Immediately after Arthur Wakefield left the Navy in 1841, his brother,
Edward Gibbon Wakefield recruited him to join the
New Zealand Company, tasking him to select settlers for a new settlement to be named
Nelson, escort the party to New Zealand, and supervise the growth of the new town. Arthur Wakefield sailed, in company with Captain
Francis Liardet, RN, on the
Whitby from London in April 1841, arriving at
Wellington on 18 September 1841. The first immigrant ships arrived in Nelson in February 1842. after
Charles Heaphy The settlement of Nelson got off to a good start. In the first two years, 18 ships transported
more than 3,000 colonists. Wakefield actively worked to promote the orderly development of the colony. However, the new colony encountered serious difficulties in subsequent months. The biggest problem was the lack of arable land. The New Zealand Company, and particularly Wakefield's brother, had made extravagant promises to the settlers about the availability of land. Each settler family had been offered 1 acre (4,000 m2) of urban land, 50 acres (200,000 m2) of suburban land, and 150 acres (600,000 m2) of rural land. However, the company had nothing like that amount of land available and the existing owners—the native
Māori—proved very reluctant to sell their land and not inclined to trust the New Zealand Company's promises. Furthermore, the newly established colonial government, under Governor
William Hobson in
Auckland, was not at all sympathetic to their problems. One of the basic tenets of the
Treaty of Waitangi (1840), between the British Crown and various Māori chiefs, was the understanding that the Crown would protect Māori from attempts to defraud them of their land. On the other hand, some members of the New Zealand Company and many of the settlers saw Māori as ignorant savages who had no right to stand in the way of honest British colonists. This was a period when the growing British Empire was very aware of what it saw as its
manifest destiny, to rule the native peoples of the world. The British colonists believed they were owed the land, and resented the fact that their survival was dependent on the goodwill of Māori, who held all the power. In summary, Arthur Wakefield found he had far more settlers than he had land for and they were not happy. For once, Edward Gibbon Wakefield urged caution, but he was in London and his brother Arthur was the man on the spot. ==Death==