attempted it would have given time to the garrison to get under arms and to repair to their posts, and to the women and children of the settlers to gain the shelter provided for them. The outposts encircling the town were block- 74 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. houses placed on commanding sites, but they were used rather as barracks than for this duty, as the nature of the country quite precluded, with the small number of troops in hand, anything like a continuous circuit. Alarms by day and night were of fre- quent occurrence, causing the women and children of the families still living beyond the prescribed limits to rush in confusion and uproar to Marsland Hill ; so that it was clearly necessary to remove the greater number of them to some place of safety, farther from military operations. The Major-General at once turned his attention to this most disagreeable duty; and tried, by showing the exigency of the occasion, to enlist the influence of the acting superin- tendent of the Province and other civil authorities in aiding him to carry out his views to this end. Far from receivinof that amount of support from the colonists (on whose account the war had originated) that REMOVAL OF FAMILIES. 75 he had a right to expect in carrying out a measure of this kind, he was met with nothing but difficulties, and when not openly opposed he was passively resisted. For the civil authorities declined to have any hand in a measure so unpopular, and left the obnoxious duty to be carried out by the military alone as they best could. They alleged that martial law had superseded their authority, and that they now had no power. The real fact of the case was, that the more influential persons of the district were averse to sending their own families away ; and, therefore, had no desire to see such a measure carried out in its entirety. They were quite aware that the presence of their families in New Plymouth must ham- per military operations and protract the war ; but they calculated that the expenditure, from which they largely benefited, and the compensation which they anticipated, would far more than recompense them for the tem- porary loss of their homesteads, and the 76 THE WAE IN NEW ZEALAND. inconvenience of living in a crowded town. The whole subject was referred to the Government in Auckland, the result of which was an acknowledgement of the ne- cessity for the measure, and to cause them to forward a very inadequate sum of money for the purpose, which was doled out most sparingly and grudgingly by the Taranaki civil authorities who had the control of it. It soon became clear that under their ar- rangements no families would leave unless it suited their plans. In a sanitary point of view the town could not contain its numerous inhabitants without a risk of engendering much disease ; and though the heavy rains that now fell cleared the half- formed streets of much refuse, still the want of drainage and the accumulation of filth in houses crowded with families livinjx in dirt and discomfort, rendered it too pro- bable that the consequences would be most disastrous when the hot and dry season should set in. As it was, fevers and diph- SICKNESS IN THE TOWN. 77 theria pervaded the town when the hot season did come; even although some hundreds of women and children had with great difficulty been removed, and the gar- rison had been reduced by the force sent to the Waitara ; and even although the Deputy Inspector-General of Hospitals had aroused the better class to their danger, and showed them the urgent necessity for drainage and cleansing. Many lives were sacrificed, owing to the ignorance and obstinacy of the people in not attending to his sanitary regulations. For, while disease and death were rife among the families in the town, the soldiers in the same place were most healthy ; and in the outposts and at the more distant camp at the Waitara, disease was unknown. Had the original numbers remained in New Pl}Tnouth, the mortality would, probably, have been fearfully great. On the 22nd of August the Major-General embarked in the ' Victoria ' for Auckland, 78 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. to concert with His Excellency the best means of brino-ino; the war to a successful termination, and to urge forcibly on the Government tlie necessity of its taking decided steps in removing those who now encumbered the town and prevented all dis- tant mihtary operations ; and, if possible, to induce it to give the requisite pecuniary aid to the Province — the unfortunate scene of war — that the distress consequent on temporary banishment from their homes might be alleviated. The Government, however, afforded only the most lukewarm assistance in this matter ; contenting themselves with merely granting him an indemnity for any steps he might take, and with placing a steamer at his dis- posal for a few trips, instead of sending some person to the spot armed with authority and suppHed with funds sufficient for the pur- poses required. With much trouble and difficulty about 600 women and children were eventually REMOVE TO NELSOX. 79 removed to Nelson. The opposition, however, was very great, and the encouragement to resist given by the civil authorities, and by the richer portion of the inhabitants, who mostly held commissions in the local corps, was very decided. It was found impossible to remove any more without resorting to the employment of actual force, which was not desirable. The remainder of the in- habitants were therefore left to endure what- ever might be the consequences of their own folly. And on the 8th September the General reported to His Excellency that he had done all that he considered advisable with regard to moving the families. Early in the month of August General Pratt visited the camp at the Waitara, and reconnoitred the enemy's position; and, leaving instructions for the preparations for his contemplated attack, returned to New Plymouth to hurry on the defences there. These were pushed on during the next few days, interrupted by occasional alarms and 80 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. by skirmishes with small parties of the rebels who showed on the edge of the main forest. These were, however, onl)?" maraud- ing parties, burning the more distant and deserted farm-houses. The population of the district had been obliged to leave their lands uncultivated, and to flock into a confined town; it was clear that vegetables, milk and other neces- sary articles of consumption would soon be- come scarce. To obviate this result every aid was offered to the settlers * to cultivate 'Superintcmlent's Office: 19th October 1860. * 'Major-General Pratt having approved of a plan whereby settlers may cultivate their farms in the neighbourhood of military posts, the following conditions relating thereto are published for general information ; and all persons who may desire to avail themselves of the opportunity for raising such crops as the season admits of, should at once make applica- tion at this office. ' 1. The farms should be in blocks, to enable the persons cultivating the land to work together and protect each other. ' 2. A farm«building, in which the labourers would THE SETTLEES. 81 their land, by converting suitable residences into block-houses, by establishing codes of signals, &c. By this system of outposts, from which no military duty but self-defence was required, it was intended to keep the enemy confined to his forest while the farmer sowed his crops. This plan, which was proposed by the Major-General, and some time after again suggested by the Com- manding Royal Engineer, was not tried be- cause the settlers did not feel secure without more permanent military protection; and because they all thought their own houses and their own lands were those which should reside, will be selected for the purpose of being forti- fied. Materials for doing so will be found, but the persons themselves must give the requisite labour. ' 3. The persons so combining together will be relieved from the present military duty whilst so employed, but they must live together in the building to be selected, for mutual protection and defence. '(Signed) E. L. Humphkies.' Taranaki Herald, Nov. 10th, 1860. G 82 THE WAE IX XEW ZEALAND. be especially chosen to be benefited by being saved and cultivated at the public expense. Kone of them cared for the general good. The plan eventually adopted, and by which much valuable food was supplied to families in the to^vn, was to cultivate a large reserve close to the lines. To do this it first re- quired to be fenced in. A native corps had been formed and was employed on this duty, with orders to clear away useless bush, but not to cut down any ornamental wood, the property of the colonists. This, though an advantage to the settlers, who before the war would have been only too glad to have had their land cleared without expense, was now objected to by them; and compensation was claimed for the damage done. They even proposed that all the wood required for this purpose should be cut on the lands belonging to the natives, and that it should be cut by the natives themselves without payment ! Another source of dificulty was found LOCAL COEPS. 83 in dealing with the newly raised local corps. They imagined themselves fitted for every emergency, and equal, if not superior, to the regular troops. The officer command- ing the militia and volunteer corps solicited an audience with the General for himself and the captains of the volunteer com- panies ; and at this interview these gentle- men explained that their knowledge of the country, gained by a long residence in it, had rendered them far better fitted to carry on a war with the natives than it was pos- sible for soldiers to be ; and they requested that the Major-General would strike them off garrison duty for a time, in order that they might carry on a guerilla war on their own lands, asserting that in a few weeks not a Maori should be seen in the district. As there was at the time no immediate pro- spect of bringing the natives to action, and as he had no wish to curb such patriotic zeal, the General assented to the proposi- tion. The weather suddenly becoming g2 84 THE YTAR IX XETV ZEALAND. very boisterous the volunteers were unable to commence operations. During the storms, however, the brig ' George Hender- son ' was wrecked on the coast ; and as it was presumed that the natives would come down to plunder it, two or three ambus- cades were laid, but without effect. Beyond this no move was made, no organised plan was adopted, nor were any steps taken likely to obtain the promised result. As the volunteers still remained in the town, notwithstanding that the weather cleared up, the officer commanding them was called on to explain, when it appeared that the men were not willing to undertake the duty proposed for them by their officers. The scheme then fell to the ground, and the corps were ordered to resume garrison duties. The works were continued during the absence of the Major-General at Auckland, and no event of any moment, on either side, took place until tlic 27th of August, when THE WAIREKA ABANDONED. 85 Major Hutchins, 12tli Regiment, command- ing at Waireka, sent in word that the enemy had abandoned their positions there, and that he had destroyed them. They were found to consist of covered rifle-pits on the slope of the hill, in double and treble lines, flanked by stockades, traversed and having passages of retreat to the rear. This unexpected step on the part of the natives enabled General Pratt, on his return to New Plymouth, on the 28tli, to do what he had always been most anxious to do, viz. to withdraw the outpost at the Waireka, without risking an action in which much loss of life on our side must have occurred, and the result of which could at most have been the capture of a post which must have been abandoned the next day — a conquest that could have had no influence on the issue of the war, which was to be decided on the north and not on the south of New Plymouth. On the 29th information was received 86 THE WAE IX XEW ZEALAND. from the Waitara that the enemy had aban- doned the Puketakauere Pah, which our troops had then destroyed. Thus the enemy had given up their lines of defence to the north and to the south, and had retired into the forest, whence they issued in small par- ties by day and night, and burnt the deserted wooden tenements of the settlers, and drove off their cattle with impunity. Many of the buildings were in the forest itself, quite be- yond our protection, as also were the cattle, which were scattered over an unfenced dis- trict. Escorts were freely offered to the settlers to drive their cattle into the town that they might be sold to the contractors. But, though the contractors offered about double what the colonists had been before re- ceiving, still, in most cases, they preferred having their cattle stolen by the natives, to losing the chance of the large compensa- tion they anticipated at the end of the war. Mr. M'Lean, the native secretary, who, during the short period he was enabled to BUKTON S HILL. 87 remain in the district afforded much valu- able aid, both by his influence and by his information, obtained intelligence on the 3rd September that a body of the enemy from William King's and the Taranaki tribes, had established themselves and were erecting a pah at a place knoAvn as Burton's Hill, about six miles from Omata. It was therefore determined to try and surround them. For this purpose three parties, averaging 250 rank and file each, started at midnight to take up positions: two to intercept the enemy on the lines of retreat that he would most likely adopt, and the third to advance on his position by daybreak. As far as Omata the road lay through a difficult fern country, but was well known to us ; beyond Omata, where it entered the dense and im- practicable forest, we knew only little of it. Notwithstanding any precautions that might be taken, a very few natives could have lain hid in this forest and could have fired on the column without being seen. The march, 88 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAXD. however, w^as conducted with the greatest secrecy and quiet, and the point of attack reached without any sign of the Maori. But though the information was ascertained to have been correct, yet the enemy had escaped. The foundations of a pah had been dug, and building materials had been collected. Recently cooked food found on the spot showed that the position had been abandoned in haste. This day's march con- firmed Mr. Reimenschneider's description of a New Zealand forest, and showed us how little persons who talked of flying columns knew of the country. In a war against savages the European has at all times great difficulties to contend against; and in New Zealand, and more especially in a district like the one to which operations were now necessarily confined, this was peculiarly apparent. In all former feuds between the European and the Maori the tactics of the latter had been to keep the war at a distance from their homes and POSITIONS OF THE NATIVES. 89 cultivations ; to take up positions naturally strong, the only value of which was that they were difficult of access ; to cause much loss of life to the attacking party in its advance ; to retreat and to vacate the post without coming to close quarters. By these measures they usually inflicted heavy losses on us and sustained little themselves. The same tactics were still adopted, though on a more extended scale, owing to their sup- ply of arms and ammunition being now much increased. None of the positions taken up by the natives were of the slightest importance to them or to us. They did not cover magazines, roads, or any points of con- sequence ; they were selected simply as spots the most inaccessible that could be found, from which retreat was secure. Tlie aban- donment of the pahs after they had answered their purpose, was part of their system of war. In the native mind victory remained with the side that lost fewest men, and not with the possession of the barren piece of 90 THE WAE IN NEW ZEALAND. ground on which the fight took place. The Maori knew that when they assembled we had no choice but to attack them, and that we were only too glad when they took up a position. The mode of attack, however, was in our hands. Hitherto this had always been the same, viz. a rush on the place, which had at best resulted in its capture, with severe loss to us, and with little or none to the enemy. We had, in fact, played their o-ame. After one of those attacks the Maori dispersed to his villages and boasted of the number of the Pakeha he had killed; while we, having hoisted our flag on the captured pah, lunched, carried off our dead and wounded; pulled the flag down again ; returned home to glorify our- selves on our gallant deeds, and bury our dead. The loss sustained by the enemy was always over-estimated. Everyone secretly wondered what object had been gained, and what had been done to bring the war to a termination. FEUDS WITH NATIVES. 91 This was the regular mode of procedure during the continuance of former disturb- ances; it was hardly ever deviated from, and so the tribes remained unconvinced of the superiority of our appliances, and con- ceived no great opinion of our aptitude to put them to the best use. When tired of fighting they dispersed into the interior, to their own homes and cultivations, and tilled their lands unconquered. Thus the feud perforce slumbered until roused again by the insidious machinations of some turbu- lent Pakeha- Maori, or of some interested colonist. The history of our colonisation of Kew Zealand, and the constant recurrence of these feuds with the natives, made it evi- dent that this plan of w^arfare — if such it could be called — would not bring the na- tives to submission and order. If this end was to be attained by fighting, it must be conducted so as to prove to them con- clusively that we were their masters, not 92 THE WAE IX XEW ZEAL.\XD. only in pluck, but in the use of the ap- pliances at our command. It was necessary to show them that their strongest pahs, or positions of any kind, were valueless ; that the forest would in time be no further pro- tection to them, and that all could be taken with little loss of life on our side. One reverse, such as that of the 27th of June, or a victory in which we suffered much loss of life, would now have raised the whole na- tive population, and plunged the colony in a war which, ending in the extermination of the native race, must have begun by the utter ruin of the northern island. By an extraordinary chain of reasoning the public, at home and in the colony, appeared to be inoculated with the feeling that to carry on a war with the native we should adopt his plan of warfare, and that we should meet him in the bush in skirmishina^ order. General Pratt, however, decided that to adopt this plan would be to sacrifice the advantages of our superior weapons ; for, if MODE OF WARFAEE. 93 we met the natives where men could only creep singly, and could not support each other in any way, the tomahawk would prove a more formidable weapon than the rifle. The issue showed that he was right, for he brought the war to a successful termina- tion before the winter set in, and proved to the natives how vain it was for them to cope with us. The nature of the country, the habits of the Maori, and the peculiar features of the war, did not admit of a strict appliance of the theory and rules of warfare. But it was not on this account necessary to disregard them altogether ; and in the sub- sequent operations theory was made to suit the circumstances of the case, and plans were not made to suit theories ; and I be- lieve for the first time in New Zealand wars the Maori was taught that neither pah nor forest would for the future afford him security. The cry raised in New Zealand, and in- dustriously circulated, that the capture of 94 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. a pall by us without the capture of the garrison was considered by the Maori a victory, was calculated to mislead. It is true the Maori had no intention in taking up any position, and fortifying it as he did, to remain in it. If he succeeded in induc- ins: the Pakeha to attack it, and in so doino; killed many of our men, losing few himself, his object was gained, and he naturally considered vacating the then useless pah no defeat. But if he was compelled time after time to vacate his posts, and to retire deeper and deeper into the forest, having sustained daily loss of his own men, and having in- flicted little or none on us, the case was very different. He was too clear-sighted not to see this. Whatever we might say he knew that he had been defeated at his own game ; that his loss w^as not only men — a serious loss to the Maori — but prestige; and it was in this way that the Waikato influence was so much weakened. The dress used by the troops on all DRESS OF THE TROOPS. 95 active operations was well calculated for the service, viz. a blue serge jumper worn over the belts, in lieu of the tunic, while a forage cap replaced the shako. In winter they had the great-coat, with the skirts tucked up, cut off, or worn horse-collar fashion. 96 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. CHAPTER Y. Attack and destruction of the Ngatiparirua, Kairau, and Huirangi pahs — Difficulty of tlie country — The enemy retreat into the forest — Major Hutchins re- connoitres the position on the Kahihi Eiyer — Mis- representation of the colonial press. Since the evacuation of the Waireka valley and of the Puketakauere Pah by the Maori, the troops in New Plymouth, Waitara, and Bell Block had. been occupied in destroying the deserted pahs of the enemy on both banks of the river Waitara, and in the neighbourhood of New Plymouth. A large number were pulled down, many "wharees'"' were destroyed, crops Avere rooted up, and much loss was inflicted on the enemy. The Maori, on the other hand, retaliated on us by burning the deserted RETALIATION. 97 houses of the settlers. The continual move- ments of the troops in the district kept the communication partially open ; and, though the main road was never safe to individuals, the tribes were more cautious in leaving the shelter of their forests. The numbers of the natives in arms at the Waitara, in- cluding the Taranaki and Ngatiruanui, who had joined the former, were at this time estimated at about 1,700; but no certain in- formation could be gained of their locations, or of the numbers in each place, till about the 8th September, when Mr. M'Lean ascer- tained with some degree of certainty that a body had established themselves in three pahs, Ngatiparirua, Kairau and Huirangi, in a level country at the entrance of a per- fectly impenetrable forest, which covered the road leading to the Ngatimaru district. The information was that the hostile Waitara tribes of William King, reinforced by the Ngatiruanui from the south and from the Taranaki district, had occupied these H 98 THE WAR IX XEW ZEALAND. pahs ; that the Huirangi pah was in the forest, and that any attempts to penetrate beyond this must be attended with much loss of life, and could result in no real advantage to us. We could hardly credit that the natives should be so emboldened as to ven- ture to stand an attack in these pahs situ- ated in the open country. But the informa- tion was trustworthy as to their presence there, and all native reports agreed that their intention was to fight. The only thing, then, to be done was to attack them in their positions and to destroy their pahs, and dislodge or, if possible, capture their garrison. To leave New Plymouth, with its imperfect defences and its crowd of women and children, without a garrison was out of the question ; and a column of about 750 rank and file, all that could be spared, was drawn from the garrison and moved to Mahoetahi, a pah about eight miles off, belonging to a friendly native. They encamped here for the night, and all infor- CROSS THE WAIOXGOXA. 99 mation tending to sliow that the enemy had determined on making a stand, orders were issued for the march. The strength of the force was increased by aijother column of about 300 men, who had orders to move from the Waitara camp by night up the left bank of the Waitara river, and to take up a position intercepting the enemy be- tween Kairau and the forest. A column from the main body moved off at midnight, crossed the Waiongona river, and, following its right bank, took post to intercept retreat to the south. Both these parties reached their allotted posts before daybreak, at which time the main body, not much nu- merically stronger, but encumbered with the ammunition, artillerj', &c., reached its post and advanced on the pahs, And then we discovered how little the country was known by the resident authorities and per- sons on whom we depended for information. Instead of finding a plain level country, easily traversed, as we had been led to h2 100 THE WAR liV XEW ZEALAXD. expect, WG found undulating ground, situ- ated between two parallel rivers, intersect- ed at right angles by innumerable gullies, at all times marshy and often impassable, the whole hid and covered by a tangle of fern mid bramble from five to eight feet hiofh. Through this the advance w^as led by a line of skirmishers of the 65th Regi- ment,* men who had been many years in the colony, and understood the nature of the work before them ; and a fine sight it was to see them skirmishing through this difficult ground. As day dawned and the pahs appeared in sight all the troops were in position, and the situation of the right * The natives never once ventured to harass any column marching through the district, nor did they on this occasion ; but had they known the true advantage their country gave them, they could have found spots along the whole course of the road where they could have caused endless annoyance and confu- sion to the troops, and could still have secured them- selves a safe retreat to the forest, which was not above two miles off. NATIVES WITHDEAW. 101 and left columns was ascertained, but there was no enemy to be seen. A few shells were thrown into Ngatiparirua and Kairau, and the pahs were burnt. They had evi- dently been vacated at the last moment, as food half cooked was found, and other signs of recent habitation were apparent. The ravines and gullies intersecting the plateau afforded too many openings for retreat to render it necessary to speculate how the garrisons had gone. And there could be no doubt but that their place of defence was the bush and the Huirangi pah, which rested on a deep ravine, its right and rear covered by the forest. A volley or two were hurriedly iired from it by its garrison, who then withdrew to annoy us from the bush, and to lure the troops into it. In this they partially succeeded; and one man, caught in the supple-jack and unnoticed, was drao;o;ed in and tomahawked before his comrade had found out that he was missing. An officer in command of a small party. 102 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. misled by bad information, entered the forest with his men, where they were en- tangled by the underwood and separated, so that they could neither hear nor obey orders, nor help one another. The above casualty was the result. Fortunately more men were not sacrificed in this ill-judged proceeding. This w^as after the capture of the three pahs and while the men, previous to returning to camp, w^ere occupied in destruction of crops, wharees, &c. Nothing more remained to be done in this direction. The enemy had retreated to the depths of the forest, and the troops having entirely destroyed the pahs and cul- tivations^ moved to the Waitara camp. Our loss was trifling : one man missing (killed), and four wounded. That of the enemy could not then be ascertained, but they afterwards acknowledged that they had lost twelve men. It was certainly a disappoint- ment that a more serious loss of life had not been inflicted on the enemy. There BROKEX COUNTEY. 103 was, however, no help for it. The broken country, covered with high fern and bramble, gave such advantage of cover to the native that, surround his position as you would, he could still find many paths to escape by ; and, unless he liked it, it was impossible to bring him to action. Still the day's results were satisfactory. The destruction of so many pahs, the constant harassing by escorts moving about, and keeping the natives, by day, at all events, either in the forest or on its verge, began to work their own results ; while the many alarms that had previously disturbed the town now in a great measure ceased. The duties of his department now called Mr. M'Lean, the native commissioner, to Auckland, where the attitude of the Waikato kept the Government in constant alarm. Before returning there he however wrote as follows: — 'The several pahs and strong- holds to the north of New Plymouth being destroyed, and the natives driven into the 104 THE WAR IX XEW ZEAL.\XD. forest, where it is impossible to carry on successful military operations against them, I have the honour to submit for the con- sideration of Major-General Pratt, that at present nothing farther can be clone in that direction beyond watching their movements and keeping them off the open country if they should expose themselves.' This was accompanied by some valuable information regarding the country to the southward. It appeared that the natives in this part of the district had many old pahs in which they lived on the road to the Tartaraimaka block, and that they had erected and fortified some others on the block itself. A short distance farther, be- yond this again, on the banks of the Kaihihi river, the natives were also reported to have taken up some strong positions, and to have erected defensive works, which latter formed the line of defence that would be at- tempted by the Taranaki and Xgatiruanui tribes until the war assumed a general form, TARTARAIMAKA. 105 and until tlie tribes were united under one common head. It was not improbable that pahs had been erected in this district with- out our knowledge. The country was now quite beyond visit from Europeans, and the native tribes who had not openly joined the insurrection were not likely to give infor- mation; besides, the wood required for making pahs was cut in the forest near at hand, and they could be put up in the course of a day or two. The Tartaraimaka block was a fine, open, grassy plain, and though new well-built stockades had been put up there by the natives, it could not be supposed that there was any intention on their part to garrison them, or that the old pahs on the road were intended to be defended, or, in fact, that the enemy con- templated making a stand nearer than the Kahihi river. To reconnoitre this latter position, and to obtain information as to the country, landing-places, &:c., and to destroy the first-named pahs, a small force, lOG THE WAE IN NEW ZEALAND. under the command of Major Ilutcliins, 1st Bat. 12th Eegiment, was detailed, and marched on the 19th September. In ad- dition orders were given to this officer that, as there were reasons to suppose that the enemy were strengthening a position on both banks of the Kahihi river, he should reconnoitre it well without permitting him- self to be drawn into an engagement, and should ascertain its strength and the best means of approach to it. The whole of this duty was well performed, and after carrying out his orders and remaining a few days encamped on the Tartaraimaka block, to complete the destruction of the enemy's posts there, his party returned to New Plymouth on the 25th of the month. The camp at the Waitara was now strength- ened by the Head-quarters of the 40th Regiment, under Lieutenant Colonel A. Leslie, who was directed to move round the Kairau plains to complete the destruction of the pahs captured on the 12th, and to FALSE REPORTS. 107 keep tlie natives back in the busli. He rejoined the force at New Plymouth on October 1st, having finished the destruc- tion of the posts and crops as directed. In the performance of this duty, on the 29th of September, a few Maoris crept up, con-' cealed by the high fern, and firing on the rearguard of the party returning to the camp killed four men. These events were at once seized on by a portion of the colonial press of New Zealand, which was apparently only too glad to have an excuse for venting its spleen on the military. The reports given were so inaccurate, and the accusations founded on them were so palpably untrue^ as to be almost unworthy of notice; still improbable and Unauthenticated as they were, they obtained credence in New Zealand and in the adjacent colonies, and even a wide circulation in some of the English papers. 108 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. CHAPTER YI. Expedition to the Kaliilii river — Difficulties of tlie marcli — Encampment at tbe Tartaraimaka, block — Destruction of tlie Orongomaihangliai, Pukekakariki, and Mataiaio palis — Tlieir formidaLle construction — Conduct and consequences of the expedition unjustly disparag-ed — Eeturn to New Plymouth — Movements and strength of the enemy — Attack and capture of the Mahoetahi pah — Political results of this im- portant victory. The garrison of New Plymouth having been increased by the Head- quarters of the 40th from the Waitara camp (which was thus reduced to 250 rank and file), the following troops were put in orders to pro- ceed to Kahihi and for the contemplated operations to the southward. This was the largest number that could with safety be drawn from the to'wn. FIELD FORCE. 109 3 i a In addition to tliis, the force was accom- panied by 150 natives of the friendly tribes, under Mr. Par- ris, assistant native secre- tary. 3I!J ^ Jiuea CO CO O O O IM t- r-i — ' CI CO CO 00 sjauniinjQ 1 1 1 ^ Ti> o 1 cj 1 CO S)ac33j3s rt r- (N to o» O 1 ^ 1 JffBls i^ 3 ^ > 2 c ry2 P • a .5 -S ^ 'fcjc S - C rH -- ^ rt p: £ 't c ir b > i o O 1 O c no THE WAK IX NEW ZEALAND. This force was to have started on the 2ncl of the month to attack the strongly entrenched position, reconnoitred by Major Hutchins, on the Kahihi river. But heavy rain set in, rendering the rivers unfordable and the roads quite impracticable. The expedition was thus delayed until the 9 th of the month, when the rivers having fallen sufficiently, the force moved from New Plymouth. The first day's march of about eighteen miles lay through a very intricate country, thickly covered with New Zealand flax, densely wooded, and intersected by numerous ravines. Sometimes these ra- vines had to be headed, at others it was necessary to make a descent to the beach from tlie overhanging heiglits. All these natural impediments afi^orded the natives every facility for conducting a guerilla war, but they never took advantage of them to harass our columns. On this march the Naval Brigade, overcoming apparently in- surmountable difficulties of country, dragged CROSSING THE KATIKARA. Ill up from New Plymouth an S-inch gun, with wliich we hoped a breach in the stockade could be effected. The force encamped at the Tartaraimaka block (a fine grassy plain, the only one I saw in the whole district), and early next morning it advanced to- wards the enemy's position. The country here became most difficult ; and though the distance was only a few miles, the crossing the Katikara river and numerous ravines offered so many obstacles that it was 8 a.m. before the column reached its encamping ground. The right of the camp rested on the sea, and the left on the Mangakuio creek, with an outpost on a commanding eminence a few hundred yards in advance, The commissariat department occupied the Parawa pah near the sea, on the right bank of the creek, and was protected by a de- tachment of the 40th Ite<2:iment. This position was about three-quarters of a mile distant from the Kahihi, on the right bank of which, and occuping a loop of it, at 112 THE WAE IX NEW ZEALAND. about eight hundred yards from the sea, stood the pah of Orongomaihanghai ; on its left bank nearly opposite and quite close to Orongomaihanghai that of Mataiaio; and a2:ain on the ri^i^ht bank but a little more inland, and distant about four hundred yards from the banks of the river, stood Pukekakariki, hid from our view by a belt of bush running midway between, and parallel to, the Mangakuio creek and Kahihi river. The camp having been pitched, and work- ing parties having been employed in com- pleting a breastwork all round, two recon- noitring parties, of about 100 rank and file each, were sent out ; one along the sea line the other up the Mangakiuo to see if the Pukekakariki pah could not be taken in re- verse, and the enemy's retreat be thereby cut off. After advancing some distance along the creek, the fern became so dense and so interwoven with brambles that pro- gress was almost entirely stopped. More- over the numerous gullies with deep NATIVE POSITION. 113 swamps running into the Mangakuio, all of which had to be headed, showed that road to be impracticable. The natives also fired on the party, as it advanced, from secure rifle-pits on the far side of the swamps and on the edge of the bush. The line along the seacoast was, how- ever, found to be good and free from ob- structions; and near the Kahihi river a good view of the situation of the enemy's post was obtained. A clump of bush and underwood, not hitherto seen, covered the Orongomaihanghai pah, which it was now settled to attack first, and in this direction. At daybreak on the morning of the 11th October a guard and working party, in all 400 men (carrying gabions made and brought from New Plymouth), advanced on the pah, and entering the small clump of bush, arrived without opposition to within about two hundred and fifty yards of it. Here the intended line of trench was marked out, and with a flying sap the men I 114 THE WAE IX NEW ZEALAXD. were in a very few minutes under cover. The enemy had offered no opposition : seeing our advance they had apparently been ex- pecting the usual rush, for which they were quite prepared by firing their volleys and escaping unseen down the ravines. It was not until 10 a.m. that they fired a shot. But from this time, and until near dawn on the 12th, a continuous and well-directed fire was kept up on the working parties in the trenches. The natives on this occasion, though not so numerous as they afterwards were, maintained, I think, a better directed fire — aiming particularly low, and just grazing the top of the gabions. During the night an approach was commenced towards the pah. On the morning of the 12th, when our works were approaching very close to the outer stockade, the enemy ceased firing ; and suspicion having arisen that they had vacated the place by the bed of the river, a party went round towards Mataiaio on the left bank; and on a con- DESTRUCTIOX OF PAHS. 115 certed signal an entrance Avas effected into both places, which were found to have been just deserted. Pukekakariki was then taken possession of, and the three pahs were de- stroyed. They were found full of potatoes, food, books, and other Maori articles; and from the pools of blood in them it appeared that some loss had been inflicted, though to what extent we could not ascertain; ours had been one officer and four men wounded. The success and good effect of the operations were undeniable. The Maori without inflicting any serious loss on us had been obliged to vacate a naturally strong position, and three carefully built pahs ; all of which were of no value to him, except as posts in the defence of which he was to inflict loss on us. In giving them up without this equivalent he acknowledged his defeat. The pahs were all built of strong timber, braced together with supple- jack, through which the 8 -inch gun, after a whole day's firing, scarcely succeeded in I 2 116 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. making a practicable breach. The pali- sades bound in this manner, though cut in two by the shot, remained swinging, sus- pended by the supple-jack, and were even then scarcely less formidable as a means of defence than when firmly fixed in the ground. The rifle pits were most ingeni- ously constructed, and flanked one another perfectly; while the precipitous banks in fear and on the flanks, afFordino^ footins: to none but natives, had also been cut into small rifle pits. The whole of the pahs were covered with fresh green leaves of the New Zealand flax (Phormium tenax)^ in two or three layers, which, though they might not stop a bullet from the Enfield rifle at a short range, would certainly divert its course. Strange to say, the capture of these pahs, which was looked on by the natives, from the little damage sustained by us in their capture, as a serious loss and a heavy blow to their cause, and by all conversant with CAPTUEE OF THREE PAHS. 117 Maori feeling, as a great success, was yet quite ignored by the government of New Zealand ;* and, on the ground that the gar- rison had not been surrounded and captured was even ridiculed by a member in the House of Assembly as ' the capture of some more empty pahs.' That in England among persons unacquainted with the country in which the war was beins: conducted such might have been the feeling, is not so much to be wondered at. But that in Auckland a member of the assembly should have en- deavoured to affix such a stigma on the military is hardly credible. All persons in New Zealand know very well that to surr round pahs in such a district is a total impossibility. They know that the enemy never dream of retiring through the open * It was, however, the capture of these three pahs, and the description of the manner in which it was effected, that induced the Times newspaper to alter its tone, both as to the character of the war, and of General Pratt's operations. 118 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. part of the country; but that, unencum- bered with a commissariat and the other necessaries of an European force, they slip out through the ravines, one by one, with- out regard to the main body, or burrow like rabbits throuo-h the hiojh fern. It is patent enough that all strategical moves to intercept their retreat from their pahs would be vain. Nor could an actual in- vestment of the pahs be made without more danger from their own fire to the attacking columns than to the enemy ; and the latter in such broken ground would even then find means to slip away through some uncon- nected part of the line. After the capture of those pahs the Maori confessed his defeat, and pointing to the forest said: ' These now are my pahs, I hope they are large enough.' The prosecution of this success by an advance farther to the south was prevented by despatches received the same day from Auckland, with information that the enemy KETUEN TO NEW PLYMOUTH. 119 at the Waitara might daily be expected to receive a reinforcement of from 600 to 800 Waikatos, and that further reinforcements were on the way. Under these circum- stances (the garrison at the Waitara Camp being now only 250 rank and file) it ap- peared most important that New Plymouth with its large population of women and children (viz. settlers' families 733, boat- men's families 91, soldiers' wives and fami- lies 86, making a total of 910), should not be left so weakly guarded. In lieu, there- fore, of the projected move south, for which the troops had come prepared, orders were necessarily issued for the destruction of the conquered posts and the return of the force to New Plymouth, which it reached on the evening of the 13th October. The news of the march, and of the un- expected approach of the Waikato rein- forcements was strongly corroborated by native spies in the pay of the Native De- partment; their strength, the position of 120 THE WAE IN NEW ZEALAND. their camps, and many details of conversa- tion held with them were most minutely described ; and we really began to believe that the news from Auckland was for once correct. The camp at the Waitara was again strengthened, and preparations were made to meet this advance as soon as the enemy showed out of the forest. Mean- while the site of the old pah of Puketa- kauere was chosen for a stockade to hold 50 men and a month's provisions, so that, if desired, the camp at the Waitara might be abandoned and an increased force be available for the field. As before, these most positive reports of the position of the enemy were again contradicted, though the informants had gone so far as to state the numbers that they had counted, the tribes that had defiled past them, and other minute particulars. One thing, however, was certain — that a move of the Waikato warriors to the south was taking place. Some parties of these halted to plant and THE WHITE CLIFFS. 121 to hold conferences, at which some spoke for and some against the w^ar : some new hands joined while old ones left and re- turned home. The European residents in the districts through which they passed wrote most contradictoiy accounts of the state of affairs, and native intelligence could not be relied on; consequently there was no arriving at the truth. One portion of the road from Waikato to Taranaki ran along the beach at the foot of a precipitous rock, known by the name of the White Cliffs, the descent of which could only be effected singly ; and, in the hopes of obtaining information of the move of the enemy, a man-of-war steamer was stationed to watch it. The measure had no good result, and probably only obliged the natives to take a more inland route. By the end of October the stockade at Puketakauere was completed and, with a view of having signals direct from this new post to the garrison at New Plymouth, and to maintain the communication, it was 122 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. intended, under the protection of a party of about 200 strong, to erect another stockade at the old pah of Mahoetahi* For this purpose a portion of the garrison of New Plymouth and also of the Waitara were directed to move on the 6 th November 1860. But on the evening of the 5th, w^hile a small party was repairing a bridge on the road between the Waitara and Mahoetahi, some of the natives showed in the broken ground, and a skirmish took place, with, as was long after ascertained, a loss of five men to the enemy. Late this night Mr. Drummond Hay, of the Native Department, making a most hazardous ride from the Wai- tara, arrived at New Plymouth with authen- tic information that the reinforcements to the natives from Waikato and the eastern districts had crossed the Waitara higher up in the forest, and that they had not only joined William King, but had, in force, occupied the old pah of Mahoetahi, which it had been our intention to fortify next day. The news was hardly credible, for NATIVE LETTER. 123 the place could be of no use to them as a position. They could not expect to be allowed to remain there, and it was one of the few comparatively open places in the district. The following letter was sent in to New Plymouth, to one of the native commis- sioners :— ' To Mr. Parris. ' Pukekoke: November 1, 1860. ' Friend, 1 heard your work : come to fight with me, that is very good. Come inland, and let us meet each other. Fish* fight at sea! Come inland, and let us stand on our feet. Make haste, don't prolong it. That is all I have to say to you. Make haste ! ' From Witini Taiporutu, Porohuru, and from all the Chiefs of the Ngatihauna and Waikato.' * This was in allusion to the steamer sent to watch at the White Cliffs. 124 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. The strength of the enemy at the Wai- tara was variously computed ; but I think it would be fair to estimate it at 1,600 men. In a despatch, Auckland, October 2nd, 1860, I see the governor says, 2,000. They were mostly fresh arrivals, the flower of the M^ori nation, who had come down to join in William King's quarrel, not as his allies, but as his masters, to take the war into their own hands, boasting that they would now soon bring it to an end, and would drive the Pakeha into the sea. They most thoroughly despised William King and his tribe, as also the Southerners, who certainly were a very inferior race, and were treated by them more as slaves than as friends. And from the arrival of these powerful allies to the end of the war, what between English bullets, and the abuse and extortion of the Waikatos, the Taranakis must have led an unhappy existence. In their spirit of boastfulness and vaunting, the Waikatos would not NATIVE VAUNTING. 125 listen to the advice of the inhabitants of the district ; but the same night that they crossed the Waitara, they sent the letter above noted; and with a portion of their force occupied the old pah of Mahoetahi, the property of a friendly chief named Mahou. The position was on the direct line of communication from New Plymouth to the Waitara, eight miles distant from the former place, four from the latter, in the fork of, and not far distant from, the junction of the Mangoraka and the Waion- gona river, about three miles from the sea, and about the same distance from the main forest, where William King had his head-quarters. The actual site was strong, a hill running parallel to the Mangoraka rivei*, at about eight hundred yards distant, surmounted by two knolls, and surrounded by a deep and dangerous swamp, only approachable on one side, where a spur of the hill offered dry ground. The space between the river and the position, though comparatively level, was, as well as the 128 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. whole of the precipitous bank of the river, covered with ti-tree, fern, and brambles, nine to ten feet high, and very difficult to penetrate. This cover might have been used by the enemy with great effect in harassing our advance. The news of the position taken up being well authenticated, the force previously ordered for Mahoetahi to establish the stockade w^as slightly in- creased, and two parties of the following strength were directed to move so as to arrive at their positions simultaneously. The column from New Plymouth, under Major-General Pratt, numbered as fol- lows ; — F. O. Capts. Subalts Sergts. Rank snd File Royal Artillery . . . — 1 1 17 Royal Engineers . . . 1 — — 10 12th Regiment . . . 1 1 1 3 81 40th Regiment . . . 1 3 6 162 65th Regiment . . . — 1 4 8 210 Militia 1 2 4 5 120 Mounted Corps . . . — 1 — — 20 Total .... 3 9 12 23 620 THE WAITAEA COLUMX. 127 The Waitara column, under Colonel Mould, R.E., was composed of — F. O. Capt. Subalts. Sergts. Rank and File Rcyal Artillery . . . Royal Engineers . . . 40th Regiment . . . 65th Regiment . . . Naval Brigade . . . 1 1 1 1 4 2 1 7 4 2 11 3 150 98 20 Total .... 2 1 8 13 282 The intention was to dislodge the enemy from his post, and, if feasible, to capture the garrison of the pah; or, if this could not be done, to pursue as far as the forest, and then to return and complete the stock- ade. The column from New Plymouth, having a well-known and good road to move over, about 7 a.m. reached the Man- goraka river, which ran through a deep ravine, and was crossed by two fords near one another. Here the natives could be descried in the pah, which was an old one, ]-28 THE WAR IN NEW ZEALAND. and was in many places open. The two 24-pounder howitzers were brought into position to cover the passage of the river, as it could hardly be expected that the native would forego his advantage, and not use the thick cover in front of Mahoe- tahi. Here, however, as on all similar occasions, no opposition was met with ex- cept at the very place where the enemy had selected to stand. The 65th then crossed, followed by the militia, and drew up across the main line about 300 yards in advance. The detachments, 12th and 40th, protected the rear and right flank until the main body, guns, &c. had crossed. Difficult ground had delayed the march of the Waitara column, which, on account of the thick scrub and broken country, could not yet be seen. The enemy now opened fire from the pah on the line of skirmishers of the 65th; and, about 8 a.m. the guns and equipage being well up, the order was given to attack; and the 65th Regiment, DEFEAT OF THE ENEMY. 129 at the double, entered and secured the centre and east end of the pah, while the Militia, with some difficulty, crossed a part of the swamp and effected a lodgement on the west. The enemy still, however, main- tained his position outside, at the foot of the pah and in the swamp and adjacent scrub. The 12th and 40th now came into action on the right, while the Waitara column, which had crossed the Waiongona, near its junction with the Mangoraka river, extended the left, and materially aided in completing the defeat of the enemy and increasing his heavy loss. Except from the puffs of smoke, scarcely an enemy had been seen ; but from the direction in which these now appeared, it seemed that the natives were escaping through the scrub, and at last one large body, dislodged by some shells, rose up and fled. This, I think, must have been about the first of the enemy who had been actually seen during the day. An advance was at once K 130 THE WAK IN" XEW ZEALAND. made in pursuit, a portion of the force being left to commence the stockade. The enemy was closely followed up to the edge of the forest, and on the road, for some three miles, tracks of blood were found, and several dead and wounded were picked up. The loss to the Maori was very se- vere; it was computed at about 100 men, and as 49 dead fell into our hands, and were buried by us, the estimate cannot be considered large. I believe the number has since been found to have been much larger. Those who fell, and whose bodies remained on the field, were all warriors of note, Waikatos, who considered themselves superior to the Europeans in New Zealand wars. They were well armed with good double-barrelled guns and rifles, many of which fell into our hands. The corpses that we buried were those of remarkably fine men, some of them influential supporters of the king movement. The loss of prestige was very great. The Waikato, who had never DEFEAT OP THE ENEMY. 131 before acknowledged to a defeat — who had come to drive the Pakeha from the country, and who had crossed the Waitara on the evening of the 5th, confident of success — was only too glad, twelve hours afterwards, to gain the shelter of the neighbouring forest, leaving the bodies of his slain chiefs in our hands. Our loss was four killed and twelve wounded, mostly in the 65th Regiment, on which on this occasion the brunt of the day fell. Colonel Mould, Royal Engineers, was left in command of the party to complete the stockade, and the remainder of the troops returned to the garrison at New Plymouth, preparatory to more extended operations. The result of this action could not but be most important. Nearly all the tribes enD;ao:ed had lost men of influence, and the Maori expression was, that the chiefs of Waikato were dead. The suddenness of the defeat — hardly more than twelve hours K 2 13-2 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. having elapsed since the main body had crossed the Waitara — had also a great eiFect. The loss had been the greatest the Maori had ever suffered at the hands of Europeans, while no corresponding loss had been inflicted on us in return. Her Majesty's colonial steam-sloop ' Vic- toria ' proceeded to Auckland with the intelligence of this victory; she returned again on the 10th, bringing the thanks of the Government to the troops engaged. But at the same time a request was made that 400 men might be sent from Taranaki (the seat of war) to Auckland, on which place the Government feared an attack would be made by the friends of the de- feated Waikato tribes. Though to send these men to Auckland would completely stop all active operations, the demand was so urgent that refusal was almost impos- sible. The troops were delayed by stress of weather for a few days, but arrived at Auckland in H.M.S.S. ' Niger' and in the WAIKATO CHIEFS. 133 'Victoria' on the 13th, on which date the Governor wrote : — ' As soon as the news of the recent operations at Taranaki be- comes known in the Waikato, it is more than probable that a large body of the tribes connected with the defeated insur- gents will take active measures to avenge their loss. Indeed I have reason to believe that the chiefs in the Waikato are now dis- cussing whether they will make a descent on Auckland or on Taranaki.' The fact was that the Government dreaded the effects of the success we had gained. The Waikatos had been punished so se- verely that it was feared the tribes around Auckland would rise for 'utu,' or re- venge. It certainly was a difficult and most singular position that General Pratt now found himself placed in. The Govern- ment, since the defeat of our troops on the 27th June, had been constantly urging on him the necessity of striking some decisive blow, and of gaining a victory 134 THE WAE IN NEW ZEALAND. which mi2:ht enable them to make aclvan- tageous terms with the insurgents. They invariably ignored that, up to this time, he had been obliged to confine his operations to the Taranaki district, south of the Wai- tara, where the enemy was scattered in the depths and on the edge of the forest ; and that to gain a victory, such as they desired, was, under such circumstances, impossible. The only thing that could be done was to harass and annoy the natives. This was effected by the constant move of the troops who had driven them back from New Plymouth, and they only ventured into its neighbourhood, to burn and destroy the more distant homesteads, when they could do so with comparative security. Above thirty large pahs had been taken and burnt, and much native cultivation had been de- stroyed. At Kahihi the enemy had been forced to vacate a position naturally strong, and fortified with much care, in which he had expected to inflict much loss on us. ENEMY CROSS THE WAITARA. 135 Farther prosecution of this success was prevented, as has been stated, and the force was obhged to return to New Ply- mouth, in consequence of despatches from Auckland, which announced that the Wai- kato tribes were rapidly moving in force on New Plymouth. The report, though partially true, was not entirely so. The enemy were drawing to the Taranaki dis- trict ; but, as had been seen, the main body did not cross the Waitara until the 5th November, late on which evening the first authentic account of their move was trans- mitted to the Major-General. The necessary alterations were made in the plan for the next day's march, and the enemy was met and defeated at Mahoetahi before he had time to establish himself. Thus General Pratt, having apparently done that which the Government had all along desired, now discovered that he had gone beyond their expectations, and was asked to reduce his already too small force 136 THE AVAR IN XEW ZEALAND. in the Taranaki district, and virtually to suspend all operations there, in order to relieve the fears of the authorities at Auck- land, who, instead of now finding them- selves in a better position to treat with the natives, were as much alarmed as to the possible results of the victory of Mahoetahi as they had been some months before at the defeat of Puketakauere. The problem General Pratt had to solve was a diificult one. All minor successes at a time when great ones, from the want of an enemy, could not be achieved, had been stigmatised publicly, and even in official quarters in New Zealand, as the mere capture of a few empty pahs. The necessity for the troops returning to New Plymouth after the ob- ject of an expedition had been gained, was described as a retreat ; and false statements and opprobrious epithets were industriously circulated in the colonial newspapers to the disparagement of the General and his officers. And now that advantage had DECIDED SUCCESS. 137 been taken of the first opportunity that offered, it was found that the success had been too decided. The General was not only to beat the Maori, but he was also to regulate the exact quantity of punishment that the people of New Zealand considered good for him. 138 THE WAE IX NEW ZEALAND. CHAPTER YIL Military preparations — Expedition to the Waitara — Pukerangioria pah — Difficulties of the approach — Defeat of the enemy at Matarorikoriko — Mr. Wilson visits the Maori camp — Strong position of the enemy. On the departure of the detachment for Auckland, the strength and distribution of the troops in the district of Taranaki were as follows (pp. 140-41). The actual effec- tives in the garrison of New Plymouth hardly mustered 550. From this time the most contradictory reports were circulated regarding the num- bers and intentions of the natives in the Taranaki district ; but it was clear, though they were concealed by the forest, that parties from all sides were flocking to them. NEW AEKIVALS. 139 These new arrivals boasted of -what tliey would have done, and how different the result of the action at Mahoetahi would have been had they been there. The ap- parently impenetrable position they occu- pied in the forest; their daily increasing numbers ; the energy displayed by the leaders in the Maori king movement; the opinion as to the rights of their cause — publicly expressed by influential Europeans ; and the advantage many settlers reaped by the duration of hostilities, still kept the tribes united, and prepared to make a farther stand for their coveted indepen- dence. On our side nothino; aofo-ressive could now be done until the return of the detachments sent to Auckland, and until the completion of the stockade at Nga- puke-turua should place a few hundred men at the General's disposal. For to attack the forest in an effectual manner, keeping the ground as it was conquered, would require every available soldier in 140 THE WAR IN IsEW ZEAL.\XD. NJ S ct^ 1 1^ o i~ in o to 00 o> 1 o 05 en o o t^ in «? 1 (M CO CC CM <2 f-H o 1 O CO o «D r— t -^ r— 1 CO Oi 1— (M a; 1 1 1 (M •-• « 1 00 -* 1 1 1 ^ 1 CO 1 Tj" Q 1 1 1 ■^ 1 (N 1 1 1 1 1 M ■* 1 (N ■* (N 1 CO 1 1 1 ^ — p^ 1 1 ■^ C^ CO f.^ o r^ 1 1 ,— , ,-H 1—4 CO 1 . ■<*• I 1 1 1— t 1 1 [ f-H o o (M 1 - j^ ^ lO 1 ^_^ ^ I I c^ u^ • . • • c F1 • • • ^ CO , . •w id >> >. u s o • "3 a rin i ■£i} c • 'ci t3 <^ H o o o o p o <^ o o o o o o ^ ci _ __ f=H Ph i^ ^_ rt U^ '<^ rM St o S- tf M O to C3 s CS o ri £• p^ (M s s § o . .« c •A CS M 1 TKOOPS AT TARANAKI. 141 I I I " I O I <£> O I «3 (N I O* ■S "^ to c s 7Z ^n i-.f W C) Pi « >. ^ X H -- _ Pi M ^ .2 — C3 sj ^ c3 ~ I 111 S :^ § Pi iB n > 142 THE WAR IX KEW ZEALAND. the country; while to storm posts, capture them, and the same clay abandon them, would only be encouraging the enemy to continue a strife that was carried on in the manner most beneficial to him. If the war was to be concluded in the district, with- out culminating in a general rising of the northern island, it was most important to take advantage of the dry season. The wet season would commence in April, the country would then become impassable, the embarking and landing of troops and stores would be dangerous, difficult, and most uncertain. General Pratt had written to England to say that if all the tribes in the northern island joined the insurgents, as it yet appeared probable they might, the next campaign must be in the Waikato country, for which at present our means were totally inadequate. Reinforcements in men and ordnance had been asked for — the latter as far back as May 1860; and until their arrival the war was perforce VIGOEOUS MEASUKES. 143 confined to the district of Taranaki, both because it was too late to transfer it to another spot, and because of the paucity of troops. During the short time that was left, however, the Major-General hoped that by a systematic attack in the forest, and by holding captured posts, he might ensure a series of successes which should induce the natives, who already showed some mis- giving as to their power, to abandon a strucro;le so disastrous to themselves. GO Preparations were therefore carried on vigorously to make the Waitara the base of operations. Provisions, ammunition, and stores were daily collected there, and as many carts and bullocks as possible were gathered for a transport corps. Supple- jack, cut by the friendly natives at some personal risk, was sent to the AYaitara in quantities, and the troops there, aided by the Naval Brigade, worked these up into gabions, of which a good store was pre- pared. The head-quarters of the 14th 144 THE WAR IX NEW ZEALAND. Regiment having arrived from England on the 1st and 5th of Depember, the detach- ments sent to Auckland returned. But the weather, which up to this time had been beautiful, now changed, and the rain poured down daily in torrents, so that moving was impossible. Arrangements, however, were pushed on, and on the 28th of December the force moved to the Waitara to commence the intended plan of attack on Pukerangioria. The troops composing this field force were, when assembled at the Waitara, including the Naval Brigade and regular troops, as fol- lows (p. 145). The garrison of New Plymouth was thus reduced to about 400 effective regular troops, in addition to the Taranaki Militia and Volunteers, who, though detailed as part of the above force for active operations in the field, did not turn out for certain reasons of their own, and remained for the protection of their families. Besides these FIELD FORCE. 145 •a c f 1 uj o» irj CO O CO >o 1 -^ CO O «5 00 r^ i-H t-l •'I" CO ^ CO o o Q 1 1 1 C4 in t^ M 1 to Staff Sergeants rH,-.rt-tO00OrH CO ^ ^