tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3398806118503572758.post7730468933262767836..comments2024-02-22T10:51:15.300+13:00Comments on The Meeting Place - A New Zealand History Blog: Terra Nullius New Zealand-style? The Curious Case of Tiritiri Matangi IslandUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3398806118503572758.post-67357316506844415332016-01-21T14:28:14.344+13:002016-01-21T14:28:14.344+13:00Thank you for this post, as a Maori Researcher fro...Thank you for this post, as a Maori Researcher from Rotorua, I began research about Frances D Fenton of English desent who came from Australia as a compiler of the 1st NZ Census 1830 onwards collecting population data to enforce Depopulation plan for Maori, next HE Scribed Te Tiriti o Waitangi up north in a strategy, then as Judicator Judge he enforced Land Confiscation Acts for central north Island raiding Maori settlements. Research completed by RangiMarie aka Lady Justice of Te Arawa.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06726663247374187775noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3398806118503572758.post-43233655421436845872015-10-17T08:13:39.003+13:002015-10-17T08:13:39.003+13:00One of the two Pākehā 'lessees' of Tiritir...One of the two Pākehā 'lessees' of Tiritirimātangi in 1854 was Duncan Campbell, the half-brother of my great great grandfather James Campbell, who arrived in Auckland in 1855. Duncan had arrived in Auckland in 1841, and married there in 1852. He styled himself as a 'master mariner', and certainly was master of coastal trading ships in the 1850s, but was mostly farming at Whangaparaoa with James after 1855, before both families headed to the Otago goldfields in 1862.Stuart Parkhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18248933459809283204noreply@blogger.com