Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T17:01:17.579Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Conquest by Contract: Wealth Transfer and Land Market Structure in Colonial New Zealand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Much of the British empire was acquired by purchase rather than conquest, but indigenous peoples usually acquired little wealth despite extensive land sales. Explanations of where the money went tend to blame either the imprudence of indigenous sellers or the duplicity of British buyers. This article suggests that a focus solely on the conduct of the individuals operating within the land market rests on a poor theoretical understanding of the relationship between law and markets, an understanding that blinds historians to the allocative effects of markets' constitutive rules. Using New Zealand as an example, the article shows how the British modified the structure of the land market over the 19th century, sometimes intentionally and sometimes inadvertently, to transfer wealth from the Maori to themselves.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 by the Law and Society Association

Footnotes

The author thanks Janet Horncy and the staff at the Alexander Turnbull Library, Carol Rose and John Bowen, and participants in workshops at Washington University and the University of Chicago.

References

References

Adams, Peter (1977) Fatal Necessity: British Intervention in New Zealand 1830–1847. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland Univ. Press.Google Scholar
AJHR (Appendix to the Journal of the [New Zealand] House of Representatives).Google Scholar
Anon. (1863) Translation of material appearing in Te Hokioi, MA 1/2/63/69, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Anon. (1865) The Wellington Almanack and Diary for the Year of Our Lord 1865. Wellington, N.Z.: M'Kenzie and Muir.Google Scholar
Anon. (1874) “Proceedings of Native Meeting Held at Thames on 11th & 12th of December 1874,” MS-Papers-2520, Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Anon. (1875) Circular, MA 6/1, 291, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Anon. (1877) How the Native Land Court and Land Purchase Department Behave on the East Coast: A Series of Letters from an “Occasional Correspondent” to “The Otago Daily Times.” Auckland, N.Z.: William Atkin.Google Scholar
Anon. (1880) General Rules of Native Land Court. Wellington, N.Z.: G. Didsbury.Google Scholar
Arnold, Rollo (1981) The Farthest Promised Land: English Villagers, New Zealand Immigrants of the 1870s. Wellington, N.Z.: Victoria Univ. Press & Price Milburn.Google Scholar
Bagnall, A.G. (1982) “No Known Copy? T.S. Grace's Suppressed Circular, W264,” 15 Turnbull Library Record, 7792.Google Scholar
Belgrave, Michael (n.d.) The Recognition of Aboriginal Tenure in New Zealand, 1840–1860. WAI 45/G4. Wellington, N.Z.: Waitangi Tribunal.Google Scholar
Belich, James (1996) Making Peoples: A History of the New Zealanders. Auckland, N.Z.: Penguin.Google Scholar
Bentham, Jeremy (1843) The Works of Jeremy Bentham. Edinburgh: William Tait.Google Scholar
Binney, Judith (1995) Redemption Songs: A Life of Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Binney, Judith, Bassett, Judith, & Olssen, Erik (1990) The People and the Land: Te Tangata me Te Whenua: An Illustrated History of New Zealand 1820–1920. Wellington, N.Z.: Allen & Unwin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BPP (British Parliamentary Papers: New Zealand). 1968–70. 17 vols. Shannon: Irish Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Brooking, Tom (1996) Lands for the People? The Highland Clearances and the Colonisation of New Zealand: A Biography of John McKenzie. Dunedin, N.Z.: Univ. of Otago Press.Google Scholar
Buddie, Thomas (1860) The Maori King Movement in New Zealand. Auckland, N.Z.: “New Zealander” Office. Reprint, New York: AMS Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Buller, James (1878) Forty Years in New Zealand. London: Hodder & Stoughton.Google Scholar
Buller, Walter (1879) Bill at end of record for Otamakapua case, qMS-1613, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Burns, Patricia (1989) Fatal Success: A History of the New Zealand Company. Auckland, N.Z.: Heinemann Reed.Google Scholar
Busby, James (1859) The Pre-emption Land Question. Auckland, N.Z.: Richardson and Sansom.Google Scholar
Butterworth, G.V., & Young, H.R. (1990) Maori Affairs: A Department and the People who Made It. Wellington, N.Z.: Iwi Transition Agency.Google Scholar
Chamerovzow, Louis Alexis (1848) The New Zealand Question and the Rights of Aborigines. London: T.C. Newby.Google Scholar
Clarke, George (1846) Extracts from the Final Report of the Chief Protector of Aborigines in New Zealand. Auckland, N.Z.: n.p.Google Scholar
Condliffe, J. B., & Airey, W.T.G. (1960) A Short History of New Zealand. 9th Ed. Christchurch, N.Z.: Whitcombe & Tombs.Google Scholar
Cowie, Dean (1996) Hawke's Bay (Rangahaua Whanui Series, District 11B). Wellington, N.Z.: Waitangi Tribunal.Google Scholar
Daamen, Rose, Hamer, Paul, & Rigby, Barry (1996) Auckland (Rangahaua Whanui Series, District 1). Wellington, N.Z.: Waitangi Tribunal.Google Scholar
Dalziel, Raewyn (1986) Julius Vogel: Business Politician. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland Univ. Press & Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Davies, William Evan (1931) The English Law Relating to Aliens. London: Stevens & Sons.Google Scholar
Denoon, Donald (1983) Settler Capitalism: The Dynamics of Dependent Development in the Southern Hemisphere. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Evison, Harry (1993) Te Wai Pounamu: The Greenstone Island: A History of the Southern Maori During the European Colonization of New Zealand. Christchurch, N.Z.: Aoraki Press.Google Scholar
Fairburn, Miles (1989) The Ideal Society and Its Enemies: The Foundations of Modern New Zealand Society 1850–1900. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Fairburn, Miles (1995) Nearly Out of Heart and Hope: The Puzzle of a Colonial Labourer's Diary. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Fenton, Francis (1868) Letter to Native Minister, 3 July, LE 1/1868/130, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Fenton, Francis (1871) Letter to Donald McLean, 12 Aug., MS-Copy-Micro-0535-052, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Fenton, Francis (n.d.) Letter to Donald McLean, MS-Copy-Micro-0535-052, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Fitz-Roy, Robert (1846) Remarks on New Zealand. London: W. & H. White. Reprint, Dunedin, N.Z.: Hocken Library, 1969.Google Scholar
Flight, Josiah (1857) Letter to Donald McLean, 9 Apr., MS-1319, 97, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Fuller, Francis (1859) Five Years' Residence in New Zealand: or, Observations on Colonization. London: Williams & Norgate.Google Scholar
Gilling, Bryan D. (1994) “Engine of Destruction? An Introduction to the History of the Maori Land Court,” 24 Victoria Univ. of Wellington Law Rev. 115–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldsmith, Paul (1996) Wairarapa (Rangahaua Whanui Series, District 11A). Wellington, N.Z.: Waitangi Tribunal.Google Scholar
Grindell, James (1857-58) Journal, qMS-0891, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Hale, Robert L. (1923) “Coercion and Distribution in a Supposedly Non-Coercive State,” 38 Political Science Q. 470–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halse, Henry (1857) Letter to Donald McLean, 31 Aug., MS-1319, 166, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Hamer, David (1988) The New Zealand Liberals: The Years of Power, 1891–1912. Auckland: Auckland Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Hawke, G. R. (1985) The Making of New Zealand: An Economic History. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Headrick, Daniel R. (1981) The Tools of Empire: Technology and European Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century. New York: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Heaphey, Charles (1871) Memorandum, 15 Apr., MA 13/2c, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Hutton, John Lincoln (1995) Troublesome Specimens: A Study of the Relationship Between the Crown and the Tangata Whenua of Hauraki 1863–1869. M.A. Thesis, Univ. of Auckland.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Duncan (1985) “The Role of Law in Economic Thought: Essays on the Fetishism of Commodities,” 34 American Univ. Law Rev. 9391001.Google Scholar
Mackay, Alexander (1890) Letter to H.G. Seth-Smith, 15 Nov., MLC 8/2, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1867) Letter to Jonathan Webster, 7 July, MS-Papers-247, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1871) Memorandum, 2 Sept., on draft of Native Land Court Act of 1871, MA 13/2e, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1872a) Letter to Spencer von Stürmer, 5 Aug., qMS-1238, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1872b) Letter to von Stürmer, 19 May, qMS-1238, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1872c) Letter to von Stürmer, n.d. (“Saturday”), qMS-1238, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1872d) Letter to von Stürmer, 10 Jan., qMS-1234, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1873a) Letter to von Stürmer, 9 Feb., qMS-1234, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1873b) Letter to von Stürmer, 13 Mar., qMS-1234, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1873c) Letter to von Stürmer, 21 July, qMS-1234, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1876a) Letter to von Stürmer, 3 July, qMS-1235, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1876b) Letter to von Stürmer, 2 Dec., qMS-1235, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1879a) Letter to von Stürmer, n.d. (“Friday”), qMS-1235, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Maning, Frederick (1879b) Letter to von Stürmer, 30 Nov., qMS-1235, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Mantell, Walter (1856) Letter to Labouchere, 5 July, MS-Micro-48, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Marr, Cathy (1997) Public Works Takings of Maori Land, 1840-1981 (Rangahaua Whanui National Theme G). Wellington, N.Z.: Waitangi Tribunal.Google Scholar
Martin, William (1865) Notes on the Best Mode of Introducing and Working the Native Lands Act. Auckland: Mitchell & Seffern.Google Scholar
McHugh, Paul (1991) The Maori Magna Carta: New Zealand Law and the Treaty of Waitangi. Auckland, N.Z.: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Miller, John (1958) Early Victorian New Zealand: A Study of Racial Tension and Social Attitudes 1839–1852. London: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Thomas (1833 & 1836) “Deeds of Purchase from Natives of Land at Hokianga & at Manakau,” MS-Papers-458, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Monin, Paul (1995) “The Maori Economy of Hauraki 1840–1880,” 29 New Zealand J. of History 197210.Google Scholar
Moore, Duncan, Rigby, Barry, & Russell, Matthew (1997) Old Land Claims (Rangahaua Whanui National Theme A). Wellington, N.Z.: Waitangi Tribunal.Google Scholar
Native Land Court (1882) “Report on alleged irregularities regarding the Ohinemuri Gold Fields,” MA-MLP 1/1882/327, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
NZPD (New Zealand Parliamentary Debates).Google Scholar
Parsonson, Ann (1992) “The Challenge to Mana Maori,” in Rice, Geoffrey W., ed., The Oxford History of New Zealand. 2d Ed. Auckland, N.Z.: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Peek, Cuthbert Edgar (1883) Letter to his father, 8 Apr., MS-Papers-3602, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Polack, J. S. (1838) New Zealand: Being a Narrative of Travels and Adventures During a Residence in that Country Between the Years 1831 and 1837. London: Richard Bentley. Reprint, Christchurch, N.Z.: Capper Press, 1974.Google Scholar
Radin, Margaret Jane (1987) “Market-Inalienability,” 100 Harvard Law Rev. 18491937.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rigby, Barry (1992) Empire on the Cheap: Crown Policies and Purchases in Muriwhenua 1840–1852. WAI 45/F8. Wellington, N.Z.: Waitangi Tribunal.Google Scholar
Seth-Smith, H.G. (1890) Letter to Alexander Mackay, 11 Dec, MLC 8/2, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Simkin, C.G.F. (1954) Statistics of New Zealand for the Crown Colony Period, 1840–1852. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland Univ. College Dept. of Economics.Google Scholar
Sinclair, Keith (1961) The Origins of the Maori Wars. 2d Ed. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland Univ. Press and Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Sinclair, Keith (1988) A History of New Zealand. Auckland, N.Z.: Penguin.Google Scholar
Smith, Norman (1948) The Maori People and Us. Wellington, N.Z.: A.H. & A.W. Reed.Google Scholar
Smith, T. H. (1868) Notes at 35–37, Wairarapa Minute Book 1A, Micro-MS-Coll-06-010, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Sorrenson, M.P.K. (1955) The Purchase of Maori Lands, 1865–1892. M.A. Thesis, Auckland Univ. College.Google Scholar
Sorrenson, M.P.K. (1956) “Land Purchase Methods and Their Effect on Maori Population, 1865–1901,” 65 J. of the Polynesian Society 183–99.Google Scholar
Spiller, Peter (1992) The Chapman Legal Family. Wellington, N.Z.: Victoria Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Spiller, Peter, Finn, Jeremy, & Boast, Richard (1995) A New Zealand Legal History. Wellington, N.Z.:Brooker's.Google Scholar
Stafford, Edward William (ca. 1870s) “Native Lands,” MS-2044, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Stirling, Eruera, as told to Salmond, Anne (1980) Eruera: The Teachings of a Maori Elder. Auckland, N.Z.: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Tribunal, Waitangi (1997) Muriwhenua Land Report. WAI 45. Wellington, N.Z.: GP Publications.Google Scholar
Wakefield, William (1839) Deed, 25 Oct., MSO-Papers-3730, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Ward, Alan (1974) A Show of Justice: Racial “Amalgamation” in Nineteenth-Century New Zealand. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland Univ. Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Ward, Alan (1997) National Overview (Waitangi Tribunal Rangahaua Whanui Series). Wellington, N.Z.: GP Publications.Google Scholar
Wards, Ian (1968) The Shadow of the Land: A Study of British Policy and Racial Conflict in New Zealand 1832–1852. Wellington, N.Z.: Dept. of Internal Affairs.Google Scholar
Wentworth, William Charles (1840) Deed, 15 Feb., fMS-257, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Wheoro, Wiremu te (1871) Letter to Donald McLean, 8 Apr., MA 13/2b, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
White, John (1871) Memorandum, received 29 June, MA 13/2c, National Archives, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
White, William Bertram (1908-09) “Highlights in the Life of William Bertram White,” MS-Papers-4542, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Whitmore, G.S. (1864) Letter to Donald McLean, 24 Nov., MS-1329, 96–97, Turnbull Library, Wellington, N.Z.Google Scholar
Wikaira, Jeanette Marie (1995) The Alienation of Maori Land in Hauraki 1852–1882. M.A. Thesis, Univ. of Auckland.Google Scholar
Wyatt, Philippa (1991) The Old Land Claims and the Concept of a ‘Sale’: A Case Study. M.A. Thesis, Univ. of Auckland.Google Scholar

Case Cited

R. v. Symonds, N.Z.P.C.C. 387 (1847).Google Scholar

Statutes Cited

An Ordinance to Repeal...of 1841, N.Z. Stat., No.2..Google Scholar
Native Land Purchase Act of 1846, N.Z. Stat., Ni.19..Google Scholar
Native Lands Act of 1867, N.Z. Stat., No. 43..Google Scholar
Native Lands Act of 1869, N.Z. Stat., No. 26..Google Scholar
Immigration and Public Works Act Amendment Act of 1871, N.Z. Stat., No. 75..Google Scholar
Native Land Act of 1873, N.Z. Stat., No. 56..Google Scholar
Native Land Act of 1873 Amendment Act of 1878, N.Z. Stat., No.1..Google Scholar
Native Land Act Amendment Act of 1878, N.Z. Stat., No. 40..Google Scholar
Native Land Administration Act of 1886, N.Z. Stat., No. 23..Google Scholar
Native Land Act of 1888, N.Z. Stat., No. 36..Google Scholar
Native Land Court Act of 1894, N.Z. Stat., No. 43..Google Scholar
Native Land Act of 1909, N.Z. Stat., No. 15..Google Scholar