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A Dark Chapter from New Zealand History

Chapter 4: INTRODUCTION.
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About This Book

A settler's account describes the Poverty Bay district, its geography and early prosperous Māori society, then traces social decline as new influences weaken chiefs' authority. It recounts the spread of a militant religious movement, a high-profile murder of a missionary, rising hostilities between Māori factions and settlers, and government efforts to pacify the East Coast led by colonial authorities and allied chiefs. The narrative reviews military actions, deportations and prisoner treatment, considers causes and missed opportunities for prevention, and argues lessons to avert similar tragedies.

These pages have been chiefly written for such as desire to forward to distant friends a brief connected account of one of those terrible massacres, accompanied by wholesale destruction of property, which bid fair to depopulate and lay waste the North Island of New Zealand.

It is possible that only vague, indefinite reports respecting the calamities which afflict this colony have reached the majority of far-away readers; more especially in Great Britain, impressions are known to prevail which are often opposed to facts. In this little work it is intended to tell a “plain, unvarnished tale;” to briefly review the causes which led to the perpetration of a great tragedy, and to shew how it might have been prevented. If the sad story contributes, even in a slight degree, to bring about an improvement in the future, the purpose for which it was written will have been accomplished.