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… tangihanga at Tamatekapua, Ōhinemutu, attended by Māori and Pākehā national leaders, the New Zealand Defence Forces …
Type: Biography
… of Thames from 1931 to 1959, and came from a prominent Pākehā family with a long association with the district. To …
Type: Biography
… tall, straight, slender, active, sinewy, sunburnt, smiling Pākehā…an agreeable intellectual cheerful young Gentleman …
Type: Biography
… at the coronation celebrations for the past behaviour of Pākehā and the church. He organised hui and church …
Type: Biography
… In 1959–60 he provoked an outcry by supporting the right of Pākehā administrators to decide whether the All Blacks …
Type: Biography
… at Maketū, Tāheke, Ōhau and Ōhinemutu. He is one of the few Pākehā to be buried in the cemetery of Te Arawa at Ōhinemutu. …
Type: Biography
… beginning of his stay Maning fitted easily into the role of Pākehā-Māori. According to an entry in an 1837 Hokianga …
Type: Biography
… Moetara ordered his people to build dwellings for his new Pākehā clients and moved his own village to be closer to …
Type: Biography
… Te Raro. The funeral was attended by 3,000 Māori and Pākehā. A monument in his memory was erected by his …
Type: Biography
… consented to his land being mined by the transient Pākehā, whom he compared to wandering albatross 'seeking …
Type: Biography
… the two sites, Oromairoa, was considered unsuitable by the Pākehā builder. This led to an argument among the leaders, …
Type: Biography
… condition died soon after he was born. Pauline had joint Pākehā and Tahitian ancestry, descended on her mother’s side …
Type: Biography
… Tuki, a Whakatōhea woman of mana, and Sanderson Black, the Pākehā captain of a coastal trader. Maria was the elder of …
Type: Biography
… the fourth synod in 1865, he was one of eight Māori and six Pākehā clergy present. By the time Mohi Tūrei was ordained, …
Type: Biography
… land, and military settlements to enforce the peace of the Pākehā. Governor George Grey , outraged by the extent of the …
Type: Biography
… of race relations conciliator in disputes between Māori and Pakeha. Not surprisingly his record in both areas was …
Type: Biography
… Eggleston (Eccleston), which was derived from the names of Pākehā missionaries. On 21 March 1878 in Auckland he married …
Type: Biography
… the year in which he first presented a range of portraits – Pākehā and Māori – at the Auckland Society of Arts. …
Type: Biography
… would never become landless or homeless, or slaves to the Pākehā. Before 1840 he had already lost Ōpua lands; it is …
Type: Biography
… to maintain the dignity of the Kīngitanga and obtain both Pākehā and Māori recognition of it. It was a see-saw …
Type: Biography