1/16 In the UK four men who pulled down the statue of a slaver have been acquitted. Australians are renaming Ben Boyd Park because Boyd was a slaver. Here in NZ we have a number of place names that are forgotten relics of the Pacific slave trade.
2/16 2 Brissenden Stream flows into the Waitakere River a kilometre or so from Te Henga/Bethells Beach on Auckland's West Coast. The stream is named for businessman Edward Brissenden, who brought Melanesian slaves to Auckland in 1870.
3/16 In 1869 Brissenden leased 400 acres of land in Te Henga, & built a flax mill there. Flax was a booming business in NZ. But Brissenden needed workers. He paid a man named Young to take the recently built schooner to Melanesia to find them.
4/16 4 By 1870 thousands of Melanesians had been brought to Queensland to work on sugar plantations. Many were kidnapped. NZ boats & crews were involved in what became known as the blackbirding trade. Brissenden wanted to extent the trade to NZ.
5/16 In April 1870 the Lulu stopped at the islands of Aneityum, Tanna, & Efate. Locals refused to sign on as labourers. They had heard about the conditions on white plantations. When the Lulu reached Pentecost island it was attacked, & retreated from a rain of arrows.
6/16 The Lulu returned to Efate, where Young paid a bribe to local chiefs who promised to find labourers. 27 men eventually boarded the vessel. They had reputedly signed contracts promising to work for 3 years for ten pounds worth of trade goods.
7/16 The Lulu returned to Auckland in May. The Southern Cross & NZ Herald both published articles ridiculing the idea that the men on the Lulu had boarded voluntarily. Wellington's Evening Post called them slaves.
8/16 The papers that denounced the Lulu's mission did not do so out of sympathy for the Efateans on board. They feared that Melanesians would racially contaminate NZ, & also discourage British immigration by driving wages down.
9/16 The Efateans arrived in Waitakere to find Brissenden closing his mill, after the legality of his land lease was contested. For a time, they faced starvation, & tried to live off the land.
10/16 In September the NZ Herald published an article called 'Disgusting Results of Imported South Sea Labour', in which it called the Melanesians at Te Henga 'woolly barbarians' whose 'habits & manners' were an 'outrage'.
11/16 The Herald's article suggests the Efateans were struggling to survive at Te Henga. It claimed that the islanders were exhuming dead animals to eat, & that they had 'scoured the creeks & feasted on putrid carrion'.
12/16 The Efateans were eventually divided into two groups. Some were sent to work in a flax mill in the Hokianga; others went to Puriri, near Thames, to work in a mill Brissenden owned
13/16 n late September a fire so bright it could be seen in Auckland destroyed the mill at Puriri. The Efateans who had been toiling there were sent to work at the Kohimaramrara property of the businessman JS Macfarlane, who was a friend of Brissenden.
14/16 In June 1871 photographer Daniel Mundy visited the Hokianga mill where Efateans were working. They appear in several pictures he took there. Mundy's became some of the first images of Melanesians to be shown in Europe.
15/16 In December 1871 one of the Efateans working in the Hokianga died. In 1872 Auckland policeman John Thompson went to report on their situation, & relayed their complaint that they had been working in NZ 'too long'.
16/16 The surviving Efateans finally went home in June 1873. I'm not sure when the stream at Te Henga got the name Brissenden, but it flows through the property the businessman owned & joins the Waitakere River near where his mill stood.
PS: I said the Colston four were all men, but one of them, Rhian Graham, is a woman. Apologies.

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More from @SikotiHamiltonR

3 Jan
1/28 I got bogged down listing the best books I read in 2021, so I'm going to skip to the top of my list & tweet at length about a couple of tomes I think everyone should read. The Dawn of Everything was arguably the most important book published in '21. Image
2/28 Dave Graeber was a radical anthropologist & a founder of the Occupy movement. He died suddenly & prematurely in 2020. The Dawn of Everything is the book he worked on for a decade with David Wengrow, & finished just before his death. It is subtitled A New History of Humanity. Image
3/28 Guided by recent scholarship & by his anarchist instincts, Graeber argues that standard grand narratives of human history are false. He resists the Rousseauan idea that hunter gatherer societies were always paradises & that the arrival of agriculture always brought misery. Image
Read 28 tweets
29 Nov 21
1/15 In his new column Damien Grant characterises defenders of Matauranga Maori as a sinister 'mob', then salutes a group of slave owners, corpse-stealers, & 'scientific' racists as 'pillars of our society'. The debate about science is exposing some double standards.
2/15 Grant is upset at the 2,059 scientists who signed a letter defending Matauranga Maori. The letter was a response to seven scholars who had written to The Listener to argue that Matauranga Maori 'falls far short of science'.
3/15 Grant is also unhappy that the Royal Society Te Aparangi is investigating two members who criticised Matauranga Maori. Grant argues that today's Royal Society is letting down its predecessors. He's right, but not in the way he imagines.
Read 15 tweets
28 Nov 21
1/7 Paul Verdon is a rugby writer. Altho he likes the All Blacks, he thinks the team should drop the Ka Mate haka, because its author Te Rauparaha was a 'murderer' 'on a par' with Hitler. Does Verdon also call for the abandonment of the NZ flag? It was authored by a mass killer.
2/7 In a piece for Muriel Newman's far right NZCPR site, Verdon calls Te Rauparaha a 'pathological monster'. He highlights Te Rauparaha's part in the Musket Wars, but ignores the facts that Te Rauparaha didn't start those wars, & in fact eventually helped end them.
3/7 Te Rauparaha's last years saw him repairing some iwi r'ships, & promoting Christianity. This final phase in TR's life makes him a somewhat more sympathetic historical figure than, say, Hongi Hika. But if we nevertheless abandon Ka Mate, shouldn't we also junk NZ's flag?
Read 9 tweets
28 Nov 21
1/4 The Free Speech Union's Jonathan Ayling thinks the reduced influence of his Baptist church is linked to the s'posed moral decline of NZ. As this commenter notes, tho, Baptists can be bigots. I found some disturbing Baptist history when I researched fascism in '30s NZ.
2/4 In 1934 the president of the Baptist Union of NZ, the Rev John Laird, attended the World Baptist Congress in Nazi Germany. Unlike many other German churches, the Baptists had refused to oppose Hitler's seizure of power. Laird was a keen Nazi.
3/4 After Laird returned to his Mt Albert church, he gave a series of talks & interviews in which he promoted Hitler as Germany's saviour. Laird believed Nazi Germany as a land of 'unity, peace & security'. NZ Baptists did not censure Laird - they gave him a platform.
Read 6 tweets
28 Nov 21
1/10 First there was Jordan Williams, who wanted to take arts grants from Eleanor Catton after she criticised John Key. Then there Elliot Ikilei, who campaigned against drag queens reading in libraries. Now the Free Speech Union has found another representative opposed to freedom
2/10 Jonathan Ayling is the FSU's new Campaigns Manager, & has led recent attacks on critics of Matauranga Maori. Ayling is a fire & brimstone Baptist, who dislikes democracy & yearns for the old days when churches like his held sway over NZ society.
3/10 Before he took a job at FSU, Ayling worked as a lobbyist in Wellington. He campaigned against euthanasia, abortion, & the legalisation of cannabis. He also wrote a series of bizarre articles for the NZ Baptist magazine.
Read 16 tweets
27 Nov 21
1/4 I'm sorry to hear that Jimmy O'Dea has died at the age of 86. Even if you haven't heard of O'Dea, you've probably seen him. This famous photo shows him being beaten by cops outside Eden Park during the Springbok Tour of 1981. O'Dea's was a life of protest.
2/4 I remembering meeting O'Dea through a barred window back in 1999. He & several other activists had barricaded themselves inside a state house in protest at market rents. The cops eventually cut through the ceiling to evict them.
3/5 O'Dea grew up in Ireland, & was a Republican as well as a Marxist. His Fenianism made him naturally sympathetic to Maori land struggles, & he was heavily involved in the epic occupation of Takaparawhau/Bastion Pt in the '70s.
Read 5 tweets

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