At the Margin of Empire:
John Webster and the Hokianga, 1842-1900
Jennifer Ashton
FEBRUARY
2015
Auckland
University Press
Paperback,
228 x 148 mm, 276 pages
978
1 86940 825 1, $49.99
Using the life of John Webster as a unique
lens through which to view the early history of New Zealand, this remarkable
biography is an intimate and revealing account of life at this time.
Born
in Scotland in 1818, John Webster came to New Zealand via Australia in 1841
(after a violent encounter in the outback which he just escaped unscathed) and
spent most of the rest of his life in Hokianga. At the Margin of Empire charts his colourful experiences carving
out a fortune as the region’s leading timber trader and cultivating connections
with the leading figures of the day, Māori and Pākehā.
Webster
fought alongside Tāmati Wāka Nene in the Northern War, married one of Nene’s
relatives and built up his kauri timber business through trade with local
chiefs (though at one point awoke to find a plundering party had arrived on his
front lawn). He was also friends with Frederick Maning, and visited by George
Grey, Richard Seddon and other luminaries of the day. In telling the story of
John Webster’s long and colourful life for the first time, this biography also
explores the wider transformation of relationships between Māori and Pākehā
during the nineteenth century.
Jennifer Ashton graduated from the
University of Auckland history department with a PhD in 2012, after a career
as a technical writer and editor. Her doctoral thesis was
placed on the Dean’s List and won a special Post-Doctoral Award from the Kate
Edger Educational Charitable Trust. She lives in Auckland.
She
was inspired by a trip to Opononi that had taken place almost 20 years earlier,
when she first saw an old, double-storied white house languishing there on the
waterfront. The house was shown to her by the original owner’s
great-great-granddaughter, and the faded opulence of the place made an
impression that she never forgot. For the next five years, the man who built
that house, John Webster, lived inside her mind as she reconstructed the life
that he had lived in that sleepy but fascinating part of the country. His
attitudes and opinions didn’t always make him the easiest housemate to have
around, but Jennifer never found him dull or tedious.
No comments:
Post a Comment