Whanganui Chronicle

Shackles a reminder of turbulent times in city’s formative years

- Sandi Black Sandi Black is the archivist at Whanganui Regional Museum.

The next object in the series is a set of leg shackles. They consist of two ankle clasps joined by four links to a central ring, which has a further set of links to which a weight or bolt could be attached. These shackles come from the Rutland Stockade andwere used on prisoners of the Pai Ma¯rire Movement.

The 1840s was a fraught time for Whanganui with tensions high over land sales and concerns for Ma¯ori rights as kaitiaki of the river. In 1846, fighting broke out in the Hutt Valley and Whanganui Europeans feared similar resistance and unrest.

This was heightened when upriver leader To¯pine Te Mamaku and 200 toa (warriors) joined the resistance in the Hutt Valley, leading an attack on Boulcott’s Farm and calling on other Whanganui River Ma¯ori to follow him. Te Mamaku returned to Whanganui and assured the European settlers he would protect the town, if it remained free of soldiers.

By mid-December 1846, however, the 58th Rutlandshi­re Regiment had garrisoned the town. The 58th completed building the Rutland Stockade by April 1847. It cost £3500 and was thought to be the largest stockade in the country at the time, at 55 x 30 metres. Besides being a base for the soldiers, the stockade was a military prison, housing detainees from battles in the region.

In 1847, an incident occurred in which a young Ma¯ori man was shot in the face by a midshipman from the HMS Calliope, although sources differ on whether the incident was deliberate or accidental. The man was treated by a military surgeon and later recovered, but the injury drew utu (retaliatio­n) when the Gilfillan family of Matarawa were attacked by a group of young Ma¯ ori men and four family members were killed.

Five of the six attackers were captured and court-martialled, with four of the men hanged and a 14-yearold banished due to his age.

After this, many European settlers in the rural areas fled to the town and stockade, and a number of women and children were evacuated. Te Mamaku and 300 of his men attacked and blocked the town for two-and-ahalf months, with many rural settler homes burned and stock plundered.

The 65th Regiment arrived in May 1847 to help reinforce the town, resulting in nearly 800 soldiers being stationed to protect fewer than 200 settlers. More skirmishes and minor battles followed and a second stockade, the York, was built by July of that year. The tensions came to a head on July 19, 1847 with the battle of St John’s Wood. Even though this had an indecisive outcome, Te Mamaku and his men returned to their upriver home a few days later and a tentative peace was restored.

The military presence would remain for nearly two decades.

In May 1848, eight years after the initial negotiatio­ns began, the Government repurchase­d the block of land at Whanganui, paying £1000 for 34,911 hectares, of which 2200 hectares were reserved for Ma¯ori.

 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? The Rutland Stockade (above) overlookin­g Atkinson’s Hotel at left and the Courthouse; (left) the set of leg shackles from the Rutland Stockade, used on Ma¯ ori prisoners.
Photos / Supplied The Rutland Stockade (above) overlookin­g Atkinson’s Hotel at left and the Courthouse; (left) the set of leg shackles from the Rutland Stockade, used on Ma¯ ori prisoners.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand