Early Maori Military Engineering Skills to be Honoured by New Zealand Professional Engineers
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14 February 2008
Early Maori Military Engineering Skills to be Honoured by New Zealand Professional Engineers.
In a first for a Maori feat of engineering, the Institution of Professional Engineers of New Zealand (IPENZ) has
recognised Ruapekapeka Pa as a national site of engineering significance. At a dawn ceremony on February 16,
representatives of the National Engineering Heritage Chapter of IPENZ, the Ruapekapeka Pa Management Trust, and the
Department of Conservation will gather to unveil a special plaque honouring the engineering skills of the Maori warriors
who built the Pa more than 160 years ago.
The gun fighter Pa, located 30 minutes north of Whangarei is comprised of a unique arrangement of rifle trenches,
bunkers, tunnels and double stockade representing an ingenious indigenous response to European firepower. It was
engineered and constructed by Warrior Chief Te Ruki Kawiti and his allies in late 1845 and was the site of the last
battle of "Northern Campaign" of the New Zealand wars. It withstood a two-week artillery barrage before being captured
by British and allied Maori forces on January 11, 1846. The Pa and battlefield are the best preserved remnant of the
northern campaign and the nine hectare reserve includes the forward British position and main British camp.
With the installation of the plaque beside the modern carved entrance way, the site stands alongside important New
Zealand engineering icons like the Auckland Harbour Bridge and motorway, and the Hamilton jet unit.
IPENZ Heritage Spokesperson Trevor Butler says that the recognition and honouring of Maori engineering skills at
Ruapekapeka is a significant occasion for the NZ Institution of Professional Engineers who hope that this will be the
first of other historic Maori innovations which can be honoured in a similar way. "Ruapekapeka may not have been the
first pa to utilize trenches or to have strong palisades, but the combination of design innovations made it one of the
most effective against assault by muskets and heavy artillery". While modern engineering has become the routine
application of detailed codes, standards and computer models, and applying international practices to local problems,
“Real engineering is the pondering of a problem not encountered before, considering options and developing an effective
local specific solution. It requires the merging of innovation, technical and interpersonal skills. Ruapekapeka
demonstrates this and represents good, sound engineering problem solving”.
The fortifications so impressed the British that following the battle, military engineers from Britain twice surveyed
the defences, built a scale model for education purposes, and tabled the plans in the House of Commons. Some historians
have argued that the knowledge was used by the British in the Crimea in 1853 and led to the trench warfare of World War
1 when machine guns made underground warfare a necessity.
DOC Whangarei Area Manager John Gardiner, who has a 25 year professional association with the Pa, noted that shortly
after the battle, Governor George Grey compared the developing military capabilities of the Maori combatants to those of
Europe's finest 19th century generals, "so it’s fantastic that Ruapekapeka continues to receive recognition from such
diverse communities of interest". Ruapekapeka Trust Chairwoman Ripeka Taipari is also pleased with the acknowledgement
but says that there is more work to do to share the story of Ruapekapeka. "Many hands played a part in the construction
of the Pa and its impossible to recognise them all on one small sign. The Trust and DOC are currently looking at ways to
preserve and promote as many stories as we can, using new technologies like the web and cellphones to get the attention
of our youth."
This work is part of a National Historic Heritage Restoration Project funded by DOC. In December 2003 the first stage of
the restoration was celebrated when tangata whenua led a dawn dedication ceremony attended by the Minister of
Conservation, the Hon Chris Carter.
In recent years, DOC and the Ruapekapeka pa Management Trust have established a car-park and loop track that passes
through the British camp, down through the remnant puriri bush and up to the Ruapekapeka Pa site entrance. Here, a
carved gateway or waharoa created by master carver Te Warihi Heteraka has been erected. New interpretational signage has
been installed and DOC has recently commissioned detailed mapping and geophysical survey of the battlefield to identify
sub-surface features. The Ruapekapeka Pa Management Trust has embarked on an ambitious Oral History Project to collect
stories and traditions from the descendants of Maori participants, which will form an important part of the growing body
of information about the site.
Key Points
- Ruapekapeka Pa is being recognised as a national site of engineering significance by the Institution of Professional
Engineers of New Zealand on February 16, with a dawn ceremony to unveil a commemorative plaque.
- This is the first piece of Maori engineering to be so recognised, on account of Ruapekapeka’s unique arrangement of
gun-fighting trenches, artillery bunkers and stockade.
- The Pa was built during the "Northern Campaign" of the New Zealand Wars of 1845-46, which began with Hone Heke’s
sacking of Kororareka (Russell) on 10 March 1845 and finished with the capture of the Pa after a two-week bombardment on
11 January 1846.
- The Ruapekapeka Pa and battlefield is managed by the Department of Conservation in partnership with the Ruapekapeka Pa
Management Trust representing Tangata Whenua, with Trustees nominated by Ngati Hine, Ngati Hau, Ngati Manu, Te Kapotai
and Ngapuhi Nui Tonu.
Further Information
Ruapekapeka Pa Historic Reserve http://www.doc.govt.nz/templates/page.aspx?id=44959
Ruapekapeka Pa Management Trust http://www.doc.govt.nz/templates/page.aspx?id=44964
IPENZ and engineering heritage http://www.ipenz.org.nz/heritage/
Background
Built by Warrior Chief Te Ruki Kawiti in late 1845, Ruapekapeka Pa consisted of a network of rifle trenches, bunkers,
tunnels and a double stockade. It was purpose built by Kawiti to counter European warfare techniques of the time. It
provided views over the whole of the contested landscape of the northern campaign. In contrast to traditional pa,
Ruapekapeka did not guard borders, command important routes of communication, or protect civilisations. Ruapekapeka Pa
could be abandoned without qualm. The aim was to draw British troops to into battle on a difficult site.
No major buildings were erected. Instead, underground rooms were built that were designed to withstand heavy
bombardment. Kawiti and his men sheltered together in dark bunkers like a colony of bats, an arrangement which gave the
pa its name, Ruapekapeka, “the bats nest”.
After two weeks of bombardment, the British troops breached the palisades and on Sunday 11th January 1846, they entered
the pa. They discovered, as with other Northern War battles, the pa had been abandoned before the troops entered. In the
battle, the British suffered a total of 45 casualties, while the Maori killed and wounded numbered about 30.
At the end of January 1846, Kawiti and Heke negotiated a peace with Governor Grey. Ruapekapeka Pa was never re-occupied
and was left to deteriorate following the battle.
Ruapekapeka was a large pa, measuring 150m x 70m, surrounded by two rows of 3m to 5m high palisades. These palisades
consisted of puriri tree trunks and split timber lashed together and reinforced with bundles of protective flax padding.
Between the two layers was a two metre wide trench divided into numerous gun fighter pits. When attacked, the defenders
could fire through the outer palisade at ground level while remaining well protected from return fire by the fence and
earthen walls of the pits. A second line of defenders could fire from the embankment over the heads of those in the
outer trench.
A network of underground connecting tunnels, and bomb-proof shelters, strengthened by strong puriri bearers were built
within the pa. The shelters were protected by earthen roofs and robust wooden huts. During times of bombardment they
provided excellent protection of the pa’s inhabitants in the same way that bomb shelters were later used in WWI.
Scattered within and behind the pa were felled tree trunks and raised mounds to provide cover should the palisades be
breached and to hinder the attackers in the event of a direct assault.
This type of pa was far better equipped to handle cannon fire than traditional pa, but almost as important as its
innovative construction was the location. A pa built inland, a long way from European supply sources and navy ships was
in a strong position. The attackers had to travel through rough, unfamiliar territory, dragging all their equipment with
them and would have little choice when it came to finding a suitable base camp.
Following the battle, the site was not re-occupied and was left to deteriorate. As a result, the timber palisades have
completely decayed and disappeared. The system of tunnels and shelters have also deteriorated over time, however there
is clear evidence of the trenches and mounds that formed the pa. A well on the site remains intact.
The site is of national cultural and historical significance because of its role in the mid-19th century dealings
between the Crown and Maori. Ruapekapeka has been identified as a key historic site on the DOC estate in Northland and
the site includes interpretation signage at both the pa site and the site of the British positions .
ENDS