Tauranga's Early Traders, Part II
‘I came to
Tauranga in 1829’, recalled James Farrow, the district’s first permanent Pakeha
settler identified by name.1 Sometimes referred to as Farrar by
later missionary arrivals who did not approve of his musket trading, the former
merchant seaman with an entrepreneurial flair was born in London in 1800.
Farrow originally landed at the Bay of Islands in 1825, with the object of
exchanging muskets and gunpowder for cargoes of dressed muka (flax or Phormium
tenax) for a Sydney trading house.2 As the Tauranga iwi were not yet
fully armed with muskets, in January 1829, he voyaged there in own his sailing
craft, which appears to have been a schooner rigged ‘boat’, with a quantity of
muskets and general ‘trade’.3 On arrival he was ‘claimed’ by the
Ngai Te Rangi people at Otumoetai Pa as ‘their’ Pakeha.
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A semi-indigenised pre-Treaty Pakeha-Maori
In the interests of protection and profit,
Tauranga’s pre-Treaty flax traders like Farrow lived among the different Ngai
Te Rangi hapu around the harbour, becoming in due course a semi-indigenised
Pakeha-Maori. Artist unknown ‘A Pakeha Maori’, in Knox, Thomas W;
The Boy Travellers in Australasia, Harpur and Brothers, New York, 1889:
203
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Alone
among Ngai Te Rangi, Farrow was, not unwillingly, assimilated
by his tribe as a semi-indigenised Pakeha-Maori or ‘white man gone native’.
Known as Hemi (James), he married an unidentified, high-born Ngai Te Rangi
woman and became fluent in Maori but, while honouring a range of customs,
retained his European dress and basic values. Farrow enhanced the power and
mana of the Otumoetai people by fully arming them and, as the intertribal
musket warfare swept the Bay of Plenty, ensured their survival as an entity. As
with subsequent Tauranga flax trader arrivals who also became semi-indigenised
Pakeha-Maori, Farrow lived in a superior house – in his case within Otumoetai
Pa, built and decorated inside and out Maori-style by his whanau and hapu –
accommodation befitting his value and status as a valued Pakeha rangatira or
white chief and a conduit to European muskets, munitions and general trade
goods.4
Arthur Thomson,
a British military surgeon and historian who encountered many former trader
Pakeha-Maori during his North Island travels (which included Tauranga) during
the 1850s, said of first arrivals like Farrow:
[E]very inducement
was held out to white men to settle in the country; houses were built for them,
land was given them, they were allowed to select wives from among the daughters
of the chiefs and were not required to hew wood or draw water. In return for
these royal privileges Pakeha Maoris were required to barter pigs, potatoes,
and flax, for guns, blankets, tobacco and other articles.5
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The house of a rangatira at Otumoetai Pa
Taylor, Richard, ‘Chief’s house, Otumoetai Pa, March
1839’. Richard Taylor’s Sketchbook, Auckland War Memorial Museum, Tamaki Paenga
Hira. Ref: MS-302. PD-1961-14-p167-1
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In 1829
Farrow, who found the Tauranga flax trade commercially viable, was joined by
his brother Daniel. Both
were associated with Otumoetai Pa until the 1860s, but little is known about
Daniel who, while assisting his brother, lived in his shadow. The harbour
offered sheltered anchorages where vessels could be easily unloaded and loaded.
Ngai Te Rangi’s leading rangatira at Otumoetai offered protection from hostile
tribesmen and guaranteed regular and substantial cargoes of dressed flax.
Smaller vessels arriving from the Bay of Islands were loaded directly while
beached on the sands below Otumoetai Pa at low tide, where Farrow later had a
jetty constructed. Any larger Australia-bound vessels anchored in the Otumoetai
channel or at Waikorere (Pilot Bay), where they were loaded from waka.
James
Farrow’s years in pre-Treaty Tauranga were adventurous ones. In November 1830, the former privateer and whaler Phillip
Tapsell sailed for Maketu, where he established himself as flax trader for the
Arawa iwi. Farrow agreed to work as Tapsell’s Tauranga flax agent, a role with
many attendant risks. Soon
after, when Farrow voyaged to Maketu and uploaded a fresh cargo of trade goods,
he and Tapsell retired to the latter’s house for refreshments. Seeing the
opportunity, the Arawa rangatira Haupapa and his warriors seized the cargo and
carried it off into the bush. Tapsell at once sent for Haupapa, who entered the
house with young chief named Pipi. While Farrow blocked the door with his body,
Tapsell placed a loaded musket to the head of Haupapa, who, calling out, ‘gave
the necessary orders, and the goods were all restored’.6
During the early 1830s, James Farrow, while only in
his 20s, exchanged muskets, powder, lead, tomahawk heads, rum and blankets with
Ngai Te Rangi for huge quantities of dressed flax, pork and potatoes, which
were shipped to New South Wales on vessels contracted by Tapsell’s employer,
the Sydney merchant house Jones and Walker. The Tauranga flax trade initially
proved profitable for all parties. By December 1830 for instance, the British
Admiralty in London was purchasing cargoes for Royal Navy lines and
rigging at £43
per ton. 7
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Farrow’s cargoes were often
loaded aboard vessels beached at low tide near Otumoetai Pa. Ilene Stichbury, Unloading on the
shore, Auckland. 1920s, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, The Ilene and
Laurence Dakin Bequest, Accession no. 1990/30/2
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On another occasion, when Hakairo,
another Arawa rangatira, invited Tapsell to establish a flax trade to Rotorua,
he sent Farrow, his most trusted agent, with a quantity of trade goods pikaued
or backpacked by a long line of Maori porters. After Farrow had purchased ‘80
or 90’ baskets of flax, he sent a message to Maketu informing Tapsell that
Hakairo’s people had stopped scraping flax ‘and had begun to look upon the
goods sent there as their own, which they could take when they pleased’.8
On Tapsell’s instructions, Farrow, his Maori wife and an American Negro assistant
‘very cleverly’ packed the remaining trade goods within the baskets of of flax
they had purchased (average weight, 60 pounds apiece) which were then pikaued
back to Maketu. The trio were fortunate, as Cabbage, a former Tauranga flax
trader who later attempted a similar stratagem at Rotorua, was found out and
killed. Hakairo vowed vengeance for the ‘theft’, but nothing came of the
affair.9
Between 1830 and
1833, Farrow also traded with the rangatira Te Waharoa and his Ngati Haua iwi
at Matamata Pa. Although the trade was intermittent, when it did occur, it
involved large quantities of flax. Ships’ cargoes up to 70 tons in weight were
distributed in back packs, borne by long lines of women and slaves by way of
the Wairere track, over the Kaimai Range and down to Tauranga. The cargoes were
shipped directly to Walker and Jones in Sydney by large vessels anchoring at
the Te Puna (Wairoa) River mouth.10 Farrow recalled:
I had been in the habit of supplying Te Waharoa with guns and power
among(?) other things… I used to go to Matamata. The N[gati] haua were
supplying me with flax. They carried the flax from Matamata to Tauranga. They
were cutting flax about Matamata, at Paparahi, and on the Waihou River at
Waiharakeke (the main canoe landing on the Waihou River for parties of Maori
visiting or attacking Matamata Pa]. Maori set great value on guns in former
times. They would work day and night to get them.11
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Farrow’s stock in trade
included cast off military flintlock “Brown Bess’ muskets
Flintlock musket, Tower Armouries,
circa 1800, London, DM000109 Gift of the Wellington City Council,
National Museum of New Zealand, Te Papa Tongarewa
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By 1832, Farrow had been joined by several competing flax traders at
Otumoetai and in 1833, Tapsell appointed the former ship’s mate Edward
Clementson as his flax agent at Matatmata Pa. Thereafter, Farrow increasingly
used his ‘boat’ to collect dressed flax from tribes around the Bay of Plenty.12
In 1836 he was trading with Arawa at Maketu Pa, when it was stormed with
great slaughter by Ngati Haua under Te Waharoa. Rescued by Ngai Te Rangi
warriors who had joined the besiegers, Farrow emerged unscathed, but without
his ‘trade’.13 Matamata’s Edward Clementson featured
in another of Farrow’s adventures - a near drowning when his whale boat was
swamped in heavy seas off Matata around 1838. Phillip Tapsell described the
incident in his reminiscences.
He [Farrow], his wife and [Edward] Clementson, with a young man named
Jenkins, set out in a whaleboat for Matata, with a view of meeting Mr. White
there [a trader and ship builder], and when off the latter place, were
overtaken in a gale of wind. It would have been easy for them to have run under
the lee of Whale Island [Moutohora], where they would have had smooth water,
and there to have waited till the storm subsided; but their young companion,
being inexperienced and very confident, was strongly desirous that they should
at once land at Matata, which he was of opinion they could easily do.
Yielding to this opinion, they pulled for the mainland, on approaching
which, they found a very heavy surf breaking on the bar. Appearances were so
threatening that, when near the entrance of the river, they lay on their oars
to deliberate on the best course to pursue. They consulted so long that, before
they were aware, the boat drifted into the breakers, and was capsized. Jenkins,
not being able to swim, went down like a shot. Clementson was a good swimmer,
but so encumbered with heavy boots, and buttoned up to the throat in a pea
jacket, that, after a few strokes, he sank also, not to rise again. Farrow, though,
also a good swimmer, would have given in from fatigue, but for his wife, who
swam by his side, encouraging him continually with the assurance that the
people were coming down to the beach, till he reached the shore in safety.14
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A Pakeha trader bargaining with Maori for pigs and baskets of dressed
flax and/or potatoes
Williams, John, Maori
bargaining with a Pakeha, A-079-017
National Library of New Zealand, Wellington. |
As the demand for muskets and Tauranga’s flax export trade declined,
James Farrow prospered from the booming provisions trade in salted pork,
potatoes, maize and wheat, which were sold directly to visiting vessels. Having
acquired a degree of respectability as ‘an old hand’ or pioneer, he joined the
Te Papa missionaries and fellow Tauranga traders in signing James Busby’s 1837
petition to the Colonial Office requesting protection from lawless Europeans.15
Farrow’s loyalty and service were
recognised by Ngai Te Rangi on 10 January 1838. The leading rangatira Tupaea,
Tangimoana and Te Omanu, permitted Farrow to purchase half an acre of land for
his trading store at the western end of Otumoetai Pa, close to the foreshore.
This acquisition was the earliest authenticated land purchase in the Bay of
Plenty for which a Crown Grant was later issued.16 Unfortunately
for posterity, no known image of James Farrow exists, but as we shall see, he
also continued to play an important role in Tauranga events in the post-Treaty
era.
Endnotes
1
Matheson, A.H; ‘Otumoetai Pa and the Early Times in Tauranga’, in Journal of
the Tauranga Historical Society (Inc.), Vol. 52 December 1974: OT 14.2
2
James Farrow (c.1800 - 1880) - Genealogy - Genihttps://www.geni.com ›
people › James-Farrow. See also New Zealand, pre-1846, Person Page 567 -
Early NZ History, http://www.nzearlyhistory.com › Avery, Max,
Maritime Tauranga, 1826-1970, Max Colwill Avery, Tauranga, 2013: 7.
3 Daily Southern Cross, 15 September 1869: 6.
4 Bentley, Trevor,
Pakeha-Maori: The Extraordinary Story of the Europeans Who Lived as Maori In
Early New Zealand, Penguin, Auckland, 1999: 142-164.
5 Thomson, Arthur. The Story of New
Zealand, Vol. 1, John Murray, London, 1859: 300.
6 Daily Southern Cross, 15 September 1869: 6.7
7 Cited in Wigglesworth, Roger, The New
Zealand Timber and Flax Trade, 1769-1840, PhD in History, Massey University,
1981: 82.
8 Daily Southern Cross, 4 August 1869: 6.
9 Ibid.
10 Tapsell, P. ‘Reminiscences, 1777? – 1873’, -1/2005486,
Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington. Early Tauranga – Toanga Tu /
Heritage Bay of Plenty, https://www.taongatauranga.net › early-tauranga
11 Māori Land Court Minute Book
(No. 3, p. 336, transcribed by Stephanie Smith), Cited in Debbie
McCauley, Author, James Farrow (c. 1800-1880) -
https://debbiemccauleyauthor.wordpress.com
12 Ibid.
13 Matheson, Vol. 52, 1974: OT 12.
14 Daily Southern Cross, 15 September 1869: 6.
15 Hinds, Samuel, The Latest Official
Documents Relating to New Zealand, With Introduction and Observations, John W.
Parker, London, 1838: 44.
16 Early
Tauranga, https://www.taongatauranga.net ›
early-tauranga