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William Hobson

 
Biography: William Hobson

William Hobson (1793-1842) was a British naval commander and governor of New Zealand. He negotiated the Treaty of Waitangi with the Maori chiefs, which granted England sovereignty over New Zealand.

William Hobson was born at Waterford, Ireland, on Sept. 26, 1793. He entered the Royal Navy at the age of 9, became a midshipman in 1806, and rose to captain in 1834. He served at the North Sea, West Indies, North America, English Channel, and Mediterranean stations and in 1836 was posted to Australia, where he surveyed Port Phillip Bay, the northern part of which was named after him.

In 1837 Hobson was sent to investigate the situation in New Zealand, where tribal warfare was reported to be threatening the lives of British subjects. As a solution, he proposed the establishment within certain areas of a series of British enclaves, or "factories, " on the model of those of the East India Company in India, but it came to nothing.

In 1839 Hobson was appointed British consul in New Zealand with authority to negotiate justly and fairly with the Maoris for recognition of British sovereignty over their territory. On Feb. 5, 1840, Hobson met with Maori chiefs at Waitangi, where they signed a treaty by which the chiefs ceded sovereignty to Britain in return for guarantees respecting their lands and possessions and their rights as British subjects. Three months later Hobson proclaimed British sovereignty over the whole of New Zealand and established the capital at Auckland in the center of the Maori population.

Hobson governed New Zealand as lieutenant governor under the jurisdiction of the governor of New South Wales, but in May 1841 New Zealand became a separate crown colony with Hobson as governor. In his short term of office he attempted to regulate land claims and as a result came into conflict with the New Zealand Company, which had been organized in 1839 by Edward Gibbon Wakefield and his followers and had claims to about 20 million acres. Hobson had virtually no military force to support him, and he experienced difficulty in reconciling the divergent interests of missionaries, traders, and Maoris. Moreover, he was not well served by the officials around him, and the expenses of his civil establishment were unnecessarily high. He himself was honest, religious, sociable, and well liked by the Maoris, who considered him a just man, but he was dogged by failing health, which affected his grasp of the situation. He died at Auckland on Sept. 10, 1842.

Further Reading

Guy H. Scholefield, Captain William Hobson, First Governor of New Zealand (1934), is the standard biography. Important specialized studies are J. C. Beaglehole, Captain Hobson and the New Zealand Company (1928); T. Lindsay Buick, The Treaty of Waitangi: How New Zealand Became a British Colony (1933); James Rutherford, The Treaty of Waitangi and the Acquisition of British Sovereignty in New Zealand, 1840 (1949); and A. H. McLintock, Crown Colony Government in New Zealand (1958).

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Wikipedia: William Hobson
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Captain William Hobson


Lieutenant-Governor of New Zealand
In office
30 July 1839 – 3 May 1841
Governor George Gipps (Governor of New South Wales)
Preceded by Office established
Succeeded by Office abolished

In office
3 May 1841 – 10 September 1842
Preceded by Office established
Succeeded by Captain Robert Fitzroy

Born 26 September 1792(1792-09-26)
Waterford Ireland
Died 10 September 1842 (aged 49)
Auckland, New Zealand
Nationality Irish

Captain William Hobson RN (26 September 179210 September 1842) was the first Governor of New Zealand and co-author of the Treaty of Waitangi.

Contents

Early life

Hobson was born in Waterford, Ireland, the son of Samuel Hobson, a barrister. Some sources put his year of birth in 1793. He joined the Royal Navy on 25 August 1803 as a second-class volunteer. He served in the Napoleonic wars and was later involved in the suppression of piracy in the Caribbean. He became a Midshipman in 1806 and some seven years later was a First Lieutenant. He was promoted to Commander in May 1824. In December 1834 he obtained a commission from Lord Auckland to the East Indies on HMS Rattlesnake. In 1836 he was ordered to Australia and arrived at Hobart on 5 August 1836 and at Sydney 18 days later. On 18 September 1836 HMS Rattlesnake left for Port Phillip District (later Melbourne) conveying Captain Lonsdale and other officials to the new colony. During the next three months Hobson and his officers thoroughly surveyed Port Phillip, the northern portion of which, by direction of Governor Sir Richard Bourke, was named Hobson's Bay, after Hobson. His ship was involved in the founding of Williamstown. He was offered the position of Superintendent of the Bombay Marine at a salary of £2000 a year, but he had taken a liking to Australia and was a candidate for the governorship of Port Phillip, although the salary was not expected to be more than £800 a year.

In 1837 he sailed to the Bay of Islands, New Zealand, in response to a request for help from James Busby, the British Resident, who felt threatened by wars between Māori tribes. He arrived on 26 May 1837 and helped to reduce the tensions. On his return to England in 1838 he submitted a report on New Zealand to propose a trading system and a treaty with the Māori to obtain land.

Lieutenant-Governor of New Zealand

At the time, the British government recognised the sovereignty of the Māori people, as represented in the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand of October 1835, which had been organised by Busby. Hobson was appointed Lieutenant Governor under the Governor of New South Wales, Sir George Gipps (ratified on 30 July 1839) and British consul to New Zealand (confirmed on 13 August 1839). He was issued with detailed instructions by Lord Normanby on 14 August 1839, giving reasons for intervention in New Zealand and directions for the purchase of land "by fair and equal contracts." The land was later resold to settlers at a profit to provide for further operations.

Hobson arrived in the Bay of Islands on 29 January 1840 (which is celebrated today as Auckland Anniversary Day) with a small group of officials, including an Executive Council consisting of the Colonial Secretary Willoughby Shortland, Colonial Treasurer George Cooper and Attorney-General Francis Fisher. The Legislative Council comprised the above officials and three Justices of the Peace.

Treaty of Waitangi

Upon arrival Hobson almost immediately drafted the Treaty of Waitangi, together with his secretary James Freeman and Busby. After obtaining signatures at the Bay of Islands, he travelled to Waitemata Harbour to obtain more signatures and survey a suitable location for a new capital (he also sent the Deputy Surveyor-General, William Cornwallis Symonds, to other areas to obtain more signatures). After suffering a stroke on 1 March 1840 he was taken back to the Bay of Islands, where he recovered sufficiently to continue work.

On 21 May 1840, in response to the creation of a "republic" by the New Zealand Company settlers of Port Nicholson (later Wellington), who were laying out a new town under the flag of an independent New Zealand, Hobson asserted British sovereignty over the whole of New Zealand, despite the incompleteness of the Treaty signing. He sent Willoughby Shortland and some soldiers to Port Nicholson on 25 May 1840, and the council of the settlers was disbanded. Their leader, William Wakefield, later travelled to the Bay of Islands to pledge allegiance to the Crown. His suggestion to make Port Nicholson the capital was rejected in favour of Hobson's plan for a new town on Waitemata Harbour, to be named Auckland after the Earl of Auckland.

On 11 July 1840 the French frigate L'Aube arrived at the Bay of Islands on its way to Banks Peninsula as part of the settlement plan of the Nanto-Bordelaise Company. Hobson immediately sent two magistrates to the area to establish the British claim to sovereignty by holding courts.

Near the end of 1840 the Port Nicholson settlers sent a petition to Queen Victoria calling for Hobson's dismissal over his treatment of them. Hobson responded on 26 May 1841 to the Foreign Secretary.

Governor of New Zealand

In November 1840 the Queen signed a royal charter for New Zealand to become a Crown colony separate from New South Wales. Hobson was sworn in as Governor and Commander in Chief on 3 May 1841.

Hobson travelled to Wellington in August 1841, where he heard the complaints of settlers and selected magistrates. He then visited Akaroa to settle the French claims. Back in Auckland, he had some difficulty with the Māori and his government was ridiculed by journalists in Wellington and Auckland. He responded by closing down the New Zealand Herald and Auckland Gazette. With his government low on funds, he resorted to issuing unauthorised bills on the British Treasury in 1842. Hobson faced opposition from the "Senate clique" radicals who sent a petition to the Foreign Secretary to have Hobson recalled. One of Hobson's last actions was to declare an Auckland Anniversary Day, to mark the anniversary of his arrival in the Bay of Islands.

Hobson suffered a second stroke and died on 10 September 1842, prior to being recalled from office. He was buried in the Symonds Street cemetery in Auckland.

References

The Dictionary of New Zealand Biography cites:

  • Hobson, W. Papers, 1833–1846. MS Papers 46. WTU
  • Moon, P. Hobson: governor of New Zealand, 1840-1842. Auckland, 1998
  • Orange, C. The Treaty of Waitangi. Wellington, 1987
  • Scholefield, G. H. Captain William Hobson. London, 1934
  • UK Parliament. Correspondence and other papers relating to New Zealand, 1835–1845. In Irish University Press series of British parliamentary papers. Colonies: New Zealand. Vols 3 & 4. Shannon, 1970

External links

Government offices
Preceded by
none (new office)
Governor of New Zealand
1841-1842
Succeeded by
Robert FitzRoy

 
 

 

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