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USES OF ADVERSITY

NELSON IN THE MAKING

AFTER NINETY YEARS

(Written by S. Saunders.)

Doubtless many of those among Sir George Grey's "unborn millions", destined to find an abiding place oh the sunny shores of Tasman Bay will rejoice that in the remote past Captain William Hobsou, R.N.—"LieutenantGovernor of New Zealand under Sir George Gipps, Governor of New South Wales, from January, 1840 to May, IS-U, and Governor of New Zealand from May, IS4I, until his death in September, IS42"—set his face resolutely against the promoters of the city and province of Nelson wandering further south in search of a more spacious field for the development of their activities. Had it been otherwise Nelson might have been by this time a rich agricultural and pastoral province, with a spired cathedral, the longest railway tunnel in the Dominion, five Labour members in Parliament, and a penchant for political fads. The New Zealand Company had been established in 1839, and Port Nicholson, now Wellington' was the first fruits of its colonising zeal. The purpose of the company was to form several settlements, one principal settlement to be selected "so as to become the commercial capital of the country," and such other settlements as might from time to time be deemed expedient. Colonel William Wakefield was in charge of the first expedition, and established such encouraging prospects that a second expedition was speedily dispatched, under the direction of the colonel's brother, Captain Arthur Wakefield, who, having joined the Navy at the tender age of 10, was still a young man with much active service to his. credit when he laid down the command of a steam frigate in the piping days of peace to aeeept service with the New Zealand Company and to fill the role of a very picturesque figure in the brief career of that ill-fated undertaking. Perhaps the most appealing of the eulogies accorded him is a fragment saved from some verses written by his friend Alfred Domett, the Poet-Premier_, on the occasion of the ill-named "Wairau Massacre," of which he was a victim:— But there was a Scotch cap and an old shooting jacket, And the form they enveloped was ever «revered; And authority needing no goldlace to back it Was felt and acknowledged where'er it appeared. In the old wooden Cathedral Church in Nelson, which is now' being absorbed, as it were, by an imposing stone structure, a simple brass plate, with but few words, tells of the service and the sacrifice of the man. TWO OBSTINATE STALWARTS. The perplexities Which beset Colonel Wakefield and Captain Wakefield concerning the site of Nelson were told at length by the late- Mr. Lowther Broad in the Jubilee History of the province thirty-eight years ago, and from this source some fragments may be taken Nothing definite, we are told, had been settled before the pioneer expedition sailed from England as to tho future settlement of Nelson. The selection of a name appears to have been tho only labour undertaken by the authorities in London. A rather vague description of some excellent country suitable for settlement on the East Coast of the South Island had been supplied by Colonel Wakefield to the Company, and there seems to have been a general impressioh in the minds of £he pioneers that they were bound for some place m the neighbourhood of Banks Peninsula. The final decision, however, was left to the Company's agents after consultation with the "Local Government," whose special knowledge was expected to be of great value in determining so important a point. But the Company.had counted without its host. Colonel Wakefield himself hankered after the fertile lands at" the back of Port Cooper (Lyttelton), which by their proximity to the first settlement would have accorded with all the plans and purposes of the Company admirably. But the "Local Gove?nment" m the person of the Governor, Captain William Hobson. would not consider any such proposition. Let the expedition go on to Auckland, where lands well adapted to the seeds of the coming settlers could be obtained, His Excellency urged. Auckland .was to be tho Capital of the Colony. The prosperity of Auckland was therefore the first question. Let the emigrants o-o there and help to make it -what the Governor wished it to be—the commercial capital as well as the seat of Government. For three weeks or so a heated- discussion went on, the Governor being obstinate and the Colonel pertinacious. The Colonel would not send tho ships to Auckland, and the Governor would not let them go anywhere near Banks Peninsula. And thus Nelson retained its Birthright and its destiny. It became neither a great agricultural and pastoral aentre nor a busy commercial depot. Tho Wakefield brothers, Captain Wakefield in particular, threw unbounded energy into the development of the second province, and by their very zeal attracted a class of settlers who in due course lent lustre to the whole colony. '' HOBSON' S CHOICE. '' Mr. Lowther Broad may be left to tell the remaining part of the story of the search for Nelson in his own words. "Time was slipping by; the intending

settlers Might be expected in a few weeks, and nothing had been done to select and survey the lands they had paid for and of which they expected possession on arrival," he writes. "Under these circumstances there was nothing for it but to look out for another site, somewhere near to Wellington, and Nelson was literally 'Hobson's Choice.' The company was in the awkward position of having assured all those who had bought land that the central parts of New Zealand would be the field of the company's operations. Had the second expedition' been sent np to Auckland- tho company would have been exposed to the severe and deserved reproaches of the deluded purchasers. The Governor cared for none of these things. ' Auckland had been selected as the Seat of Government, ana lie was determined to compel by all means in his power the migration to Auckland or its neighbourhood of the company's emigrants, and, indeed, of anyone else he could induce to go there. It was no use waiting any longer, nothing would induce His Excellency to let the expedition go to Port Cooper or Banks Peninsula, and so one fine morning, Colonel Wakefield came on board the Whitby and said to his brother, 'You cannot go to Port Cooper the Governor won't sanction it. He says he has orders to make a church settlement there; but I'll give you a pilot and an interpreter and you can take the ships and go and,see the chief at Kapiti. I have heard there is some good land about Blind Bay, and you had better go and find it." Captain Wakefield accepted his brother's advice and after a satisfactory interview with the chief at Kapiti made his way to Blind Bay, the first boat to go ashore carrying Captain Wakefield, Mr Stephens, and Mr. Tuekett. Neither Captain Wakefield nor Mr Tuekett the surveyor of the party, was satisfied by the appearance or the lay of the land in view; but a day or two later one of the boaterews sighted the boulder bank, a curious shingle deposit running parallel with the shore, and following its course found the narrow passage which for many years served as the only entrance to the haven beyond. This discovery finally settled the site of Nelson and so sealed the destiny of the province. AND AFTERWARDS. That Sir George Grey was entitled to look forward to the advent of those unborn millions"- that formed the centre-piece in his memorable election campaign of 1876 we all must admit. His career before that was unique in Imperial expansion. It was his lot to make good where other administrators had failed. Appointed Governor .of South Australia in 1841, when only 29 years of age, he was called to New Zealand in 1845 to fill a similar position hero and to repair the blunders of his predecessors in office. He retired in 1853, after seeing the main points of his system or responsible government established, but was recalled in 1861 to give invaluable assistance in bringing about., during the succeeding six or seven years, the cordial relations between the Maori and European peoples which have bound them together as one nation. Sir' George visited Nelson first' m March, 1846, only two or three months after his first appointment, and the local paper, then claiming to be the pioneer of journalism in tire colony, recorded that his energy had won the confidence of the people and his urbanity their hearts. He visited the ."baby" city" again a year later, and both the newspaper and the settlers, as the chroniclerj-ecords, declared him "entitled to the warmest support." On this occasion he was able to announce that he had completed the purchase of the Wairau lands from the Maoris by a payment of £3000, and that the survey of the country had been recommenced with a view to it being speedily occupied by European settlers in perfect harmony with the Native vendors. During the same visit he reinstated in all their dignity and authority the Magistrates who had resigned their office under threat of dismissal from Governor Fitzroy "for their conduct in issuing the warrant for the arrest of Rauparaha and Eangihaeta," much to the satisfaction,, we are told, of the people of the province. At that time Nelson claimed among its citizens such prominent figures in the later life of the country as Sir William Fox, Mr. Alfred Domett, and Sir Francis Bell, the father of the' late Leader of the Legislative Council, and ifr may not be a mere vain conceit to feel that the presence of such gentlemen in the midst of a community, remembering the charms of Captain Wakefield, did much to perpetuate in Nelson a measure of courtesy, hospitality, and integrity that gives "Sleepy Hollow" a charm that any community might envy. |

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19291102.2.63

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CVIII, Issue 108, 2 November 1929, Page 10

Word Count
1,656

USES OF ADVERSITY Evening Post, Volume CVIII, Issue 108, 2 November 1929, Page 10

USES OF ADVERSITY Evening Post, Volume CVIII, Issue 108, 2 November 1929, Page 10