1803 in New Zealand

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1803
in
New Zealand

Decades:
  • 1800s
  • 1810s
  • 1820s
See also:

There is a lessening of the sealing rush at Bass Strait as the rookeries become thinner, and as a result sealers return to Dusky Sound and explore the surrounding coast. Little of the movements of these ships is actually recorded as a veil of secrecy still surrounds their activities while the various ships try to make the most of any discoveries before the competition arrives. They occasionally meet local Māori but little information regarding these encounters survives. There are again around half a dozen whalers off the north-east coast of New Zealand, a few of which call into the Bay of Islands. The first Māori to join a whaling ship, and possibly the first to leave New Zealand in 10 years, does so early in the year.[1]

Incumbents[]

Regal and viceregal[]

  • Head of StateKing George III.
  • Governor of New South WalesPhilip Gidley King

[2]

Events[]

  • 30 January – George Bass asks Governor King of New South Wales for a fishing monopoly from a line bisecting New Zealand from Dusky Sound to Otago Harbour extending south to include the subantarctic islands. It is not granted but shows the sealers' area of interest at this time.[3]
  • 1 June – Alexander, Captain Robert Rhodes, arrives in Port Jackson with Teina aboard. Teina is the first Māori recorded to have left New Zealand since Tuki and Huru in 1793. Teina may have been related to Huru[1] while the Sydney Gazette reports that Tuki spoke with the Alexander, possibly when it visited Doubtless Bay.[1][4]
  • 19 September – Alexander leaves Port Jackson to return Teina to New Zealand. Teina has stayed with Governor King while in Sydney and has been given gifts to take back with him, including pigs.[1]
  • December – , William Dagg, master, lands in Dagg Sound.[1][5]
Undated
  • Phillip Tapsell (born Hans Felk) visits New Zealand for the first time, on a whaling ship (possibly the Alexander) which calls at the Bay of Islands.[6] (See also 1823, 1828 and 1830).

Births[]

  • 21 July (in England): Henry Samuel Chapman, Judge, journalist, politician.[7]
  • 23 October (in England): Alfred Nesbitt Brown, missionary.[8]
undated

Deaths[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e Salmond, Anne. Between Worlds. 1997. Penguin Books (NZ) Ltd. ISBN 0-670-87787-5.
  2. ^ The colony of New South Wales encompasses New Zealand from 1788 to 1840. Therefore the head of state is the monarch of the United Kingdom represented by the Governor of New South Wales. However, British sovereignty was not established over New Zealand per se until 1840, at which point the Treaty of Waitangi retroactively recognised that it had been an independent territory until then. Furthermore, the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand signed by a number of Maori chiefs in 1835 was formally recognised by the British government at the time, indicating that British sovereignty did not yet extend to New Zealand. (New Zealand Ministry of Culture and Heritage)
  3. ^ Letter George Bass/Governor King, 30 January 1803; George Bass/Captain Waterhouse 2 February 1803, reproduced McNab, 1908, pp. 242–246.
  4. ^ "SHIP NEWS". The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser. NSW. 5 June 1803. p. 4.
  5. ^ Wises New Zealand Guide,7th Edition, 1979. p.80.
  6. ^ "New Zealand Encyclopaedia 1966: Tapsell Biography". Archived from the original on 23 October 2007. Retrieved 31 October 2007.
  7. ^ "CHAPMAN, Henry Samuel, from An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, edited by A. H. McLintock, originally published in 1966". Te Ara – The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. 18 September 2007.
  8. ^ Encyclopedia of New Zealand 1966
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