Hawke's Bay Today

No relatives at Colenso’s grave to mark his death after disgrace

Illegitima­te child meant reverend spent end alone

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William Colenso was born in Penzance, England, in 1811. At the age of 14 years, he became an apprentice printer and, in 1833, accepted the position as Church Missionary Society printer for New Zealand.

Colenso arrived with a small Stanhope printing press at Paihia on December 30, 1834, and was greeted by Ma¯ori, who gave him the name Koroneho. When the printing press was set up, Colenso produced the first New Zealand publicatio­n, a Ma¯ori translatio­n by William Williams of the Epistle of Paul.

Demand by Ma¯ori for written material was insatiable and Colenso’s publicatio­ns subsequent­ly increased the authority and extent of missionary influence. By 1840 Colenso had produced over 74,000 books and pamphlets, not all religious.

For clergymen like Colenso, the study of nature was often seen as the study of God’s handiwork. While living in Paihia, he developed an interest in botany, and his many missionary journeys to localities unknown and unexplored by Pa¯keha¯ provided him with remarkable opportunit­ies for plant collecting and exploratio­n.

He grew to love Aotearoa’s flora and fauna. In 1896 he wrote: “In every aspect of nature there is joy; whether it be the purity of virgin morning, or the sombre grey of a day of clouds, or the solemn pomp and majesty of night; whether it be the chaste lines of the crystal on yonder . . . mountain range, or the waving ever-changing outlines of distant hills tremulousl­y visible through the slanting rays of the setting sun; the minute petals of the New Zealand daisy, or the overhangin­g forms of mysterious forests; it is a pure delight to see.”

Bishop Selwyn accepted Colenso as a candidate for ordination on the prerequisi­te that he acquired a wife to support him in his work. Colenso proposed to Elizabeth Fairburn, the daughter of missionary parents, and they married in April 1843.

During a trip to Te Mataua-Ma¯ui/Hawke’s Bay with the Reverend William Williams in 1843 it was agreed, in consultati­on with local Ma¯ori, to establish a mission station at Waitangi, situated at the mouth of the Ngaruroro River.

Colenso was ordained as deacon in September 1844 at Waimate, Bay of Islands. Three months later, Colenso, Elizabeth, their daughter

Frances, along with two Ma¯ori servants, R¯ıpeka Meretene and Ha¯muera, left to establish the Waitangi Mission Station in Te Matau-a-Ma¯ui.

Elizabeth, a competent Ma¯ori scholar, fluent in te reo Ma¯ori and skilled in homeopathi­c medicine, taught local Ma¯ori children and women to read and write, as well as providing nursing care to the community. Whenever Colenso was away on his extensive expedition­s, it was Elizabeth who ran the mission.

The discovery that Colenso was the father of Wiremu, born May 28, 1851, to R¯ıpeka Meretene, was a great shock to Elizabeth. As a result of his indiscreti­on, Colenso was suspended as deacon in November 1852 and dismissed from the mission. Elizabeth, with Wiremu, left the next year and Colenso lived alone at Waitangi, becoming a virtual recluse. In 1861 he moved to Napier township and, during the latter part of his life, increasing­ly turned to writing and botanical work.

The Hawke’s Bay Philosophi­cal Institute (MTG Hawke’s Bay’s predecesso­r) was establishe­d by a group of “important and influentia­l men” at a meeting held on September 14, 1874. Under its constituti­on, the institute was founded for “the advancemen­t of Science, Literature and Art as well as for the developmen­t of the resources of the Colony”. From its inception, Colenso was a driving force and mainstay behind the institute, appointed both secretary and treasurer, positions he held for 10 years.

A Gottfried Lindauer painting of Colenso was commission­ed by the Philosophi­cal Institute to hang in pride of place on one of the walls of the Athenaeum. On November 14, 1894, before the oil painting was officially hung at the Athenaeum, it was displayed in John Craig’s shop window on Hastings St, Napier, where, according to the Daily Telegraph newspaper, it “attracted a great deal of public attention”. Lindauer’s portrait of William Colenso shows a venerable gentleman, dressed in clerical garb, with a kindly face, engaging brown eyes and long-flowing grey hair and beard. His overall demure is one of a man who had lived a long and interestin­g life.

In 1894, Colenso was re-admitted to the Anglican clergy, acting as a relieving minister. William Colenso died February 10, 1899 and was buried in the Napier Cemetery. Henry Hill, friend and colleague, wrote of the funeral, “The scene . . . was sad, and withal, beautiful. An old man full of years and honours was borne to his last resting place. Yet no wife, no child, no relative was there to mourn his passing.”

 ?? ?? An oil painting of the Reverend William Colenso by Gottried Lindauer.
An oil painting of the Reverend William Colenso by Gottried Lindauer.

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