Sunday, 13 March 2011

Colvile's Story, Part 2: Duck Shoot at Maketu

This is the second in a series of articles about Fiennes Middleton Colvile and his service with the 48th Regiment of Foot in New Zealand. Part 1 introduces the series with a carte de visite portrait of Colonel Colvile sent to me by historian Michael Hargreave-Mawson. It also provides some early biographical details and background to his sevrice with the 48th Regiment. We now come to the 48th's arrival in Tauranga, in the Bay of Plenty on the north-east coast of the North Island.

Image © 2010 Brett Payne
Monmouth Redoubt, Tauranga [15]

The bulk of the troops disembarked from the H.M.S. Miranda and H.M.S. Corio near the Archdeacon Brown's Church Missionary Society station at Te Papa, on the shores of Tauranga harbour. Over the next few weeks they established the Monmouth and Durham Redoubts, overlooking the harbour and land approaches respectively, and a large tented and hutted camp [16]. Further troops continued to arrive, in preparation for General Cameron's plan to disrupt the supply of both warriors and food to the Waikato tribes by the Ngaiterangi [17].

Image © and courtesy of Alexander Turnbull Library
Colvile's Redoubt at Maketu, c. 1864 [18]

In the mean time, a request was received from the inhabitants of Maketu, some 35 kilometres to the south-east, for protection from Ngati Porou warriors from the East Coast who were reported to be approaching. On 5 March two hundred troops from the 68th Regiment had been sent down the coast on board the H.M.S. Miranda but, finding the seas too rough to land, they had been forced to return to Tauranga. A detachment of troops under the command of Major Colville was then marched overland to Maketu, arriving on 11th March. Colvile established his camp in an abandoned Maori pa known as Pukemaire, situated at the top of a steep hill in a commanding position overlooking the settlement [19].

Image © and courtesy of Auckland City Library
Fort Colvile (or Pukemaire Pa) viewed from the south-east [20]

Despite continuing rumours of the approach of East Coast warriors, the situation remained quiet at Maketu over the next few weeks, permitting the troops to settle into their new home. Their security was bolstered by the arrival of a large contingent some 300 "friendly" Arawa on the 20th April. Conditions appeared peaceful enough for Major Colvile to consider indulging in leisure activities.

Image © 2010 Brett Payne
Little Waihi, from the sand hills on the Pukehina spit [21]

The lagoon over the hill at Little Waihi - actually the estuary of the Waihi River with a narrow, fordable outlet - was well known for its abundant wildfowl. Colvile and Ensign Way, commander of the 3rd Waikato Militia detachment, accompanied by an orderly headed over there for some recreational shooting on the morning of Thursday 21st, 1864.

Image © and Courtesy of Google EarthOblique view of the Maketu Peninsula,
showing Major Colvile's escape route [22]

The report from a newspaper correspondent in Maketu follows:

When the Major and his party arrived at Waihi they were detained about fifteen minutes launching the canoe, which was high and dry on the beach. After succeeding in launching their craft they started on their expedition, and they had not been on the water but a short time when Mr. Way saw armed natives on the opposite side coming towards them. He at once drew the Major's attention to the fact, remarking at the same time that he had no doubt there were many more in the neighbourhood.

The Major then said to Mr. Way, "I think we had better return," which suggestion was immediately carried out, Mr. Way remarking, that he was glad the suggestion had come from the Major in the first instance. They at once turned the canoe back, and after proceeding about 200 yards the Major called out, "quick, put the canoe on shore." The canoe was then run on a mud bank — when a volley of about 50 shots whistled round their heads — the Major's orderly fell over the side of the canoe, Mr. Way followed, and the Major laid down in the canoe.

Almost immediately after they commenced wading to the shore, having to cross a mud flat about a quarter of a mile in breadth, every step they took sinking above six inches in the mud. All this time they were closely followed by the Maoris, who continued loading and firing as fast as they could. After a vast amount of exertion the Major and his party succeeded in reaching the shore; they had then a steep hill to mount, which they succeeded in doing after a great exertion. The Major mounting first, the orderly second, and Mr. Way last; the Maoris still following and firing, the last shot falling about two yards from Mr Way. [23]

Image © 2010 Brett Payne
Little Waihi from the Maketu tableland,
showing the gully up which Colvile, Way and Key escaped [24]

Colvile's own account to Headquarters, perhaps understandably, neglected to mention the original purpose of the expedition:

Port Maketu, April 21st, 1864. Sir, — I have the honor to report to you an engagement with the East Coast natives at Why-hee, two miles from the fort at Maketu, in which about 110 men of the force under my command were engaged. An ambuscade was laid near the ford at Why-hee this morning; and at least 50 rebels opened lire on Ensign Way (3rd Waikato Regiment), Private Key (43rd Light Infantry), and myself, when we were crossing the river at 10 a.m., in a canoe. The rebels were certainly not above 50 yards distant at the time, and I consider our escape as most providential and wonderful. They pursued us across the ford, on our jumping out of the canoe into the water, and followed us, yelling and firing, till we got into the bush and escaped. [25]

Image © and courtesy of Alexander Turnbull Library
Little Waihi, Sketch Map of Military Action, April 1864 [26]

With that ignominious thwarting of their day's activities, Colvile issued orders to send "a picket of 50 men directly," and then had to retire to his tent for half an hour to recover his composure. Way had collapsed in the fern, completely exhausted but, after administration of a "stimulant" - perhaps a little brandy - recovered enough to return to the fray. Further troops were sent down to the rifle pits which had previously been dug on the near side of the estuary, but the East Coast natives, estimated at some 300 strong, had re-crossed the ford and established themselves in the protective sandhills of Pukehina, resulting in a standoff [23]. Fighting continued back and forth across the estuary for almost a week, with some casualties, but no permanent advances on either side, so Colvile sent a message with Retreat Tapsell, then a Sergeant in the Armed Constabulary, to Colonel Booth in Tauranga, requesting assistance [27].

Gunboats were sent down from Tauranga on 27 April and, after taking aboard Ensign Langlands to direct the shelling, succeeded in routing the enemy from their positions.

Their retreat became a run over the sand hills. H.M.S.S. 'Falcon' and the 'Sandfly,' steamed in hot pursuit, shelling them as they went ... The detachment of the Colonial Defence Corps and Forest Rangers crossed the Waihi river, with about 250 natives of the Arawas, about 4 p.m., 100 of the same tribe having gone in hot pursuit some time before, catching up the rear of the enemy and killing two. [28]

Te Arawa warriors, accompanied by MacDonnell and other from the colonial forces, pursued the enemy down the coast past Otamarakau as far as Matata on the 28th, killing many, although not without casualties. By that evening, the enemy had scattered and the troops were all back at Maketu, tending to the wounded and burying the dead [28].

Continued in Part 3: Massacre at Te Ranga

References

[15] Digital Photograph of Monmouth Redoubt, taken by Brett Payne with Kodak DX7590, 24 November 2010.

[16] Anon (1864) The War in Auckland, Auckland: Daily Southern Cross, Vol XX, Issue 2110, 25 April 1864, Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand.

[17] Belich, James (1988) The New Zealand Wars and the Victorian Interpretation of Racial Conflict, Auckland: Penguin Books, 396p.

[18] Colvile's Redoubt at Maketu, 1864, Watercolour (142 x 226mm) by H.M.L. Atcherley, Alexander Turnbull Library ID: A-196-009, Courtesy of Timeframes.

[19] Piercy, J.J. (2005) The War of 1864 and its Aftermath, Historical Review, Vol. 53, Issue 2, p. 56-65, Tauranga Historical Society.

[20] Photograph of Fort Colvile (or Pukemaire Pa) viewed from the south-east, Undated, Print by unidentified photographer, Auckland City Library.

[21] Digital Photograph of Little Waihi, from the sand hills on the Pukehina spit, taken by Brett Payne with Kodak DX7590, 30 December 2010.

[22] Annotated oblique view of the Maketu Peninsula, Adapted and accessed from Google Earth, 15 February 2011.

[23] Anon (1864) Maketu. (From our Special Correspondent), Auckland: Daily Southern Cross, Vol XX, Issue 2114, p.3-4, 29 April 1864, Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand.

[24] Digital Photograph of Little Waihi, from the Maketu tableland, taken by Brett Payne with Kodak DX7590, 30 December 2010.

[25] Anon (1864) News from Tauranga, Wellington: Wellington Independent, Vol XIX, Issue 2054, p.5, 28 April 1864, Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand.

[26] Sketch map of military action near Little Waihi, Bay of Plenty, April 1864, by Thomas McDonnell, Pencil on paper, scale not given (203 x 330mm), Alexander Turnbull Library ID: MapColl-832.16hkm/1864/Acc.51976, Courtesy of Timeframes.

[27] Arawa (1937) Historic Maketu: Bledisloe Park and its Associations, The New Zealand Railway Magazine, Vol. 12, No. 7, p.37-38, Wellington: New Zealand Government Railways Department, New Zealand Electronic Text Centre, Victoria University of Wellington.

[28] Anon (1864) The War in Auckland. Maketu, Auckland: Daily Southern Cross, Vol XX, Issue 2121, p.5, 7 May 1864, Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand.

Saturday, 12 March 2011

Fiennes Middleton Colvile & the 43rd Regiment of Foot in New Zealand, Part 1


Image © and courtesy of Michael Hargreave-Mawson
Colonel F.M. Colvile, C.B. [1]

When I asked correspondent Michael Hargreave-Mawson - a keen military historian, author and collector of military CDVs and cabinets - last year if he had a photograph of any soldiers who might have served in the Tauranga area during the New Zealand Wars, I had little idea of the journey of discovery which lay ahead. Mike promptly sent me this image, showing a bearded officer wearing uniform and medals, and with his right arm clearly amputated below the elbow.

This figure is identified on the verso as "H H The Sahabadur of Deccan" but this is clearly fantasy. He is wearing the tunic of an Infantry Colonel, 1868-1881, and the shako on the table beside him carries the green horsehair plume in use by Light Infantry regiments from circa 1871-1874. He is wearing three medals, of which the first is partially hidden under his sash; the second is the Breast Badge of a Companion of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath; and the third is the New Zealand Medal (which was first issued in 1869) ... Only one Colonel of Light Infantry in the period between 1871 and 1874 had the CB, the New Zealand Medal and one other ... Fiennes Middleton Colvile served in the New Zealand War of 1864-65 and was present at the engagements at Maketu, Te Ranga, and at various operations in Taranaki.
He also sent an outline of Colvile's military career, extending from his purchase of a commission in the 43rd Regiment in 1850, through service in India and New Zealand in the late 1850s and early to mid-1860s. While records show that he was severely wounded in the right thigh in October 1865, strangely, Mike was unable to find any evidence that Colvile ever lost his right arm [2].

Te Ranga Battle Site, June 21st 1864 [3]
Photo © 2010 Brett Payne

I've read about the New Zealand Wars in Michael King's excellent and very popular The Penguin History of New Zealand, and I pass the Te Ranga Battle Site every time I drive into town. However, not having grown up in this country, the New Zealand Wars didn't feature in my school curriculum. I wasn't familiar with the detail of, or background to, the various actions that took place in the vicinity of Tauranga during the 1860s, and I hadn't come across mention of Colvile. It didn't take long on the net, however, to unearth a trail of his time in New Zealand and several further portraits.

Image © and courtesy of Puke Ariki Museum

Image © and courtesy of Puke Ariki Museum

(Left) Major F.M. Colvile, c.Nov 1864-Oct 1865 [4]
(Right) Lieut.-Colonel F.M. Colvile, c.1870-1874 [5]

These two carte de visite portraits, both from the Puke Ariki Museum Heritage Collection, confirm that the subject of Mike's portrait is indeed Lieutenant-Colonel Fiennes Middleton Colvile. To set straight the matter of spelling, several variants of the surname have been encountered in the various records perused, including most commonly "Colville," and occasionally even "Colvill." The form favoured by the family themselves, being used by them in most official records, was "Colvile," which should therefore be preferred.

Barton House, Barton-on-the-Heath
Image © and courtesy of the Historic Houses Association [6]

Fiennes Colvile was born on 4 April 1832 and grew up in Barton House, still a magnificent Elizabethan manor on a 1200 acre estate at Barton-on-the-Heath, Warwickshire [6]. He was the ninth child, and youngest son, of Captain Frederick Colvile (1792-1872) and his wife Mary Leigh (1796-1871) [7].

1841 Census, Barton-on-the-Heath, Warwickshire [7]

His first military posting appears to have been to India, with the 43rd (Monmouth) Light Infantry Regiment, departing from England in September 1853 for what would become a lengthy sojourn overseas [8]. He would not see his home again for over twelve years. Colvile served in the Indian Mutiny campaign from 1857 until 1859, being present at the capture of Kirwee and Bandah, the regiment having marched some 1300 miles in six months. He also commanded three companies under Brigadier Carpenter in subsequent operations at Bundelkund, twice being mentioned in dispatches [2,9].

S.S. Lady Jocelyn at Port Chalmers, 1888 [10]

In late 1863 the 43rd Regiment was ordered to New Zealand to "support the supremacy of Her Majesty." The headquarters of the regiment, including Colvile who was by then a Major, arrived in Auckland on board the clipper S.S. Lady Jocelyn in mid-December [11]. After a brief period of acclimatisation in Otahuhu [12], waiting for the remainder of the regiment to arrive from Rangoon [13], they received orders to proceed to Tauranga, accompanied by soldiers of the 68th Regiment, 3rd Waikato Militia, Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers [14].

Continued in Part 2: Duck Shoot at Maketu

References

[1] Elliott & Fry (n.d.) Carte de visite portrait of Colonel F.M. Colvile, C.B., taken in the early 1870s by Elliott & Fry, 55 Baker St. W., London, Collection of Michael Hargreave-Mawson.

[2] Hargreave-Mawson, M. (2010) Email Correspondence re. Lieutenant-General Sir Fiennes Middleton Colvile, K.C.B., 8 November 2010.

[3] Digital Photograph of Te Ranga Battle Site Sign, taken by Brett Payne with Kodak DX7590, 2 December 2010.

[4] Hoby, G. (1864-65) Carte de visite portrait of Colonel Fiennes Colville of the 43rd Regiment, by Mr. [George] Hoby, [New Plymouth] Taranaki, New Zealand, Collection of Puke Ariki Museum, Accession No. PHO2008-1657.

[5] Anon (n.d.). Carte de visite head-and-shoulders portrait of Lieutenant Colonel Fiennes Colvile, Collection of Puke Ariki Museum, Accession No. PHO2008-1638.

[6] Anon (2009) Barton House, Historic Houses Association.

[7] Anon (1841) Census of Barton House, Barton-on-the-Heath, Warwickshire, England, 6 June 1841, National Archives Ref. HO107/1131/2/3/1, Courtesy of Ancestry.co.uk.

[8] Anon (1853) Naval and Military Intelligence, London: The Morning Post, 19 September 1853, 19th Century British Library Newspapers, Gale CENGAGE.

[9] Levinge, R.G.A. (1868) Historical Records of the Forty-Third Regiment, Monmouthshire Light Infantry, London: W. Clowes & Sons, 353p, Google Books.

[10] Photograph of the sailing ship "Lady Jocelyn" at Port Chalmers, dry plate glass negative (6.5" x 8.5") by D.A. de Maus, 1888, Alexander Turnbull Library ID: 1/1-002195-G, Courtesy of Timeframes.

[11] Anon (1863) Arrival of the "Lady Jocelyn" with Troops, From India, Auckland: Daily Southern Cross, Vol XIX, Issue 1998, p.3, 11 December 1863, Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand.

[12] Anon (1863) The Maori Prisoners, Auckland: Daily Southern Cross, Vol XIX, Issue 2011, p.3, 26 December 1863, Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand.

[13] Anon (1864) Letter from the North, Dunedin: Otago Daily Times, Vol 656, p.6, 25 January 1864, Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand.

[14] Anon (1863) The Tauranga Expedition, Auckland: Daily Southern Cross, Vol XX, Issue 2031, p.3, 21 January 1864, Courtesy of Papers Past, National Library of New Zealand.

Thursday, 10 March 2011

Sepia Saturday 65: Learning to drive

My Grandpa Charles Leslie Lionel Payne (1892-1975) probably learned to drive a motor car in 1926. Although one document amongst his Canadian Expeditionary Force service records describes him as a "driver," I believe this was more accurately a wagon driver, rather than of a motorised vehicle. During the early part of the Great War he was serving with the 2nd Divisional Train of the C.A.S.C., and driving horse-drawn wagon loads of supplies would have been one of his duties.

Image © and courtesy of Barbara Ellison

Amongst my Dad's papers is his father's first driving licence, issued at Derby on 31 March 1926, at which time he was living at 154 Almond Street, Derby with his parents. Sadly, I don't appear to have a photocopy or scan of this document, although it may be in a "safe place" somewhere. This snapshot is one of a series of three that I believe must have been taken in the mid-to late 1920s, presumably after he got his licence. I've sent an image to the ever helpful Surrey Vintage Vehicle Society with a request for an identification of the vehicle, in the hope that it will help me date it, and will report back on their findings. I don't believe Grandpa ever owned a vehicle, so this one may have belonged to his Uncle Hallam - who I know purchased a Citroen in July 1921 - or to his employer Robert Clayborn.

Image © and courtesy of Barbara Ellison

The building visible behind the vehicle doesn't look like the house at 154 Almond Street, a Street View image of which featured in my story about his mother Amy, posted a few days ago. I suspect it is either the house where he and my grandmother moved after their marriage in September 1926 ('Marlboro,' Chellaston Road, Allenton) or the yard at Clayborn's in Shelton Lock were he was employed as a builder's clerk from the late 1920s until the outbreak of the Second World War.

Image © and courtesy of Barbara Ellison

By comparing photographs taken on his wedding day (1926) and in the mid-1930s, I think this series of snapshots may have been taken in the late 1920s or early 1930s.

Image © and courtesy of Barbara Ellison

The three loose paper prints are roughly trimmed, but measure approximately 46-48 x 68.5-70.5 mm, are on Velox paper and have the photographer batch number "1369" stamped on the reverse. Another series of three snapshots showing Grandpa in his characteristic cigarette smoking stances, and at roughly the same time, also sadly unannotated, has the batch number "1380" hand-stamped in identical type on the reverse.

This post is an entry for Sepia Saturday 65, where you'll find many more of similar ilk.

Post Script: Bozi Mohacek of the Surrey Vintage Vehicle Society has kindly identified the vehicle as a Model "T" Ford.
Various body aspects suggest a build year of c. 1923. As it could be a UK made car it may be a year later.
As the car looks fairly well used, at least to me, this would fit with a date estimate of the late 1920s/early 1930s.

Monday, 7 March 2011

North Beach, Aberystwyth

Image © and courtesy of Theresa Jones
Theresa Jones & friends, North Beach by Constitution Hill, Aberystwyth, 6 Mar 2011
Image © and courtesy of Theresa Jones

Many thanks to Theresa Jones for this fine photograph of the rock face at Constitution Hill, North Beach, Aberystwyth, which featured in an image of a mounted print that Jeri Bass sent me and which I posted here on Photo-Sleuth in October 2008.

Image © and courtesy of Jeri Bass
Unidentified group on an outing, c.1890-1900
North Beach, Aberystwyth
Mounted print by E.R. Gyde of Aberystwyth
Image © and courtesy of Jeri Bass

Sunday, 6 March 2011

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