William Thomas Fairburn
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Elizabeth Newman (died 1847)
William Thomas Fairburn | |
|---|---|
| Born | 3 September 1795 Deptford, England |
| Died | 10 January 1859 (aged 63) Auckland, New Zealand |
| Occupation | Missionary |
| Spouse(s) | Sarah Tuckwell (died 1843) Elizabeth Newman (died 1847) |
William Thomas Fairburn (3 September 1795 – 10 January 1859) was a carpenter and a lay preacher or catechist for the Church Missionary Society (C.M.S.) in the early days of European settlement of New Zealand.
He was born in England in 1795, and married Sarah Tuckwell on 12 April 1819 in St Johns Church of England, Parramatta, Sydney, NSW Australia.
Missionary work in New Zealand
He and Sarah sailed on the brig General Gates to New Zealand on 27 July 1819, accompanying Samuel Marsden on his second visit to New Zealand.
In 1823, Marsden sailed on the Brampton on his fourth visit, bringing with him Henry Williams and his wife Marianne as well as Richard Davis and William Fairburn, and their respective families.[1][2][3]
In October 1833 he went with John Alexander Wilson, James Preece and John Morgan to establish a mission station at Puriri on the Waihou River.[4][5]
In 1835, Te Waharoa, the leader of the Ngāti Hauā iwi (Māori tribe) of the Matamata region, lead his warriors against neighbouring tribes to avenge the death of a relative, with the fighting, which continued into 1836, extended from Rotorua to Tauranga.[6][7]
After a house at the Rotorua mission was ransacked, both the Rotorua mission and the Matamata mission was not considered to be safe and the wives of the missionaries were escorted to Puriri and Tauranga. Fairburn and the other CMS missionaries attempted to bring peace to the belligerents.[6][7][8] In late March 1836, a war party led by Te Waharoa arrived at Tauranga and the missionary families boarded the Columbine as a safety precaution on 31 March.[9][10]
In 1840 he was at the mission station at Maraetai, and was at the Puriri Mission in 1842.[11][12]
