Mair, born in
Peterhead, Scotland, in 1799, had sailed on the whaling vessel
New Zealander in 1820. At this occasion he visited New Zealand for the first time. When it returned to England on 2 March 1820, the missionary
Thomas Kendall was among the passengers, together with
Hongi Hika and
Waikato, the two
rangatira of
Ngāpuhi iwi (tribe) that were the first Māori to come to England. In 1823 he made his second trip to New Zealand. This time he bought two preserved heads. In 1824 he made his third visit. He would never sail back to England again.
Sailing master of the Herald was a 55-ton mission
schooner, built at the beach of
Paihia in the
Bay of Islands. Missionary
Henry Williams laid the keel for the vessel in 1824. He needed a ship to provision the mission stations and to visit the more remote areas of New Zealand to bring the Gospel. When Gilbert Mair visited New Zealand for the third time, Williams asked him to assist in building the ship. When the
Herald was finished in 1826, Mair became the
sailing master. He made a lot of trips. He went to Australia three times. He visited the
Bay of Plenty 4 times, and sailed up and down the east coast of the
North Island from the
East Cape to the
North Cape, and on the west coast south to
Kawhia. In May 1828 the
Herald foundered, while trying to enter
Hokianga Harbour. After the
Herald was wrecked, Gilbert Mair purchased land from the natives, built his home at Wahapu and carried on the business of merchant and trader.
Marriage On his first visit to New Zealand, Gilbert Mair had been in contact with the Puckey family: William Puckey and his wife Margery, their son
William Gilbert Puckey (1805–1878) and daughter Elizabeth Gilbert (1809–1870). When he had first met Elizabeth she was only 11 or 12, but when he returned in 1824 "she had grown into a 15-year-old woman". They married on 12 September 1827 in Sydney, during one of trips of the
Herald there. They would raise twelve children: • Caroline Elizabeth, the first born in 1828; she died in 1917 • Robert (1830–1920). His name "is held in high regard at
Whangārei, his life-long home town, to whose people he gave a beautiful park" • Matilda Helen (1845–1927). Married Dr
Richard Sissons. • Emily Francis (1848–1902) • Sophia Marella (1850–1884) • Lavinia Laura, the last born in 1852; she died in 1936
Death Mair died at "Deveron", Whangārei, in 1857. He was buried on his own property. Many years later his sons removed his remains to the graveyard round the Church, where now only members of the Mair family are laid to rest". ==Witness of the Musket Wars==