1819 in New Zealand
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following lists events that happened during 1819 in New Zealand.
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Incumbents
Regal and viceregal
Events
- January â Hongi Hika returns from his expedition to East Cape and the Bay of Plenty (see 1818) with 2000 prisoners.[1]
- 5 May[2] â Samuel Leigh arrives on the Active to recuperate from ill-health at Samuel Marsden's invitation.[3][4]
- 17 June[2][5] â Leigh returns to New South Wales. While in New Zealand he has conceived the idea of establishing a Wesleyan mission to the MÄori. He returns to England before the end of the year with this proposition in mind. His report to Marsden leads to the appointment of John Gare Butler to head the second Church Missionary Society mission.[3][4]
- 24 July â Governor Macquarie appoints Butler a justice of the peace for New Zealand.[6]
- 12 August â Marsden arrives in New Zealand on the General Gates on his second visit accompanied by Butler and James Kemp and their families. Marsden accepts the offer of land at Kerikeri from Hongi Hika to start the second Church Missionary Society mission. Butler will be in charge. He is the first resident ordained clergyman in New Zealand.[6][7]
- 25 September â Marsden plants the first grape vines in New Zealand.[8][9]
- 9 November â Marsden leaves at the end of his second visit.[7]
- 20[6] or 21 December[10] â The Butlers and Kemps take up residence in Kerikeri.
- Undated
- Te Rauparaha joins a NgÄpuhi attack on NgÄti Maru in Taranaki. The NgÄpuhi have enough muskets to soon win several battles (the NgÄti Maru have never seen muskets before) and capture a number of pa before continuing on to Cook Strait. When they pass through Kawhia on their return the NgÄpuhi give the NgÄti Toa some muskets. Later in the year NgÄti Toa (possibly led by Te Rauparaha) return to the Cook Strait region looking for a new place to settle as they are under severe pressure from Waikato and NgÄti Maniapoto at Kawhia.[11]
Births
- 23 April (in Scotland): Edward Stafford, politician.[12]
- Undated
- William Henry Eyes, politician.[13]
- (in England): John Gully, artist[14]
- (in Scotland): James Macandrew, Superintendent of Otago, businessman.[15]
- Approximate
- (in Germany): Carl Sylvius Völkner, Protestant missionary.[16]
- 9 or 19 January (in Ireland): William Travers, politician.[17]