At the Margin of Empire: John Webster and Hokianga, 1841–1900 - Historical Biography by Jennifer Ashton | Perfect for History Enthusiasts & New Zealand Colonial Studies
At the Margin of Empire: John Webster and Hokianga, 1841–1900 - Historical Biography by Jennifer Ashton | Perfect for History Enthusiasts & New Zealand Colonial Studies

At the Margin of Empire: John Webster and Hokianga, 1841–1900 - Historical Biography by Jennifer Ashton | Perfect for History Enthusiasts & New Zealand Colonial Studies

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Description

 

This book is far more than a simple biography: it offers a different way of looking at the history of nineteenth-century New Zealand. Jennifer Ashton focuses on the everyday life of one man in a particular location to reveal how dramatic social, economic and political changes in early New Zealand were worked out in daily cultural and social practices. – Hazel Petrie

In this remarkable biography, Jennifer Ashton uses the life of one man as a unique lens through which to view the early history of New Zealand.

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.
Ashton takes us into Hokianga to reveal how the evolving intimate relationships and economic transactions of everyday life reflected larger shifts in colonial power. She argues that through his daily interactions, Webster helped slowly shift the balance of power in the North: the credit that he extended to his customers and kin saw them selling land to pay debts, helping push Māori into economic dependence. 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. It is an intimate and revealing account of life in early New Zealand.

ISBN: 9781869408251
Size: 22.8 x 14.8cm
Page: 276
Format: Paperback
Weight: 500g