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WHALING. IN THE CONTACT PERIOD. Ocean Whaling. The first whaling ship from America arrived in 1797. Ocean whaling was well established by 1802. Whale oil was in high demand in an increasingly industrialised West. Whalers were visitors rather than settlers.
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WHALING IN THE CONTACT PERIOD
Ocean Whaling • The first whaling ship from America arrived in 1797. • Ocean whaling was well established by 1802.
Whale oil was in high demand in an increasingly industrialised West.
Whalers were visitors rather than settlers. • 1806-1810 50 whaling ships visited the Bay of Islands.
Maori gained mana from working on whaling ships and travelled to London, Australia and the USA and became part of an international pool of whalers. • 1805 Chief Ruatara spent four years on a whaler.
Whalers who stopped off at the Bay of Islands traded blankets, nails and guns for potatoes, pork, firewood, spars, women and Maori labour. • Maori trading for guns led to the Musket Wars of the 1820s.
British whalers were most frequent visitors but by the late 1830s it was the Americans and the French who were most common. • Whalers visited between November and April for 2-5 weeks.
Maori women often entered into sexual contracts with the whalers. • In return for sex they received a gun for their chief and a dress for themselves. • Ex-ship girls were in demand as wives by Maori men
By the 1830s Kororareka had become notorious. • Whalers were often accused of being ‘agents of vice’.
Up to one thousand Maori may have travelled overseas by 1840
SHORE WHALING • Shore whaling began in 1827 developing a more permanent population. • Shore whalers depended on local Maori for food.
Intermarriage between whalers and Maori women gave protection to the whalers and access to goods and exposure to a new culture for Maori. • Nearly all the shore whalers came from Australia. The Graphic “a Maori Woman”.
There were 80 whaling stations set up between 1827-1850. • Each station had around 1-2 dozen Europeans who whaled for half the year.
Johnny Jones of Waikouaiti had eight whaling stations employing 280 men. In 1838 they caught 41 whales yielding 145 tons of oil valued at 4,500 pounds sterling. • There were no duties to pay on whale oil before 1840.
Most shore stations had closed by the 1850s because the Right whale had become scarce. • The last whale was commercially hunted in NZ in 1964
Summary • Unlike the missionaries and other settlers, the whalers and sealers did not attempt to change Maori. • Rather, Maori were exposed to a new culture. • Some Maori joined with the whalers and sealers to exploit the natural resources