Everything about The History Of Auckland totally explained
The
History of Auckland (here in the sense of
Greater Auckland), stretches from early
Māori settlers in the
14th century to the first
European explorers in the late
18th century, over a short stretch as the official capital of (European-settled)
New Zealand in the middle of the
19th century to its current position as fastest-growing and commercially dominating
metropolis.
Māori settlement
Early Māori settlement
Tāmaki Makau Rau ('Isthmus of one thousand lovers', also translated as 'Tamaki-the bride sought by a hundred suitors'), now known as Auckland, was first settled by
Māori people around 1350. The region was valued for its rich and fertile land. Māori constructed terraced
pa (fortified villages) on the volcanic peaks. Māori population is estimated to have peaked at 20,000 in the region in
pre-European settlement times, a figure which would later qualify in New Zealand as a city. Earthworks are still evident today around some of the larger volcanoes such as
Mount Albert,
Mount Eden and
One Tree Hill.
The isthmus, around 8 kilometres wide with Mount Eden and One Tree Hill at its narrowest point, led to the area having great strategic qualities. The isthmus also has the highly productive soils providing
agricultural opportunities, and the two harbours providing diverse
kai moana (seafood).
Arrival of the Europeans
Ngāti Whātua and
Tainui were the main tribes living in the area, having captured it by conquest several generations previously.
The arrival of Europeans changed the balance of power between
iwi, as European settlement to the north enabled traditional rivals
Ngapuhi and other allied northern iwi to acquire muskets by trade. Initially no military advantage accrued; - despite lacking muskets, Ngāti Whātua defeated musket equipped Ngapuhi in the battle of
Moremonui, killing 2,000. However once Ngapuhi became skilled with muskets, they displaced Maori from the Auckland area in a series of campaigns over the 1820s.
Āpihai Te Kawau (c. 1760-1869), leader of the Ngāti Taou
hapu, was a good friend of
Samuel Marsden. Over a ten-month period in 1821-1822 he conducted a principal part in the 1,000 mile
Amiowhenua expedition. This series of battles raged through much of the central and southern North Island. It ended when Te Kawau's Ngāti Whātua forces, uniting with the Taranaki they were embattled with, jointly defended the Tainui Matakitaki pa from
Hongi Hika's Ngapuhi forces.
Europeans also introduced new diseases (especially
smallpox and
tuberculosis), which, as elsewhere lead to significant mortality and morbidity amongst immunologically naive
indigenous peoples. The result was the Auckland isthmus remained a virtually vacated buffer zone between iwi, with a population probably under 500 in 1840.
As the
Musket Wars drew to a close, pressure for British intervention to quell lawlessness, in large part driven by missionary pressure to protect the Māori, led to the Annexation of New Zealand and the despatch of
Lt Governor Hobson to sign the
Treaty of Waitangi in
1840. (James Cook had claimed New Zealand for Britain by right of discovery, and though New Zealand was part of
New South Wales from 1788 until 1840, the Crown didn't formally claim the country until 1840.)
By 1840 Te Kawau had become the paramount chief of Ngāti Whātua. Cautious of reprisals from the Nga Puhi defeated at Matakitaki, Te Kawau found it most convenient to offer
Governor Hobson land around the present central city. He and six other chiefs travelled to the
Bay of Islands to make the offer and signed the
Treaty of Waitangi on
20 March.
As the Māori population declined for nearly a century, so did the quantity of land held by Ngāti Whātua. Within 20 years, 40% of their lands were lost, some through government land confiscation. At close to the lowest level of population, Ngāti Whātua land holding was reduced to a few acres at
Orakei, land which Te Kawau had declared "a last stand". By the end of the 1840s, Maori were a minority in the Auckland area. Despite scares during the
New Zealand wars, Maori re-emerged as a cultural and political force only after the
Bastion Point occupation and Maori cultural revival of the late 20th century.
Birth of the city
Capital of New Zealand
After the signing of the
Treaty of Waitangi in February 1840 the new Governor of New Zealand,
William Hobson, had the task of choosing a
capital for the colony. At the time, the main European settlements were in the
Bay of Islands. However, the Bay of Islands' geographical position made it very remote, inaccessible and off-centre from the rest of the New Zealand archipelago.
Even in 1840
Port Nicholson (now
Wellington Harbour) seemed the obvious choice for an administrative capital. Centrally situated at the south of the
North Island, close to the
South Island and growing fast, it had a lot to commend it. But the
New Zealand Company and the
Wakefield brothers had founded and continued to dominate Port Nicholson. Furthermore, it already had a bad reputation with the
Māori for unscrupulous or even illegal occupation of land.
On the initial recommendation of the missionary
Henry Williams, supported by the Surveyor General,
Felton Mathew, and the offer of land from Ngāti Whātua, Hobson selected the south side of
Waitemata Harbour as his future capital, while setting up a temporary capital at
Okiato (also known now as Old Russell) in the Bay of Islands. The Chief Magistrate, Captain
William Cornwallis Symonds, soon purchased the further land from Ngāti Whātua, The sale price for the initial 3,000
acres (12 km²) was for cash and goods to the value of £341.
Ngāti Whātua would certainly have expected from English
colonialism increased security and trading benefits. This would include greater access via the quickly developed port facilities for the lucrative trade in produce grown in
Tainui's fertile
Waikato and
Hauraki Plains for the
Australian prison colonies and
Sydney market.
Hobson’s barque, the
Anna Watson, arrived in Auckland Harbour on 15 September 1840. By coincidence, three days before the
Platina had arrived looking for Hobson. This ship carried 130 colonists and a prefabricated Governor's residence, which was modelled on
Napoleon Bonaparte’s prison from
St Helena.
A foundation ceremony took place at 1.00 pm on
18 September 1840, probably on the higher ground at the top end of present-day
Queen Street. Hobson named the new settlement in honour of
George Eden, 1st Earl of Auckland, a patron and his friend. The
New Zealand Government Gazette announced royal approval of the name on
26 November 1842.
From the outset a steady flow of new arrivals from within New Zealand and from overseas came to the new capital.
The first European settlers in Auckland,
William Brown and
John Logan Campbell, had arrived a month earlier on a hunch about Hobson’s intentions and bought Brown’s island. Soon after Hobson founded Auckland, they built the city’s first house,
Acacia cottage, which can still be seen on the side of One Tree Hill, in the park that Campbell donated to the city in his old age.
Initially settlers from
New South Wales predominated, but the first
immigrant ships sailing directly from Britain started to arrive as early as 1842. From early times the eastern side of the settlement remained reserved for government officials while mechanics and artisans, the so-called "unofficial" settlers, congregated on the western side, in areas like
Freemans Bay. This social division still persists somewhat in modern Auckland, with the eastern suburbs generally being more upscale.
Auckland was the seat of
Auckland Province from 1853 until the abolition of provinces in 1876.
Loss of capital status
Eventually in
1865,
Port Nicholson became the capital and, now known as
Wellington, remains so today. The advantages of a central position became even more obvious as the
South Island grew in prosperity with the discovery of
gold in
Otago, and with the development of sheep farming and
refrigeration, especially
refrigerated ships which allowed chilled meat to be safely shipped to Britain. Parliament met for the first time in
Wellington in
1862. In
1868 Government House moved there too.
Growth of the city
George Grey's operations against the
Māori King Movement in the early 1860s. Grey's modus operandi involved opening up the
Waikato and
King Country by building roads, most notably
Great South Road, (a large part of which now forms
State Highway 1). This enabled rapid movement, not only of soldiers, but also civilian settlers. It also enabled the extension of
Pākehā influence and law to the
South Auckland region. Auckland grew fairly rapidly, from 1,500 in 1841 to 12,423 by 1864, with most growth occurring in close proximity to the port area in
Commercial Bay, as well as some small developments towards Onehunga (another port), and at a few favoured spots beside the harbour. During the mid 19th century, European settlement of New Zealand was predominantly in the
South Island. Auckland however gradually became the commercial capital. Market gardens were planted on the outskirts, while
kauri tree logging and
gum digging opened up the
Waitakere Ranges.
Throughout the 19th century Auckland’s intense urban growth concentrated around the port in a very similar manner to most other
mercantile cities. At this time Auckland experienced many of the pollution and overcrowding problems that plagued other 19th century cities, although as primarily a port rather than a manufacturing centre it avoided large-scale
industrialisation, and by 1900, Auckland was the largest New Zealand city. The overcrowding of the inner city had by then created a strong demand for the city to expand, which was made possible when
trams appeared in New Zealand around this time, supported by ferry services, mostly to what would become
North Shore City.
A Russian scare at the end of the 19th century had caused coastal guns to be bought and fortifications built, notably at
North Head and on
Waiheke Island, where they can still be seen.
Twentieth century
New transport and urban sprawl
While trams and railway lines shaped Auckland's rapid extension in the early first half of the 20th century, they were soon overtaken by motor vehicles, with Auckland boasting one of the highest car-ownership rates of the world even before
World War II. Their growing popularity meant that urban development was freed from narrow corridors, and could occur anywhere new roads were built, leading to a rapid decentralisation, with urban growth spreading all over the Isthmus. In 1959 the new
Auckland Harbour Bridge linked
North Shore with the city, further extending its reach.
In World War II the city was overflown by a Japanese seaplane, chased ineffectually by a
Royal New Zealand Air Force De Havilland Tiger Moth. Again, coastal fortifications were built or extended, with a large military base on Rangitoto storing mines supposed to block the inner Hauraki Gulf in the event of an impending Japanese invasion, which in the end never came to pass.
Following the initiative of
Michael Joseph Savage's
New Zealand Labour Party large numbers of state houses were constructed through the late 1930s, '40s and '50s, usually on quarter-acre (1,000 m²) sections - a tradition that survives despite frequent subdivision. To this day, a large percentage of the houses in Auckland only have one full story. Due to these factors, Auckland is a largely suburban, low-density city.
1985 Bombing Attack
The
Greenpeace flagship craft, the
Rainbow Warrior was docked in the
Port of Auckland awaiting departure and to lead a flotilla of
yachts protesting against
French nuclear testing at
Mururoa Atoll in the
Tuamotu Archipelago of
French Polynesia. Just before midnight
NZST (1pm BST, 8am EDT) on
July 10,
1985 two explosive devices attached to the hull by operatives of the French intelligence service (
DGSE) were detonted creating a gaping hole in the side of the vessel. The ship began to sink rapidly, the crew were evacuated but one crew member,
Fernando Pereira, drowned on the sinking ship. Two of the French agents were subsequently arrested by the
New Zealand Police on
passport fraud and
immigration charges.
Problems in infrastructure
In 1993, the
Police Eagle helicopter and a traffic-spotting plane collided in mid-area, falling to the packed motorway below during Friday night rush hour. Four people died and traffic became grid-locked over much of the inner city.
All four electrical power cables supplying the Central Business District failed on
20 February 1998, causing the
1998 Auckland power crisis. It took five weeks before an emergency overhead cable was completed to restore the power supply to the Central Business District. For much of that time, about 60,000 of the 74,000 people who worked in the area worked from home or from relocated offices in the suburbs. Many of the 6,000 apartment dwellers in the area had to find alternative accommodation.
Mercury Energy, operators of the cable that failed, had to spend many millions of dollars on the temporary cable, and compensation for local businesses.
The
2006 Auckland Blackout showcased the fact that Auckland's power-supply infrastructure is still very vulnerable to disruption. A faulty powerline shackle caused a short-circuit at the
Otahuhu substation, with the blackout affecting wide parts of the conurbation, including the CBD, but sparing most of
Waitakere City and
North Shore City. While the blackout lasted only about half a day, it reignited political pressure aiming to improve the national electricity grid.
Further Information
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